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Voting underway in Mauritius as President Ghazouani runs for reelection

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With a promise to increase investment in the West African nation as it gets ready to start producing natural gas, incumbent President Mohamed Ould Ghazouani is highly likely to win the presidential election that was held on Saturday.

The 67-year-old former senior soldier, Ghazouani, has pledged investor-friendly measures to ignite a commodities boom in the 5 million-person nation, many of whom remain impoverished despite the abundance of fossil fuels and minerals.

“The last word belongs to the Mauritanian voters. I commit myself to respecting their choice,” Ghazouani said after voting in the capital.

Voting began at 0700 GMT. The polls close at 1900 GMT, and on Sunday, preliminary results are anticipated.

Ghazouani, who was elected to a first term in 2019, is up against six opponents, one of which is anti-slavery campaigner Biram Dah Abeid, who finished second in the election with more than 18% of the vote.

 

Hamadi Sidi El Mokhtar of the Islamist Tewassoul party, economist Mohamed Lemine El Mourtaji El Wafi, and attorney Id Mohameden M’Bareck are among the other contenders.

The 39-year-old geographer Mohamed Cheikh Hadrami claimed he had voted for a candidate “who will be able to reconcile Mauritanians” shortly after polls opened in the capital, Nouakchott. He refused to disclose his vote-casting choice.

Two million or so people were registered to vote, and the two main election topics were eliminating corruption and giving young people jobs.

 

Ghazouani has pledged, should he be re-elected, to build an LNG-fueled power plant from the Greater Tortue Ahmeyin offshore gas project, which is expected to begin producing natural gas by the end of the year. In addition, he promised to increase mining for iron ore, gold, and uranium as well as to invest in renewable energy.

Since 2019, Ghazouani has overseen a period of comparatively stable conditions as Mali and other neighbouring countries in the Sahel region of Mauritania have struggled with Islamist insurgencies that have resulted in military coups.

 

Politics

Cabinet reshuffle in Egypt amid power outages, economic strain

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Egypt’s President, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, swore in a drastically reorganized cabinet on Wednesday, adding new finance and foreign ministers to a government beset by daily power outages, economic hardships, and the Gaza war on its border.

Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly was reappointed by Sisi after the resignation of the previous cabinet was announced a month ago. Sisi stated that the main goals of his new government will be to increase investment and reduce inflation, which reached record highs last year.

Ahmed Kouchouk, a well-known individual who served as the World Bank’s chief economist before taking on the role of deputy finance minister in 2016 and leading negotiator for the International Monetary Fund, is the new minister of finance.

Following his oath of office, Kouchouk declared that Egypt would stick to its policies of reducing debt, adhering to fiscal restraint, and pursuing structural reform to facilitate growth in the private sector.

The re-appointment of Rania al-Mashat, the former minister of international cooperation who was responsible for securing development financing, came with the addition of planning and economic development to her portfolio.

Hassan El Khatib, a finance expert who had previously held positions at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, completed the revived post of investment minister. The longer-dated maturities of the bonds saw the biggest increase in value.

Egypt’s long-standing foreign exchange shortfall has been lessened by a recent infusion of capital and money from the UAE, the IMF, and the EU, among others; nevertheless, since then, power outages and gas shortages have made life difficult for both businesses and residents.

After being nominated petroleum minister, Karim Badawi, a manager at the oil services company SLB, stated that supplying fuel to power plants will be a top priority. Mohamed Shaker was succeeded at the Ministry of Energy by Mahmoud Esmat, a former minister of public enterprises.

At the supply ministry, which oversees wheat purchases, Sherif Farouk took over from his predecessor as chairman of Egypt Post, where he had overseen reforms to pension payments systems.

Aiming for reform, Farouk will oversee a food subsidy program that feeds over 60 million people and makes Egypt one of the world’s largest importers of wheat.

Over the previous two years, as Egypt struggled to control a dollar shortage and soaring inflation, there have been rumours that Madbouly himself may be replaced.
To put Egypt’s economy on a more stable foundation, analysts and businesses argue that significant changes are required, including the state and military making room for the private sector.

Mahmoud Mohieldin, a former Egyptian minister of investment, told the American Chamber of Commerce in Cairo on Monday that in addition to enabling much-increased exports and tax revenue, institutions also need to invest in human resources.

“We need to have a plan from now, which is a new growth model, a new development model,” he said.

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Egypt agrees long-awaited govt reshuffle

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According to local media, long-awaited changes to Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly’s cabinet are imminent, with new finance and foreign ministers scheduled to take office on Wednesday.

The Gaza War on its border, economic difficulties, and ongoing power outages that have irritated Egyptians and forced some factories to close are among the difficulties facing the new administration.

According to state television, Ahmed Kouchouk will take over as finance minister and will likely have the most difficulty controlling a collapsing economy and spiralling debt.

The foreign ministry announced that Badr Abdelatty, Egypt’s ambassador to the European Union, will take over for Sameh Shoukry, who has led the nation’s diplomatic efforts to mediate a settlement between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas in their nearly nine-month conflict. State TV cited local channel ExtraNews in its report.

Egypt’s ExtraNews, Mahmoud Esmat will be named minister of power and Karim Badawi as minister of petroleum. According to the site, Rania al-Mashat, the previous minister of international collaboration, will be reappointed to her position as minister of economic development, planning, and international cooperation. Sherif Farouk, the head of Egypt Post, is expected to assume leadership of the supply ministry.

There were rumours that Madbouly himself might be replaced as Egypt attempted to manage a chronic foreign exchange shortage and high inflation over the past two years.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi directed the new government to focus on lowering inflation and regulating markets as well as attracting and increasing local and foreign investments.

Egypt has historically been the world’s largest wheat importer, and Farouk would be tasked with overseeing those purchases as well as a sprawling food subsidy program that feeds more than 60 million people.

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