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US sanctions Wagner-linked firms in CAR 

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According to the United States Treasury Department, the US on Thursday placed penalties on two businesses in the Central African Republic that were connected to both illegal mining operations and the Wagner mercenary group in Russia.

Washington claimed the firm and its businesses had “established a vast security and business network” in the African nation, accusing Wagner of supporting what it called Russia’s “malign activities” there.

“This network has advanced Russia’s destabilizing activities at the expense of the Central African Republic’s sovereignty,” the department said in a statement.

Among the businesses impacted is a mining consortium that, according to Washington, imports chemicals frequently utilized in the industry. Wagner also hired aeroplanes to transport staff and equipment.

The other is a company that got material shipments from a Russian organization connected to Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the group who was killed in an aircraft crash in August of last year.

According to the Treasury, financial institutions and other individuals conducting specific business or activities with the companies may be subject to sanctions.

The sanctions, it was stated, mean that all of the companies’ assets and interests in the country, or the possession or control of Americans, are blocked. The US has imposed sanctions on many organizations and people worldwide that back the Wagner Group.

Wagner has been active in politics and the military in West African countries, particularly in Mali and Libya more recently. The mercenary group is accused of killing 500 civilians in Mali in May 2023 during its raid against al-Qaeda members ravaging the town of Moura.

Wagener’s growing involvement in West Africa is a subject of international politics, with Russia and Washington both competing for the soul of Africa, while China holds grip on the continent in international economic relations.

Musings From Abroad

Saudi Arabia, Egypt strengthen investment ties, call for Gaza truce

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During discussions in Cairo on Tuesday, Egypt’s President, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, and Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, called for a ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon.

The meeting also marked the beginning of a strengthen economic and investment cooperation.

According to Egypt’s presidency, the leaders observed the formation of a supreme coordination committee between Riyadh and Cairo to further collaboration, as well as the signing of an agreement to promote and safeguard mutual investments between the two nations.

The visit is taking place amid rumours regarding possible Saudi investments in Egypt, which this year has seen a significant inflow of outside funding, including a $35 billion transaction with the UAE sovereign fund ADQ.

In 2022, the crown prince, also referred to as MbS paid his final official visit to Egypt. Saudi Arabia, which had previously given Sisi’s Egypt financial help, later said it was going to start investing instead of giving allies direct assistance.

According to a statement released by the president on Tuesday, the two leaders discussed efforts to strengthen economic ties between Cairo and Riyadh, with a focus on trade, investment, and economic integration in the transportation, energy, and tourist sectors.

According to the presidency, the leaders also spoke about regional events, specifically the circumstances in Gaza and Lebanon, and “they demanded to start taking steps to reach calm that include a ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon.”

By Tuesday afternoon, Egypt’s government dollar bonds had gained the most, with longer-dated maturities seeing the biggest gains. By 11:28 GMT, the 2059 maturity gained 1.73 cents, bidding at 77.80 cents on the dollar.

Last month, the prime minister of Egypt declared that Saudi Arabia intended to spend $5 billion in Egypt, separate and apart from the money the Gulf state had already placed in the Egyptian central bank.

Two tourist development locations on Egypt’s Red Sea coast and in the country’s southern Sinai peninsula—both of which are across Saudi Arabia—are potential investment destinations.

In order to address a protracted economic crisis that has resulted in record inflation, a mounting debt load, and significant currency devaluations over the last two years, Egypt has been actively pursuing substantial investments.

 

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Musings From Abroad

Uganda, Turkey announce $3 billion electric train agreement

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Uganda announced on Tuesday that it had reached a $3 billion agreement with a Turkish business to construct an electric railway line that would connect the landlocked nation to Kenya, its neighbour.

According to Transport Minister, Katumba Wamala, the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) track will connect Malaba on the Kenyan border with Kampala, the capital of Uganda.

“We signed a contract with Yapi Merkezi from Turkey for construction of a 272-kilometre (170-mile) line at euros 2.7 billion,” or $3 billion, Wamala told AFP.

He claimed that work on the line, which is a 1,700-kilometer regional rail project, is scheduled to start in November and that Yapi Merkezi had stated that the project would be finished in four years.

“With the railway network in place, Uganda hopes to overcome the long delays of transporting goods from Mombasa,” Wamala said, referring to Kenya’s Indian Ocean port city which is a major gateway for Ugandan trade.

According to Yapi Merkezi, the agreement includes both the delivery of train cars and the building of the railway. The trains can travel at speeds of up to 120 km/h and can carry 25 million tonnes of cargo annually.

“This should enable us to cut cargo transport costs by half,” Ramathan Ggoobi, permanent secretary at the Ugandan finance ministry, said in a government video shared online.

“I am telling you we are the second most expensive route in the world… now we should be amongst the most competitive.”

The Turkish company and Tanzania reached a separate agreement to build an electric railway connecting the nation’s major hubs, which was followed by the Ugandan accord.

In July of this year, services on the SGR line that links the capital Dodoma with Tanzania’s biggest metropolis Dar es Salaam commenced.

In 2022, Tanzania also came to an agreement worth $2.2 billion with a Chinese company to construct the last segment of the SGR line, which will connect Tanzania’s main port to its neighbours.

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