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Africa must focus on its young people, experts urge

African-migrants-in-Libya-face-kidnapping-torture-and-robbery-on-smuggling-route-to-Europe

Professor Paul Collier, one of the world’s most influential development economists, warns that Africa’s “easy decade” of accelerated economic growth is coming to an end, and only accelerated job creation and integration will ensure sustainable growth and development across the continent.

Dr. Collier, Professor of Economics and Public Policy in the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford, was delivering a keynote address at the African Economic Conference 2018, hosted by the African Development Bank in Kigali, Rwanda.

He was speaking Monday December 3, 2018 on the first day of the Conference at a high-level panel on “Drivers, Opportunities and Lessons for Africa’s integration”, comprising experts as well as high-level policymakers, who provided their reflections and perceptions on regional and continental integration.

“Africa’s easy decade is over; but the last decade of African growth was not sustainable. Now Africa must focus on its big resource – its young people. No other continent has anything like such a huge influx of young labour. Productive jobs are the priority,” Collier said.

“Young people can’t create priority jobs by themselves. Those jobs have to be created, so the prime task of policymakers in Africa over the next decade is to create productive jobs for young people at a rate that has never happened before.”

Collier added that connectivity between African countries will unlock the potential of many countries, and this connectivity has to be in terms of both physical transport and political ideology.

“Small countries are doomed to poverty unless they have open markets and free societies. And yet, the typical African country is small, with closed markets. That is a disastrous combination. So the African Continental Free Trade Area is a very important step forward,” he said.

The African Development Bank has pledged full support to the Continental Free Trade Area as part of its High 5 strategy to Integrate Africa and has invested more than $20 million over the past five years to support the institutional and human capacities of the Continental Free Trade Area Secretariat.

Another high-level panelist, Professor Ademola Oyejide, the Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Ibadan and Chairman of the Centre for Trade and Development Initiatives, noted that regional integration must drive overall continental integration.

“We should not destroy regional economic communities by protectionism and unnecessary barriers to trade. We as African leaders are not in the business of designing theoretical regional programmes: we expect real progress from the regional blocs,” he said.

Professor Klaus Zimmermann, President of the Global Labor Organization, added, “Africa is now on the right path and has to move in the direction of the AfCFTA. One of the most important playing cards in this game is the people of Africa.”

A common message from other high-level panelists, such as Prof. Emmanuel Nnadozie, the Executive Secretary of the African Capacity Building Foundation, was that governments must adopt policies to enable their countries to achieve economic diversification and reduce their dependence on primary commodities.

The Continental Free Trade Area is expected to boost intra-African trade by up to US$35 billion per year, creating a 52% increase in trade by 2022; and a vital $10 billion decrease in imports to Africa.

In addition, the African Development Bank Group is accelerating the impact of its flagship Jobs for Youth in Africa (JfYA) Strategy (2016-2025) designed to support African countries in overcoming youth unemployment and underemployment. The goal of the strategy is to create 25 million jobs for African youth over the next decade and to equip 50 million youth with employability and entrepreneurial skills.

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I told BoU not to close Crane Bank but they didn’t listen to me, let them face Cosase-Museveni

President Museveni

President Yoweri Museveni has told his cabinet that he tried to restrain Bank of Uganda from closing Crane Bank Limited but the failed to listen to him.

Sources say that Museveni has left the officials to be probed without protection because he told them not to close Crane Bank but they did not listen to him. Sources say this issue came up in the recent Cabinet meeting.

In a cabinet meeting yesterday that was chaired by him, Mr Museveni is reported to have rejected pleas by Finance Minister Matia Kasaija to have the ongoing inquiry in parliament halted. Kasajia’s request was supported by government Chief Whip, Ruth Nankambirwa. However, as the debate was gaining momentum, the president chipped and said “I advised those people (BoU) against closing Crane Bank, I even went on to suggest that we carryout a silent investigation and I went ahead to contact Abdu Katuntu who agreed with my suggestion but they refused and so let parliament do its work and let them face music” the president is quoted to have said.

President Museveni flatly refused to reign on Cosase so that they (BoU)are not exposed further, BoU claimed that the institution is sensitive and that its exposure will impact on the economy.

When the Bank of Uganda (BoU) sold Crane Bank to Dfcu Bank in January 2017, officials did not expect that they would be probed by parliament and so far, the Governor Prof. Emmanuel Mutebile and his subordinates have been exposed by the Auditor General John Muwanga in his special audit report of BoU on seven defunct banks.

Mr. Muwanga in his report faulted BoU for selling off some of Crane Bank’s assets and liabilities when they had chance to revive it, most especially that BoU claims it spent Shs478.8 billion on the bank during its takeover. Muwanga in his report says he doesn’t understand why BoU spent all that money on CBL and later sold it to DFCU Bank at Shs200 billion.

Parliament’s Committee on Commissions, Statutory Authorities and State Enterprises (Cosase) is using Mr. Muwanga’s report to probe BoU top officials and so far they have been exposed as an institution that is disorganized in terms of writing reports, keeping documents and violation of its own operational procedures.

“I noted that BOU did not carry out a requisite valuation of assets and liabilities of the three defunct banks (GTB. NBC and CBL) resolved using the purchase and assumption arrangement at the time of signing the P&A. In absence of the valuation and or documented evaluation of alternatives and assumptions used, I could not establish how the terms for the transfer of assets and liabilities in the P&A were determined,” Muwanga’s report reads in part.

Among others Cosase is mandated to ex­am­ine the re­ports and au­dited ac­counts of statu­tory au­thor­i­ties, cor­po­ra­tions and pub­lic en­ter­prises and in the con­text of their au­ton­omy and ef­fi­ciency, as­cer­tain whether their op­er­a­tions are be­ing man­aged in ac­cor­dance with the re­quired com­pe­tence and where ap­plic­a­ble, in ac­cor­dance with sound busi­ness prin­ci­ples and pru­dent com­mer­cial prac­tices.

The last weeks have seen BoU officials fail to present reports and documents concerning the dale of Teefe Trust Bank, Greenland Bank, International Credit Bank and Cooperative Bank. The officials who should be the cream of the civil service in Uganda cannot even answer simple questions related to their work. They have presented unsigned documents which they call as official as if they don’t know that any document without a signature is useless in legal terms.

Sources say Museveni is happy with Cosase that has so far exposed BoU top officials. They have been exposed as workers who handle public matters with carelessness. That is why they can’t find reports and other documents related to the sale of banks. That is why they cannot identify the whereabouts of some of the companies that they hired to do the jobs such as Kirkland & Associates and Nile River Acquisition Company.

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Makerere University joins KCCA, PSI in new Kampala City maternal-newborn health project

Makerere University School of Public Health has joined hands with Kampala Capital City Authority and Population Services International in a three-year implementation science project aimed at improving maternal and newborn outcomes in slum areas.

Funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Maternal and New-born Health (MaNe) Kampala Slum project aims at generating evidence on effective approaches for improving health services for the urban poor that can be scaled up in other urban settings within Uganda and world-wide, according to a project briefing.

The project is composed of three core functions with implementation jointly led by PSI and KCCA, evaluation and learning led by Makerere University, the policy function will be by KCCA.

“The project will be implemented in the slum communities and informal settlements in the divisions of Rubaga and Makindye in Kampala city,” the MaNe briefing reads.

“The project will initiate and test innovative approaches to address the demand and supply side barriers affecting illness recognition, care seeking, effective referral and provision of quality care equitably for better MNH outcomes in urban slum settings in Kampala city,”

The Principal investigators of the project include Associate Professor Peter Waiswa, Dr. Dorothy Balaba, Dr. Okello Daniel and Dr Hirschhorn, Lisa.

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Coca-Cola appoints Jacques Vermuelen as Africa CEO

Jacques Vermuelen

Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) has appointed Jacques Vermeulen, the current managing director of its international division, to the position of Group CEO of CCBA from December 1.

Vermeulen has served as managing director of CCBA’s International Division, which covers all of CCBA’s Africa operations outside South Africa, since July 2016.

He first joined Coca-Cola in 1995 as Head Office Financial Accountant and served in various financial roles both at Head Office and in operations before being appointed as CCS’s Chief Financial Officer in 2008.

In 2010, Jacques was appointed Chief Operating Officer (COO) for the Southern Division of CCS, and was in 2014 appointed as COO responsible for all CCS’s operations.

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South Africa offered to host 2019 AFCON

Afcon 2019

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) have asked South Africa to step in as the hosts of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.

This comes after the initial hosts Cameroon were stripped of the rights to host the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations on grounds of insecurity during the body’s Executive Committee Extraordinary meeting in Accra.

South Africa hosted the competition back in 2013 and can be able to host it again, but it’s not up to the South Africa football association alone to make the commitment.

The South Africa Football Association is open to hosting the continental tournament but will have to meet the Government first before making a final decision.

The Bafana Bafana official twitter account tweeted; “SAFA President has told the SAFA AGM in Sandton on Sunday, 2 December that CAF has asked the Association to seriously consider hosting AFCON 2019. SAFA will however, meet the Government first before making a decision.”

With the stadiums built for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, South Africa is one of the countries with the facilities to host any continental competition.

CAF wants to have a new host for the competition by December 31.

Fourteen countries have already confirmed their places at the tournament and they are; Cameroon, Kenya, Senegal, Madagascar, Morocco, Mali, Algeria, Tunisia, Nigeria, Egypt, Uganda, Mauritania, Guinea and Ivory Coast.

The other ten places will be decided during the final qualifiers in March 2019.

The 2019 AFCON tournament will be the first to host 24 teams. The competition will be held in June and July moving from January and February.

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Charcoal burning threatens sea nut oil business

charcoal

The felling of Sea Nut Trees for charcoal burning in West Nile and as well as other regions of northern Uganda, is threatening the extraction of sea nut oil which is on high demand in the country and foreign markets, according to dealers in this business.

The tree that produces both the edible product and smearing oil (butter) is among the best trees that produce charcoal which provides heat energy for preparation food in homes.

The recent engagement between the sea nut dealers and the German Corporation established that there are many challenges facing sea nut oil production and the major issue is the rampant cutting down of this trees, poor processing, branding and networking, limited scale on consumer packaging among others.

The local producers of sea nut products have now called upon local governments enact bylaws to protect sea nut tree.

Mary Orodriyo a trader in sea butter business from West Nile region said there is also no price target in the primary processing of the sea nut due to manipulation.

Charles Lagora Pader District commercial officer said the problem is the long value chain which worsened by use of fake weighing scale which is leading to adulteration of the product.

Robert Abak the resident district Commissioner Otuke appealed to the processors to use the resources that they have to support their product citing use of local media to create awareness and advertise their products.

Joyce Anguduyo another dealer said cutting of sea nut tree was making it hard for them to reap quality from the product. She urged people to be aware on the dangers of cutting down this tree species and that government should impose policy to combat the vice.

Alex Tabule the certification officer Uganda National Bureau of Standards said the farmers need to know about implementation of standards, technology, harvesting process and suitable packaging equipment should also be good enough to protect the sensitive product, quality improvement through standards and identification of gaps among others should be embraced.

Debrah Akatabi a researcher said that conservation of the tree species should be embraced by involving churches, schools and other institutions whereby they can plant more of the species in order to keep them present. They take 15 years to mature.

In 2006 President Museveni issued a warning through District Resident Commissioners to ensure that the districts of Karamoja, Lango, Acholi and West Nile protect the tree species due to their value that could boost Uganda’s exports.

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Parliament slaps travel ban on Bagyenda, passport confiscated

Embattled former Executive Director in charge of Supervision at Bank of Uganda Justine Bagyenda.

The former Bank of Uganda (BoU) executive director of supervision, Justine Bagyenda, was on Monday put on oath as she appeared before Committee on Commissions, Statutory Authorities and State Enterprises (Cosase) alongside the bank’s staff. The oath means should Bagyenda lie to the committee she will be arrested just like what happened to her former aides last week.

Bagyenda had earlier on apologised to the MPs for her absence in the last two weeks when they needed her to give more information on missing documents related to the liquidation of seven commercial banks. But the MPs have asked her to deposit her two passports-the International passport and the East African Passport.

The order to have Bagyenda deposit her documents came after MP Moses Kasibante (Rubaga North) warned her not to disappear again, suggesting that she deposits the passports with parliament.

MP James Waluswaka suggested that parliament confines Bagyenda even if she hands over her passports to parliament. Katuntu declined to issue any orders to do with confinement of Bagyenda, saying that she is now back in the country and will honour parliament as expected.

Bagyenda pleaded with the committee to let the police release her former bodyguard and driver who were arrested by police last week after telling lies having taken on oath. But Committee Chairman Abdu Katuntu said releasing the two persons is the duty of the police not parliament. “The law is taking its own course. Parliament has nothing to do with it,” Katuntu said.

Bagyenda lauded the committee saying it had understood her situation, even though she said social media has carried out propaganda messages about the situation. Today was the last day for a warrant of arrest to be issued against Bagyenda if she had not appeared.

On amalgamation of loans of Greenland Bank, International Credit Bank and Cooperative Bank before selling them to Nile River Acquisition Company, Bagyenda said secured loans had weaknesses such as family ownership and squatters. For this reason, she said BoU could not collect monies on secured loans. When asked about the evaluation documents/reports Bagyenda said her successor Dr. Tumubweine Twinemanzi, should look for them on archives. BoU sold the loans at Shs8.89 billion yet they had book value of over Shs34 billion. The secured loans, unsecured loans, poorly secured loans and unknown loans were sold at 93 percent.

When asked whether she did an evaluation of the loans assets before putting them on market using hired law firm JN Kirkland & Associates, Bagyenda instead asked that Director, Financial Markets Development Coordination, Benedict Sekabira shed more light on the same. The hired company is said to have done desktop evaluation of the assets of the loans of Greenland Bank, International Credit Bank and Cooperative Bank.

Representatives of JN Kirkland & Associates were sent summons to appear before the committee today but the firm’s physical address is nowhere to be traced despite having some presence on Google.

Proponents of the firm say; it is a firm of corporate lawyers and attorneys engaged in business legal practice in Uganda and many of the countries in East, Central and Southern Africa. It is our ultimate mission to become the business law firm of choice in all corners of the continent of Africa!

The MPs were concerned that BoU did not use professional valuer to evaluate the assets upon which loans were given out. No reports were availed by BoU on the same.

MPs want valuation reports that Bagyenda claims were done by Bagaine and company. Katuntu has asked that BoU come with reports tomorrow without fail.

MP Waluswaka suggested that Bagyenda be put under medical examination to establish if she has a mental problem but Katuntu ruled him out saying that the Auditor General’s report does not mention that issue since it all about audit issues.

On liquidation costs of Shs18.02 billion, BoU failed to present financial ledgers related to those costs. “I noted, that BOU did not maintain financial ledgers in relation to the liquidation costs,” Muwanga said in his report.

Deputy Governor Dr. Louis Kasekende said some documents are in the bank’s finance department. However Katuntu wondered how BoU officials could not understand what the Auditor General wanted.

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Bagyenda turns up at Cosase probe

The embattled former Bank of Uganda executive director for supervision Justine Bagyenda is at parliament ready to appear before the Committee on Commissions, Statutory Authorities and State Enterprises (Cosase).

Bagyenda left the country on November 22, 2018 well knowing she was supposed to appear before the committee to answer queries related to the disappearance of key reports relating to the liquidation of seven commercial banks such as Teefe Bank, Greenland Bank, International Credit Bank, Global Trust Bank Uganda, National Bank of Commerce, Cooperative Bank and Crane Bank Limited.

On February 11, 2018, CCTV cameras installed at the bank captured Bagyenda’s bodyguard and driver taking out three bags containing what was suspected to be BoU’s documents. She is expected to answer queries related to the disappearance of documents, some of which the Auditor General John Muwanga complained about in his special audit report of BoU on defunct banks. Bagyenda is alleged to be a holder of three passports.

Her driver and bodyguard are under investigation by the police.

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Africa must accelerate market reforms

George Asante

By George Asante

African countries are making commendable progress to reform and liberalise their financial markets. This is key to financial inclusion, economic development and capital raising.

The extent of this progress was revealed in the 2018 Absa Africa Financial Markets Index, which ranks 20 countries in terms of the stage of maturity, transparency and investor friendliness of financial markets. Launched in October alongside the International Monetary Fund meetings in Bali, this is the second edition of the index, independently prepared and published by OMFIF.

It focuses on six core pillars: market depth; access to foreign exchange; market transparency; capacity of local investors; macroeconomic opportunity; and legality and enforceability of standard financial markets master agreements.

Overall, South Africa was ranked first on market depth; legality and enforceability of standard financial markets master agreements; market transparency, tax and regulatory environment; capacity of local investors and macro-economic opportunity. However, it came second to Kenya on access to foreign exchange.

The index is an important indicator of ranked countries’ progress on and commitment to financial market reforms. Without these, economic development and accessing domestic and foreign capital is difficult, if not impossible.

For Africa to grow, it needs a broad, all-inclusive financial market that facilitates investment. The index is an important tool that offers a blueprint on bolstering the continent’s financial markets, pricing investment and competing equally for the available funding needed to propel development in the region.

Peter Matlare, group chief executive officer and CEO of Rest of Africa at Absa, agrees, saying the development of well-regulated, deep and liquid financial markets should be at the top of policy-makers’ development agenda. ‘The index facilitates a meaningful debate about the maturity and accessibility of Africa’s financial markets,’ he says.

Some countries, like Botswana, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa have made steady progress with their financial market reforms. But others, such as Ethiopia and Mozambique, lag behind, particularly in the development of stock exchanges, which are essential to raising capital through listings.

Ethiopia lacks a securities exchange, apart from one for commodities. There are no equities listed on Angola’s exchange, and both Cameroon and Mozambique have a market capitalisation of less than 5% of GDP. South Africa is the only index country where the total value of listed equities is more than $100bn, at $1.1tn.

Africa’s financial markets need accelerated reforms, principally because they can be used to raise capital to meet its significant funding needs, particularly for infrastructure projects. The continent’s transformation requires significant resources. For example, to achieve universal energy access by 2025, as much as $55bn annually must be raised in domestic and international capital. As much as $50bn is needed to fund African infrastructure projects.

While some African countries are implementing policies to bolster regional stock market integration and encourage expansion, they are hamstrung by low liquidity, limited prospects for listings and a lack of product diversity. These present significant obstacles to capital market growth. Only South Africa, Botswana and Ghana have a market capitalisation greater than 100% of GDP, while in 14 countries it is lower than 50%.

But it is not all doom and gloom, as the index illustrates. Several countries have made progress to create more transparent and well-regulated markets, supported by improving tax environments. This is vital for attracting foreign investment, encouraging domestic participation and aiding market development.

Equally impressive is increased financial inclusion through better design, implementation and regulation of savings institutions. This has widened opportunities for people in these countries to access capital markets. Additionally, countries have implemented policies that have increased the size of assets held by local investors, creating opportunities to develop financial products and enhance liquidity.

To accelerate financial market reforms, there is a need for sustained economic growth in many countries. This requires policy initiatives to attract investors by, for example, paying more attention to infrastructure and trade diversification while ensuring financial transparency. Such steps are necessary to facilitate Africa’s economic transformation.

George Asante is Head of Global Markets excluding South Africa at Absa.

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15 war victims graduate in vocational skills

GULU: A total of 15 former war victims in Northern Uganda graduated in different vocational disciplines from Gulu War Affected Training Centre GWATC.

These former abductees By the Lord Resistance Army LRA war in the region confessed that most of them were hopeless before after returning from the bush and hardly did not know that their future can be brightened again until they started hearing about the centre on Radio and immediately opted to join despite being desperate and hopeless.

During the 8th graduation ceremony at the centre, these 15 survivors were excited upon seeing them also making another tremendous steps in lives with great hope that the decision they took will positively change their lives and thinking.

Piloya Concy, 25 years old one of the female made a revelation that she was abducted at the age of nine from Pabo village in Amuru District and by then she was in Primary Four ,she managed to come back from captivity after one year and continue with her study up to Ordinary Level but later decided to go for vocational skill training due lack of fees since both parents were unable to push her for further studies in other institutions.

Concy did training in tailoring and garment cutting emerged the best students in the school and was awarded with an electronic sewing machine.She is hoping that the knowledge she attained and plus the equipment will help her in sustainability of her business.

Patrick Oola Lumumba the chairman LC3 Bardege Division in Gulu Municipality said in most cases parents from north were spending millions of shillings sending their children to Kampala for better education but it’s now time the parents should realise and recognize the importance of different institutions in the district in order to cut cost and burdens since they have every equipment and facilities needed to instill knowledge in their children.

He added that the grandaunts should be empowered individually by opening up their own workshops and restaurants in order to avoid exploitation from other business owners around town.

Betty Betty, director of the school revealed that she started the school because she was also affected by the war and as a returnee after studying tailoring course for three years she came back and started working with other organizations to train other returnees but later lobbied for his own training centre in 2005 were the centre has now positively impacted many lives of the returnees and other community in the region and most of them are living on their own.

Gulu War Affected Training Center has so far passed out over 400 students in hands skill disciplines including former LRA abductees and other community at large .

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