Tag: Kenya

  • Kenya overturns Nigeria’s 25 years lead in stock trading

    Kenya overturns Nigeria’s 25 years lead in stock trading

    The value of shares traded on the Kenyan stock exchange surpassed Nigeria’s for the first time on record in September. The value of shares traded on Nigeria’s exchange fell to $139 million, near the lowest since Bloomberg began compiling such data in 2009. In Kenya, which has an economy an eighth the size of Nigeria’s, but which is set to grow by almost six per cent this year, the value rose 4.2 per cent from August to $152 million, according to Bloomberg.

    Nigeria is caught between the highest inflation rate in more than a decade and an economy set to contract for the first time since 1991. The naira was allowed to float from June 20, losing more than a third of its value against the dollar since and weakening beyond 300 per greenback for the first time on July 22. The float is anything but free, with Aberdeen Asset Management and Duet Asset Management among investors saying the central bank is holding the naira in a tight range.

    “Nigeria’s in a recession and it’s got issues around foreign-exchange liquidity,” Yvonne Mhango, a sub-Saharan Africa economist at Renaissance Capital, said by phone. “If you compare that to Kenya, an economy that’s growing at 5 or 6 percent, a currency that’s stable, basically you’re seeing a reflection of greater interest in Kenya simply because there is growth”.

    “Over and above that, in the case of Kenya, if they want to repatriate their money tomorrow, the foreign-exchange liquidity is available, whereas in Nigeria it’s more of an issue: you have to wait a longer time to get your dollars out of the country,” Mhango said.

    The lack of foreign-exchange liquidity looms as a greater obstacle to foreign investment in Nigerian than the moribund economy, according to Mhango. “As that clears, you’ll see improved interest, even before the economy starts showing positive growth — as long as the liquidity issue is addressed, you’ll see a pickup in activity.”

     

  • KENYA’S SINGLE ENTRY EDGES NOLLYWOOD OUT

    KENYA’S SINGLE ENTRY EDGES NOLLYWOOD OUT

    I was more concerned with films from Africa and the Middle East at this year’s TIFF for the purpose of proximity which is one of the parameters for newsworthiness. On the other hand, I know that the narrative is fast changing to our part of the world, and there is just the need to know those that Nigeria would be competing with within the same region, because whether we agree or not, the window to the outside world is the lens with which African stories are told.

    Therefore, even though none of the Nigerian films won in the competitive categories, our East African brothers from Kenya grabbed a laurel, a tougher one, if you ask me –  Prize of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI), awarded to Mbithi Masya for the film, Kati Kati.

    Yes, the film, even though it is from a first time feature film director, got some foreign collaboration, which is one of the factors that make a film huge and disposed to other audiences. Beyond that, that a more critical audience like FIPRESCI found it worthy, makes this more pleasing to me.

    The jury remarked: “With a generous and poetic tone, not without a degree of anger at personal and political injustice, FIPRESCI is pleased to present the prize in the Discovery programme to an exciting and unique new voice in cinema, Mbithi Masya for his debut feature Kati Kati.”

    By implication, another African film is Oscar hopeful, knowing the chances that TIFF’s strong films have had at the Academy awards.

    Recall that the film, 12 Years a Slave, which fetched Kenyan girl, Lupita Nyong’o her first Oscar was first premiered at TIFF in 2013. Perhaps another Kenyan is about to get global attention again.

    Nigeria can take a cue and make the best of existing cultural agencies like Ford Foundation, British Council and Goethe Institut for such exports; I recall that Nigeria had a similar chance in 2013 with the 30 percent sponsorship of Biyi Bandele’s ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ by British Film Institute (BFI), which couldn’t fly as expected, even with British-Nigerian actor, Chiwetel Ejiofor, playing the lead.

    Kati Kati’s director, Mbithi Masya, a member of Kenya’s acclaimed alternative house-funk trio, Just a Band, is just an unassuming filmmaker who has directed numerous short films, documentaries, commercials, music videos, and video installations, just like some of the directors of the Nollywood films selected for TIFF. Pundits believe that there is really no difference in the opportunities that Nollywood filmmakers are exposed to, just personal drive, simplicity, thoroughness and strategy.

    “I’m used to working on a small scale,” Masya says. “I think if they told me to write a big African epic … I would have been out of my depth.”

    The film opens with a shot of a woman standing in an empty field, unsure of how she got there. She soon discovers that she’s dead and now finds herself trapped at the mysterious wilderness lodge from which the movie takes its name.

    Shot entirely on location at a working safari lodge, the movie has an intimate scope that Masya says suits his first foray into feature films.

    Kati Kati was produced by One Fine Day Films and Kenyan production house Ginger Ink, with support from Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Goethe Foundation, Arri, and Deutsche Welle’s DW Akademie, a non-profit sponsoring media development.

  • Ease of doing business: Nigeria will be top 100 countries by 2019, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari said on Sunday in Nairobi, Kenya that Nigeria will be one of the most attractive and easiest places of doing business in the world by 2019.

    Speaking at a plenary session on “Dialogue with the Private Sector” at the sixth Tokyo International Conference for African Development (TICAD VI), President Buhari said his administration is implementing policies and measures to create right and enabling environment for business and investors in Nigeria.

    Nigeria is currently ranked 169 out of 189 countries by the World Bank, according to the Bank’s 2016 Ease of Doing Business report.

    But Buhari, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, told the session attended by several African leaders, Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and international business executives that his administration’s vision and objective is to make Nigeria one of the top investment destinations in the world, within the shortest possible time.

    “We believe government has a particular responsibility to create right and attractive environment for businesses and economic activities to thrive.

    ‘‘In furtherance of this vision, we have launched the Presidential Enabling Environment Council, PEEC and Inter-Ministerial Council to oversee the efforts of government to remove various bottlenecks that stifle businesses and economic activities and thereby create economic activities and the right enabling environment and investment climate in Nigeria.

    ‘‘The secretariat will include strong private sector representation that would be led by experienced business professionals from the private sector.

    ‘‘We are committed to moving up the ranking of the World Bank’s ease of doing business index 20 places in first year and be in the top 100 within the next 3 years,’’ the President said.

  • Koffi Olomide deported from Kenya for ‘kicking woman’

    Koffi Olomide deported from Kenya for ‘kicking woman’

    DR Congo musician Koffi Olomide was on Saturday morning deported from Kenya after videos of him kicking a woman at the Jomo Kenyetta International Airport, Nairobi, on Friday surfaced.

    The video sparked outrage on social media and he was subsequently arrested.

    The 60 year old Soukous musician who was in Kenya for a concert on Saturday however, denied kicking anyone.

    Speaking to the BBC, Olomide said he had tried to “stop” a “girl who wanted to fight the dancers I came with”.

    Regarded as one of Africa’s biggest musician, Kenyans were divided over his deportation but Youth and Gender Cabinet Secretary Sicily Kariuki, said the singer should be deported and his visa permanently revoked.

    Olomide’s lawyer, Prof George Wajackoyah, said they had been “treated like animals.”

    Olomide was arrested on Friday night after an interview and was detained at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport police station overnight.

    The police said he was arrested for creating disturbance at the airport.

    “His conduct was an insult to Kenyans and our constitution,” she said. “Violence against women and girls cannot be accepted in any shape, form or manner. It is a blatant violation of their human rights.”

    In 2008, he was accused for kicking a television cameramn and breaking his camera in Kinshasha, DRC. And in 2012, he bagged a three month suspended prison sentence, also in his country for assaulting his producer.

  • Pitfall Kenya’s electoral body must avoid

    Sir: For some as yet rather inexplicable reasons, we somehow seem to always find a way to discredit our electoral commissions in order to provide the necessary grounds to do away with the existing team and pave the way for the appointment of entirety fresh hands, ahead of every upcoming or new round of elections. It is very sad to note, rather unfortunately, that would appear to be the case with the ongoing debate around the leadership of one of Africa’s highly respected EMBs, the Kenyan Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), at the moment.

    In so doing, however, we inexorably end up depriving the commission, nay the country at large, of the inherent benefits associated with the consolidation, refinements and continuous improvements in the electoral process that often come with having the same team conduct more than one election over the course of their constitutionally stipulated tenure. The case of the Dr.KwadwoAfari-Gyan – led Ghanaian, and Dr. Christiana Thorpe – led Sierra Leonean, Electoral Commissions,in West Africa, which conducted several elections over the course of their respective tenures (six elections for Dr.Gyan and 2 for Mrs. Thorpe), immediately comes to mind in that regard.

    It is not for nothing that several well established electoral jurisdictions the world over, consider it best practice to stagger the appointment of their electoral teams in such a way as to ensure that the tenure of at least half of the existing commissioners always overlaps with that of a new set of appointees, just so as to provide the much needed continuity that is so vital to the critical job they carry out as an EMB.

    The wholesale appointment of a new team into such an important body or, indeed, total replacement of the existing one, especially coming just around, or so close to the election period, often carries with it, the inherent risks of causing needless disruptions and avoidable problems around the conduct of the election itself; a situation we must collectively seek to prevent as Africans, as much as we all possibly can.

    Having said that, one is not, in any way, trying to play down or belittle the rights of Kenyans to raise legitimate issues or concerns around their electoral system as a whole, or, indeed, the electoral management body as presently constituted. But the solution, perhaps, better lies in isolating whatever those specific principal concerns might be, and addressing them well ahead of the upcoming elections, rather than doing away with the current IEBC team so late in the day.

    Kenya’s next general elections slated for August 2017 may indeed, seem so far away on the face of it. But, believe me, 14 months is a relatively short period when it comes to putting in place the necessary operational structures and logistical requirements for such a huge undertaking, with all the hugely daunting and often considerably overbearing social, environmental and infrastructural challenges that often come with the territory.

    This is scarcely enough time for any new commission to settle down to learn the ropes, and still be able to prepare and deliver on citizens’ massive expectations and collective aspirations for a credible, free and fair electoral process. Any move in that direction at this point will be inauspicious and amount to nothing but a bigand unnecessary gamble, at a time the IEBC needs all the support and encouragement it can get from all quarters to prepare for the huge task ahead, and must be avoided at all costs, in my view.The country’s leadership and its entire citizenry from all political persuasions will, therefore, do well to resist the temptation to attempt any risky experimentation with a new IEBC in order to avert the possible complicationsthat may accompany such an ill-advised move. AsMarylynnLongsdon rightly cautions; “if your life takes a turn for the worst, remember you are the one who is driving”.

     

    • Abdullahi Usman,

     usmanabd@gmail.com

  • Kenya to prioritise exports to African countries

    Kenya to prioritise exports to African countries

    Kenya plans to prioritise exports to African countries in order to grow export volumes, the export promotion agency has said on Thursday.

    Export Promotion Council (EPC) Chairman Jas Bedi told a trade forum in Nairobi that the continent has started importing 45 per cent of Kenya’s products.

    “EPC is currently training Kenyan enterprises on export trade.

    “So that they can identity suitable export markets in Africa that have a high potential of importing Kenya’s products,’’ Bedi said during the official opening of the forum.

    The exhibition was organised by the EPC under the EPC Product Development Program for Value Added Agriculture, Livestock and Light Manufactured Products.

    African nations targeted under Kenya’s export promotion campaign include the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique, Sudan and Angola. Uganda is currently Kenya’s largest export market.

    Bedi said that Kenya would also consolidate its market share in the existing markets in the East Africa Community bloc where Kenyan products enjoy preferential tariffs.

    According to the chairman, Africa is an ideal export destination because they purchase manufactured goods as opposed to other regions which buy raw agricultural products.

    “So trade with Africa helps Kenya to achieve its industrialisation vision,’’ Bedi said.

  • Brexit and its  impact on  Nigeria, Kenya South Africa

    Brexit and its impact on Nigeria, Kenya South Africa

    In this special report, EXX Africa Admin analyses the impact of ‘Brexit’ on three of the United Kingdom (UK)’s most important African markets – Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya.

    • The UK vote to leave the EU was based on a non-binding advisory referendum and does not guarantee the UK’s departure from the EU. However, months of political uncertainty throughout Europe will rattle global and African markets.
    • If the UK does leave the EU, the impact on many African economies will be short-term and relatively insignificant. The UK will have two years to renegotiate trade agreements with African countries.
    •The South African economy is now more likely to fall back into recession and extreme currency volatility indicates that a downgrade of its credit rating to non-investment grade in December is now almost inevitable. Bi-lateral security cooperation and aid programmes face less disruption.
    • The effective implementation of a new foreign exchange mechanism and liberalisation of the fuel sector will face fresh hurdles as the UK withdraws from the EU. Nigeria will also struggle to attract interest in new debt sales aimed at financing its expansive budget.
    • Kenyan markets were relatively stable following the ‘Brexit’ vote, although any disruption in EU trade negotiations would negatively impact the cut flowers export market. It is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya, which could even benefit Kenya and other EAC members.

    On June 23, the United Kingdom (UK) voted to leave the European Union (EU) in a non-binding advisory referendum, which resulted in the resignation of UK Prime Minister David Cameron and is likely to trigger fresh elections later this year or in 2017. Despite pressure from some EU countries, it is unlikely that exit negotiations will begin until a new UK government is firmly in place. There is a possibility that the next UK government will not trigger exit negotiations at all, based on a legal technicality or if it calls a second referendum.

    Regardless of the probability of an eventual UK exit from the EU, the referendum result has caused market turmoil across the world, as investors worry that the result of the UK vote could drive fresh momentum to anti-establishment movements in other European countries. Global stocks lost $2 trillion in value on June 24 and the pound sterling fell to a 31-year low. UK companies and banks were some of the worst affected, with $55 billion wiped off banking stocks. The price of commodities also fell, with the price of oil dropping 3.9 per cent to $50 per barrel. However, the price of gold gained 4.7 per cent as a reflection of investors’ perception of gold as a safe haven. At the time of writing on 27 June, Asian stocks and the UK pound were extending losses.

    In Africa, currencies, stocks, and bonds also tumbled as a result of the UK referendum vote. The South African rand fell by eight per cent against the US dollar, before recovering to trade at 3.6 per cent weaker, while falling to a record low against the Japanese yen. Investors are worried that African countries will have less access to international capital markets, which would halt large infrastructure and other projects. There is also a concern that the UK will now disengage from Africa, as its economy inevitably slows, and foreign aid flows are cut. While the UK has a firm commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of its Gross National Income (GNI) on development aid, an eventual recession in the UK would decline GNI in absolute terms and thus diminish development aid to Africa.

    Moreover, any trade deals that the UK has in place with African countries are essentially trade agreements with the EU, which has exclusive jurisdiction over its members’ trade deals. Any exit from the EU could terminate the UK’s access to the EU’s single market, forcing the country to negotiate new trade accords with African countries, which is likely to be a cumbersome and lengthy process.

    It is however likely that the UK would leave many existing trade agreements in place and thus mitigate risk of trade disruption. In this special report, EXX Africa assesses the likely implications of a UK departure from the EU for some of the UK’s top African trading partners, as well as other implications on wider investment and security. We analyse two key drivers of risk, firstly the impact of a ‘Brexit’ on existing trade and other arrangements with the EU, and secondly the longer term effect of a probable economic slow-down of the UK economy, which is the fifth largest in the world with substantial ties to the African continent.

     

    Impact on South Africa

     

    The South African economy is now more likely to fall back into recession and extreme currency volatility indicates that a downgrade of its credit rating to non-investment grade in December is now almost inevitable. Bi-lateral security cooperation and aid programmes face less disruption.

    The South African economy is the most exposed to the global economy and in particular its currency is the most volatile among its emerging market peers. South Africa is reliant on foreign capital to finance its wide current account deficit. Additional fears of euro-scepticism in other EU countries have also stoked fears that South Africa’s trade with the EU is under threat. South African exports to the EU reached over $14.2 billion in 2015. However, the impact on the South African economy would be short-lived and relatively manageable. In a worst case scenario, where the UK economy were to shrink by five per cent and UK imports were to drop by 10 per cent, South Africa’s economic growth would fall by only 0.1 per cent  (according to research by North West University).

    South Africa’s Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has said that the country’s treasury and the central bank would take any additional measures to cope with the implications of the ‘Brexit’ vote, while South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has assured markets that South African banks and financial institutions could withstand the shock, as demonstrated during the 2008/09 global financial crisis. While a 0.1 per cent loss in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth is relatively small, the country’s economic growth rate has already slumped, recording a 1.2 per cent contraction in the first quarter of 2016, as mining and farming output shrank. The UK exit vote thus indicates that a recession will be increasingly likely for the South African economy in 2016.

    The impact on the currency would be more significant and have longer term implications on the country’s debt rating. The rand has already lost 21 per cent against the US dollar so far in 2016. On June24, the South African rand was the worst performing currency after the UK pound, before paring some of its previous losses. This is due to South Africa’s close financial ties to the UK and the fact that many large South African companies have a dual listing on the London and Johannesburg stock exchanges. According to research by unicredit, UK banks’ claims on South African companies account for 178 per cent of South Africa’s foreign currency. South Africa’s already volatile currency and a probable recession further would increase the prospect of a downgrade of the country’s credit rating to non-investment grade by December. The longer term implications would lead to weak growth, higher inflation and interest rates, as well as extensive capital flight.

    According to Bloomberg, the UK is South Africa’s fourth largest export destination, mostly dominated by metals and agricultural goods. The bulk of these exports have duty-free access to the EU under the terms of the Trade Development Co-operation Agreement. The trade terms with the UK will now need renegotiation and revision, which could take up to two years, and significantly impact investment in key industries such as mining and agriculture.

    Moreover, South Africa is a member of the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), which is dominated by asymmetric trade with South Africa. Other SACU members such as  Botswana, Namibia, Lesotho, and Swaziland, will similarly be affected by the trade renegotiations with the UK. South Africa’s Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies has offered UK companies that stand to lose their duty-free access to EU markets a base in South Africa, thereby continuing these companies’ access to the EU through the EU-SADC Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), which includes six countries of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

    Beyond trade and investment, the implications of an eventual ‘Brexit’ are less likely to be extensive. The presence of the British Peace Support Team (BPST) in South Africa, which provides for bilateral military co-operation such as joint exercises with the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), is unlikely to be affected. South Africa is one of the top ten countries receiving British aid, which could be cut down as the UK economy enters severe recession. Britain’s bilateral development programme in South Africa came to an end in 2015, since when the relationship between the two countries has shifted to one of mutual co-operation and trade.

     

    Impact on Nigeria

     

    The effective implementation of a new foreign exchange (forex) mechanism and liberalisation of the fuel sector will face fresh hurdles as the UK withdraws from the EU. Nigeria will also struggle to attract interest in new debt sales aimed at financing its expansive budget.

    The main impact of a ‘Brexit’ on Nigeria would be further deterioration of the country’s already struggling economy, which has been caused by the fall in global oil prices and a steep drop in local crude production due to an insurgency in the Niger Delta. There is extensive trade and security cooperation between the UK and Nigeria that would be likely to face several years of disruption as the UK departs from the EU. Nigeria is the UK’s second-largest export market in Africa. Bilateral trade between the two countries is currently worth $8.3 billion and projected to reach $25 billion by 2020. The UK is also Nigeria’s largest source of foreign investment, with assets worth over $1.4 billion.

    Moreover, UK-Nigerian remittances account for $21 billion a year. The UK is also one of the largest development assistance donors to Nigeria, although Nigeria is not as aid-dependent as most continental counterparts.

    A slowing UK economy on the back of a departure from the EU and potential disruption as the UK renegotiates its trade agreements, would be likely to reduce trade flows, foreign direct investment, and Nigerian remittances. There is also no guarantee that other EU countries will make up the UK shortfall in trade and investment, as other EU countries look to Iran for more reliable access to oil and to Asia for cheaper labour.

    On June 24, Nigerian stocks ended a three-day rally, falling 1.4 per cent over worries of Britain’s vote to leave the EU. Nigerian banks, such as Fidelity Bank and Zenith Bank, recorded the biggest losses. Nigerian stocks had previously rallied 8.5per cent after the government floated the naira and ended a highly controversial currency peg.

    As a result, new portfolio inflows will slow, which will hamper the implementation of the country’s new foreign exchange mechanism. On June 20, the central bank introduced a more flexible foreign currency policy, removing a de facto peg of around 197 naira to the US dollar. The naira’s 16-month peg to the dollar had overvalued the Nigerian currency, resulted in an economic contraction, and harmed investments. The implementation of the fuel sector liberalisation, including the termination of a burdensome state-subsidy scheme, would be likely to face implementation issues.

    The sector’s liberalisation will add to fuel importers’ margins and will allow shipments of fuel to resume. The liberalisation of the fuel marketing sector and the proposed introduction of a flexible exchange rate are both aimed at soothing foreign investor concerns and to attract new fundraising to finance a record budget deficit widened by a fall in oil revenues. The effective implementation of the new currency regime and establishing its credibility will be key to attracting new Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and portfolio flows. Finance Minister Mrs. Kemi Adeosun is due to launch a planned eurobond sale later in 2016. The government plans to raise $10 billion of new debt of which $5 billion would come from foreign investors. Much of this planning would be delayed as risk-aversed investors steer away from Nigerian debt.

    Beyond trade and investment, the UK is also a key partner in Nigerian security. The UK has been crucial to drawing international attention to the Islamist Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast. There is a risk that the UK would become distracted from international security threats, such as those by Boko Haram, as it negotiates its departure from the EU. However, the US and France have proven more crucial partners than the UK in combating Boko Haram, thus mitigating the effect on counter-insurgency efforts.

     

    Impact on Kenya

     

    Kenyan markets were relatively stable following the ‘Brexit’ vote, although any disruption in EU trade negotiations would negatively impact the cut flowers export market. It is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya, which could even benefit Kenya and other East African Community (EAC) members.

    Kenyan officials were quick to respond to the market turmoil followed by the UK’s vote to leave the EU. Finance Minister Henry Rotich assured investors that Kenya has adequate foreign exchange reserves to absorb any shocks from the crisis. Kenya has $5.6 billion in foreign reserves, which amounts to five months of import cover, which is higher than the four months the country usually holds.

    The central bank also said it would be ready to intervene in money and foreign exchange markets if required. Such assurances steadied the impact on the Kenyan shilling, but some banking stocks still suffered losses. Equity Bank and Co-operative Bank were down over two per cent on June 24, while other stocks were unchanged.

    However, there is a risk of capital flight from Kenya as risk-aversed investors seek safe havens. This would weaken the shilling and increase import costs. Kenya’s import bill has steadily increased by more than 10 per cent over the past five years. Another key concern would be that ongoing negotiations of a trade agreement between the EU and the East African Community (EAC) would be delayed as the EU copes with the UK’s departure. The Kenya Flowers Association expects any such delays would cost the Kenya flower industry USD38 million per month. Horticulture is a primary export market for Kenya and over one third of the EU’s cut flower imports, mostly to The Netherlands and the UK, are derived from Kenya. However, it is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya given the two countries’ long-standing bilateral relations. Such negotiations could even benefit Kenya and other EAC countries, as Kenya gains leverage over setting trade terms.

    Although a series of diplomatic disputes have strained British-Kenyan relations over the past few years, Kenya is likely to feature as the UK’s principal destination for emerging market investment. Despite diplomatic disputes, Kenya is likely to remain a preferred beneficiary of British foreign investment in agribusiness (tea, tobacco) and in oil and gas, with the UK being instrumental in the development of Kenya’s region-leading financial sector.

    Much like US investment, British investment is likely to increase in the renewable energy sector, especially financing and technical co-operation for geothermal, solar, and wind projects, which represent lower-risk sectors. Given these interests, and the large presence of British expatriates and tourists, the UK is likely to maintain security co-operation towards mitigating the threat posed by militant group al-Shabaab, which has British nationals active within its ranks.

     

     

  • Buhari condemns increased global risk to journalists

    Buhari condemns increased global risk to journalists

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday in Abuja condemned the increased global risk to journalists in the performance of their professional duties.

    The President spoke at the opening of the Congress of the Federation of

    African Journalists hosted by the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the president delivered a keynote address on the theme: ”The Political Change and the Safety of Working Journalists in Africa”.

    Buhari, who was represented by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said the risk came in the form of “harassment, arrests, detention and murder”.

    “According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), 72 journalists were killed globally in the year 2015, the most recent information available in that respect. Eleven of the 72 who died in that year were killed in Africa.

    “The same year, out of 20 listed deadliest countries for journalists, five were from Africa – South

    Sudan, Somalia, Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo and Libya.

    “Also, 90 journalists are currently being detained in many countries.

    “It is, therefore, fitting that the safety of working journalists in Africa will be of concern to your organisation, the Federation of African Journalists, ” he said.

    The President said that journalists were targeted not only to restrict the free flow of information, but increasingly as leverage to secure huge ransoms and political concessions through sheer violence.

    He charged the Federation to work with the governments of their countries to remove the existential threats to media practitioners.

    He said the Federation could also work with other organisations committed to the protection of journalists.

    Such organisations according to him, include the Committee to Protect Journalists, the International Federation of Journalists and the International Press Institute, to eliminate or reduce the risks to journalists

    “It is also important for media institutions to ensure the adoption of best safety protocols for their journalists.

    “They must develop and implement procedures and tools aimed at ensuring the physical and

    psychological safety as well as the digital security of journalists, ” he said.

    The President said his administration saw the media as a partner in progress, and “has never contemplated harassing, not to mention killing, any journalist” .

    “The media represents the eyes and ears of the world and attempt to

    silence it through the harassment, arrests, detention and murder of

    journalists, is akin to making the world go blind and deaf.

    “I can report to this Congress that not a single journalist is being detained or harassed in our country today.

    “The government of the day is not a threat to the media, and it is not about to stifle press freedom or deny anyone his or her constitutionally guaranteed rights, “he said.

    The president also noted that his Administration placed preference to security and welfare of its citizens.

    He declared the summit open and wished participants fruitful deliberations.

  • CAF disqualifies Kenya from U-20 AFCON qualifiers

    CAF disqualifies Kenya from U-20 AFCON qualifiers

    The Organising Committee for the U-20 Africa Cup of Nations has disqualified Kenya from the 2017 edition for fielding five ineligible players against Sudan.

    The East Africans fielded the players during their First Round first leg clash against Sudan on April 3 at the El Merreikh Stadium in Khartoum, which ended 1-1.

    The five players include Erick Otieno, born on Sept. 27, 1996, Nicholas Kipkirui, born on May 31, 1996, and Boniface Muchiri, born on Aug. 23, 1996.

    The rest are Eugene Mukangula, born on June 22, 1996 and Theodore Kilele, born on Sept. 25, 1996.

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF), in a statement on its website, said this was contrary to a circular sent to all National Associations.

    It had said only players born on Jan. 1, 1997 or after are eligible to participate in the U-20 Africa Cup of Nations scheduled for Zambia in 2017.

    “The Organising Committee, after its findings, concluded that the Football Kenya Federation (FKF) clearly violated article 40.11 of the competition’s regulations.

    “The regulation states that a team which allows a non-qualified or a suspended player to take part in a direct knockout match shall lose the match and shall be eliminated from the competition, even in the absence of protests.’’

    CAF General Secretary Hicham El Amrani said the Kenyan under-20 national team has consequently been disqualified from the preliminaries.

    In a letter dated April 19, addressed to the CEO of FKF, CAF also said the Sudanese under-20 national team has qualified for the next round.

    It however pointed out that the decision could be contested before the CAF Appeal Board within three days of notification.

     

  • Taipei protests Kenya’s deportation of Taiwanese

    Kenyan police have deported dozens of Taiwan nationals to China over charges of telecommunication fraud, in spite of protests from Taipei, officials said on Tuesday.

     

    Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Eleanor Wang on Tuesday said after news broke of the first eight Taiwan nationals who were deported on April 8.

     

    “The move was tantamount to kidnapping.

     

    “Kenya does not recognise Taiwan, but does have diplomatic relations with China, Beijing does not recognise the government of Taipei, and pressures other countries not to do so either,’’ Wang said.

     

    The eight deported on Monday were acquitted in a Kenyan court, before Kenyan police allowed Chinese public security officers to force them onto a China Southern Airlines.

     

    Wang added that they were deported in spite of an injunction by the Kenyan High Court and protests by Taipei diplomats in South Africa.

     

    Taiwan’s Justice Ministry said, citing Beijing officials that they were now detained in Beijing on further suspicion on telecommunications fraud.

     

    The Director-General of West Asian and African Affairs of the Foreign Ministry, Chen Chun-hsien said another 37 Taiwan nationals were deported this week.

     

    It was not clear what stage their cases were at in the Kenyan courts.

     

    “Our citizens have not been convicted of any crimes and, if suspected of offences, should be returned to Taiwan for handling by our judicial system,’’ he said.

     

    If this action becomes a precedent, it may create a domino effect that could be extended to abduct Taiwan citizens to China for alleged violations of China`s political as well as criminal laws.

     

    DPP Secretary-General Wu Jau-shieh called Beijing’s actions a grave violation of human rights that would only worsen the impression of China in Taiwan