Tag: Africa

  • 8 strong currencies in Africa

    8 strong currencies in Africa

    The strength of a currency is mostly due to the country’s stable economy, low inflation and interest rates.

    In the continent of Africa, there are 54 countries and despite the challenges facing most governments in the continent, some countries have maintained a resilient and stable currency. 

     The highest currency in Africa in 2023 is the Tunisian Dinar but the North African country is not the only one that has a strong currency; below are a list of strong African currencies in 2023 and in no particular order.

    1. Tunisian Dinar (TND)

    Tunisia’s TND was introduced in 1960 which replaced the Franc. The TND is strong because of the country’s political stability and diverse economy which has made it Africa’s most valuable currency.

    1 pound equals 3.89 TND , 1 USD equals 3.08 Tunisian Dinar and 1 Naira equals 0.0041 

    2. Libyan Dinar (LYD)

    The official currency for Libya is the Libyan Dinar. Introduced in 1971 to replace the Libyan Pound used from 1951 to 1971, the Libyan Dinar has become one of Africa’s strong currencies.

    1 pound equals 6.10 LYD , 1 USD equals 4.82 Libyan Dinar and 1 Naira equals 0.0064

    3. Moroccan Dirham (MAD)

    The Moroccan Dirham is one of the continent’s most stable currencies. The notes are available in denominations of 20, 50, 100, and 200, and the Bank al-Maghrib issues them. The Dirham comprises 100 santims and is available in nine coins and four banknote denominations.

    1 pound equals 12.62 MAD , 1 USD equals 9.98 Moroccan Dirham and 1 Naira equals 0.013

    4. Ghanaian Cedi (GHS)

    The cedi is the Republic of Ghana’s fourth historical and only current legal tender. The Ghanaian cedi replaced the Ghanaian Pound in 1965 and the current currency was reintroduced in 2007 after it was devalued three times due to economic difficulties.

    1 pound equals 14.35 GHS , 1 USD equals 11.35 Ghanaian Cedi and 1 Naira equals 0.015

    5. Botswanan Pula (BWP)

    The currency of Botswana is called the Pula which was gotten from the Tswana word meaning rain – which is also the country’s national motto. It was inntroduced in August 1976, replacing the rand.

    1 pound equals 17.01 BWP , 1 USD equals 13.46 Botswanan Pula and 1 Naira equals 0.018

    6. Seychelles’ Rupee (SCR)

    The Seychelles Rupee is the official legal tender in Seychells and another strong and valuable currency in Africa. 1 pound equals 16.72 SCR , 1 USD equals 13.23 Seychellois Rupee and 1 Naira equals 0.017

    Read Also: 10 weakest world currencies

    7. Namibian Dollar (NAD)

    The Namibian dollar has been the official currency of Namibia since 1993 when it was replaced by the South African Rand but the rand can still be used or exchanged in Namibia as it is still considered a legal tender in the country.

    1 pound equals 23.57 NAD , 1 USD equals 18.65 Namibian Dollar and 1 Naira equals 0.024

    8. South African Rand (ZAR)

    In March 2023, the South African Rand ranks tenth in the continent with an exchange rate of 18.75 ZAR versus the US dollar. The rand was introduced in 1961, three months before South Africa became a republic. It is also legal tender in the Common Monetary Area (Eswatini, Lesotho, and Namibia).

    1 pound equals 23.68 ZAR , 1 USD equals 18.75 South African Rand and 1 Naira equals 0.025

    It is important to note that the strength of a currency can fluctuate over time. The currencies listed above may be stronger or weaker in the future depending on the economic and political conditions in these countries.

  • 15 most peaceful countries in Africa

    15 most peaceful countries in Africa

    The 2023 Global Peace Index (GPI), in July, presented its rankings for 163 independent states and territories according to their level of peacefulness.

    The Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP) ranked Mauritius as the most peaceful in Africa, while Botswana and Sierra Leone came second and third respectively.

    Here are 15 most peaceful countries in Africa.

    1. Mauritius

    2. Botswana

    3. Sierra Leone

    4. Ghana

    5. Senegal

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    6. Madagascar

    7. Namibia

    8. The Gambia

    9. Zambia

    10. Liberia

    11. Malawi

    12. Tunisia

    13. Equatorial Guinea

    14. Angola

    15. Morocco

    Here are 10 most peaceful countries in the world are:

    1. Iceland

    2. Denmark

    3. Ireland

    4. New Zealand

    5. Austria

    6. Singapore

    7. Portugal

    8. Slovenia

    9. Japan and

    10. Switzerland.

  • Africa is being courted by China, Russia and the US; Why the continent shouldn’t pick sides

    Africa is being courted by China, Russia and the US; Why the continent shouldn’t pick sides

    By Bhaso Ndzendze

    Some three decades since the end of the Cold War, the world order is undergoing a structural transformation. At the heart of it is the challenge posed to the hegemony of the US. This is primarily being led by Russia and China which are discontented with Washington’s excesses across the global stage. The most recent example of this rebellion was the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Fiona Hill, a British-American foreign affairs specialist, observed that the war was a “proxy for a rebellion by Russia and the ‘Rest’ against the United States”.

    The African continent is an obvious contender for major power courting as this realignment takes place. This is for at least four reasons.

    Firstly, it is the largest regional bloc in the United Nations, representing some 28% of all the votes in the General Assembly. Secondly, it possesses some crucial raw minerals that are found only in the continent. Thirdly, it possesses some important sea trade routes, particularly in East Africa. Finally, the continent is home to the fastest-growing youth demographic, and will account for about 42% of the world’s youth by 2030.

    I am a scholar of geopolitics and have conducted research on the continent’s trade ties to the major powers. My findings have led me to the conclusion that Africa can gain more by being neutral than by picking sides.

    The drivers

    Africa’s size in the UN General Assembly can’t be overstated. The continent sometimes struggles to respond in a co-ordinated way. Nevertheless, it has, in the past, been able to vote in sync in a way that has proved influential. The most notable example of this was the 1971 vote for the resolution that brought mainland China into the UN and replaced Taiwan. In total, there were 76 votes in favour, of which 27 came from African member states.

    In today’s UN, having this large grouping on one’s side helps countries the most when it comes to passing – or defeating – resolutions. With the UN Security Council in gridlock because the five permanent members (China, France, Russia, the UK and the US) have veto power, there has been a shift towards the UN General Assembly, which works on one-member-one-vote. General Assembly votes are mainly symbolic. But they are a useful indicator of where the international community stands, and are a powerful moral weapon for any major power.

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    Africa’s other major attraction is, of course, its resource wealth. This has become even more pronounced and taken on extraordinary importance in the push towards alternative sources of energy, both renewable and non-renewable. And in the production of products driven by the rise in technological innovation, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo’s cobalt, which is needed to make device screens among other things. The DRC is the world’s leading producer of this crucial mineral.

    At the same time the oil reserves of Algeria, Angola and Nigeria will become increasingly important as countries look to diversify away from Russia for natural gas and from fossil fuels more broadly.

    Then there are the trade routes. The Red Sea route, which straddles northeast Africa and links it to the Indian Ocean, constitutes 10% of annual global trade.

    The Red Sea route passes countries such as Eritrea and Somalia. Both have been actively courted by Russia.

    For its part, China has earmarked the route through its Maritime Silk Road initiative. Its aim is to boost port infrastructure among countries with Indian Ocean coastlines.

    Lastly, Africa is home to the fastest-growing youth population. This will be important in the search for future markets, particularly in sectors such as technology and education.

    The US and Europe are also keen to tap this human capacity as their own populations age above the global average. Many are looking to Africa as a source of inward migratory flows.

    Africa’s ties with the major powers

    In 2022, the continent as a whole exported US$43.1 billion worth of goods to the US and imported goods worth US$30.6 billion.

    By comparison, China exported US$164.1 billion to Africa and imported US$117.5 billion worth of African goods, in the same year. With African exports totalling US$661.4 billion, the US accounts for 6.5% and China 17.7%.

    China, the notable growth story of the past half-century, has thus become the African continent’s single biggest trading partner, though the combined power of the European Union’s trading bloc of 27 countries still leads.

    China’s ties with the continent are the result of decades of diplomatic and commercial efforts to woo the continent through the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation. Part of this has been driven by its desire to counter the US. The other driving force has been to sustain its economy, given Africa’s untapped potential.

    Russia has pursued a different strategy. Given that its trade with the continent is at a minimum – exports and imports were around US$18 billion in 2021 – it has rather sought to become a security partner, drawing on sentimentalised Soviet history.

    Washington’s principal instrument for growing trade, and encouraging good behaviour, in Africa is the African Growth and Opportunity Act, set to expire in 2025. The framework is a lever. But, as the data show, trade is in evident decline.

    The general picture can obscure some nuances. Some African states are more deeply intertwined with the US than others. For example, Djibouti has an American military base (along with other states, though not Russia at this point). And Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa are also among the top recipients of US direct investment.

    On the other hand, Eritrea, which was the only African state to brazenly vote against the UN General Assembly to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, seems to have no aspirations to be in America’s good graces. This notorious outlier aside, the world is deeply intertwined, with high interdependence even among the competing major powers.

    The US and China, despite their trade war, have struggled to decouple from one another, with their bilateral trade reaching new heights as recently as last year.

    In light of the comparatively diminished US-Africa trade, the US may be looking to make use of third parties. It could potentially influence the EU to influence Africa. The Huawei issue demonstrates this. The US has successfully pressured quite a few of its allies to halt doing business with the Chinese technology giant. According to UNCTAD data, France (US$60 billion) and the UK (US$65 billion) are the principal holders of African assets.

    As these and other European states seek to “de-risk” from China, there may be third-party consequences for Africa. This might include undue pressure on the continent to behave in certain ways towards China and towards Russia.

    Picking sides isn’t the best option

    Recent research, including my own on US-China trade “competition” over Africa, shows that the prevailing notion that smaller countries need to “pick sides” in polarised global contexts is false. Africa is best served when it conducts trade with as many partners as possible.

    Indeed, as shown, the major contenders are themselves conducting record-breaking trade with one another.

    All the while, Europe continues to conduct trade with Russia following the war against Ukraine (indeed, it is growing in some respects).

    The continent can, therefore, afford to be neutral. What it cannot afford to do is pick sides and preclude any partnerships. In the oncoming multipolar order, there are no self-evident, African-specific needs to pick sides. All options can be on the table.

    Ndzendze is associate professor, (International Relations), University of Johannesburg. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the https://theconversation.com/africa-is-being-courted-by-china-russia-and-the-us-why-the-continent-shouldnt-pick-sides-210516.

  • List of Africa’s most innovative cities

    List of Africa’s most innovative cities

    Kenyan capital, Nairobi tops 6 cities in Africa for innovation and ranks among the top 100 globally, according to Knight Frank’s Africa Horizons Report 2021/22.

    Nairobi ranked ahead of Cape Town (South Africa) which was second, Kampala (Uganda) third with Cairo (Egypt) and Johannesburg (South Africa) in fourth and fifth place respectively.

    Here is a list of Africa’s most innovative cities

    1. Nairobi, Kenya

    Nairobi is the capital and largest city of Kenya.

    The name is derived from the Maasai phrase Enkare Nairobi, which translates to ‘place of cool waters’, a reference to the Nairobi River which flows through the city.

    The city has a population of 4,397,073 in the 2019 census.

    The city is commonly referred to as The Green City in the Sun.

    2. Cape Town, South Africa

    Cape Town, South Africa

    Cape Town is South Africa’s oldest city.

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    It serves as the country’s legislative capital, being the seat of the South African Parliament.

    It is the country’s second-largest city (after Johannesburg) and the largest in the Western Cape.

    In 2014, Cape Town was named the best place in the world to visit by The New York Times and similarly by The Daily Telegraph in 2016.

    3. Kampala, Uganda

    Kampala is the capital and largest city of Uganda.

    The city proper has a population of 3,846,000 and is divided into the five political divisions of Kampala Central Division, Kawempe Division, Makindye Division, Nakawa Division, and Rubaga Division.

    4. Cairo, Egypt

    Cairo is the capital of Egypt and the country’s largest city, home to over 22 million people.

    It is also part of the largest urban agglomeration in Africa, the Arab world and the Middle East.

    5. Johannesburg, South Africa

    Johannesburg is the most populous city in South Africa, classified as a megacity.

    According to Demographia, the Johannesburg–Pretoria urban area (combined because of strong transport links that make commuting feasible) is the 26th-largest in the world in terms of population, with 14,167,000 inhabitants.

    It is the provincial capital and largest city of Gauteng, which is the wealthiest province in South Africa.

    Johannesburg is the seat of the Constitutional Court, the highest court in South Africa.

    6. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

    Dar es Salaam region is one of Tanzania’s 31 administrative regions and is located on the east coast of the country.

    The region is comparable in size to the combined land and water areas of the nation-state of Mauritius.

     According to the 2022 census, the region has a total population of 5,383,728 and the national census of 2012 had 4,364,541.

    The region has the highest population in Tanzania followed by Mwanza Region.

    7. Lagos, Nigeria

    Lagos or Lagos City is the most populous city in Nigeria, with an estimated population of 26 million and around 30 million in the Lagos metropolitan area.

    Lagos is the most populous urban area in Africa.

    It was the national capital of Nigeria until December 1991 following the government’s decision to move their capital to Abuja in the centre of the country.

    Lagos is a major African financial centre and is the economic hub of Nigeria.

    8. Dakar, Senegal

    Dakar is the capital and largest city of Senegal.

    The city of Dakar proper has a population of 3,430,000, whereas the population of the Dakar metropolitan area is estimated at 3.94 million in 2021.

    9. Accra, Ghana

    Accra is the capital and largest city of Ghana, located on the southern coast of the Gulf of Guinea, which is part of the Atlantic Ocean.

    As of the 2021 census, the Accra Metropolitan District, 20.4 km2 (7.9 sq mi), had a population of 284,124 inhabitants, and the larger Greater Accra Region, 3,245 km2 (1,253 sq mi), had a population of 5,455,692 inhabitants.

    10. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    Addis Ababa is the capital and largest city of Ethiopia.

    The estimated population of Addis Ababa in 2023 reached 5,460,591, whereas back in 1950, the population stood at 392,000.

    Addis Ababa is a highly developed and important cultural, artistic, financial and administrative centre of Ethiopia.

  • With technologies, Africa can feed itself – Prof. Sereme

    With technologies, Africa can feed itself – Prof. Sereme

    Professor Paco Sereme is the Vice President (West Africa), African Academy of Sciences and also the President, Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Burkina Faso. He is a Plant Pathologist, in this interview, he speaks on the need for Africans to adopt the use of biotechnology to boost food production for the growing population.

    Do Africa need Biotechnology in the agricultural sector?

    Biotechnology plays a pivotal role in the agricultural sector, we have been dealing with some crops for centuries, those crops have their own advantage like some resistance to some challenges like drought, but if you look at the productivity of those crops, they are low and biotechnology is giving us the opportunity to improve the productivity of those crops.

    The population of Africa is growing so fast, it is a big challenge because we cannot feed all these people if we are still dealing with the traditional way we are making crops in Africa. It is a big advantage for Africa to use biotechnology, if you look at the policy in some countries at the African Union (AU) level, it is clear that we need Biotechnology.

    Can you tell us one reason why Africa should adopt biotechnology?

    I will say the growth of the population is enough reason for us to adopt the use of biotechnology in Africa. The traditional way we are doing cropping, we cannot afford to feed the population, when I was young in this country (Burkina Faso), I remember our population was 3.5 million, now we are 22 million and the farmers are Still dealing with the same yield. Biotechnology has an advantage as it enables us to increase our yield in terms of quality and quantity.

    At one point, Burkina Faso was a leader in the continent on biotechnology deployment, but today, it’s different, what went wrong?

    There are many reasons because I think there was a lack of communication between policy makers, the scientists and the stakeholders, for example when they realised that the fibre of the BT cotton was short with the implications that the price decreased, the policy makers should have questioned the result. It is possible to ask how to improve the length of the fibre, then if so, what should we do? But this was missing. At the same time, the lobby against the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) was also very strong and made a lot of noise. Do you know today, some farmers are coming to the scientists asking who will bring us back to the BT cotton. I think the reason why Burkina Faso is not producing BT cotton is not linked at all to what people are trying to say but due to lack of proper communication.

    PBR cowpea is about to be released, what are the lessons learnt from the BT cotton experience that will help guide the release?

    One of the many reasons why the Bt cotton was stopped is the insufficient communication on the path of scientists working on it and the failure on the part of policymakers to ask the necessary questions. For this new crop, I think the most thing to do is to emphasize on communication, because if the scientists explain why the use of pesticides is not efficient for the control of Maruca, no farmer will go on the field in the night to say he wants to spray chemical on his field, but if the scientist explain, going through some organised stakeholders, they will understand and make it easy for the adoption of this technology. I think the lesson drawn from BT cotton will be very useful and very soon, Burkina Faso will join Nigeria and Ghana for the release of BT cowpea.

    As a scientist, why do you think it is important for Burkina Faso to adopt GMOs?

    If you look at the region of West Africa, Burkina used to be the second largest producer of cowpea, but most of our production is going to Ghana, Togo, Nigeria and Benin Republic because those countries need a lot of this crop but they cannot produce too much so it is a big opportunity for us. If we can improve the productivity of the crop instead of having 300,000 tons per year, if we have 500,000 tons per year, that will be okay. It will contribute to food security and to improve the condition of farmers in terms of having some cash products, the crop also contributes a lot to soil productivity.

    You mentioned that Burkina Faso produces a lot of cowpea, but most of them end up in Ghana, Togo and Nigeria, do you think there is a need for the establishment of a regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) framework to harmonise this?

    For the conventional crop, there is a regulation already at the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) level, for example, if I am a seed producer and if I have crop that has been certified In the country, I can send it to Nigeria, there won’t be a problem, that is the same approach for the promotion of biotechnology in this region, I have been the Executive Director for CORAF for 12 years and one of our big achievement is to bring all the ECOWAS countries to have a regulation on biosafety and biotechnology, the country are not the same level but CORAF is also helping them to be at the same level. If that happens, it will be very easy to use the modified seed in this region or from one country to another. So CORAF, which is a sub-regional Organization based in Senegal, is a kind of network of all agricultural research in West and Central Africa to improve the collaboration of scientists for the benefits of all the country.

    What other crop do you think biotechnology can help Burkina Faso improve?

    If we succeed with the BT cowpea, for me, there are other crops coming, I have seen, for example, Philippine yellow rice with a lot of adventure that led to that in terms of the quality , nutrition. We claim that we want to be self-sufficient in rice, that has been there for many years, but we are far from reaching this objective and I think a crop like rice, if we properly use some technology to address some issue of that , of course with some insects and disease in the country that affects crops, we will want to improve the nutritional quality which biotechnology can help. But would be determined by the way we will succeed with the Bt cowpea.

    Those who oppose this technology go to the US and eat these foods, when they come back, they tell people not to eat that it’s not good, what do you have to say?

    That is why I said we have to improve the communication, is like we give these people all the liberty to do what they do and we are just sitting in the corner, looking at them, we are not doing enough because up till today, nobody can show us the evidence that the use of those modified crops have some health issues and environmental issues, we have to be better organised for that. That is one of the key focus for the national Academy, we have to convince the government on the need to use those technology to improve agriculture.

    A lot of things have been happening that require scientific answers, don’t you think the African Academy has been too quiet on the continent?

    A lot of things have been happening within the Academy. The Academy is undergoing a rebuilding process and I see a lot of people with enthusiasm, but now that is not the case, we have to regain the confidence of people. If you look at the funding of the academy, it’s just through Bill and Melinda Gates, the European Union and some people in the UK. We have to improve that. The African Union is part of the governing council of the Academy, they should also play a key role on how to encourage people to be more proactive and to give advice to the government also to implement some policies. When COVID-19 happened, people in Europe produced their own vaccine, used it before sending leftovers to us, we should also take a leaf from such issues.

  • Ill-treatment of opposition figures in Africa

    The recent unfortunate death of Mohammed Morsi on June 17 in an Egyptian court once again brought to the fore the danger facing prominent opposition figures in Africa. Like Morsi, our own M.K. O. Abiola too died while in incarceration. Before analysing the sordid treatments being meted out to opposition politicians in Africa nowadays, it is pertinent to document here brief, details of events leading to Morsi’s programmed death in the hand of an unrelenting dictator called Abel Fattah El-Sisi in Egypt.

    The late Mohammed Morsi was a well-educated man who had a Ph.D. degree in engineering. Before his foray into the murky Egyptian politics, that had been dominated by military dictators for decades, he was a professor in one of the top universities in USA. On returning to Egypt, he had a stint as a lecturer at Cairo University before his political activities. Through his party known as the Freedom and Justice Party, which was aligned to Muslim Brotherhood, he became a member of Egyptian parliament. He was a well-respected parliamentarian reputed for his oratorical skill and deep insight into issues.

    After the Egyptian revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak, the sit-tight dictator that ruled Egypt for 30 years in 2011, his party became the largest party in the 2011-2012 parliamentary election.  With this victory, Morsi became the fifth president of his country and the first to be democratically elected.

    Mohammed Morsi was in power for barely a year, when he was toppled by the military led by the present president of the country, Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, because of the deteriorating political situation in Egypt. Morsi’s one year rule was turbulent as he wanted to introduce some of the policies of the Muslim Brotherhood which many people felt abridged the democratic rights of the people. Four months after leaving power, he was put on trial with some members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood for murder and incitement. He escaped death sentence but he was sent to prison for 20 years. After this, he faced numerous other charges and was on trial for espionage when he collapsed and died in an Egyptian court trying him in June. Many people regarded him as a martyr. If his regime had  not been truncated,  he would have changed  ‘the liberal’ Egyptian society to a very extreme conservative society desired by the Muslim Brotherhood for the Arab countries. Whether this change would have solved myriads of socio-political problems of Egypt is now left to the realm of conjecture. It has to be recalled here that in the nineties, the Muslim Brotherhood won free and fair election in Algeria as Morsi’s party did in Egypt but the party was not allowed to rule by the Algerian military because of the party’s extreme policies. This action of the Algerian military led to many years of civil war in Algeria.

    The plight of Morsi in Egypt is a pointer to the fact that presently in Africa, there is a high level of intolerance to opposition figures and parties, as was the case when most of the African countries were practicing the retrogressive one-party system of governance immediately after independence. The continent is now littered with dictators who molest and harass opposition politicians. Few bad cases where opposition figures are victimized and harassed as documented in Republic of Benin, Equatorial Guinea, Cameroons, Rwanda and Uganda are highlighted in this piece.

    In the Republic of Benin, our western next door neighbour, Patrice Talon who took over power in 2016 has been trying in a very subtle way to reintroduce the discredited one-party system of governance that led to economic and political doldrums in his country for more than 30 years. This action of his has generated a lot of protest and social disobedience by the people who do not want to lose their democratic rights again. For leading this protest, he has put the former president, Thomas Boni Yayi under house arrest and his has also threatened another former president of his country Nicephore Soglo, who was one of the architects of the present democratic dispensation in the country. All efforts to get Talon to release Boni Yayi have fallen on deaf ears. It is unfortunate, that France under the progressive President Macron appears to be giving tacit support to this upstart in the Republic of Benin.

    In the central African country of Equatorial Guinea, there is blood-thirsty Obiang  Nguema  Mbasogo, a dictator who has ruled the country for 40 years since 1979. In this country, murder and kidnapping are the lots of opposition politicians. He executed his predecessor, Marcias Nguema in 1979 when he took over and he and his family control all the resources of the country. In the neighbouring Cameroons, the dour ageing dictator, Paul Biya who has ruled his country his country with iron fists for the past 37 years has zero tolerance for the opposition. At present he has unleashed reign of terror on the people of the English-speaking part of his country because of their agitation for self-determination for their own part of Cameroons, which unfortunately, is  presently enslaved by the French-speaking part.  They want their part of the country, formerly known as Southern Cameroons when that part was with Nigeria to be an independent country to be known as Federal Republic of Ambazonia. Many leaders of the English-speaking part have been killed while many have gone on exile.

    Paul Kagame of Rwanda who is erroneously held up as a poster boy for good governance in Africa in the west, is known to harass opposition figures regularly and unfortunately his admirers in the western world have not been able to condemn him until recently when the European Union presented to the whole world, a damning human rights record in Rwanda under Kagame. Diane Rwigan, the opposition activist and former presidential candidate has just been released from prison after spending one year in jail. She was accused of inciting insurrection against the government of Paul Kigame who has been in power for the past 19 years. Camir Nkurunziza, a critic of Kagame’s government was few days ago shot dead in South Africa by the agents of Kigame’s government. This has already sparked diplomatic row between Rwanda and South Africa. Kagame who is from minority Tutsi tribe has used all government machineries to suppress Hutus opposition figures who are from the majority tribe. In neighbouring Uganda, the easily excitable Yoweri Museveni who has ruled his hapless country for 33 years since 1986 sometimes ago told the whole world that he did not believe that there should be opposition parties in African countries. In his warped thinking, he feels opposition parties retard progress. Opposition figures like Kizza Besigye were jailed and the musician turned politician, Robert Kyagulayi was put in ‘preventive arrest’. These actions of the ageing Museveni are to prevent them from contesting the 2021 presidential with him. Detention and arrest of opposition figures are tactics of Museveni at the approach of any presidential election.

    The above expositions only deal with few countries in Africa. There are still suppression of opposition figures also in countries like Togo, Egypt, Burundi, Central African Republic and Gabon. There can be no democracy when opposition figures and parties are harassed and victimized with government machineries routinely, as we see presently in many parts of Africa.  The death of Mohammed Morsi in detention has rekindled once again the memories of many African opposition figures that died in detention. These figures included J. B. Danquah of Ghana, Felix Mommie of Cameroons, Patrice Lumumba of DR Congo, Ben Kheda and Ben Bella of Algeria, Diallo Telli of Guinea, who was the first Secretary General of OAU, Maurice Yemeogo and Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso, Steve Biko of South Africa and Moshood Abiola of Nigeria. In this list, only Patrice Lumumba, Steve Biko and Moshood Abiola had been given posthumous honours and recognitions in their countries.

     

    • Prof. Lucas writes from Old Bodija, Ibadan.
  • Whither Africa?

    Africa is not a country, but we remain a people. Yes! a people whose children’s distended bellies hover around like the sun around the moon. From the deep of the Sahel to the plains of the Kalahari, we are a people yet we are the third in the world race, we are a people who wait patiently for mosquito nets from United Nations to keep our children from dying from mosquito-induced malaria.

    We are not a country, we are blacks, our thoughts were presumed opaque but beyond our opaqueness we have in us Nobel laureates, our tummy distends yet our brains remain linear. Africa you are not a country, you are dark, but in your darkness there is glimmer and on a night like this, I remember June not like a April in Rwanda, Rwanda was genocide, but in June when Mo Salah, Matip, Mane, Nabi Kaita, and Wanyama file out in the frenzy of the Bernabéu, My teary eyes remind me that we are a people and in the absence of a country we remain a people.

    Hope calls, beacon of lights sparkles, and when Mobutu Sese Soko and Idi Amin gets up from their death, that they never left a country for us will eternally hunt them like a spectre, but we remain a people. Africa you are not a country.

    • By Kehinde Oluwatosin Babatunde, Lagos.

     

  • The Past, Present And Future In African Wrestling Women’s Team

    Wrestling in Africa is a centuries-old sport predominantly associated with men. Some communities also featured traditional women wrestling for courtship, ritual initiation into womanhood and measuring physical attractiveness. However, traditional women’s wrestling doesn’t have a lot of fighters due to lack of encouragement from the relevant quarters.

    African Traditional Wrestling

    In traditional African wrestling, many women faced discrimination for various reasons. For starters, women were seen as physically delicate to participate in wrestling.  Moreover, women were seen as home-bound caregivers, while fighting was mostly left for warriors.

    Besides the societal challenges, lack of freedom and gender parity in sports also made wrestling a man’s world (patriarchy). Conservative religious considerations and cultural heritages also hindered women from participating. In some African communities, women were not even allowed to witness elaborate mystical rites surrounding wrestling.

    In Nigeria, Guinea Bissau, Senegal and other African states, festivals such as King Oussouye and Jola involved women wrestling. These festivals welcome female wrestling heavyweights from various regions as it’s the only place women could participate freely without prejudices.

    READ ALSO: 2019 African Wrestling Championships: Nigeria retains women’s title

    Women Wrestling Teams in Africa

    Today, some African communities have standardized women wrestling, encouraging female participation. For some women, official participation in tournaments and matches is still out of the question, but there are some who are defying the odds to make a name in the sport. As such various African wrestling women teams are gaining popularity in the continent.

    Nigeria is one of the top countries in Africa when it comes to women wrestling. In a soccer-crazed country, Nigerian football betting with Betway would seem more appealing than women wrestling. Nonetheless, the country’s wrestling federation is gaining popularity due to the achievements of players such as Odunayo Adekuoroye. Odunayo took gold medals in the 2014 and 2018 women Commonwealth games.

    Senegal is also standardizing women wrestling, with national team coaches using festivals such as King Oussouye to recruit participants. The national women’s wrestling team also attends the festival to see female wrestlers showing their prowess. It’s during this festival that Isabelle Sambou got recruited after showing strength and promise in wrestling.

    Sambou is a five-time national champion and a nine-time gold medalist in the women’s AWC (African Wrestling Championships). In 2015, the World Wrestling union (WWU) also crowned her the African Wrestler of the Decade. However, Sambou has had to make several sacrifices for her passion.

    The Future Of Women Wrestling In Africa

    Female wrestling is a known sport in various African countries, but it’s not very popular like male sports. Nonetheless, various women wrestlers are striving to advance it despite the obvious challenges they continue to encounter in their quest. As such, we can expect to see more women being recognized as strong combatants as betting companies like Betway continue to embrace the sport.

    In Africa, women’s wrestling is amid a continental change in an excellent subculture led by tough and progressive heroines. There are various exciting changes taking place and fans can only expect the sport to be more thrilling and entertaining than today.

     

     

  • Africa Re unveils $20,000 InsurTech challenge

    Africa Re is introducing InsurTech Challenge, an initiative aimed at identifying, promoting and rewarding technology companies, especially start-ups owned by Africans or built by individuals’ resident in Africa.

    The top three shortlisted companies will be offered a platform to meet the insurance industry.The winner will get a cash prize of $20,000.

    The reinsurance firm has asked interested participants to visit the website of the initiative. The window to submit applications is opened from February 18 to April 30.

    The Group Managing Director, Corneille Karekezi, said the initiative is also part of the current African Insurance Awards programme and its grand finale will hold at a gala dinner during the annual conference of the African Insurance Organisation (AIO) in Johannesburg, South Africa on June 10.

    According to him, technology is redefining the way we do business and the insurance industry is not left out of this disruptive change especially with the growth of InsurTech companies leveraging on best-in-class technologies to simplify the product life cycle for consumers,

    He said: “As part of our corporate mission to develop the industry, Africa Re is launching InsurTech Challenge, an initiative which aims at identifying, promoting and rewarding technology companies especially start-ups owned by Africans or built by individuals’ resident in Africa that are solving some of the identified challenges in the insurance value chain.

    “InsurTech Challenge is a new category of the African Insurance Awards. It is targeted at non-insurers that are collaborating with insurers to improve their customer service delivery, product development and overall innovation all around Africa,” he added.

  • 5G will spark wave of innovations in Africa, says Mikael Bäck

    Industry 4.0 has arrived, and it is going to spark an unprecedented wave of innovation in the Middle East and Africa (MEA), this is according to Mikael Bäck, Corporate Officer for Ericsson’s Group Function Technology Group.

    Back made this known in an opinion article shared with the media on Monday.

    According to back, Industry 4.0 merges operational, information and communication technologies with cyber-physical systems, enabled by advanced wireless communication and Industrial IoT services.

    This digital and wireless transformation, he said will be powered by 5G networks, which have the potential to drive economic growth in the region like no previous generation of mobile technology.

    “For example, the security, high speeds, low latency and massive number of connections in 5G networks will support smart city and agriculture transformation in many countries in the Middle East and Africa. This will enable new revenue streams from IoT and industrial applications and accelerate digitalisation.

    “Agriculture 4.0 will particularly transform both the demand side and the value chain/supply side of the food-scarcity equation, using technology to address the real needs of consumers.

    “The UAE already uses the SCADA system, which combines up-to-date, real-time data from weather stations with data from soil moisture and salinity sensors.  And IKEA, David Chang and the ruler of Dubai have invested USD 40 million in vertical farming. Other Arab countries are also shifting their focus to expand their agriculture vertically, and conducting trials with a number of new technologies.

    “The Middle East and Africa region is also the world’s largest center for mineral mining (diamond, phosphate, gold) and for oil and gas operations. The domain choice of IoT connectivity for these industries will be 5G.

    “An interesting case study in this area is the Boliden Aitik mine in Sweden. The application of 5G-enabled automation reduces costs by one percent, with communications being the key enabler. For the Aitik mine alone, carrying out drilling and blasting using automation shows an annual EUR 2.5 million net saving. This illustrates the potential for similar operations in MEA and other regions.” he said.

    Switching on 5G in the Middle East

    In 2019, we will start the commercial roll out of 5G with operators in advanced markets like the UAE, Saudi Arabia’s and Qatar, with significant traffic volumes in 2021.  We were recently selected by Batelco to commercially deploy 5G across Bahrain and announced 5G commercial launches with Etisalat, STC and Ooredoo at Mobile World Congress 2019. In fact, all major service providers in the region are moving aggressively to launch 5G commercially, according to Ericsson Mobility Report MEA.

    Moreover, we are working with partners in a multitude of industries, as well as academia partners within research and development projects.

    This has wide regional ramifications, as there are great economic benefits in taking advantage of a new wireless technology first, highlighted by the boom in the app economy in the region after its adoption of 4G.  Numerous regional start-ups like Fetchr!, Souq, Careem, and ReserveOut have been hugely successful, and many more have had a strong impact in the market.

    Key drivers for immediate 5G deployment include increased network capacity, lower cost per gigabyte and new use case requirements. The majority of the 5G subscriptions in the MEA are expected to come from advanced ICT markets like Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar while in Africa, considerable momentum is building in South Africa.

    The MEA region’s telecom market is characterized by increasing uptake of LTE. The region will lead the globe with a forecast for 9x mobile data traffic growth (1.8 to 17 EB/month from 2018 to 2024) and see a doubling of mobile broadband subscriptions (850 to 1,630 million from 2018 to 2024), according to Ericsson Mobility Report MEA.

    The exponential role of disruptive technology in climate action

    Beyond improving efficiency and reducing cost, digitalisation and IoT have wide human implications. From smart homes and power grids to connected transport systems, IoT is already making our personal lives safer, healthier and greener.

    ICT in combination with a well-integrated corporate sustainability strategy can help tackle a range of global challenges. While the digital sector is on track to reduce its own emissions, representing just 1.4% of the global total, it is also in a unique position to influence other sectors.

    Social and technological innovations are already scaling, for example, shared and “on-demand” fleets of more energy-efficient electric vehicles could reduce global energy demand for transport by more than 50 percent by 2050 while reducing the number of vehicles on the road.

    For example, the vision adopted by Dubai for 2030 is for 30 percent of public transport to be autonomous. Other GCC states have also revealed plans to cut emissions and improve climate mitigation.

    Adopting circular-economy approaches has the potential to reduce global emissions from industry by 45 percent by 2050. Globally, heavy industries such as steel, aluminum, cement and plastic production can reduce emissions by 50 percent using current technologies and efficiencies.

    5G is the backbone that can make it all work both in the Middle East and Africa as well as across the globe – driving economic value from enhanced mobile broadband to digital industry to combating climate change. That in turn will require an ecosystem of technology, regulatory, security and industry partners to deliver on the potential.