Without peace to keep, UN winds up its missions in Africa, experts wary of risky security vacuum

Without peace to keep, UN winds up its missions in Africa, experts wary of risky security vacuum

Half of the UN’s 12 peacekeeping missions are in Africa, comprises about 86,000 military, police and civilian personnel. MONUSCO and MINUSMA, two of the biggest and most expensive operations, are working to fully withdraw by the end of 2023.

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Millions of jobs in Kenya, South Africa and 3 others in limbo over AGOA trade initiative

Millions of jobs in Kenya, South Africa and 3 others in limbo over AGOA trade initiative

Apparel has been the standout success story of AGOA, which launched in 2000 to help develop African economies and foster democracy. African apparel exports under the programme reached nearly $1.4 billion last year, double the pre-AGOA amount.

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Poverty and corruption are transforming African coastal waters into world’s biggest transnational crime scene

Poverty and corruption are transforming African coastal waters into world’s biggest transnational crime scene

Drug runners also exploit the hard-to-police waters of East Africa, including the island states of Comoros, Madagascar, Mauritius, the French island of Réunion and the Seychelles, which has the highest per capita rate of heroin use in the world.

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US to evict Gabon, Niger, Uganda and Central African Republic from Agoa trade programme

US to evict Gabon, Niger, Uganda and Central African Republic from Agoa trade programme

Launched in 2000, AGOA grants exports from qualifying countries duty-free access to the US market. It is set to expire in September 2025, but discussions are already underway over whether to extend it and for how long.

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Africa: A young continent ruled by old men and where democracy is strangled by gerontocrats

Africa: A young continent ruled by old men and where democracy is strangled by gerontocrats

Youthful uprisings first flared in 2011, during the Arab Spring, when an uprising in Tunisia inspired others in Egypt and Libya. Later, powerful demonstrations erupted in Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Senegal and even Eswatini, a tiny kingdom of 1.2 million people in southern Africa.

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Africa’s cultural conquest of West has gained pace through music, industrialisation is limping

Africa’s cultural conquest of West has gained pace through music, industrialisation is limping

African fashion had its own shows in Paris and Milan. In Venice, Africa is the focus of this year’s Architectural Biennale. Last year, an architect from Burkina Faso won the prestigious Pritzker Prize. In 2021, Tanzania-born Abdulrazak Gurnah won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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In 10 years Africa is projected to have world’s largest skilled workforce, overtaking China and India

In 10 years Africa is projected to have world’s largest skilled workforce, overtaking China and India

Businesses are chasing Africa’s tens of millions of new consumers emerging every year, representing untapped markets for cosmetics, organic foods, even champagne. Hilton plans to open 65 new hotels on the continent within five years. Its population of millionaires, the fastest growing on earth, is expected to double to 768,000 by 2027, the bank Credit Suisse estimates.

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When to ignore an instruction from your boss: Avoid emails asking you to approve payments

When to ignore an instruction from your boss: Avoid emails asking you to approve payments

BEC wire transfer fraud sees criminals taking advantage of an expected financial transaction such as a supplier payment, and asking the recipient to adjust the bank account information on an outgoing wire transfer. In many cases, the instruction may appear to come from the victim’s boss, and may even be written in a similar style that is used by the boss.

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Exchange rates: US dollar exerts pressure on Kenyan, Ugandan and Zambian currencies  

Exchange rates: US dollar exerts pressure on Kenyan, Ugandan and Zambian currencies  

Nigeria’s naira is seen trading around its current levels on the official market in the coming week, after the finance minister said the government was expecting $10 billion of inflows to ease dollar shortages.

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South Africa: Apprehension spikes that creation of foreign, domestic spy services will feed corruption

South Africa: Apprehension spikes that creation of foreign, domestic spy services will feed corruption

Critics point to the dismal failure of present intelligence structures to vet even a high-profile person such as Andre de Ruyter, former CEO of Eskom who was forced to deploy private intelligence capacity to fight rampant corruption and theft at the National Key Point utility.

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