Africa lagging behind in getting five-a-day

Africans are not eating enough fruit and vegetables, a critical problem on a continent where obesity, diabetes and heart disease are becoming as concerning as under-nutrition, scientists said Monday.

In the majority of African countries, half the population could be classified as overweight, Jacky Ganry from French agricultural research centre CIRAD told a conference in Dakar.

“In Africa we are in a critical situation, the average per capita availability (of fruit and vegetables) is far below the recommended level,” he said. The World Health Organisation puts the level at 400 grammes a day.

Massive urbanisation, lifestyle changes and dietary habits — particularly in urban areas — along with physical inactivity and inadequate intake of fruits and vegetables are leading to growing numbers of non-communicable diseases, he said.

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Turkish PM: Africa needs trade more than aid

In his address to EU-Africa summit held Monday in Libya, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that African countries need trade, investment, technical and scientific cooperation more than assistance. Erdogan is the guest of honor at the summit meeting.

We find this encouraging because last week we presented an article proposing a shift from the AID model to more trade and accessible  western markets.

You may read the article from here

We will welcome your opinion on this or an alternative veiw.

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South of the Sahara: Boom times, at least in parts

Pratibha Thaker: regional director, Africa, Economist Intelligence Unit

Sub-Saharan Africa will be one of the fastest-growing regions of the world in 2011, thanks to surging demand both from abroad (from China and India in particular) and at home (fuelled by urbanisation and consumerism). As a result, investors will find it increasingly difficult to ignore the area, despite its—justified—reputation as a tough place for business because of political uncertainty, corruption, weak infrastructure and inconsistent regulation.

A test of Africa’s democratic credentials will take place in the early part of 2011, when Nigeria—the region’s most populous country, largest oil producer and second-biggest economy after South Africa—elects a new president and legislature. The election, expected to be won by the ruling People’s Democratic Party and President Goodluck Jonathan, will not be fully “free and fair”. However, if a more effective government emerges, the benefits will be felt throughout the region. Several other sub-Saharan states are planning to hold elections during the year. They include, in rough chronological order: Benin, Uganda, Chad, Madagascar, Zambia, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia and Gabon—and in January southern Sudan is due to hold a referendum on independence (see article).


More than just commodities

As well as hosting the region’s most important election, west Africa will be the location of Africa’s fastest-growing economy in 2011: Ghanaian growth is set to reach double digits as oil comes on stream in significant quantities for the first time. The inflow of money will pose a stiff test of institutional accountability, but Ghana’s democratic record is among the best in the region (power has regularly shifted between the two major parties), offering hope that the country will use its new-found oil wealth more wisely than others have done.

Certainly, oil wealth is no guarantee of prosperity, as demonstrated by producers such as Equatorial Guinea and Chad. However, oil will drive growth in Angola, the region’s third-largest economy, Congo-Brazzaville and, within a couple of years, Uganda. Meanwhile, mineral producers, such as Mozambique, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania and Zambia, and strong agricultural economies, including Ethiopia, Kenya and Malawi, will benefit from rising demand and should achieve economic growth of 5% and above in 2011.

Ghanaian growth is set to reach double digits

Sub-Saharan Africa will be more than just a commodity play, however, as urbanisation and an expanding middle class increase demand for modern goods and services. The arrival of new submarine fibre-optic cables will boost bandwidth, cut costs and stimulate businesses that rely on technology. With recovery in Western economies still looking fragile, there will be a growing appetite to invest in Africa, adding to the forays already made by China and India.

The fastest-growing areas will be telecoms, banking, retailing and manufacturing. The provision of financial services to ordinary people, including tele-banking, will thrive. In addition, outsiders will want to buy or lease cheap agricultural land. Food-importing countries poor in land and water but rich in capital, such as the Gulf states, and countries with large populations and food-security concerns, such as China, South Korea and India, will be at the forefront. Private capital will also play a vital role—through privatisation and public-private partnerships—in modernising the region’s inadequate infrastructure, especially its transport and electricity networks. Several countries will seek private investment in power generation, although their weak regulation will remain an obstacle.

So in 2011 sub-Saharan Africa will find itself newly fashionable. But investors will need to distinguish between the countries that are starting to live up to their potential and those whose politics and policy will keep them stuck in the slow lane.


 

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Africa’s youth can do great things, says UN Chief

African graduate leaving the continent for greener pastures

Africa’s young population can drive the continent’s future development, Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon told an international symposium taking place in Benin.

More than 60 per cent of Africa’s 1 billion people are under the age of 25 years, he noted in a message to the meeting in Cotonou.

“While it will be a tremendous undertaking to provide them with jobs and income opportunities, this energetic creative and vibrant workforce can do great things for African standards of living if only they are given the tools.

“Africa’s impressive economic growth during the past decade shows what is possible. The challenge now is to translate growth into improved social welfare for the people and faster progress towards the Millennium Development Goals,” Mr. Ban said, referring to the targets to slash hunger, poverty, disease and a host of other social and economic ills by 2015.

The other challengeWe can end povertys the Secretary-General outlined for the continent to address included climate change, desertification and democratic backsliding, as well as continued armed conflict and sexual violence against women.

At the same time, he praised the achievements of African countries since their independence from colonial rule, with particular tribute paid to the African Union (AU), and the efforts it has made to improve the political and economic situation in the continent.

“Africa has taken charge of preventing and resolving its conflicts and promoting the economic and social development of its people,” he said.

Through African institutions, such as the AU, the continent had become less reliant on the international community for aid and support, Mr. Ban noted, while adding that the UN will continue to support Africa’s efforts to ensure stability and progress.

(United Nations)

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Ghana’s Economy 75% Bigger Than Previously Estimated

cedis notes
By Moses Mozart Dzawu
Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Ghana’s economy is 75 percent bigger than previously calculated, the country’s Statistical Service said, slashing the relative size of the fiscal deficit and the current-account shortfall.
The West African nation’s gross domestic product this year is 44.8 billion cedis ($31.2 billion), compared with the previous estimate of 25.6 billion cedis, Grace Bediako, head of the Accra-based agency, told reporters today.
“The revisions will be a huge positive for the relative risk matrix” of Ghana, Stephen Bailey-Smith, an analyst at Standard Bank Plc in London, said in a note to clients. The changes “should foster a rating upgrade.”
Standard & Poor’s cut Ghana’s credit rating to B, five steps below investment grade, on Aug. 27, citing concern about the large fiscal deficit and a lack of clarity on oil-industry laws. The government posted shortfalls equivalent to 14.5 percent of GDP in 2008 and 9.7 percent in 2009. The International Monetary Fund said on Oct. 1 that the shortfall may exceed the 8 percent target this year. Those figures are now significantly smaller.
The statistics service also raised its growth forecast for this year to 6.6 percent from 5.9 percent, and revised up its calculations for the previous three years. GDP expanded 4.7 percent in 2009, 8.4 percent in 2008 and 6.5 percent in 2007, compared with previous estimates of 4.1 percent, 7.2 percent and 5.7 percent.
Economic growth slowed in 2009 after the government embarked on an austerity program to bring down the budget deficit. Ghana posted a current account deficit of about 7.9 percent of GDP last year, according to the previous data.
Eurobond
Ghana’s 8.5 percent fixed-rate Eurobond due October 2017 was bid for as much as $115.50 at 5:14 p.m. in London, with a yield of 5.746 percent, according to data compiled by Standard Bank London. The bid price is 0.5 percent higher than yesterday’s close of $114.87, while the yield is 10 basis points lower.
Today’s announcement “confirms that over the last five years Ghana has performed better than most of its peers,” Wayne Mitchell, the country representative for the IMF, said in an interview today.
The revision won’t affect IMF support for the country, since “assistance is determined by need and not economy size,” Mitchell said.
Deputy Finance and Economic Planning Minister, Seth Terkper, said on Oct. 20 that Ghana may lose access to cheap loans if the new data show the country is wealthier than thought.
New Activities
The size of the economy was revised up after new economic activities were added, methodology was improved and the base year was shifted to 2006 from 1993, Bediako said.
“The new data series includes activities of the oil sector, forest plantations and information and communication, which were not included in previous estimates,” she said.
The new GDP places Ghana among middle-income countries, as defined as those with a per capita income of more than $976 a year, Bediako said. Ghana’s is now $1,318.36.
The statistics aren’t all good news, said Sampson Akligoh, an analyst at Accra-based Databank Financial Services.
“If GDP is 44 billion cedis and tax revenue is less than 7 billion cedis, it tells you tax collection is not enough,” he said in an interview today.
Ghana’s economic growth may average about 8 percent in the next three to five years, as oil production starts from the West African nation’s Jubilee oil field December, Kofi Wampah, deputy central bank governor said Oct. 7.
Wampah said the economy may expand 10 percent to 15 percent next year, slower than Finance Ministry’s prediction of 20 percent.
–Editors: Philip Sanders, Ana Monteiro
To contact reporter on this story: Moses Dzawu in Accra at mdzawu@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net.
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Caught

(From the newzimsituation.com)
Grace and Robert mugabe
According to a respected South African Newspaper Zimbabwe’s first lady reportedly had an extra-marital affair with Zimbabwe’s central Bank Governor and President Mugabe’s personal banker Gideon Gono
When President Robert Mugabe’s younger sister, Sabina, died in Harare after a short illness, pictures showed the 86-year-old president looking devastated at her funeral.
Mugabe hopes the embarrassing secret of his wife’s infidelity with one of his right-hand men is safely buried with the body of the hapless Chademana
The trusted guard who spilled the beans has died suddenly
But it may well have been more than the death of his beloved sister that shattered Mugabe and sent his health into what is reported to be further decline.
According to one of Mugabe’s most trusted bodyguards who was present at the time, Sabina Mugabe, 75, warned her brother before she died that he was being betrayed by two of the most important people in his personal and political life: his wife and his personal banker, a pivotal member of his regime.
Sabina told the president that Grace and Gideon Gono, the powerful head of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and Mugabe’s confidant, were secret lovers.
Grace, 41 years Mugabe’s junior, has taken lovers before. One lover, Peter Pamire, died in a mysterious car accident. James Makamba, one of Zimbabwe’s richest businessmen and a top-ranking Zanu-PF official, enjoyed her favours but their affair ended in tears, too, when a furious and sexually jealous Mugabe ran him out of town in fear of his life.
But never before has Grace been romantically involved with a politician in Mugabe’s inner circle. And never before has a man so close to the president risked allowing it to happen.
The dangers from discovery are high. Zimbabwe state intelligence officials made it known that Mugabe’s detection of the affair had already led to the murder of the bodyguard present at Sabina’s bedside and more trouble would almost certainly follow. (more at the zimsituation.com)
(From the zimdiaspora)
The Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe, is “ready to go to war” over allegations that his wife Grace cheated on him as she leaves the country for their multi-million pound home in Hong Kong.
Sources close to the president’s camp say he is livid about the claims that Mrs Mugabe, who is 41 years his junior, had a five-year affair with Gideon Gono, one of his closest friends and the head of Zimbabwe’s Reserve Bank.
The 86-year-old leader is due to convene an emergency meeting with senior aides and Dr Gono today and could take legal action to silence the rumours.
Mr Mugabe’s spokesman denied suggestions that Dr Gono had gone into hiding amid fears his life might be in danger.
Grace and Robert mugabe cheating
Meanwhile Grace Mugabe is said to be “extremely upset” and lying low at the family’s £4m mansion in Hong Kong, where their daughter Bona attends university.
She and married Dr Gono were alleged to have met up to three times a month at her farm, friends’ houses or at hotels in South Africa and Malaysia, and to have intended to set up home together after Mr Mugabe died.
He was said to have been “devastated” when he learned of the allegations from his sister Sabina, shortly before she died three months ago.
A man previously alleged to have had an affair with his wife, Peter Pamire, died in mysterious circumstances and another, businessman James Makamba, fled to the UKapparently fearing the same fate.
Robert and Grace Mugabe, a former typist in his office, began their affair when he was still married to his terminally ill wife Sally, and married in 1996.
Dr Gono could not be reached for comment although staff in his office insisted he had turned up for work “as normal”.
A source said to be close to the Mugabes and Dr Gono told the website New Zimbabwe said they were planning a joint fightback.
“There is a major meeting planned for Wednesday which will be attended by lawyers and advisers to the President and Gono,” she said.
Another source said: “Dr Gono is a very trusted individual who had been allowed more than any other person access to the family.
“Gideon Gono needs to get this sorted and needs to clear this very fast to restore the trust of the president.”
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Watch out for Africa, says the World Bank

Africa economic opportunity
 
The World Bank's new report on Africa, published this week, concluded that that continent "could be on the brink of an economic take-off, much like China was 30 years ago, and India 20 years ago".
 
In its draft strategy for Africa, published on Monday, the bank said the continent's steady economic growth, progress on the millennium development goals and good rates of returns on investments give Africa "unprecedented opportunity for transformation and growth". Promoting Africa as an exciting and lucrative investment destination will be crucial to fulfilling this potential, it added.
 
"The emergence of new development partners such as China, the untapped potential of mobilising domestic resources, as well as the rise in private capital flows to Africa, calls for a new approach – Africa as an investment proposition – and points to the need for new partnerships among governments, development partners and the private sector," said the bank.
 
Based on data from the World Development Indicators, private cash flows (remittances and foreign direct investment) to developing countries totalled more than $650bn in 2009, while official development assistance fell to less than $130bn.
 
As the strategy's name – Africa's future and the World Bank's role in it – might suggest, the draft, which comes five years after its last Africa Action Plan, is both an optimistic reading of Africa's development and an assertive defence of the critical role the bank can play in its future. According to some, the emergence of new and very eager investors like China and India has left the bank worried about losing its footing on the continent.
 
Writing in the Nairobi-based Business Daily, Johnstone Ole Turana argued that: "The increased accessibility of grants from the BRIC [Brazil, Russia, India, China] nations, which is being provided with less conditionality compared to the World Bank and the western countries' bilateral aid, has forced sub-Saharan African nations to re-orient their engagement from the west to the east."
 
The draft moves away from a focus on single-issue projects – in an implicit critique of an MDG model of development with separate targets – and instead focuses on systems and structures, giving special attention to closing Africa's "infrastructure gap" and leveraging its investment potential. This means developing a more "attractive" climate for foreign investors, tackling "key constraints" from the regulation of labour and land to the lack of "financial (and overall business) literacy".
 
The bank is, of course, positioning itself as the essential partner for both developing countries and potential investors, willing and ready to exercise its "comparative advantage" in partnerships, knowledge, and financing. "From the reputational perspective, it's absolutely crucial for them to be seen as linchpins to African development, particularly with regard to private sector linkages" , said Soren Ambrose, from Action Aid Kenya, last month.
 
Yesterday, the bank's managing director, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, approached the China Mining Congress, being held in Tianjin, China, with a bid for how "the World Bank can help lay the ground work for larger investments", offering knowledge and guidance to investors and advice to governments on how to marry investment and development priorities. Okonjo-Iweala also advertised the bank's programme of providing "political risk" insurance to investors in case of war, civil unrest or expropriation.
 
Changing perceptions
The draft also sets out the bank's commitment to improve the otherwise poor perceptions of Africa, which can make attracting investors challenging. The paper claims the rate of return on foreign investment in Africa is higher than in any other developing region, but notes that "given its legacy of poverty, slow growth, conflict and disease, not everybody sees Africa as the emerging frontier".
The bank's wants to help change the public mindset, "not just in providing the evidence of the changes on the continent and educating the rest of the world, but also in supporting those, such as the media, who interpret this evidence to the public and thereby shorten the lag between perceptions and reality".
 
The bank also plans a shift in its own communications with the public, moving away from the stand-alone reports aimed at specialist audiences.
 
One early example of this shift is the bank's decision to make public a series of stakeholder consultations on the draft strategy, held in 36 countries between June and September this year, and uploading a promotional video on YouTube.

 

[youtube]RjcQhptocqQ[/youtube]

 

 
Now, the bank has launched an online consultation alongside the draft, actively seeking comment from the public to feed into its final strategy for Africa, due early next year.
 
What feedback the bank chooses to incorporate into its strategies and programmes on the continent – if any – is the crucial question. In the past, critics, such as Beatrice Edwards, of the Governance Accountability Project, have come down hard on the bank for showing "transparency about the problem but no accountability or attempt to fix it".
 
But the online consultation does provide an opportunity to tell the bank what you think – and posting a comment isn't too arduous, at least from the UK. Feel free to cross-post your comments here.
(Report from the Guardian, UK)
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In Ghanaian Village, American Woman Reigns As King

An american woman installed King in a ghanaian village
It was two years ago, at 4 a.m. at her apartment in Maryland, that Peggielene Bartels got the news from West Africa. A relative called from Ghana to say that her uncle, the king of the fishing village of Otuam, had died.
The news didn’t end there. She was also informed that she had been anointed his successor: King Peggy.
“He said, ‘No, no, no, no, Nana, don’t hang up,'” Bartels recalls. “‘We chose so many names, male and everybody, and somebody suggested that we choose your name, also. And when we poured libation and did the rituals, as soon as we mentioned your name, it started vaporing and we were surprised. So we did it three times. So that’s when we got to know that you are the king.'”
Nana Amuah-Afenyi VI is Bartels’ new title, but she is better known as King Peggy. This straight-talking, 57-year-old is the first woman in her fishing community of 7,000 people in Ghana’s Central Region to be anointed a king, or “nana.”
She now juggles two lives — from the palace in Otuam and from a modest condo outside Washington, D.C. Since the 1970s, Bartels, a naturalized U.S. citizen, has been a secretary at Ghana’s Embassy in Washington where she still spends most of her time, running royal affairs back home in Otuam over the phone and on trips to Ghana.
“So, when they told me, I was a little bit reluctant to accept it, because it comes with responsibilities. And here is a secretary in the United States, I have my own obligations, bills and stuff and becoming a king, you have to be really rich,” she says.
“And then, as if someone was talking to me, a voice said, ‘Accept it, it is your destiny and you will be helped to help your people.'”
With help from her friends and scraping together her own savings, King Peggy says she is determined to help her people in Ghana to progress.
On a sweltering day in Ghana, Peggy is overseeing her uncle’s funeral. A slight breeze is blowing in from the Atlantic Ocean and the freshly painted blue and white royal residence gleams. In the sandy courtyard, drums are beating while a man in a trance performs a frenzied dance before a sea of red and black — mourners dressed for a royal burial.
The former king died in 2008, but his body was kept in a mortuary until King Peggy could save up enough money to give him a proper send-off. She’s dressed like a king — albeit with a touch of lipstick — wrapped toga-style in regal red traditional fabric and seated upon a royal stool.
Dignitaries attending the funeral include another royal, Nana Boakye Asafo Adjei, the Sanahane, or ruler, of Asamankese Traditional Area in eastern Ghana.
He said he had nothing but respect for King Peggy.
“I’ve been really surprised by what she has done because I thought being a woman, she can’t,” he said. “But she has competed with the men, so I give her congratulations. She is now a king, so she has a lot to handle.”
Bartels says most people are willing to work with a woman as their traditional ruler.
“The women are so happy for me, they are really on my side,” she says. “But it’s only a few elderly men — because they are used to bossing females around. And I don’t give them the chance. They are the people resisting me.”
She adds that during meetings, if they feel she is coming on too strong, they say: “‘Listen you’re a woman, so you listen to us.’ Then I also say, ‘I’m in the States, I’m a woman and, in the rituals with the ancestors, you chose me in the name of God, so shut up and sit down.’ And they will sit.”
Back in the U.S., King Peggy is on the lecture circuit, talking about Ghana, its traditions and her fishing community. While she’s in Otuam, she presides over fisherfolk and has confronted many hurdles, including, she says, tackling graft and dishonesty within the royal circle.
“At first when I started, it was a tough challenge because they were just collecting our family fishing fees and they were misusing the funds. But I came on so strong,” she says. “So I had a tough time straightening that out.”
Dressed in customary black and red funeral clothing, villagers from the Otuam fishing community carry the casket of their late ruler Nana Amuah-Afenyi V, who died two years ago. He is succeeded by his niece, King Peggy, a secretary at the Ghanaian embassy in Washington, who says she had to save up to give her uncle a fitting send-offKing Peggy insisted future proceeds go directly into an account in a rural bank they opened in her village. She rejuvenated her royal council to include people she trusted, and has turned her attention to improving the lives of her community.
The next project is to build a high school for students who have finished ninth grade, she says.
A villager, carrying a large basin upon her head, gives King Peggy high marks for her rule. Aba Nyame Bekyere, 51, a former fishmonger, says she’s pleased with what she hears Bartels is doing for Otuam, especially for women and children.
“Those of us who didn’t go to school, particularly the women, we’d like to learn,” she says through a translator. “And we need a high school here, so that our kids don’t have to go so far away to study.”
King Peggy is getting help from donors in the U.S., including the Shiloh Baptist Church in Landover, Md. Pastor Be Louis Colleton and his congregation heard about Bartels, met her and committed to helping her fishing community.
Colleton and more than a dozen other Americans accompanied her from Maryland to Ghana this fall and traveled to palm tree-lined Otuam, along the shores of what used to be part of West Africa’s Atlantic slave coast.
“We have covenant with Nana, the king — we as a church — to help her to better her community of people to bring fresh water,” he says. “Now we’re moving toward the possibility of establishing a school.”
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