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Haiti’s PM visits US as Kenya’s police take over capital

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As part of a United Nations-backed effort to combat armed gangs that have taken over the capital, newly deployed Kenyan police officers started patrolling the city on Friday. Haitian Prime Minister, Garry Conille, left Port-au-Prince to travel to Washington and New York.

According to Conille’s office, Justice Minister Carlos Hercule will serve as acting prime minister on Conille’s behalf while he travels alongside Foreign Minister Dominique Dupuy, Finance Minister Ketleen Florestal, and Chief of Staff Nesmy Manigat.

“The delegation will have important work meetings with officials from international financial institutions, among others. It will also inspect Haiti’s embassy in Washington,” the office said, without giving further details.

Conille and Jon Finer, the deputy national security advisor, will meet on Monday, according to a spokesman for the US National Security Council. The UN has approved the deployment of an international security force headed by Kenya to assist Haiti’s police in combating armed gangs that have caused a humanitarian crisis in the nation. The U.S. is the power behind this force financially.

The first Kenyan police deployment arrived this week after Haiti’s former government requested the force in 2022. The arrival date of the remaining force, which is scheduled to total over 2,500 officers, is unknown.

Residents in Port-au-Prince expressed hope that the armed Kenyan police in khaki uniforms, complete with bulletproof jackets and helmets, would put an end to the senseless killings and allow commerce to resume as they patrolled the city in black armoured vans.

“We need peace. If the Kenyan police forces are here, it’s so we can return to the lives we used to have. We hope they’ve come to work seriously,” said resident Kloud Dine.

“We need the Kenyans here a while here because the gang members make us suffer too much,” added Louise Baret, a painter. “Enough is enough.”

Residents in Port-au-Prince expressed hope that the armed Kenyan police in khaki uniforms, complete with bulletproof jackets and helmets, would put an end to the senseless killings and allow commerce to resume as they patrolled the city in black armoured vans.

Gang leader Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier rallied armed men in a video posted on social media on Wednesday. He told them to open fire on Kenyan police and threatened to fight to the death, saying, “I don’t care if they are white or black.” He declared, “They’re invaders if they’re not Haitian and they’re on Haitian territory.”

Because of the violence, more than 500,000 people have left their homes, and about half of the population is hungry.

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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