2023 African Nations Cup qualifiers results & fixtures (2nd round) – Africa – Ahram Online

All times GMT+2
Sunday 5 June 
Group E
Madagascar 1-1 AngolaScorers: Rakotoharimalala 36 / Gelson 43
Central Africa 1-1 GhanaScorers: Namnganda 41 / Kudus 17
Group J
Botswana 0-0 Tunisia
Monday 6 June 
21:00 Equatorial Guinea vs. Libya
Tuesday 7 June 
Group B
15:00 Eswatini vs. Burkina Faso18:00 Cap Verde vs. Togo
Group H
18:00 Zambia vs. Comoros
Group L
21:00 Rwanda vs. Senegal
Wednesday 8 June
Group F
15:00 Uganda vs. Niger18:00 Tanzania vs. Algeria
Group G
18:00 Congo vs. Gambia
Group I
18:00 Gabon vs. Mauritania21:00 Sudan vs. DR Congo
Group L
21:00 Benin vs. Mozambique
Thursday 9 June 
Group C
15:00 Burundi vs. Cameroon
Group G
15:00 South Sudan vs. Mali
Group D
18:00 Guinea vs. Malawi18:00 Ethiopia vs. Egypt
Group H
19:00 Lesotho vs. Cote D’Ivoire
Monday 13 June 
Group A
15:00 Mauritius vs. Nigeria18:00 Sierra Leon vs. Guinea Bissau
Group K
21:00 Liberia vs. Morocco
(For more sports news and updates, follow Ahram Online Sports on Twitter at @AO_Sports and on Facebook at AhramOnlineSports.)

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West African leaders put off further post-coup sanctions | Star Tribune

ACCRA, Ghana — West African heads of state put off further punishing the leaders of Mali, Guinea and Burkina Faso at a regional summit Saturday, as coup leaders in all three countries continue to insist that it will take years before new elections can be held.

The 15-nation regional bloc known as ECOWAS will convene again on July 3 before determining if further sanctions will be implemented in the three suspended members states, ECOWAS Commission President Jean-Claude Kassi Brou said.

ECOWAS already imposed strong economic sanctions against Mali back in January — shutting down most commerce, along with land and air borders with other countries in the bloc. Those measures have crippled Mali’s economy, prompting concern about the humanitarian consequences on Malians.

The sanctions have not yet brought about a political breakthrough either: In the months since, Col. Assimi Goita has only further isolated the country internationally, pulling out of a regional security force and also shutting down two leading French media broadcasters.

Goita’s government also still insists that no vote can be held until 2024, which would extend their time to power to nearly four years despite originally agreeing to an 18-month transition back to democracy.

The juntas in Guinea and Burkina Faso also have proposed three-year transitions, which have been rejected by ECOWAS as too long a wait for new elections.

The wave of military coups began in August 2020, when Goita and other soldiers overthrew Mali’s democratically elected president. Nine months later, he carried out a second coup when he dismissed the country’s civilian transitional leader and became president himself.

Mutinous soldiers deposed Guinea’s president in September 2021, and Burkina Faso’s leader was ousted in yet another coup in the region back in January.

The political upheaval came at a time when many observers were starting to think that military power grabs were a thing of the past in West Africa: Mali had gone eight years without one, while Guinea had made it 13 years.

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Associated Press writers Krista Larson in Dakar, Senegal, Baba Ahmed in Bamako, Mali; and Boubacar Diallo in Conakry, Guinea contributed.

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New EU military missions in West Africa to counter Russia – EUobserver

The EU is aiming to launch three new military missions in West Africa after Russia pushed Europe out of the Central African Republic (CAR) and Mali and threatens to do so in Burkina Faso. The new missions ought to be in Burkina Faso, one of the Gulf of Guinea states, and in Niger according to a “strategic review” paper by the EU foreign service dated 25 May and seen by EUobserver.

Niger slated to host EU military training mission (Photo: Jean Rebiffe)

The Niger mission is the first to go ahead after Nigerien authorities requested an EU “logistic and maintenance centre of excellence in the vicinity of Niamey”, it said.

But the EU is keen “to go beyond this initial request to also cover a ‘train, equip and accompany’ package for specific units or even a full-scale military operation to accompany Nigerien armed forces to combat”.

Burkinabe armed forces “during discussions at technical level” asked the EU for a similar package, the EU foreign service said.

But Burkina Faso is playing a double game, because it also sent a high-level military delegation to Mali in mid-April and the EU suspects it discussed using Russian mercenaries to fight jihadists the same way Mali has done.

“The possibility of a replication of the Malian model [in Burkina Faso] and the use of Russia-affiliated forces cannot be ruled out,” the EU foreign service warned.

The Gulf of Guinea project is in its infancy.

But the EU foreign service spoke of creating “a limited military footprint in one identified coastal state” that would host EU military trainers who could carry out “bespoke” missions in the region.

The EU military expansion comes after Russia pushed out French-led European forces from CAR last year and then Mali this year in what is increasingly looking like an African front in Russia’s geopolitical clash with the West.

The EU also hopes to create its own rapid reaction force by 2025 designed to fight in places such as the Sahel in what French president Emmanuel Macron has championed as Europe’s “strategic autonomy”.

The new EU force must be ready to go into combat to defend Europe’s interests, the EU foreign service paper said.

EU countries must “accept the risks associated with closer accompaniment of partner forces closer to the combat zone”, it said.

But for all Macron and the EU foreign service’s talk, Russian president Vladimir Putin’s push into Françafrique risks making the EU ambitions appear like too little too late.

The EU folded its CAR mission in December 2021 after Kremlin-linked mercenaries from the Wagner group took command of EU-trained soldiers and committed atrocities.

It also suspended its Mali military and civilian training missions in May after Mali brought in Wagner mercenaries to fight jihadists.

Reputation damage

The EU pull-back was due “to prevent any reputational risk due to Malian defence and security forces trained by the EU falling under the control or engaging along of Russia-affiliated forces, as it had been observed in the centre of the country”, the EU foreign service said.

The EU had funded new military camps in Konna, Tominian, Timissa, Sayed, and Korientze in central Mali and trained soldiers and gendarmes there in the past two years, the EU paper noted.

But “the units (both National Guard and National Gendarmerie) in these posts, which were trained by EUCAP Sahel Mali [the EU mission] prior to their deployment, are now under military command and are integrated in joint operations with Russia-affiliated forces,” the EU paper noted.

“It is also assessed that Russia-affiliated forces are gradually more present and influential at the strategic level” in Malian military circles, the EU warned.

And now Malian soldiers “together with Russia-affiliated forces” were “terrorising the population with punitive raids, targeting the Fulani community in particular”, the EU said.

“Reports of violence on civilians have reached unprecedented levels,” it said. “It is evident that Russia-affiliated forces’ presence alongside the MAF [Malian Armed Forces] coincides with serious and systematic human rights violations”.

The few EU military and civilian trainers who are staying on in Mali will do so to maintain some contact with Malian military commanders and keep an eye on Russian deployments.

“It is assessed that about 1,000 Russia-affiliated personnel, mostly relying on Malian equipment, are deployed in Mali, with a notable presence in Sévaré, Ségou, Niono, Timbuktu and Gossi in MAF camps,” the EU foreign service said.

“Air Base 101, in Bamako, is used as a logistical hub for their deployment,” it added.

Wagner’s presence was accompanied by a disinformation campaign which aimed at “deflecting attention from Russia-affiliated forces atrocities against civilians” and contained anti-French “pan-Africanist” ideology, it noted.

And all that was taking place amid potentially lucrative Malian mineral reserves as well as dire poverty and insecurity for ordinary people — 6 million of whom needed food aid in a country where one in five schools are closed.

Not enough

Looking back to CAR, the country has become so closely tied to Russia that it now teaches Russian in its schools and offered Putin to send fighters to Ukraine.

But if the Russian leader wanted to fully replicate his CAR success in Mali, he might have to commit more resources than at present, the EU foreign service said.

Jihadist attacks against Malian camps in March and April showed that “around 1,000 Russia-affiliated forces along with the MAF are not enough to clear and hold the centre of the country”, the EU paper noted.

“The sustainability of the Russian support to Mali in the current global environment is also questionable,” the EU added, referring to Putin’s military losses on his primary battlefields in Ukraine.

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German Chancellor Scholz Kicks off Africa Trip in Senegal

dakar, senegal — 
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said his country is interested in a major gas exploitation project in Senegal as he began a three-nation visit to Africa on Sunday that also is focused on the geopolitical consequences of the war in Ukraine.
Senegal is believed to have significant deposits of natural gas along its border with Mauritania at a time when Germany and other European countries are trying to reduce their dependence on importing Russian gas.
“We have begun exchanges and we will continue our efforts at the level of experts because it is our wish to achieve progress,” Scholz said at a joint news briefing with Senegalese President Macky Sall.
The gas project off the coast of Senegal is being led by BP, and the first barrels are not expected until next year.
This week’s trip marks Scholz’s first to Africa since becoming chancellor nearly six months ago. Two of the countries he is visiting — Senegal and South Africa — have been invited to attend the Group of 7 summit in Germany at the end of June.
Participants there will try to find a common position toward Russia, which was kicked out of the then-Group of Eight following its 2014 seizure of Crimea from Ukraine.
Leaders at the G-7 summit also will be addressing the threat of climate change. Several G-7 countries, including Germany and the United States, signed a ‘just energy transition partnership’ with South Africa last year to help the country wean itself off heavily polluting coal.
A similar agreement is in the works with Senegal, where Germany has supported the construction of a solar farm.
German officials also said Scholz will make a stop in Niger, a country that like its neighbors has long been battling Islamic extremists.
Earlier this month, the German government backed a plan to move hundreds of its soldiers to Niger from neighboring Mali. The development comes amid a deepening political crisis in Mali that prompted former colonial power France to announce it was withdrawing its troops after nine years of helping Mali battle insurgents.
Germany officials say their decision also was motivated by concerns that Malian forces receiving EU training could cooperate with Russian mercenaries now operating in the country.
Germany, though, will increase its participation in a U.N. peacekeeping mission in Mali, providing up to 1,400 soldiers. The Cabinet’s decisions still need to be approved by parliament.
Niger is also a major transit hub for illegal migration to Europe. People from across West Africa connect with smugglers there to make the journey northward to attempt the dangerous trip across the Mediterranean Sea.

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African leaders to attend 2022 World Economic Forum in Davos – CGTN

FILE PHOTO: A man silhouettes in front of the logo of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2020. (Photo/Markus Schreiber,file)

FILE PHOTO: A man silhouettes in front of the logo of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2020. (Photo/Markus Schreiber,file)

African presidents are expected join the world’s political and business elite in Davos, Switzerland, for the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting that starts today and is expected to run until May 26.The 2022 meeting is the first in-person meeting since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.Happening under the theme of History at a Turning Point: Government Policies and Business Strategies, the meeting will have 200 sessions attended by more than 2,500 leaders and experts.Some of the African leaders that have confirmed attendance include Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Namibia President Hage Geingob and Rwanda President Paul Kagame.The Forum is expected to place focus on the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.The 2022 forum will also have panels on a host of other issues, including climate change, rising energy prices, global supply chain problems, gender inequality and poverty.

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Libyan rivals resume U.N.-brokered talks on elections | AP News

CAIRO (AP) — Rival Libyan officials on Sunday resumed talks in the Egyptian capital, the latest U.N.-led efforts to agree on constitutional amendments for elections as the North African nation again finds itself at a political impasse.Twelve lawmakers from Libya’s east-based parliament and 11 from the High Council of State, an advisory body from western Libya, were attending the Cairo-hosted talks, said Abdullah Bliheg, the parliament’s spokesman.The U.N. special adviser on Libya, Stephanie Williams, said the talks aim at addressing core challenges — including the political system, eligibility criteria, and a timeline for elections. She advised the attendees that they have until May 28 to come with an agreement.“This session constitutes your last chance to provide a credible response to the expectations of the Libyan people and make concrete progress on these issues,” she said.The first round of the talks

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Chad: Hundreds stage anti-French Protest In N'djamena | Africanews

Hundreds of Chadians joined anti-French protests called by the opposition coalition Wakit Tama on Saturday, May 14.
Protesters oppose France’s military presence in the country and support for transitional President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno, who has been in power since his father’s death in 2021.
They reportedly attacked “symbols” of their former colonial power, including several Total petrol stations.

The protest was mainly attended by students with many on motocycles and chanting “France get out”.
**”Now France is meddling in politics, we don’t know, now the whole Chadian territory is occupied by the French army. The French army is concerned with the wealth of Chad’s subsoil and not with the well-being of the Chadian people.”**Souleyman Tahir, Protester
Former president, Idriss Déby Itno, headed an authoritarian regime for 30 years and was killed in battle on April 20, 2021, during a rebellion in the north of the country.
Chadian police fired tear gas and used water canon to disperse hundreds of protesters who took to the streets of the capital and other towns in an anti-French protest that saw the destruction of some French-linked businesses.
The protest was called by Chadian civil society coalition Wakit Tamma to denounce France’s backing of the Transitional Military Council that seized power following the battlefield death of President Idriss Deby in April 2021, a spokesman said.
As France’s influence wanes in its former colonies, recent protests in countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have seen calls for increased military ties with Russia instead of France.

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Family death from nursing shortage inspires African-native to earn Miami degree – Journal-News

It was a family tragedy that first led her to consider nursing as a career.A relative in her native African country died while in an under-staffed hospital, Addae said, with only one nurse for every 50 patients.“I vowed to become a nurse to care for the sick,” said Addae, a devout Christian. “I am a woman of faith.”Earning a degree while raising four young children requires much, she said. So, she often turns to one of her favorite Bible passages.“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. When the going gets tough, I just talk to my God.”Addae’s perseverance of handling both motherhood times four and undergraduate classes drew both the attention of and praise of Miami University Hamilton professors.“I remember bawling my eyes out one day when I was having a conversation with Miami Professor Dr. Eyad Mussallem because I thought I was going to fail a course,” Addae said. “He encouraged and believed in me when I felt I couldn’t find the strength to carry on.”Addae “is an excellent student who is always willing to volunteer to help other students and goes above and beyond what is asked of her in the classroom,” said Tricia Neu, assistant professor of Nursing and director of the FNP track. “We are so excited to have her in our grad program.”Addae wasn’t surprised by the academic assistance or high quality of it regional nursing professors.“I decided to enroll at Miami University Regionals because of its outstanding academic reputation.”And now she is also setting her sights on smashing a gender stereotype held by some family members in her old country.“Becoming a nurse practitioner will allow me to become the first woman among my siblings to pursue (an advanced degree),” she said. “I’ll break the stereotype that only men can achieve higher academic success in my family.”

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Ethiopia revokes accreditation of The Economist reporter – The East African

By TESFA-ALEM TEKLE

Ethiopian authorities on Friday revoked the press credentials of a foreign journalist who had been working for The Economist in the Horn of Africa nation.In a letter issued Friday afternoon and seen by The EastAfrican, the Ethiopian Media Authority (EMA) said it has cancelled media accreditation of Tom Gardner, citing failure to maintain professional ethics and violations of the country’s laws and regulations. It did not gave details of the allegations.“As a professional journalist accredited to work in Ethiopia, you know very well that the condition of your permit is dependent on your strict observation of professional ethics and the rules and the regulations of the country,” it said.“This letter is written to inform you that your accreditation is revoked effective immediately, and you are no longer allowed to work as a journalist in Ethiopia.”EMA said that prior to the decision, the authority had several discussions with the journalist.However, the authority alleged that Mr Gardner failed to live to standards of conduct for journalists.  

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“Despite our repeated discussions, verbal warnings and written reprimands, you have not shown the willingness to correct your mistaken approach,” the letter said.It, however, said The Economist is welcome to appoint an “unbiased and independent” journalist to replace Mr Gardner.A few weeks ago, EMA had issued a warning letter to the journalist after he posted on his private social media that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and TPLF rebel leader Debre Zion Gebre-Michael had a telephone conversation.Authorities warned him to be careful about his reporting, especially on stories that could affect national interest.Since the Tigray conflict broke out in November 2020, the Ethiopian government has been criticised for creating a difficult environment for journalists and dissidents.Journalists have also complained that they have been denied access to war zones where right violations, including massacres, rapes, and other serious crimes, have been reported.The Ethiopian government led by PM Abiy Ahmed, a 2019 Noble Peace Prize winner, has been criticised by several international right groups for using the state of emergency as a tool to arbitrarily detain several journalists to stifle critical reporting and to silence war zone news coverage.The Committee to Protect Journalists’ (CPJ) 2021 prison census ranked Ethiopia as sub-Saharan Africa’s second-worst jailer of journalists.“We are very concerned. This development is the latest sign of Ethiopia’s deteriorating press freedom environment,” CPJ’s Africa Program Coordinator, Angela Quintal, told The EastAfrican on Friday.Since the conflict in Tigray erupted, several Ethiopian journalists and translators working for a range of international media organisation—including to AFP, Nation Media Group, Reuters, the BBC and the Financial Times—have been detained while doing their jobs.Last year Ethiopian authorities also revoked press accreditation of a New York Times reporter.

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Agenda 2063: Education in Africa, a key to success, By Rahma O. Oladosu – Premium Times Nigeria

I believe one of the easiest ways to push this Agenda forward is through education. Africa acknowledges the fact that social and economic development is not possible without substantive investment in education and research, especially at the tertiary level.

Over time, it has become imperative for Africa to map out a strategy of regional cooperation and integration and lay the foundation for sustainable development. The establishment of the African Union (replacing the Organisation of African Unity) has been a step in that direction. The Union aims at achieving greater unity and solidarity and accelerating the political and socio-economic integration of the continent.

In great efforts by the African Union to accomplish what it has set out to achieve in making the continent a better one, AGENDA 2063 was introduced.

Now, what exactly is agenda 2063?

Agenda 2063 is Africa’s blueprint and master plan for transforming the continent into the global powerhouse of the future. It is said to be the continent’s strategic framework that aims to deliver on its goal for inclusive and sustainable development and it is a concrete manifestation of the pan-African drive for unity, self-determination, freedom, progress and collective prosperity, pursued under Pan-Africanism and towards African Renaissance. Agenda 2063 encapsulates not only Africa’s Aspirations for the Future but also identifies key Flagship Programmes which can boost the continent’s economic growth and development, and lead to the rapid transformation of the continent. It also identifies key activities to be undertaken in its 10-year Implementation Plan, which will ensure that Agenda 2063 delivers both quantitative and qualitative transformational outcomes for Africans.

I believe one of the easiest ways to push this Agenda forward is through education. Africa acknowledges the fact that social and economic development is not possible without substantive investment in education and research, especially at the tertiary level.

Getting an education is not just a fundamental human right, It is pivotal to increasing employment and income opportunities. It is fundamental to breaking the cycle of poverty. Education is the key to unlocking the golden door of freedom for all in Africa. It is the bedrock of social and economic development.

Education is crucial as it is an investment in human capital. This yields tremendous benefits on many levels and spheres. It benefits the individual, family community, and nation. Education is a sustainable means of alleviating poverty and bring lasting change.

Consequently, to effect permanent change, any effort to bring lasting change must include education, in one way or the other.

Recently, the executive secretary of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), Architect Sonny Echono, played host to a team from the African Union Commission for Education, led by Professor Mohammed Belhocine, the commissioner for education who came to the Fund on an impactful courtesy visit, which I was privileged to witness.

The Fund, generally known for providing support for research and development in tertiary institutions in Nigeria, revealed its readiness, through its management, to forge a partnership with the Pan African University to push the African Union agenda forward. Arc. Echono further said that the Nigerian government is actually thinking in the direction of promoting technology and is in the process of establishing a national institute in Abuja, which will be a post-graduate institution for the promotion of the technological transformation of the country.

I personally think this would be a plus for the education sector in Nigeria, considering the fact that there hasn’t been much attention given to technology in most of our tertiary institutions recently.

The Pan African University (PAU) is the culmination of continental initiatives of the African Union Commission to revitalise higher education and research on the continent. According to the African Union, the PAU will greatly boost the population and retention of high-level human resources, alongside quality knowledge outputs and will attract the best intellectual capacity from all over the world.

Fortunately, the Pan African University partnership with TETFund will most definitely yield positive results with the latter providing tremendous support in terms of the construction of more classrooms, procurement of laboratory equipment and all other basic infrastructure needed. This major development will provide a conducive environment and enable student researchers to learn one or two things to attract value. It will also be a huge opportunity for scholars to troop to the university.

With this, the goals of the African Union is being geared towards the right direction with education as an early foundation, encouraging research through the Pan African University and bringing young Africans together to study and conduct research for about three to five years, and in the process they get to know each other better in terms of their cultures, languages and beliefs. And this will create the real momentum for Pan Africanism, and a step towards realising Agenda 2063.

Rahma Olamide Oladosu writes from Wuye District, Abuja.

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W/Africa's challenges not insurmountable, say Catholic Bishops – Vanguard News

.By Luminous Jannamike, Abuja Catholic Bishops from the 16 West African countries, on Saturday in Abuja, said the sub-region will overcome its current challenges.However, they insisted that political leaders must halt policies and practices that permit the exploitation of the people. The clerics also resolve to work with critical stakeholders to remove all obstacles to peaceful coexistence, development and productivity in the region.The Bishops under the auspices of the Reunion of the Episcopal Conferences of West Africa (RECOWA) said this in a communique made available to journalists at the end of their 4th General Assembly, which was held in Nigeria’s capital city. The religious leaders, who acknowledged that West African countries were battling the common challenges of insecurity, corruption, and sectional marginalisation among others, nonetheless said there is no need to despair because tough times do not last forever.They said, “We recognize the inherent dangers in our current society, but we remain optimistic that none of the problems bedevilling our sub-region is insurmountable. “However, we need to work together, with like minds in politics, religion, economics, social life the media, in synergy to fight against all forms of man’s inhumanity to man.”The communique was signed by RECOWA President, the Most Revd. Alexis Touabli Youlou, further stressed that all stakeholders must sustain the advocacy for positive change in society. To this end, it added: “As Church, we call on politicians, other leaders and indeed our people to order in their never-ending craving for self-aggrandisement and acquisition of wealth.“We urge Christian politicians, traditional rulers, technocrats, professionals, especially those in the media, businessmen and women, and indeed all our people to live out their Christian vocation in fighting corruption, ethnocentrism, sectionalism, and all forms of injustice in society.“We strongly denounce the policies and practices of our governments and leaders who facilitate and permit the exploitation and marginalisation of our people and endanger the future of our children.“Tragically, some individuals engaged in acts of violence and terrorism have aggravated the state of insecurity in our subregion. We, therefore, call on all never to grow weary in denouncing and rooting cut such evils in our midst.”The Catholic Bishops also said that at the end of their deliberations, they held elections and the following emerged as the leaders of RECOWA for the next three years:“Most Reverend Alexis Touabli Youlou, Bishop of Agbovilie in Cote D’Ivoire, President; Most Reverend Joseph Kwaku Afrifan-Agyekum, Bishop of Koforidua in Ghana, first vice president; and Most Reverend José Lampra, Bishop of Bissau in Guinea Bissau, second vice president.“Also elected to the secretariat of the reunion are Father Vitalis Anaehobi, Secretary-General, from Nigeria.”Vanguard News NigeriaRELATED NEWS

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Indian doctor removes 'rare' cancerous tumour from African infant's brain – India News

Ayrton Timm de Oliveira and Edwina, both 26 and from Mozambique, were devastated when their infant son and first child, John (name changed), began experiencing major vision loss, delayed growth and feeding difficulties. He is a ten-month-old baby.After presenting their child’s reports to several Indian hospitals, the parents were informed that their child had a massive brain tumour. Symptoms such as insufficient oral food consumption resulted in the child remaining underweight and constantly crying. The tumour was 7x8x9 cm in size and took up one-third of the brain.The couple travelled to India in an attempt to save the baby, where Dr Harshil Shah, a well-known neurosurgeon at Ahmedabad’s Shalby Hospitals, performed a five-hour surgery.Dr Shah said, “They [parents] did a CT scan in Africa and the basic diagnosis revealed it to be a large, initial stage 2 cancerous brain tumour. Every hospital they had gone to told them that the mortality rate was high. Shalby Hospital was able to not just detect but also perform the lengthy and complicated surgery.””The male child was suffering from a rare chiasmal tumour. This tumour arises from the optic nerves that were affecting the brain, which I was able to diagnose on time. This is the reason that the child was not able to see even objects that were close to him due to an affected vision,” said Dr Shah.”Post-surgery, the child’s food intake increased, and he gained three kg. He was nutritionally deficient. However, the patient is now doing well and is completely normal,” said the doctor.”Surgery and complete tumour removal have a very low success rate, and patients with no deficit are extremely rare. I’ve never seen such a large tumour, let alone in a child,” he added.READ | Boy goes for nasal surgery, doctor performs hernia operation insteadWATCH | Meet the IAF doctor who revived cancer patient after she suffered cardiac arrest on Kolkata-bound flight

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Widespread population immunity of Covid-19 observed in South Africa before Omicron wave

1. Widespread underlying SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity was observed in Gauteng province, South Africa, before the omicron wave.
2. Epidemiologic data demonstrated a decoupling of hospitalizations and deaths from infections while omicron was circulating.
Evidence Rating Level: 2 (Good)
Study Rundown: The Omicron variant was first identified in November 2021 in Gauteng province, South Africa, and was designated as a variant of concern due to its predicted high transmissibility and its potential to evade immunity from neutralizing antibodies induced by vaccination or natural infection with wild-type virus. The omicron variant outcompeted the delta variant in Gauteng and was responsible for 98.4% of the cases sequenced in South Africa in December 2021, and a prior population-wide seroepidemiologic study demonstrate that 19.1% of the population was seropositive for Covid-19. However, there is a gap in knowledge as to understanding the seroprevalence of Covid-19 before the omicron wave. This study found that there was widespread underlying SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity in Gauteng before the omicron-dominant wave of Covid-19. This study was limited by changes in the frequency of testing over time which limited head-to-head comparisons of case numbers across waves, and the fourth omicron wave had not fully subsided at the time of this analysis, which will result in a lag in the reporting of data such as hospitalizations and deaths attributable to this wave. Nevertheless, these study’s findings are significant, as they demonstrate that there was widespread seropositivity of Covid-19 in Gauteng prior to the omicron wave and that there was a decoupling of hospitalizations and deaths from infections while omicron was circulating.
Click to read the study in NEJM
Relevant Reading: Omicron — Decoupling Infection from Severe Disease
In-Depth [seroepidemiologic survey]: This seroepidemiologic survey was conducted from October to December 2021 in Gauteng province, South Africa, to determine the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 IgG, obtaining samples from 7010 participants, of whom 18.8% had received a Covid-19 vaccine. Patients who live in the Gauteng province and were able to provide written informed consent were eligible for the study. Patients who resided outside of the studied province or declined to participate were excluded from the study. The primary outcome measured was seroprevalence measured with dried-blood-spot samples and tested for IgG against SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and nucleocapsid protein. Outcomes in the primary analysis were assessed via unadjusted, univariable analyses for each risk factor with generalized linear models with a log link to estimate risk ratios. Based on the analysis, the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 IgG ranged from 56.2% among children younger than 12 years (95% Confidence Interval [CI], 52.6 to 59.7) to 79.7% among adults older than 50 years of age (95% CI, 77.6 to 81.5). 93.1% of vaccinated participants were seropositive for SARS-CoV-2 while 68.4% of unvaccinated participants were seropositive. Epidemiologic data also demonstrated that the incidence of Covid-19 infection increased and subsequently decreased more rapidly during the omicron wave than it had during the three previous waves. The incidence of infection was decoupled from the incidences of hospitalization, recorded death, and excess death during the fourth wave, as compared to the proportions seen in the previous three waves. Overall, this study demonstrated that there was widespread Covid-19 seropositivity in the Gauteng province of South Africa before the omicron wave, showing that there was a decoupling of hospitalizations and deaths from Covid-19 infections while the omicron variant was still circulating.
Image: PD
©2022 2 Minute Medicine, Inc. All rights reserved. No works may be reproduced without expressed written consent from 2 Minute Medicine, Inc. Inquire about licensing here. No article should be construed as medical advice and is not intended as such by the authors or by 2 Minute Medicine, Inc.

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Symbiosis School of International Studies Launches MA in African Studies – News18

Symbiosis School of International Studies (SSIS) has launched a masters of arts in African studies (geo-economics and foreign policy) that offers a holistic understanding of the African continent and its relation with major countries in the world. The two year long multidisciplinary programme focuses on the political, economic and socio-cultural environment of the continent and its impact on global affairs.Candidate should be a graduate from any statutory university with a minimum of 50 per cent marks (45 per cent for SC and ST) at the graduation level. Candidates appearing for the final year examination can also apply, but their admission will be subject to obtaining a minimum of 50 per cent marks (45 per cent for SC and ST) in the qualifying examination.
A candidate who has completed qualifying qualification from any foreign board/ university must obtain an equivalence certificate from the Association of Indian Universities (AIU) Symbiosis School of International Studies (SSIS), a constituent of the Symbiosis International (Deemed University) was established in 2012 with the aim to bring a discourse on international relations through a well-designed academic programme, conferences, symposia and exchanges with relevant stakeholders.
The MA African studies centers around the key areas of African economy, foreign policy, history, culture and identity. It also delves into the political processes and institutions, for a comprehensive understanding of the upswing development trajectory of the region.
Along with empowering students to learn and understand the African continent, the programme aims to strengthen analytical, critical thinking and communication skills, including developing a holistic understanding of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. The programme will also help the student to work in a multicultural environment.
Further, the third and fourth semesters offer electives to help students deep-dive into the subject around North, West and Central Africa and Eastern, Southern Africa and Island nations. It also offers Arabic and French language learning as part of its elective courses.
The curriculum includes a mandatory internship in the third semester to help students implement their theoretical learning with the real-world scenario. Post the completion of programme, students can pursue a host of career paths across the corporates, the NGOs, the civil service, think tanks, the media houses and international organizations or further, pursue doctoral studies in the domain.
Aspirants can apply for MA African Studies (Geo-economics and Foreign Policy) by visiting the official website of SSIS and registering for the programme. After successful online registration and payment of fee, subject to fulfillment of admission criteria, shortlisted candidates would be notified for Personal Interview (PI) via email.
The PI will be conducted virtually and aspirants will have to book their preferred slot for the same. Aspirants need to ensure uninterrupted connectivity and a well-functioning mic to undergo the PI. The maximum score for PI will be 100 marks and can cover general awareness, clarity of thought and articulation, logical reasoning, learning orientation, motivation, extracurricular activities, specific field of interest, communication and soft skills, and overall personality.
Shivali Lawale, Director, Symbiosis School of International Studies said, “It brings us immense pleasure to announce the launch of M.A in African Studies focusing on Geo-economics and Foreign Policy. With the launch of this programme, we are steadily diversifying our platform for teaching and research in international relations, with an emphasis on India and its role in global affairs. Through this programme, we hope to empower future leaders and corporates, who will strengthen the collaborations between India and Africa. We look forward to welcoming our first batch of students.”
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Why Nigeria and other African countries are blocking cellphones | Fin24 – News24

This week, Nigeria blocked millions of its citizens – who haven’t linked their lines to their ID numbers – from making phone calls.Other government also want citizens to register their phones.But there’s a distrust by residents to hand over their details to the government.This Monday, millions of Nigerians woke up to find that they
had been barred from making phone calls. The number of disconnected lines is
reported to be as many as 75 million, more than a third of the total 198
million lines nationwide.But the move has been a long time coming.In December 2020, Abuja issued a directive for all SIM card
carriers to link their lines to a unique National Identity Number, citing a
need to tackle the plaguing insecurity in the country.That deadline was postponed numerous times but last week’s
attack on a train by armed groups was a wake-up call. When reports started
surfacing online that the attackers had started calling families of abducted
passengers for ransom, the government swung into action, fulfilling its almost two-year-old
promise to cut off non-compliant citizens.On social networks, many – especially southerners – are
debating the connection between SIM card linkage with the national identity
number and the actions of these groups, known locally as bandits, whose axes of
focus are swaths of the northwest and central Nigeria.In 2015, the Nigerian government fined MTN,
one of the continent’s biggest telecom players, US$5.2bn for defaulting in
cutting off unverified customers.The National Communications Commission (NCC) had previously
instructed the telecom giant to deactivate between 10 and 18.6 million
lines. But government swung into action after the high-profile kidnap of a
former Nigerian finance minister; police say the kidnappers used MTN lines to
contact his family members.ALSO READ | MTN must verify users in Nigeria by
year end or face blocked SIM cardsAcross the continent, there is a lengthening line of
governments embarking on a mass disconnection drive citing, among other things,
domestic security. In March, Zambia announced it had deactivated two million
SIMs cards to stem the volume of fraud carried out using mobile lines.Kenyan media have also reported an April 15 deadline by
authorities in the East African country for the deactivation of unregistered
SIM cards – the third such deadline in the past 10 years. In 2013, it switched
off more than two million SIM cards after an attck by the armed group
al-Shabab.Last year, Tanzania said it had blocked 18,000 SIM cards
involved in criminal activities. In a bid to also curtail mobile scams, Ghana
issued a directive for every SIM card carrier to re-register their SIMs with
the Ghana Card, the national residency card, or lose them.In faraway Hong Kong, a proposal from last year to
impose new restrictions on phone line registrations was approved this March.What are the issues?With Africa having a 44% mobile penetration rate, SIM cards
are one of the most ubiquitous technologies around.At least 50 of Africa’s 54 countries have mandatory SIM
registration laws in place, but most have barely been enforced – until now.
Registration usually involves the submission of personal data and the capture
of citizen biometrics.The rationale is that this registration will help create a
vast database to help track criminal activity. Officials say SIMs, accessible
even on the streets for sometimes as low as US$1 (~R14), are frequently bought
and discarded by suspected criminals, without any – or not enough – details of
their personal identity to trace and monitor them.”Since 9/11, in many countries, if you want to get a
SIM card, you have to show some [form of] identification,” Rebecca
Enonchong, Cameroonian tech entrepreneur and founder of AppsTech told Al
Jazeera. “It is rather normal that the government should require those who
are using cell services [to] register with the operators and the
telecommunication companies should know who is connected to their
services.”YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE| OPINION | Yes, the regulator wants
mobile operators like Vodacom and MTN to store your biometricsOn the surface, this sounds like a quick and cheap solution
for many governments in a continent where most countries have no unified
operational national database.But multiple SIM ownership is prevalent across Africa for
many reasons including varying data prices, connectivity speeds and signal
strength. In 2018, four African countries were among the top 10 globally, with
dual or multi-SIM mobile phones. Kenya even once had plans to institute an
ownership cap of 10 SIM cards per person. Telecom operators also often tailor
registration processes in order to sell more prepaid SIM cards.Experts say the outcome is that the data gleaned from SIM
registrations are not as accurate or neat as they ought to be.”The ID systems [in Africa] are not really backed by
technology, there are no linkages, so there is no verification process,”
Enonchong said. “If the telecommunication companies themselves don’t
enforce that, it is really very hard for the government to make use of the
data.”How did we get here?At the root of it all is a mass unwillingness to register
SIM cards due to a seeming lack of distrust by residents to hand over their
details to the government.Unsurprisingly, there are concerns about data privacy and
the inestimable capacity of government to use data collected for one purpose
for another, given the historical intolerance for dissent in some of these
countries.There is also a legal void around government handling of
data.A 2021 report by Collaboration on International ICT Policy
for East and Southern Africa (CIPESA), claimed that only half of African
countries have adopted laws to protect personal data.Repeated registration exercises have also weakened the will
of the people, experts say.Over the years, Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country and
its economic powerhouse, has instituted multiple mandatory identity
registration schemes, including Bank Verification Number (BVN) and National
Identity Number (NIN), alongside more widespread IDs like voters’ cards,
international passports and others.Yet, the government is insisting that the way forward is for
every SIM card to be linked with an NIN, a policy that many Nigerians say will
be just as cumbersome and bureaucratic as its predecessors – and possibly end
up achieving nothing too.”This is a trend of policy laziness,” Gbenga
Sesan, head of Lagos-based digital rights advocacy nonprofit Paradigm Initiative,
told Al Jazeera. “The problem does not lie with the lack of a central
database; it is about impunity. If I know that if I commit a crime and I know I
would be punished for it, then I will likely think about it twice.”In Kenya, citizens are also complaining about the redundancy
of multiple registrations. The new registration warrants the submission of the
phone number, copy of passport or visa and biodata page, exit stamps and
scanned ID – items they claim to have submitted during the last exercise in 2018.The bigger fear, however, is of government surveillance
under the guise of national security, leading to a widespread reluctance to
willingly submit personal data which can be used to monitor their everyday
activities.”The issue of data privacy transcends Africa,” Ken
Ashigbey, the CEO of Ghana Telecommunications Chamber, noted. “The concern
about Big Brother sitting somewhere and using your data to spy on you is always
going to be there, [and] when you bring it into the examples of Africa where
our governments all seem to have total power, definitely there are risks,”
he said.The risks also extend to small and medium-scale enterprises
(SMEs) in a digital era where SIMs and the world of possibilities on the
internet are helping empower many in the absence of social welfare schemes.Already, SMEs account for 84% of employment and make up 96%
of businesses in Nigeria. Shutting millions of people out of seamless
communication could adversely affect the economy, Sesan warned.”What we are going to lose is roughly one-third or
about 35% of connected lines that we have [and] there will be major economic
consequences [but] there will be no gain in terms of security,” he said. Go to the Fin24 front page.Go to the Fin24 front page.

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African refugees see racial bias as US welcomes Ukrainians – WXYZ

(AP) — African refugees say the recent decision to grant refugee status and other humanitarian protections to Ukrainians fleeing war underscores the racial bias inherent in American immigration policy. Wilfred Tebah says he and other immigrants from Cameroon have long been deserving of similar humanitarian considerations. They also argue that Congo and Ethiopia should qualify because of their ongoing conflicts, as should Mauritania. The Department of Homeland Security said it continues “monitoring conditions in various countries.” President Joe Biden recently announced the U.S. would take in 100,000 Ukrainian refugees and grant Temporary Protected Status to another 30,000 already in the country.

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African countries respond to global inflation [Business Africa] | Africanews

In Africa, governments are stepping up their efforts to mitigate the impact of the Russia-Ukraine crisis on their citizens’ wallets. According to UNCTAD data, no less than 25 African countries import more than a third of their wheat from Russia and Ukraine; 15 import more than half and two countries, Benin and Somalia, import 100%. So how is Africa trying to limit the impacts of this crisis?
Ghana presents robust digital economyGhana has recently embarked on the transformation of several public services. An identity card serves as a biometric passport and tax identification number. In this way, the country intends to mobilise domestic revenue and prosecute all those who evade taxes before the end of the year. This digital policy, which affects all sectors, should be a response to financial exclusion and the predominance of the informal sector.
Burundi coffee sector struggles to reboundIn Burundi, coffee accounts for nearly 40% of export resources, and supports 8 million Burundians. With the failure of the privatisation of the sector, the state has been running the sector since 2019, but production figures remain low, dropping from 34,000 to 6,000 tonnes for the 2021-2022 growing season. Coffee growers’ discontent is growing, as well as the lack of traceability of all actors involved in the sector.

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Can African oil producers help the world end reliance on Russian Oil and Gas?

Unlocking Africa’s oil and gas potential is now imperative against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and the resulting crude, diesel, and gas supply crunch. This has rendered European dependence on Russian energy untenable, creating a major opportunity for Africa to position itself as a crucial option to increase the supply to the global energy markets. However, significant challenges remain for the continent’s hydrocarbon producers to suddenly ramp up their production due to infrastructure, finance, and technology deficits.
Countries with major LNG resources, such as Nigeria, Angola, Libya, and Algeria, suffer from limited and underdeveloped pipeline networks, refineries, jetties, terminals, and ports. Additionally, incentivizing foreign investment is often problematized by a host of risk factors, including political instability, local insecurity issues and financial institutions shifting investments from fossil fuels to renewables. Finally, securing the latest technology to facilitate local content development has proven cost prohibitive given the reliance on foreign intellectual property and the continual brain drain of key local human capital.
All the above issues will be discussed at the 8th Africa Petroleum Congress and All the above issues will be discussed at the 8th Africa Petroleum Congress and Exhibition (CAPE VIII) taking place from 16-19 May 2022 in Luanda, Angola. The congress is organized by the African Petroleum Producers Organization (APPO), the government of the Republic of Angola (for the first time), and AME Trade Ltd. The three-day event will be centered around the theme of “Energy Transition: Challenges and Opportunities in the African Oil and Gas Industry,” and assemble experts from the national, regional, and international energy and oil and gas industries to deliberate the challenges and opportunities of the energy transition and the future of the oil and gas industry in Africa.
CAPE VIII will unfold against the recession of the global pandemic that exacerbated record production declines across African hydrocarbon producing countries from 2020 to 2021. The annus horribilis was compounded by under-investment in exploration activities, leaving several of the continent’s biggest energy players struggling to cope with the post-lockdown surge in demand for hydrocarbons. Fortunately, APPO’s ambition to establish the continent as an energy hub regained significant headwind with a stellar upstream development outlook for 2022 and beyond.
The congress will be the ideal platform for Africa’s leading oil and gas producers to confront the foregoing challenges and engender solutions to maximize its oil and gas resources. Amid the drive by developed economies towards decarbonization and net-zero policies, attending energy stakeholders will have the opportunity to reinforce the case for regional integrated supply chains and pooling resources to leverage the catalytic power of hydrocarbons in a sustainable manner.
Supported by countless multinationals across the energy value chain and national oil companies, CAPE VIII will feature illuminating insight from a range of illustrious keynote speakers, who will mold the future landscape of energy in Africa and beyond.Source: AME Trade Ltd

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Africa mostly quiet amid widespread condemnation of Russia – The Columbian

KAMPALA, Uganda — Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni recently remarked that Russia’s war on Ukraine should be seen in the context of Moscow being the “center of gravity” for Eastern Europe.
His son, Lt. Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, was more forceful, declaring that most Africans “support Russia’s stand in Ukraine” and “Putin is absolutely right!”
Amid a worldwide chorus of condemnation, much of Africa has either pushed back or remained noticeably quiet. Twenty-five of Africa’s 54 nations abstained or didn’t record a vote in the U.N. General Assembly resolution earlier this month condemning Russia.
The reason? Many nations on the continent of 1.3 billion people have long-standing ties and support from Moscow, dating back to the Cold War when the Soviet Union supported anti-colonial struggles.
Those relations have tightened in recent years: As U.S. interest in Africa appeared to wane under President Donald Trump’s administration, Russia — along with China — expanded its influence, enlarging its economic footprint to include everything from agricultural programs to energy plants. In 2019, dignitaries from 43 African nations attended a summit with Russia, which also has become the dominant exporter of weapons into sub-Saharan Africa, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

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Google internet cable lands in Africa, promising fast connection | Reuters

DAKAR, March 18 (Reuters) – A subsea cable owned by Google (GOOGL.O) that promises to double internet speeds for millions in Africa arrived in Togo on Friday, the company said, the latest step in a multi-year project to provide cheaper access to users across the continent.The Equiano cable, the first of its kind to reach Africa, has wound its way from Portugal and will double internet speed for Togo’s 8 million residents, Google said in a statement.That may be a taste of things to come for other countries set to benefit in a region where internet use is rising fast but where networks are often cripplingly slow and are a drag on economic development.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterThe new line will also make land in Nigeria, Namibia and South Africa, with possible branches offering connections to nearby countries. It is expected to start operating by the end of the year.Sub-Saharan Africa is the world’s least-connected region, with around a quarter of the population still lacking mobile broadband coverage compared to 7% globally, according to a 2020 report by GSMA Intelligence.Most countries in West Africa are at the bottom of a World Bank global ranking on internet penetration. read more Togo will be the first to benefit. The cable is expected to reduce internet prices by 14% by 2025, according to an Africa Practice and Genesis Analytics assessment commissioned by Google.Google said the cable will indirectly create 37,000 jobs in Togo by 2025 and boost GDP by $193 million.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Sofia Christensen; Editing by Edward McAllisterOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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African Billionaire To Launch Bid For Chelsea – Soccer Laduma

An African billionaire is reportedly close to launching a bid for Chelsea after outgoing owner Roman Abramovich recently announced the club was for sale.
Report: Tuchel Makes Final Decision On Chelsea Future
According to the Daily Mail, Ghanaian businessman Bernard Antwi Boasiako has confirmed he is eager to buy the London giants amid the ongoing crisis at Stamford Bridge. 
Last week, the UK government imposed major sanctions on Russian-Israeli oligarch Abramovich, who has been Chelsea’s owner since 2003. 
His relationship, however, with Russian president Vladimir Putin has landed him and other mega-rich Russian businessmen in hot water in England, with the billionaire currently thought to be in the process of selling the club. 
Below are the 10 highest-paid at Chelsea: 

Rumours recently emerged that Boasiako, who made his billions being a goldmine owner, was exploring an offer for the Premier League giants due to his fond feelings towards the Blues. 
A spokesperson for the wealthy business has since appeared to confirm his interest: “Bernard Antwi Boasiako is exploring a potential offer for Chelsea. Discussions with various parties involved in the sale have taken place.
“Chelsea has a lasting legacy in Africa, players like Didier Drogba and Michael Essien are legends of the club; the opportunity to enhance the club’s reputation in Africa is a very tempting prospect.
“Restoring stability and ensuring there are no job losses are among the priorities.”
Below is where Abramovich currently ranks among the wealthiest Premier League club owners: 

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CERAWEEK 'Energy transition? Leave us out,' say African energy leaders | Reuters

A vertical gas flaring furnace is seen in Ughelli, Delta State, Nigeria September 16, 2020. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde/FilesRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterHOUSTON, March 9 (Reuters) – Developing countries should not have to target renewable energy sources and turn away from fossil fuels, Nigerian and Equatorial Guinea energy officials said on Wednesday, joining other emerging oil-producing nations reluctant to embrace the global energy transition trend.Emerging economies must contend with higher fuel costs at a time when millions lack access to reliable energy sources while also dealing with extreme climate events.Some 900 million people in the world, most of them in Africa, still have no access to energy for basic needs, Nigeria’s oil Minister Timipre Marlin Sylva said during the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegister”We are still in transition from firewood to gas,” Sylva said. “Please allow us to continue with our own transition.”Equatorial Guinea Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons Gabriel Obiang Lima echoed those concerns, saying pressure over renewables is “very unjust”, with a discussion on how to transition only possible after the energy security crisis is over.The 38 members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), some of the richest countries worldwide, along with Russia, China and India, account for more than two-thirds of the world’s oil demand. The rest, which includes Africa, most of Asia and Latin America, accounts for just 31%, according to OPEC data.”Every emerging economy has to have the right to access reliable, safe energy,” said Tengku Muhammad Taufik, president and CEO of Malaysia’s state-owned Petronas.Other countries with oil discoveries still in development, including Ghana, Guyana and Suriname, also have said they cannot be expected to give up the chance to benefit from oil and gas that helped build more developed economies.”They want all of us, including those of us without food, to carry the burden of transition,” Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) general manager Bala Wunti said.Nigeria now faces a double blow from high prices of gas for cooking that it imports and lack of investment in its oil industry, Sylva said, as banks and funds have been pushing to restrict investment in oil globally to cut greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.Nigeria has had to cut oil production from 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to less than 1.5 million bpd due to lack of financing to maintain its facilities, Sylva said.That lost production could have helped contribute to global supply as the world now seeks alternatives to Russian oil after buyers halted purchases over its invasion of Ukraine, he said. Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a “special operation”.Investors backing renewable fuels have cut financing for oil projects, reducing production of oil, gas and coal faster than renewable sources of energy could replace them, pushing prices up, he said.”It was expected we were going to arrive at this point where we have an energy crisis,” Sylva said. “There is a gap.”Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Sabrina Valle; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and David GregorioOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Erdogan seeks to boost ties with Africa in four-day visit | News | Al Jazeera

The Turkish president wants to boost business ties with African countries.Turkey’s president has promised to boost relations with African countries as he visited the Senegalese capital Dakar during a four-day tour of Central and West Africa.
“We will continue to enhance our relations with African countries on the basis of sincerity and solidarity,” Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Tuesday during a joint press conference with his Senegalese counterpart Macky Sall.
“We exchanged ideas on how we can further advance our relations in every area,” he said. “We once again gladly observed that we share the same determination to deepen our cooperation.”
In 2021, the volume of bilateral trade between Turkey and Senegal reached $540m. Erdogan has said the goal is to bring the figure to $1bn.
The Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA), which “has since 2007 completed 186 projects in Senegal with a total value of $12m, is determined to maintain its activities,” he said.
Sall praised Turkish companies that have initiated various investment projects in the country and said investments between the two countries should increase even more.
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The Turkish president is set to attend Wednesday’s opening ceremony of the Dakar Olympic Stadium, which was constructed by a Turkish company.
Erdogan, who set out on Sunday for the tour, will also visit the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Guinea-Bissau.
In Dakar, the Turkish president noted that the 3rd Turkey-Africa Partnership Summit, held in Istanbul in December, set out a roadmap in Turkish relations with Africa for 2022 to 2026.
Leaders from more than a dozen African countries attended the summit, highlighting Turkey’s expanding influence on the continent.
Since its 2019 intervention in the Libyan civil war, Istanbul has steadily expanded its African footprint as it seeks to replace Western influence on the continent.
The European Union has sought to counter both Turkish and Chinese influence, positioning itself as “Africa’s partner of choice” during a summit with the African Union earlier this month.
“The European Union is the first trading partner and the first investor in Africa,” Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said after the two-day summit, which drew to a close on February 18. “Indeed, we need a stronger partnership between us.”
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We will continue to enhance our relations with African countries: Erdoğan – Turkey News

DAKAR

Turkey is an important member of the G-20 platform and the 13th largest country in the world by purchasing parity, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said on Feb. 21, underlining the strength of the Turkish economy despite global difficulties.
“Our economy is resilient to global shocks. We grew our economy by five percent every year despite the instability in the region,” Erdoğan said, speaking at a business forum during his visit to the Senegalese capital Dakar as part of his four-day trip to Central and West Africa.
Turkey will see a more successful year in growth in 2022 as its growth rates approach double digits, Erdoğan stated.
Senegal is an export gateway to West Africa, Erdoğan said, noting cooperation in the fields of agriculture, tourism, food and health will be beneficial for the entire region.
Turkey’s policy for “opening” to Africa was successfully completed and turned into a partnership policy with Africa in 2013, he said, emphasizing that ongoing projects with African partnerships are based on equal partnership and mutual benefit.
Ankara will continue to enhance its relations with African countries based on sincerity and solidarity, Erdoğan said during a joint press conference with his Senegalese counterpart, Macky Sall.
The bilateral trade volume between Turkey and Senegal reached $540 million in 2021, the president said, noting that Turkey’s aim is to increase this figure to some $1 billion soon.
He added that Turkish firms in Senegal carry out operations in the fields of energy, steel production, health care, food industry, ready-mixed concrete production and gold processing.
The Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA) has finalized 186 projects in Senegal with a total value of $12 million since 2007, Erdoğan said. The Turkish Maarif Foundation provides education for 287 students at 13 schools in the country, he noted.
He thanked Senegalese authorities for their support in Turkey’s fight against FETÖ. “We have no doubt that this support and solidarity will continue,” he said.

Erdogan, Diplomacy,

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