Jump to navigation

Published 22nd October 2020

Vol 61 No 21


Nigeria

Rage at the gates

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020

Targeted with live rounds in Lagos, campaigners against police brutality step up their protests and political ambition

Pressure is mounting on President Muhammadu Buhari's government after the shooting of protestors at the Lekki Toll Gate in Lagos on 20 October with the African Union and the United Nations condemning the violence, calling for a full investigation of the deaths and negotiations to resolve the crisis. After investigations on the ground, Amnesty International reported that at least 12 civilians had been shot dead in the attacks at Lekki Toll Gate and the Alausa protest ground in Lagos.

READ FOR FREE

States carry on regardless

Rotimi Akeredolu and his deputy Lucky Ayedatiwa celebrate their victory, Ondo State, 10 October 2020. Pic: Olukayode Jaiyeola/NurPhoto/PA Images
Rotimi Akeredolu and his deputy Lucky Ayedatiwa celebrate their victory, Ondo State, 10 October 2020. Pic: Olukayode Jaiyeola/NurPhoto/PA Images

Rival candidates in Ondo State's elections campaigned for their national ambitions more than local issues

After losing the Edo state elections last month, the ruling All Progressives' Congress (APC) held on to Rotimi Akeredolu's governorship of Ondo State on 10 October – a result...


The limits on the economy

Mthuli Ncube at Parliament, Harare, July 2020. Pic: Wanda/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images
Mthuli Ncube at Parliament, Harare, July 2020. Pic: Wanda/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

As dissent grows and government lacks finance for a new land scheme, the finance minister insists prospects are brightening

Rejecting the gathering gloom about the national economy, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube released a budget strategy paper on 16 October forecasting the economy would grow by 7.4% ne...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The International Monetary Fund reckons the Covid-19 pandemic will result in sub-Saharan African economies contracting by 3% this year and bouncing back by a similar amount in 2021. Over half of low-income countries are either in debt distress or at high risk of debt distress, according to the Fund.

Yet despite these dismal forecasts and a growing consensus that a handful of African sovereigns are likely to default over the next year, the autumn meetings of the IMF and World Bank, sev...

The International Monetary Fund reckons the Covid-19 pandemic will result in sub-Saharan African economies contracting by 3% this year and bouncing back by a similar amount in 2021. Over half of low-income countries are either in debt distress or at high risk of debt distress, according to the Fund.

Yet despite these dismal forecasts and a growing consensus that a handful of African sovereigns are likely to default over the next year, the autumn meetings of the IMF and World Bank, seven months into the pandemic, covered little more than the lowest hanging fruit. A six-month extension of the Debt Service Suspension Initiative – which Kenya and several other African states have opted out of because it could hurt their creditworthiness – and a commitment to publish a 'Common Framework for Debt Treatments' in November, setting out debt restructuring proposals on a country-by-country basis, represents more thin gruel. Little progress has been made on private sector debt restructuring.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva says emerging markets will need $2.5 trillion of assistance. Yet the Fund had, by the end of July, only dispersed $90 billion in loans and currency swaps, and is unable to get its board to sign off on new Special Drawing Rights.

'You can't squeeze water out of a stone,' says economist Joseph Stiglitz, who argues that without debt restructuring and increased fiscal assistance, many countries will not recover. For the moment, however, little more is on offer.

Read more

A DIY debt trap

The government has turned down debt deferral and plans to increase borrowing, prompting growing doubts about its judgement

President Uhuru Kenyatta's government insists it will not take advantage of the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) offered by the Group of 20 wealthy nations to mitigate the...


New debt demand as bondholders defer decision

A local company goes to court to recover $300m from the state power utility as bondholders postpone a vote on the government's request for debt relief

The operator of the country's only coal-fired power station, Maamba Collieries Ltd., has opened arbitration proceedings with Zambia's state-owned electricity utility Zesco to recov...


Koroma probe risks backlash

The government hopes a strong stand on corruption will win votes, but the opposition is set on making the cost of prosecutions unacceptably high

In what government supporters see as a watershed moment and critics say is a precursor to civil unrest, formal corruption investigations have opened against former President Ernest...


A change of tone

President Ramaphosa has made a renewed commitment to review public ownership and plot out a major role for the private sector

After a decade of corruption, economic decline and a crippling pandemic, President Cyril Ramaphosa has unveiled his Economic Reconstruction and Recovery Plan, which does not go as ...



Pointers

Jihadists trade up

The deal that saw Jama'a Nusrat ul Islam wa al Muslimin?(JNIM), the Malian branch of Al Qaida led by Iyad ag Ghaly, exchange four hostages for 204 presumed jihadists, has thrown up...


Frelimo flounders in north

The insurgents in Cabo Delgado retain the initiative, having attacked a village in Tanzania and reportedly destroyed a Tanzania People's Defence Force armoured personnel carrier on...