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Published 26th July 2019

Vol 60 No 15


Nigeria

The Gang of 43 breaks cover

Vehicles on fire during protests in Abuja on 22 July. Pic: Xinhua News Agency/PA Images
Vehicles on fire during protests in Abuja on 22 July. Pic: Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

Light on technocrats, heavy on party hacks with accountability issues, many ask whether the new ministerial team was worth the four-month wait

With an extra five members, stuffed with party loyalists and an average age of 60, President Muhammadu Buhari's new ministerial team cannot be accused of exuding dynamism or imagination. Announced two days after about a dozen people were killed in the capital when Shiite protestors clashed with armed police, the composition of the new government reinforced the sense of a lack of executive urgency as the country's national security crisis was spiralling out of control.

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A killing joke

William Ruto. Pic: Gerd Uwe Hauth/DPA/PA Images 2007
William Ruto. Pic: Gerd Uwe Hauth/DPA/PA Images 2007

A fake letter detailing an assassination plot against the Deputy President has widened the fault lines within the ruling elite

The political drama sparked by a fake letter claiming that several cabinet ministers from President Uhuru Kenyatta's Mount Kenya homeland had been plotting to kill Deputy President...


Zuma blusters at Zondo

The former President failed to convince at the state capture commission, but Ramaphosa took hits from another quarter

The African National Congress breathed a collective sigh of relief – party insiders said – when the questioning of former President Jacob Zuma, who is facing multiple corruption al...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

Boris Johnson took over as Britain's Prime Minister on 24 July after easily beating former Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt for the leadership of the ruling Conservative party. A Johnson premiership raises the prospects of Britain leaving the European Union without an exit deal on 31 October. That may mean British ministers could start talks on new trade deals with Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya. Divisions between the UK and the EU may increase Africa’s leverage in trade and security talks.

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Boris Johnson took over as Britain's Prime Minister on 24 July after easily beating former Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt for the leadership of the ruling Conservative party. A Johnson premiership raises the prospects of Britain leaving the European Union without an exit deal on 31 October. That may mean British ministers could start talks on new trade deals with Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya. Divisions between the UK and the EU may increase Africa’s leverage in trade and security talks.

Brexit will consume the Johnson team's attention almost to the exclusion of anything else. Diplomats in Brussels and across Africa note shrinking British influence and interest in the continent since the 2016 referendum. That has serious implications in the Horn.

Not a natural diplomat as seen in his unhappy stint as Foreign Secretary, Johnson’s clumsy references, when editor of the London weekly Spectator, to 'picaninnies', 'AIDS-ridden choristers', 'watermelon smiles' and colonialism, though he has since apologised, are hard to forget. However, Johnson's aides say he will pick a more diverse team than his predecessors: fellow Brexit enthusiasts Kwasi Kwarteng (whose family is Ghanaian) and Priti Patel (family is Ugandan) are likely to get top jobs.

Last summer, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta appeared to forget Johnson’s name, referring to him as 'the bicycle guy'. Many said it was an intentional snub. Either way, African leaders could be forgiven for treating Johnson as warily as the EU will.

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The Egypt model isn't working

As negotiations for the transition stretch out, activists are blocking plans for a born-again junta

Backed by money and guns from allies in the Gulf and Cairo, the ruling generals in Khartoum had hoped by now to have consolidated a new regime, complete with co-opted civilians, fo...


Kasaï peace at risk

An ambitious provincial governor’s new appointments and initiatives threaten to anger armed militants now on a ceasefire

Violence engulfed Kasaï Central Province between 2016 and 2018, when the anti-government Kamuina Nsapu militia – aggrieved about the murder of their traditional leader by the...


Paris’s terror dilemma

France needs solutions, and fast. It can't go all out against the Sahel's jihadists, but neither can it just fold its tents and go home

Over recent days President Emmanuel Macron and key advisers have been reviewing the French engagement in the Sahel amid increasingly vocal criticism of the Opération Barkhane milit...


One rule for the party

Factions are struggling for advantage within the ruling CCM. But outside it, opposition and dissent are dangerous

With 15 months to go to the 2020 general election, President John Pombe Magufuli faces blatant dissent from senior figures in the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM). Yusuf Makamba an...


Fund falls for Sassou

The IMF sees the country as a test case for African nations which borrowed heavily from China. It is being lenient

President Denis Sassou-Nguesso appears, again, to have secured victory over the International Monetary Fund, obtaining an urgently needed bail-out in exchange for promises that he ...



Pointers

Off the case

The dismissal of Zambia's embattled Minister of Finance, Margaret Mwanakatwe, on 14 July came as no surprise, although a few eyebrows were raised at the choice of Sunday night for ...


Spinner caught in web

In the months leading up to the August 2017 polls in Kenya, rumours flew that data-mining consultancy Cambridge Analytica, then at the height of its notoriety, had been hired by Pr...


Vaz clings on

Hopes that the 10 March elections would usher in a new era of reconciliation and dislodge President José Mário Vaz's limpet-like grip on power have again proved vain as the politic...


Sisi's Sinai stalemate

The temporary cancellation of flights to Cairo by major airlines on security grounds this month and the handing over of El Arish port to the military are reminders that the Islamis...