Senegalese opposition leader claims innocence in rape case

Senegal’s main opposition leader and presidential candidate, Ousmane Sonko, has claimed his innocence as he made his first court appearance in Dakar on Thursday to respond to accusations of rape.

‘He has, as you can imagine, contested the facts and has dismissed the accusation. He provided all the evidence of his innocence,’ said one of his lawyers, Bamba Cissé.

The 48-year-old politician, who came third in the last presidential election and plans to run again in 2024, has been accused of raping an employee of a beauty salon where he was getting a massage.

Sonko tweeted after the three-hour hearing that he believed it had gone very well.

Cissé described the case as a ‘state conspiracy’, a claim made repeatedly by the opposition leader, and said that it should be dropped.

‘We expect a total dismissal of the case in relation to these non-existent facts, that were the source of a plan hatched by people lurking in the shadows who simply wanted to eliminate a political opponent,’ said Cissé.

Security tight in Dakar

There was a large security presence throughout the city for the hearing, particularly around Sonko’s home and the court building in the capital.

Yesterday, Sonko urged his supporters to remain calm.

‘I ask you solemnly to go about your business, not to come to my house, nor to the court, nor to rally, because this is an ordinary procedure. It will not be resolved tomorrow,’ he said.

His arrest and indictment last year led to several days of deadly riots, looting and destruction.

Members of Sonko’s Yewwi Askan Wi opposition coalition have expressed their support for their leader, saying they will stand together in the face of any injustice.

The authorities have denied any misuse of state institutions in the legal proceedings against Sonko.

Source: Africanews

Why is Chakwera afraid of Hellen Buluma?

Chakwera afraid of Buluma

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-President Lazarus Chakwera is afraid of Hellen Buluma despite many recommendations of her illegal recruitment and abuse of office at National Oil Company of Malawi (NOCMA).

This comes as the Office of the Ombudsman confirmed receipt of a letter from Secretary to President and Cabinet (SPC), Colleen Zamba, responding to a determination on allegations of irregular and unlawful recruitment of Nocma’s deputy chief executive officer Hellen Buluma.

Zamba wrote the letter in her capacity as board chairperson for Nocma.

The determination by Ombudsman, Grace Malera, which was made on September 30, 2020, nullified Buluma’s recruitment.

Malera has also confirmed that her office has responded to Zamba’s letter.

“In our response we have advised the SPC/board chairperson that the law does not make provision for the position and approach that they have taken as Nocma directors to respond to a determination that has been delivered.

“Instead there are legal mechanisms that are at her disposal. It would help for her office to consult the Attorney General (AG) on the further conduct of this matter,” said Malera.

In her letter the SPC also indicated that the board was not given a right of reply before the determination.

But Malera said this is a misrepresentation of facts because the SPC/board chairperson was duly represented during an inquiry on July 21, 2022 by a senior officer from her office and her office also provided comprehensive written response and relevant documents submitted on July 27, 2022.

Meanwhile, the office of the Ombudsman has submitted a report of non-compliance to Parliament for action.

Inside OPC office told this publication that Zamba’s decision came from statehouse saying there is serious reasons why Chakwera is afraid to fire Buluma.

Bulama remains key witness in case in which former Energy Minister Newton Kambala, Enoch Chihana and Chris Banda (all them Chakwera’s partners in Tonse Alliance government) are accused interfering NOCMA in awarding fuel supply contracts.

“Buluma has key information regarding to scandals Chakwera and his aids been involved at NOCMA. Despite Buluma being opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) zealot, Chakwera is very afraid on this lady for personal reasons than that of public interests,” alleges the sources.

Africa Investment Forum 2022 Market Days —Press conference

What:    Africa Investment Forum 2022 Press Conference

Who:     Heads of Africa Investment Forum founding partners

When:   3 November 2022, 13:30 GMT

Where: Africa Investment Forum Press Briefing Room and hybrid (register here for online coverage)

The Africa Investment Forum Market Days are holding from 2-4 November in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire. This is the first in-person meetings since 2019. The Market Days will showcase billions of dollars in investment-ready transactions to participants from around the world.

On Thursday 3 November at 13:30 GMT, a press conference will gather the heads of the eight Africa Investment Forum founding partners.

The heads are African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina; Africa50 Chief Executive Officer Alain Ebobissé; Africa Finance Corporation President and Chief Executive Officer Samaila Zubairu; Africa Export-Import Bank President Benedict Oramah; Development Bank of Southern Africa Representative (Group Executive, Client Coverage) Mohan Vivekanandan; European Investment Bank Representative (Investment Officer) Moussa Nakoulima; Islamic Development Bank Group Acting CEO and CEO of ITFC Hani Salem Sonbol; and Trade and Development Bank President Emeritus and Group Managing Director Admassu Tadesse.

To cover the press conference, media representatives are invited to register here. Journalists are also invited to send their questions for the press conference in advance here.

3 November

13:30 – 14:45 GMT: Press conference

Except for the opening plenary, the closing session and events happening in the press conference room, the Market Days is open only to invited participants.

www.africainvestmentforum.com
Source African Development Bank Group

Eswatini: African Development Bank satisfied with portfolio implementation progress at mid-term of Country Strategy Paper

Meeting on Tuesday, 18 October 2022, the Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group approved the mid-term report of the implementation of the Bank’s 2020-2024 Country Strategy Paper (CSP) for Eswatini and the 2022 country portfolio performance.  

The review assessed the extent to which the objectives and expected outcomes of the Bank’s strategy and captured lessons learned at mid-term of the CSP, while determining the continued relevance of the CSP priority areas for the remaining implementation period. The Bank’s portfolio performance in Eswatini was rated 3 on a scale of 1 to 4, with 1 being “Very Unsatisfactory” and 4 being “Very Satisfactory”.

Approved by the Bank Group’s Boards of Directors in February 2020, the Eswatini 2020-2024 CSP focuses on two priorities: (i) Scaling-up infrastructure investments to promote economic diversification; and (ii) Strengthening economic governance to improve the investment climate. These align with the Bank’s 10-year strategy and its High 5 operational priorities. The strategy is also aligned with Eswatini’s national development priorities.  The mid-term report was prepared following extensive consultations with the government, private sector, civil society and development partners.

The Country Strategy Paper cites 11 projects that are to be approved during the remainder of the CSP period, 2022-2024. Given the lack of progress in programmed non-sovereign operations and potential public-private partnership projects, the Bank will prioritize country dialogue missions with the private sector. The Bank will also design innovative financing instruments, including syndication, tailormade to the needs of Eswatini, an economy whose private sector is dominated by micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises.  The Bank could also use partial risk and partial credit guarantees to encourage private sector participation in public-private partnership projects.

At the operational level, lessons learned at mid-term identified many factors crucial to efficient project implementation: the quality-at-entry of projects, timely provision of counterpart funds by the Government and full-time deployment of project implementation staff.

Eswatini is among the African countries that can access the resources of the ADB Window, the Middle Income Country Technical Assistance Fund (MIC TAF), and other trust funds. During the first half of the period covered by the CSP, the country’s lending limit declined from $715 million in 2020 to $206.91 million in 2021 and $200.20 million in 2022. Since 2020, four sovereign operations with a total value of $238.23 million have been approved, with an additional $1.56 million coming from MIC TAF.

Development partners, such as the OPEC Fund for International Development and the European Union, have expressed interest in co-financing ongoing or potential Bank projects in the agriculture, water and sanitation, and energy sectors.

As of 31 August 2022, the Bank’s active portfolio in Eswatini comprised 12 operations (8 projects, 1 line of credit, 1 study and 2 technical assistance projects). Total commitments amounted to $441.02 million, up from $221.85 million in 2020. Much of this has been sourced from ADB Window resources.

The portfolio covers the agriculture, transport, water and sanitation, multi-sector, and finance sectors. It targets four of the High 5s, namely: “Feed Africa” (56.4%), “Improve the quality of life for the people of Africa” (23%), “Integrate Africa” (17.6%), and “Industrialize Africa” (3.1%). The portfolio includes no energy sector projects (“Light up Africa”).

The Government and the Bank have agreed that the priority areas of the Country Strategy Paper remain relevant and should therefore remain unchanged through the end of the strategy period.
Source African Development Bank Group

Former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan shot on foot in attempted assassination

Former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan shot on foot

ISLAMABAD-(MaraviPost)-Former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan was shot in the foot at a rally Thursday, according to an official from his party, which said the incident was an assassination attempt.

A bullet hit Khan in his foot after a gunman opened fire, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) senior leader Asad Umar said.

According to CNN, the former Pakistan cricket captain was taken from the rally site just outside the town of Gujranwala to receive treatment in Lahore, around a two-and-a-half-hour drive away.

Khan is in a stable condition and undergoing surgery, according to Senator Fawad Chaudhry, a senior PTI politician and Khan’s former information minister.

Six others were injured and are still being treated, Chaudhry said.

Police said they detained a man suspected of firing shots at the rally. The male suspect was arrested with a 9mm pistol and two empty magazines, police said.

At least one person was killed in the incident, according to Faisal Javed, a senior PTI politician and close Khan ally who received a wound to the head in the attack.

The victim’s name has not been released.

In a video statement Javed, who can be seen sitting up while receiving treatment, said: “Please pray for us, for Imran Khan, pray for our fellow workers who are severely injured and pray for our party member who has died and is martyred.”

Protests broke out across Pakistan in support of Khan, including in the capital Islamabad as well as in Peshawar. Khan was on the seventh day of a nationwide rally tour calling for elections to be brought forward from August next year.

“I condemn the incident of firing on PTI Chairman Imran Khan in the strongest words,” Sharif wrote, adding that he has asked for an “immediate report on the incident” and will pray for the recovery of those injured.

“Violence should have no place in our country’s politics,” Sharif wrote.

On October 21, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) recommended that Khan be disqualified from holding political office for five years, a move likely to further inflame political tensions in the country.

While reading out the recommendation, ECP chief Sikandar Sultan Raja stated that Khan was disqualified for being involved in “corrupt practices.”

The commission said its decision was based on the grounds that Khan had “made false statements” regarding the declaration of the sale of gifts sent to him by the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Dubai while in office — an offense that is illegal under the country’s constitution.

Khan was unseated in a vote of no-confidence following claims of bad governance and economic mismanagement.

Since then he has repeatedly claimed, without providing any evidence, that the United States had orchestrated his ouster. Khan’s allegations have become a staple at rallies he has held across Pakistan in a bid to return to power.

His claims have struck a chord with a young population in a country where anti-American sentiment runs high, and anti-establishment feelings are being fueled by a rising cost of living crisis.

This is not the first time that Pakistani politicians have been attacked.

Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated on December 27, 2007, and then Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani survived an assassination attempt in 2008.

Source: CNN

Ethiopia marks two-year war anniversary the morning after peace deal

Ethiopia commemorated the two-year anniversary since the outbreak of war in Tigray during a ceremony in Addis Ababa, the morning after the warring parties agreed to a breakthrough deal for a cessation of hostilities.

The warring sides in Ethiopia announced Wednesday an agreement to silence their guns after two years of devastating conflict that have claimed thousands of lives and left millions needing aid in Africa’s second most populous country.

The surprise deal between Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government and Tigrayan rebels was unveiled after little over a week of negotiations led by the African Union in South Africa and was hailed by the UN and the US among others.

“We have agreed to permanently silence the guns and end the two years of conflict in northern Ethiopia,” the government and Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) said in a joint statement after marathon talks.

The breakthrough was announced by the African Union’s mediator, former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo, almost exactly two years to the day since the war erupted in November 2020.

“Today is the beginning of a new dawn for Ethiopia, for the Horn of Africa and indeed for Africa as a whole,” he said.

“The two parties in the Ethiopian conflict have formally agreed to the cessation of hostilities as well as the systematic, orderly, smooth and coordinated disarmament,” Obasanjo said at a briefing in Pretoria.

They also agreed on a “restoration of law and order, restoration of services, unhindered access to humanitarian supplies, protection of civilians… among other areas of agreement”, he added.

It was not immediately clear how the deal would be monitored to ensure it was implemented, and there was no mention by Obasanjo of international and rebel calls for Eritrea’s feared army to withdraw from the battlefield.

Two years after war broke out in northern Ethiopia between federal forces and Tigrayan rebels, the country remains in deep crisis, with its once-vibrant economy in ruins and a humanitarian disaster roiling Tigray.

A breakthrough agreement announced Wednesday between the federal government and Tigrayan regional authorities to cease hostilities has been hailed as “a welcome first step” by UN chief Antonio Guterres but crucial details remain unclear, with no mention of Eritrea, a key player in the conflict.

– ‘Half a million dead’ –

The war’s toll is unknown, but the US envoy to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, recently said that the devastation and deaths “rival what we’re seeing in Ukraine”.

“Over two years of conflict, as many as half a million… people have died, and the United States is deeply concerned about the potential for further mass atrocities.”

The war erupted on November 4, 2020, following tensions between the federal government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which dominated Ethiopian politics for nearly three decades until the election of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in 2018.

The violence has drawn in regional militias from Amhara and Afar in northern Ethiopia as well as forces from Eritrea, whose leader Isaias Afwerki has a longstanding enmity with the TPLF.

Tigray has faced severe shortages of food and medicines and limited access to electricity, banking and communications, with UN warnings that hundreds of thousands of people were on the brink of famine.

UN investigators have accused Abiy’s government of crimes against humanity in Tigray, including the use of starvation as a weapon — claims rejected by the authorities.

The region of six million people has been largely closed off to the outside world for well over a year, making it very difficult to assess conditions on the ground.

“We will never know the real toll,” said Patrick Ferras, a geopolitical researcher and president of Strategies Africaines, who told AFP that at least 300,000 people had likely lost their lives in the conflict.

A military source who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity said it was impossible to count the fighters involved but analysts believe the number extends into several hundred thousand.

– A fractured country –

The war has exposed underlying fissures within Africa’s second most populous nation, with both sides accused of abuses against civilians based on their ethnicity.

A mosaic of more than 80 ethno-linguistic communities, Ethiopia has long struggled to manage the diversity within its borders, with its most populated region Oromia witnessing constant clashes even as the war in Tigray dominates headlines.

Abiy, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for engineering a rapprochement with Eritrea, now presides over a country fractured along ethnic lines.

The non-profit ACLED, which focuses on conflict, has pointed to “rising levels of violence in many areas throughout Ethiopia”, singling out the regions of Oromia, Gambella and Benishangul-Gumuz.

With federal forces focused on northern Ethiopia, the risk of violence elsewhere flaring into prolonged instability poses yet another threat to the country of 120 million people.

– An economy in ruins –

When Abiy took the reins in 2018, Ethiopia’s economy was growing at breakneck speed, expanding annually by nearly 10 percent from 2010 onwards.

Since then, the economy has encountered several roadblocks, including the war and the Covid pandemic, to name two.

This year GDP is projected to grow less than four percent, according to the International Monetary Fund.

“The economic situation is disastrous,” said Ferras.

Annual inflation, which already averaged 13.5 percent between 2010 and 2018, exploded to around 33 percent this year, driven by rising food prices.

“This is largely due to the setbacks of Ethiopian agriculture,” a diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity, referring to a locust invasion, flooding and drought.

The situation will likely worsen as the war in Ukraine drags on, with the Ethiopian currency’s value plummeting against the US dollar and the import-dependent nation’s foreign exchange reserves drying up.

The IMF estimates that Ethiopia only has enough reserves to pay for about three weeks of imports as it struggles with a shortfall in development aid given by foreign nations.

“Since the beginning of the conflict, Ethiopia has lost half of its official development assistance,” the diplomat said.

– Faint hopes for peace –

Even as peace talks opened in South Africa last week, observers were pessimistic, with fighting showing no signs of letting up after a resumption of combat in August shattered a five-month truce.

In recent weeks, federal forces — backed by Eritrean soldiers — captured a string of towns in Tigray, piling pressure on the TPLF.

Wednesday’s surprise announcement of a deal to end hostilities was greeted with cautious hope, with the United States calling it an “important step towards peace”.

But there are “too many unknowns” surrounding the agreement, said Benjamin Petrini, a research fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Washington.

It is unclear how the implementation of the deal will be monitored and crucially, no mention has been made of a withdrawal by Eritrean troops, who have been accused of gruesome abuses against Tigrayan civilians.

“If someone wants to be sceptical you would say that solving it all in eight days of negotiations is not a serious effort,” Petrini told AFP.

“You may have only scratched the surface.”

Source: Africanews

Cameroon: Do you send money digitally? Tips to do it faster, easier and safer

Byline: Imane Charioui, Director of Francophone Africa, WorldRemit

DOUALA, Cameroon, 3 November, 2022,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- After more than a year of closures, movement, and work limitations here in Cameroon, the last year left us many challenges as a society. One of them being how to continue to financially support our families in the most difficult moments. 

Many Cameroonian immigrants continued to help not only their families but the country’s economy through sending money digitally and embracing technology and as of 1 June 2022, WorldRemit users globally sent nearly £75M GBP which equates to 57,753,377,280 West African CFA in remittances through its digital payment service.

Sending money digitally has proven to be much faster, safer and more convenient for both the sender and the recipient. The Cameroonian diaspora accounting for about 4 million people, with over one million living and working within Africa while the rest residing in France, Belgium, Germany, Canada and the United States1.

This trend is here to stay, and in 2022 users are expected to increasingly opt for more digital options.

So that families are not left without the important financial support of their loved ones abroad, Imane Charioui, Director of Francophone Africa, WorldRemit, a leading cross-border digital payments service, shares some advice.

Go digital. Money transactions don’t necessarily have to be done in person, handling cash, or through a bank account. Digital transfer services, such as WorldRemit, offer users ways to send money safely, quickly, and very easily from their phones or electronic devices, while those who receive it can also do so through digital channels such as bank accounts and mobile wallets. 

With increased digitization and access to mobile money in Cameroon, the country displays a relatively fair but feeble performance in terms of digital infrastructure, digital financial services and digital entrepreneurship2.

Take precautions. The more we avoid being exposed, the more protected we will be. The great advantage of digital platforms to send money is that they are so simple, safe, and fast to use that there’s no need for a middleman. Make sure that the service you use offers low commission rates and competitive exchange rates.

Protect your data. Make sure the money transfer service you use is committed to protecting your data. In WorldRemit’s case, our payment partners in receiving countries will verify your identity, but your data is always protected and is never shared with third parties.

Verify the recipient’s identity. Make sure you are using the recipient’s full legal name since the bank in the receiving country will verify that their identification matches the transfer information. Indicate how the recipient will receive the money, whether it is cash pickup, mobile money, or bank transfer.

Choose fast and safe transactions. Pick a service that ensures your money reaches its intended destination quickly and safely. 90% of transfers made with WorldRemit are authorized within minutes and the app’s technology enables users to monitor the status of their transactions from beginning to end for greater peace of mind.

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of WorldRemit.

Notes to Editors:

About WorldRemit

We’re a leading global payments company and, along with Sendwave, part of Zepz, a group powering two global payments brands.

We disrupted an industry previously dominated by offline legacy players by taking international money transfers online – making them safer, faster and lower-cost. We currently send from 50 countries to recipients in 130 countries, operate in more than 5,000 money transfer corridors worldwide and employ over 1,200 people globally.

On the sending side WorldRemit is 100% digital (cashless), increasing convenience and enhancing security. For those receiving money, the company offers a wide range of options including bank deposit, cash collection, mobile airtime top-up and mobile money.

Backed by Accel, TCV and Leapfrog – WorldRemit’s headquarters are in London, United Kingdom with regional offices around the globe.

www.worldremit.com

Media Contact

WorldRemit Press Office

media@worldremit.com

Source : African Media Agency (AMA)

African Development Bank calls for closer linkage of peace, security and development efforts

The African Union held its first Political Conference in Tangier, Morocco, with delegates calling for accelerated partnerships between the various actors to respond more efficiently to Africa’s challenges.

In her opening speech, delivered on behalf of the President of the African Development Bank Group, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, the Bank’s Vice President for Finance and Director of Financial Services, Hassatou Diop N’Sele, commended His Majesty King Mohammed VI and the Moroccan government for organizing the Conference.

She said the meeting provided a unique opportunity to better sequence and interweave security and development interventions in Africa.

“If ever there was a time to reaffirm the strategic nature of the link between security and development, it is now,” N’Sele stressed. She noted that due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Africa’s GDP in 2020 recorded its largest decline in twenty years. She added: “We have lost $165 billion and over 30 million jobs. More than 26 million people have fallen into extreme poverty and more than 250 million have been affected by conflict.”

“And now, as we begin a painful recovery, we face a food crisis: grain and energy prices have skyrocketed, while the lack of fertilizer threatens the balance of our food systems,” She noted.

To avert a looming food crisis, worsened by the overlapping impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, the African Development Bank Group has launched a $1.5 billion African Emergency Food Production Facility to bolster food security in its member countries.

The facility is providing 20 million African smallholder farmers with access to fertilizer and seeds to help produce an additional 38 million tonnes of food, worth about $12 billion over the next two years.

N’Sele participated in panel on the nexus of “Peace, Security and Development”, in relation to the orientations of the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

She restated the Bank’s commitment to work with the African Union, regional economic communities, development partners, governments, and the private sector to mobilize resources to address the structural causes of conflict, reduce volatility and consolidate development outcomes for a more secure and resilient continent.

The African Development Fund, the Bank Group’s concessional window, focuses on fragility, economic resilience, conflict prevention, and helping post-conflict countries. The Bank Group is working on an innovative security-indexed investment bond platform to mobilize public and private resources for addressing the root causes of insecurity, build institutional capacity and community resilience, and rehabilitate infrastructure that would have been affected by insecurity.

Jean-Guy Afrika, Acting Director of the Regional Integration Coordination Office at the Bank, urged African Union member states and conference partners to collaborate in programming, strategy and implementation of their projects.

“If we want to accelerate Africa’s development, build a better business environment and achieve free movement of goods, people, services and capital, it is essential that we have a common vision to strengthen the institutional capacity of regional economic communities and regulate and harmonize policy frameworks between countries,” Jean-Guy Afrika said during a panel on the role of regional integration in peace and prosperity in Africa.

Over the past six years, the African Development Bank Group has invested more than $44 billion in infrastructure across the continent, including water and sanitation, energy, transport and digital infrastructure.

Afrika said Morocco remains a privileged partner of the Bank Group and a model in deploying funds to accelerate development and regional integration.
Source African Development Bank Group

African Development Bank to amplify Africa’s voice at COP27

What:   African Development Bank at 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference

Who:    African Union Commission; African leaders; African Development Bank; the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa; NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency; Partners

When:   6-18 November 2022

Where:  Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt | Click here to follow online.

The African Development Bank Group is set to join global leaders, including from Africa, at the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) to lend support to Africa’s concerns and priorities on climate change.

COP27, commonly referred to as the African COP, is an opportunity to spotlight the African continent’s special needs, circumstances and opportunities. It will take place from 6 to 18 November in the Egyptian resort city of Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.

Bank President Akinwumi Adesina will lead a delegation of senior management and experts to join the African Union Commission, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, and the NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency as host the Africa Pavilion at COP27.

The Pavilion provides the space for Africa to meet and strategize to defend its common positions and interests at COP27.

The Bank will use its presence at the event to enhance strategic partnerships to mobilize new financial resources and shape the global COP27 narrative on critical issues such as just energy transition, nature-based solutions, adaptation finance, and loss and damage.

Delegates will highlight the Bank’s significant commitments towards greening Africa’s growth, including the commitments of the African Development Fund, its concessional lending arm to low-income African countries, and reaffirm the Bank’s request for more concessional financing from the reallocation of the IMF Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) to deliver green growth and sustainable development faster and at scale..

The Bank will also showcase, through an array of its programmes with high returns on investments, Africa’s potential to drive global emissions down and grow sustainably: 65% of remaining arable land in the world; youthful labor, Africa Continental Free Trade Area’s 3.3 trillion market, and abundant renewable energy (10 TW solar, 350 GW hydropower, 150 GW wind, and 15 GW geothermal).

Other senior members of the bank delegation include, Kevin Kariuki, Vice President for Power, Energy, Climate and Green Growth; Beth Dunford, Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development; Kevin Urama, Acting Chief Economist and Vice President for Economic Governance and Knowledge Management; and Solomon Quaynor, Vice President for Private Sector, Infrastructure and Industrialization.

COP27 – will build on the outcomes of COP26 to deliver action on an array of issues critical to tackling the climate emergency – from urgently reducing greenhouse gas emissions, building resilience and adapting to the inevitable impacts of climate change, to delivering on the commitments to finance climate action in developing countries. Around 90 heads of state are expected to attend, including U.S President Joe Biden and Macky Sall, President of Senegal and African Union chair, and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Click here to follow activities at the Africa Pavilion.
Source African Development Bank Group

Uganda : Health Minister visits new Ebola treatment unit

Jane Ruth Aceng toured the new treatment center, which was built by the charity Doctors Without Borders, alongside U.S Ambassador to Uganda Natali Brown and other health agencies officials.

According to health officials, the 42 Bed facility is designed to help patients recover quickly and also reduce the stress of isolation.

“With this 42 bed facility… relatives, friends can come and visit the patients,”Aceng said.

“There are high-risk zones and they are what we call green Zones, where the family members can come and interact with the patients with a two-metre distance in between,” she added.

A recent explosion of Ebola virus cases has been reported in the Ugandan rural community Kassanda.

Officials said it began when defiant residents exhumed a body at night, undoing the work of a safe burial team in order to give the deceased man a proper Islamic funeral.

Within days, at least 23 of the mourners had contracted Ebola and three were dead, prompting Uganda’s health minister to say she hoped the members of the farming community in the district of Kassanda had learnt their lesson.

Ebola has infected 130 people and killed 43 in Uganda since September 20th, when the outbreak was confirmed in Mubende days after local officials first noted a “strange illness.”

Official figures don’t include those who died with probable Ebola before the outbreak was confirmed.

Source: Africanews

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