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  • Africa Grows Strongly but Poverty & Inequality Remain Persistently High

    Africa Grows Strongly but Poverty & Inequality Remain Persistently High

    {{Economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) remains strong with growth forecasted to be 4.9% in 2013. Almost a third of countries in the region are growing at 6% and more, and African countries are now routinely among the fastest-growing countries in the world, according to the World Bank’s new Africa’s Pulse, a twice-yearly analysis of the issues shaping Africa’s economic prospects.}}

    Buoyed by rising private investment in the region and remittances now worth US$33 billion a year supporting household incomes GDP growth in Africa will continue to rise and pick up to 5.3% in 2014 and 5.5% in 2015.

    Strong government investments and higher production in the mineral resources, agriculture and service sectors are supporting the bulk of the economic growth.

    As Africa’s growth rates continue to surge with the region increasingly a magnet for investment and tourism, Africa’s Pulse notes that poverty and inequality remain “unacceptably high and the pace of reduction unacceptably slow.”

    Almost one out of every two Africans lives in extreme poverty today. Optimistically, that rate will fall to between 16% and 30% by 2030. The report suggests that most of the world’s poor people by 2030 will live in Africa.

    “Sustaining Africa’s strong growth over the longer term while significantly reducing poverty and strengthening people’s resilience to adversity may prove difficult because of the many internal and external uncertainties African countries face,“ says Makhtar Diop, the World Bank Group’s Vice President for Africa.

    “Within Africa, natural disasters such as droughts and floods are occurring more frequently while the threat of conflict continues, with recent events in the Central African Republic and Mali reinforcing the need for peace, security, and development to take place at the same time.

    This is why the World Bank Group pledged US$1 billion in May this year to help bring peace and development back to Africa’s Great Lakes Region through better health and education services, more jobs and cross-border trade between the countries in the area, and more electricity. We will take this same message of peace, security, and development to the countries of the Sahel over the coming weeks.”

    Following the global financial crisis and recurring climatic volatility on the continent, a growing number of African countries are setting up social safety nets to protect the health and livelihoods of poor and vulnerable people during periods of adversity. Africa’s Pulse notes that safety nets can protect families from the worst effects of crises and also contribute to growth as well by allowing people to raise their incomes.

    Africa’s rising growth is underpinned by strong private investment. Gross fixed capital formation in the region has steadily increased from about 16.4% of GDP in 2000 to about 20.4% in 2011. The pickup in investment has directly contributed to economic growth and has also helped boost the productive capacity of the region’s economy.

    Increasingly, infrastructure projects are being financed from new funding sources, such as China, but increasingly from Brazil and India, according to the analysis.

    Translating growth into much less poverty

    Despite strong growth, Africa’s progress on ensuring that growth translates into considerably less poverty has been slow and hindered by high inequality.

    “Africa grew faster in the last decade than most other regions, but the impact on poverty is much less than we would’ve liked. Africa’s growth has not been as powerful in reducing poverty as it could have been because of the high levels of inequality. Growth with equity is possible, but it requires a decline in inequality in both outcomes and opportunities,” says Francisco Ferreira, Deputy Regional Chief Economist, World Bank Africa Region.

    Tourism destinations continue to thrive throughout Africa: tourist arrivals to the region jumped 4%compared to the same period a year ago. Among the destinations for which quarterly data are available, the strongest performers in tourism were Cape Verde (up 18%), followed by the Seychelles (up 13%), South Africa (up 4%), Swaziland (up2%), and Mauritius (up 1%).

    Africa’s Pulse notes that exports from Sub-Saharan Africa have remained concentrated in a few commodities such as oil, metals and minerals. Throughout the region, countries have diversified their trading partners and the BRIC countries—China, Brazil, Russia and India— now account for 36% of the region’s exports. These exports reached US$144 billion in 2012, almost at the same level of Africa’s exports to the EU and the United States combined at US$148 billion.

    “But high dependence on one or a few commodities makes Africa’s resource-rich countries vulnerable to sharp movements in prices of these commodities,” says Punam Chuhan-Pole, Lead Economist of the World Bank’s Africa Region, and author of Africa’s Pulse.

    Region needs better statistics

    According to Africa’s Pulse, as the continent moves closer to the center stage in the global fight against poverty, countries will need to invest in improving their weak statistical capacity to be able to better track and respond to their poverty and national account estimates.

    Regular, reliable statistics are essential to measure development progress and policy analysis and yet Africa’s statistics are wanting, which is why the World Bank is redoubling its support to countries to improve the quality and frequency of their data and statistics.

    The new report says that technology can help. For example, the proliferation of mobile phones in Sub-Saharan Africa could be used to collect frequent up-to-date household information, which in turn could also be used to estimate trends in poverty. Agricultural statistics such as crop yields could be improved using inexpensive handheld Global Positioning System (GPS) tools.

    agencies

  • Egypt Attacks Target Security Forces

    Egypt Attacks Target Security Forces

    Egyptian security forces have been targeted in several attacks around the country, reports say.

    {{Gunmen killed five Egyptian soldiers who were in a patrol vehicle outside of the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya, say security officials.}}

    A large car bomb struck headquarters of the security forces in southern Sinai, killing five, while a rocket attack hit a satellite station in a Cairo suburb.

    The attacks follow a day of deadly clashes on Sunday.

    Security forces have been the frequent victims of attacks in northern Sinai, where analysts say a fully fledged insurgency is building.

    Quentin Sommerville: “This fits with the military-backed government’s narrative that they are fighting terrorism”.

    But the south of the peninsula – key to Egypt’s economy due to tourism – has remained largely peaceful, until the attack in al-Tour on Monday.

    agencies

  • Libya Demands for Answers on US Commandos Raid

    Libya Demands for Answers on US Commandos Raid

    Libya has called for an explanation after the US captured a man it alleges is an al-Qaeda leader during a raid in Tripoli.

    Ali Zeidan, Libya’s prime minister, suggested on Sunday that his government was not informed of the plan before US commandos seized Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, known by his alias Anas al-Liby, in the Libyan capital on Saturday.

    “The Libyan government is following the news of the kidnapping of a Libyan citizen who is wanted by US authorities,” Zeidan said in a statement. “The Libyan government has contacted to US authorities to ask them to provide an explanation.”

    Liby is wanted by the US for his alleged role in the East Africa embassy bombings that killed 224 people in 1998. The US had offered $5m for information leading to his capture.

    US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel praised the US military on Sunday saying that the raid underlined the precision, global reach and capabilities of the US forces.

    George Little, a spokesman for the US Defence Department, said that Liby was being “lawfully detained by the US military in a secure location outside of Libya”.

    Media reports from US, added that even though the US had said that Liby would be interrogated where he was being held before he was brought to justice, it was unclear whether he would be brought to justice in a US courtroom or a miltary tribunal.

    {{‘Work of piracy’}}

    Media in Tripoli, quoted Liby’s wife as saying that he was seized as he headed to morning prayer by eight to 10 masked men.

    “His wife saw the men getting out of two cars in front of the house … she added that the masked men immediately attacked him before he could get out of his car,” our correspondent said.

    “She said she was listening to them and heard some of them speaking in a Libyan dialect … and some information indicated they were Libyan special forces.”

    Nabih al-Ruqai, Liby’s brother, blamed foreign troops for using illegal methods: “This is a work of piracy from foreign troops on Libyan land to kidnap my brother, they were supposed to present legal documents to the Libyan government and my brother should be tried here in Libya – like any Libyan.”

    The raid in Libya coincided with a failed attempt in Somalia to seize Ahmed Godane, a leader of the al-Qaeda-linked group al-Shabab.

    aljazeera

  • Trio Awarded Nobel Medicine Prize

    Trio Awarded Nobel Medicine Prize

    Americans James Rothman and Randy Schekman and German-born Thomas Sudhof have been awarded the Nobel Medicine Prize for their groundbreaking work on how the cell organises its transport system.

    The trio, who all work at US universities, were honoured for “their discoveries of machinery regulating vesicle traffic, a major transport system in our cells”, the Nobel committee said in its announcement in Stockholm, Sweden, on Monday.

    Their research has helped explain processes as varied as the release of insulin into the blood, communication between nerve cells and the way viruses infect cells.

    Schekman said he was awakened at 1am at his home in California by the chairman of the prize committee and was still suffering from jetlag after returning from a trip to Germany the night before.

    “I wasn’t thinking too straight. I didn’t have anything elegant to say,” he told The Associated Press. “All I could say was `Oh my God,’ and that was that.”

    He called the prize a wonderful acknowledgment of the work he and his students had done and said he knew it would change his life.

    “I called my lab manager and I told him to go buy a couple bottles of Champagne and expect to have a celebration with my lab,” he said.

    Multiple prizes

    Rothman and Schekman received the Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award for their discoveries in 2002 – an award often seen as a precursor of a Nobel Prize.

    The announcements of Nobel laureates will continue this week and next with physics, chemistry, literature, peace and economics.

    Each prize is worth $1.2m.

    Established by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, the Nobel Prizes have been handed out by award committees in Stockholm and Oslo since 1901. The winners always receive their awards on December 10, the anniversary of Nobel’s death in 1896.

    Last year’s medicine award went to Britain’s John Gurdon and Japan’s Shinya Yamanaka for their contributions to stem cell science.

    Source: Agencies

  • Israel’s Rabbi Ovadia Yosef Dies at 93

    Israel’s Rabbi Ovadia Yosef Dies at 93

    The influential spiritual leader of Israel’s Sephardic Jewish community and the ultra-Orthodox Shas party has died at a Jerusalem hospital, a spokesman said.

    Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, 93, underwent heart surgery at Jerusalem’s Hadassah hospital on September 23 where he had remained since then, with doctors saying just days ago his condition had improved.

    But late on Sunday, the hospital said his condition had suddenly worsened, with medics confirming it as critical on Monday.

    “After a long struggle, the rabbi died just a few moments ago,” the hospital spokesman told public radio on Monday.

    Yosef, whose son Yitzhak Yosef was elected chief rabbi of Israel’s Sephardic Jews in June, a post he himself had previously held, had been in and out of hospital for months.

    He wielded enormous influence among Israeli Jews of Middle Eastern and North African ancestry, and had frequently been a kingmaker in the country’s fickle coalition politics.

    Shas was a member of successive governing coalitions before going into opposition after the last general election in January.

    Source: Agencies

  • Ravel Morrison: Sam Allardyce praises West Ham midfielder

    Ravel Morrison: Sam Allardyce praises West Ham midfielder

    {{West Ham manager Sam Allardyce said Ravel Morrison has “sorted himself out”, describing his goal in a 3-0 win at Tottenham as “a bit of genius”.

    Morrison, 20, joined West Ham last year after off-field problems hindered his progress at Manchester United.}}

    Allardyce said: “Sir Alex Ferguson told me ‘I hope you sort him out because you will have a top-class player’.

    “I’m not sure I’ve sorted him out, he’s sorted himself out. He’s begun to enjoy his football which he loves so much.”

    The manager added: “He enjoys being with the lads and listens to what the experienced players say, and can do something that nobody else can do in our side and you saw that today.”

    Attacking midfielder Morrison was called into the England Under-21 squad for the first time earlier this week and he crowned his international selection with a fine solo goal, running from his own half to take on the Spurs defence and chip goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.

    It was his fourth goal in eight appearances this term, which Allardyce also thought was “goal of the season” so far, and it lifted his side out of the bottom three.

    The victory came after Allardyce decided not to name any recognised strikers in his side, with Morrison the furthest forward.

    Morrison joined Manchester United as a schoolboy but only made three first-team appearances before moving to the Hammers in January 2012, spending last season on loan at Birmingham.

    BBC Sports

  • Malala: We must talk to the Taliban to get peace

    Malala: We must talk to the Taliban to get peace

    A Pakistani teenager shot in the head by the Taliban for championing girls’ rights to education has said talks with the militants are needed for peace.

    Malala Yousafzai was attacked by a gunman on a school bus near her former home in Pakistan in October 2012.

    The targeting of a schoolgirl who had spoken out for girls’ rights to education caused outrage in Pakistan and around the world.

    The 16-year-old was treated in the UK and now lives in Birmingham.

    She spent months in hospital and required several operations to repair her skull.

    In her first in-depth interview since the attack, Malala told the BBC that discussions with the Taliban were needed to achieve peace.

    “The best way to solve problems and to fight against war is through dialogue,” she said.

    “That’s not an issue for me, that’s the job of the government… and that’s also the job of America.”

    In July, plans for talks involving the Taliban, the US and the Afghan government were frustrated by a row over the status of the Taliban’s newly opened office in Doha, Qatar.

    Malala said it was important that the Taliban discussed their demands.

    “They must do what they want through dialogue,” she said.

    “Killing people, torturing people and flogging people… it’s totally against Islam. They are misusing the name of Islam.”

    Malala also described the day of the attack for the first time. She said the street her school bus was travelling on was unusually deserted before the vehicle was flagged down and the gunman opened fire.

    “I could see that there was no-one [there] at that time.

    “Usually there used to be so many people and boys and they used to be standing in front of shops. But today… it was vacant.”

    The teenager, who gave a speech to the UN in July, also spoke of her desire to return to Pakistan and enter politics.

    “I will be a politician in my future. I want to change the future of my country and I want to make education compulsory,” she said.

    “I hope that a day will come [when] the people of Pakistan will be free, they will have their rights, there will be peace and every girl and every boy will be going to school.”

    BBC

  • Canceled EU-U.S. talks complicate trade ambitions

    Canceled EU-U.S. talks complicate trade ambitions

    {{Even before the cancelation of the latest round of EU-U.S. talks, negotiations to create the world’s largest free-trade deal were getting into difficulty territory.}}

    France won a concession to leave European movies and entertainment out of the pact, to shield them from Hollywood and Silicon Valley, raising concerns Washington may pursue opt-outs for its shipping industry on security grounds.

    Then the first round of talks in July were overshadowed by reports the United States had bugged European Union offices under its surveillance program made public by fugitive former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

    Now, just before negotiators were due to get down to the nitty gritty in the search for a deal by the end of next year, the U.S. government’s partial shutdown has forced next week’s talks in Brussels to be scrapped.

    If that were not enough, a split is emerging between Europe and the United States on one of the most critical areas of the proposed pact: finance.

    “This delay is not fatal, but if the U.S. shutdown drags on and you are taking things off the table like culture and financial services, it is not a good way to start,” said Stuart Eizenstat, a former U.S. ambassador to the European Union.

    “This postponement may complicate the timetable of completing the talks by the end of 2014,” Eizenstat said.

    EU and U.S. officials say the deal, known as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, could boost economic output by some $100 billion a year on each side of the Atlantic, creating a market of 800 million people.

    After five years of crisis, both see a deal as a way to reinvigorate their economies that account for a third of world trade when China’s might threatens their global standing.

    {reuters}

  • AfDB gives $70m to PTA Bank for Trade Growth

    AfDB gives $70m to PTA Bank for Trade Growth

    {{The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank (AfDB) approved on Wednesday a financial package consisting of $20 million in additional equity and a $50 million line of credit to finance projects in the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank (PTA Bank) member states.}}

    This financial package will allow PTA Bank to finance a mix of small- and medium-scale enterprises and regional infrastructure projects.

    Moreover, this package will count in mobilizing financial resources for developing the Tripartite Free Trade Area (TFTA) region, which will ultimately contribute to economic development and generate employment opportunities.

    PTA Bank was established in 1985 as a financing arm of the Common Market for East and Southern Africa (Comesa) and is headquartered in Bujumbura, Burundi.

    The bank’s shareholders include Burundi, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritius, Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe as well as the AfDB and the People’s Republic of China.

    PTA Bank’s mandate is to foster economic and social development in regional member states through regional integration, trade and project finance. Its financial performance in recent years has been robust, despite the global financial crisis, and has consistently posted healthy profits and achieved good asset quality over the last five years, and has also strengthened its corporate governance and risk-management structures and processes.

    The provision of the financial package builds on the existing strong partnership between PTA Bank and AfDB based on synergies stemming from complementary sources of comparative advantage.

    PTA Bank, with its field presence and market knowledge, provides a logical channel for AfDB to reach out to end-customers by efficiently leveraging its scale.

    Moreover, AfDB’s subscription of new equity in PTA Bank is expected to play a catalytic role and by so-doing encourage more institutional shareholders to boost the bank’s capitalisation.

    {Workers construct a road }
    NMG

  • Sudan’s Ruling Party in Fresh Signs of Rebellion Against Bashir

    Sudan’s Ruling Party in Fresh Signs of Rebellion Against Bashir

    {{Several figures within Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party (NCP) who signed a memo last week calling for the cancellation of recent cuts in subsidies and an end to the bloody crackdown on protesters, refused to appear before a commission of inquiry formed by the party.}}

    The economic measures triggered some of the worst protests Sudan has seen in years, with the death toll surpassing 200 according to Amnesty International.

    The memo, which was sent to president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir and initially signed by 31 NCP members, criticised the government’s decision to remove subsidies on fuel and other basic commodities, saying it “harshly” impacted on Sudanese citizens.

    The signatories, who included former presidential adviser Ghazi Salah Al-Deen Al-Attabani and MP Aisha Al-Ghabashawi, said parliament had not been consulted over the latest economic measures, which were opposed by sections of the NCP.

    “Alternatives [to lifting subsidies] were proposed by individuals, experts and political forces but the substitutes were given no consideration and the government insisted on implementing the measures as they are indifferent to their impact and the extent of citizens’ ability to endure them”, said the memo.

    The head of the NCP organisational sector, Hamid Sideeg, announced on Friday that his party has formed a committee chaired by national assembly speaker Ibrahim Al-Tahir to query those whose names appeared in the petition that was circulated publicly.

    Reliable sources told Sudan Tribune that Ghazi, Ghabashawi and several other signatories refused to appear before the party’s commission of inquiry, pointing that out that the body has no legal basis.

    The same sources asserted that the group, known for their reformist agenda, would step up its rhetoric against the party’s dominant group if it continued to implement policies harmful to the Islamic Movement (IM), which is considered the ideological arm of the NCP.

    Sources close to Al-Attabani denied rumours that he has been detained or put under house arrest, citing a social visit he made to the Naima area in White Nile state on Friday before returning to his home in Khartoum North.

    Disputes within the NCP escalated against the background of divergent positions on the public protests which have lasted for two weeks.

    One senior source told Sudan Tribune that a meeting at the NCP’s leadership office last Thursday saw a sharp confrontation between president Bashir and three of the memo’s signatories.

    The source said that Al-Attabani and Ghabashawi had outlined the reformists’ vision and criticised the government’s economic measures, as well as its response to the protests, calling for a reversal of recent cuts in subsidies and more political freedoms.

    Al-Attabani responded to claims by Bashir’s that the government is intending to approve a new constitution which allows political pluralism, saying the problem is that the NCP has little appetite to play by the rules.

    He added that past experience clearly showed that the NCP did not respect the constitution which was drafted and approved by its own institutions, saying that if the government had respected the constitution it could have prevented the war in South Kordofan and Blue Nile states.

    The ex-head of the NCP parliamentary caucus further stressed that government institutions should abide by the laws as outlined in the constitution and take tougher action to fight corruption.

    One of the memo signatories, Fadl Ahmed Abdullah, told the UAE-based Sky News Arabia that they reject Bashir’s probe and described al-Tahir as “part of the problem”, saying he is not qualified to stand on the committee.

    The spokesperson for NCP reformists, Abdel-Ghani Ahmed Idris, told Sudan Tribune from his residence in London that the party is no longer governed by rules and regulations but the “gun”, adding that the party’s institutions function only to implement the decisions of the dominant group.

    He added that it has become clear that the NCP is “unreformable”, hinting to a possible split from it.

    The first split within the NCP took place in 1999 following a bitter power struggle between Bashir and Islamist leader Hassan Al-Turabi, with the latter subsequently ousted from his post as parliament speaker.

    Al-Turabi later established the Popular Congress Party (PCP) and has since been a vociferous critic of the very regime for which he orchestrated the army-backed seizure of power in 1989.

    {sudantribune}