‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات African. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات African. إظهار كافة الرسائل

Africa: Visa Announces Grant to Help African Women Grow Their Businesses

Nairobi — Visa has announced a grant from the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa in collaboration with Standard Bank providing funding to the Africa Women Impact Fund, which will fund the working capital requirements of female fund managers in the South, East, and West Africa.

In a statement, Visa says the award is an expansion of the She's next program for women-owned businesses and is intended for 55 women who participated in AWIF's program after responding to their call to action.

"Through this programme we aim to ensure that women are not only recipients but become decision-makers where institutional funding for businesses is concerned" said Aida Diarra, Senior Vice President & Head of Sub-Saharan Africa at Visa.

Women fund managers in Africa continue to face numerous challenges in building sustainable businesses. Research shows slow-moving progress in the visibility and inclusion of women fund managers due to systematic barriers and investor bias.

Sub-Saharan Africa has been included in the global advocacy initiative, which aims to further support and celebrate African women entrepreneurs as they establish, grow, and progress their companies.

The financing from Visa will go toward initiatives that help business owners develop their technical expertise, make themselves more appealing to larger institutional investors, and manage profitable enterprises that will go on to invest in other companies, including small and medium-sized ones.

"The funding will ensure that these business owners are able to focus on growing their enterprises without the burden of managing short-term debt and other operational costs related to building a successful business" added Diarra.

In conclusion, Lindeka Dzedze Head of Strategic Partnerships at Standard Bank Group, says their partnership with visa in their contribution to AWIF sees gender equity not only as a fundamental human right but also as a business imperative.

"The group believes that the economic empowerment of women is essential to raising Africa's economic output and creating sustainable jobs, especially within the small enterprises that drive growth on the continent," said Dzedze.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/africa-visa-announces-grant-to-help-african-women-grow-their-businesses/?feed_id=8928&_unique_id=62f34dbb4674a

Tonnes of South African fruit stranded at European ports

The EU introduced new plant and health safety requirements as ships were already at sea carrying hundreds of containers full of fruit to Europe, resulting in them being held up on arrival.

Europe is the largest market for South Africa's almost $2 billion citrus industry, accounting for 37 percent of all exports, according to the CGA.
Europe is the largest market for South Africa's almost $2 billion citrus industry, accounting for 37 percent of all exports, according to the CGA. (AFP Archive)

Millions of boxes of oranges have been spoiling in containers stranded at European ports as South Africa and the European Union lock horns in a dispute over import rules.

South Africa, the world's second largest exporter of fresh citrus after Spain, filed a complaint with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) last month after the EU introduced new plant and health safety requirements that orange farmers say threaten their survival.

The measures came into force in July as ships were already at sea carrying hundreds of containers full of South African fruit to Europe, resulting in them being held up on arrival, South Africa's Citrus Growers' Association (CGA) says.

The EU rules aim at tackling the potential spread of an insect called the false codling moth, a pest native to sub-Saharan Africa that feeds on fruits including oranges and grapefruits.

The new measures require South African farmers to apply extreme cold treatment to all Europe-bound oranges and keep the fruits at temperatures of two degrees Celsius (35 degrees Fahrenheit) or lower for 25 days.

But the CGA says this measure is unnecessary as the country already has its own, more targeted way of preventing infestation.

READ MORE: Did agriculture get its start in Türkiye? This scientist believes so

'Discriminatory' measure

In its WTO complaint, South Africa argued that the EU requirements were "not based on science", more restrictive than necessary and "discriminatory".

South African citrus growers say the requirement puts undue extra pressure on an industry already in dire straits.

"This is going to add a lot of costs... and at the moment, that is what no grower in the world can afford," said Hannes de Waal, who heads of the almost 100-year-old farm Sundays River Citrus.

De Waal, whose company has orange, clementine and lemon trees straddling 7,000 hectares near the southeastern coast city of Gqeberha, said revenues were already squeezed by high shipping and fertiliser costs.

Freight costs have rocketed since Covid-19 struck, and so has the price of fertilisers due to the Ukraine conflict  — Russia being one of the world's largest producers.

READ MORE: Pesticide spraying drones to increase Turkish farmers’ income

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZJNXHBLvDE[/embed]

Source: TRTWorld and agencies


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/tonnes-of-south-african-fruit-stranded-at-european-ports/?feed_id=7745&_unique_id=62ef90cd4a633

Africa: Lavrov's African Safari Was Not Routine

With Russia's foreign minister and France's president in Africa this week, propaganda around the Ukraine war is intensifying.

Russia's long-time Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov insisted his African safari this week was a routine visit. Western leaders and commentators believe it was a charm offensive to win support for Russia's war in Ukraine.

Lavrov told the state-controlled RT television network before he left that Russia had good political and economic relations with all four countries on his itinerary - Egypt, Ethiopia, Uganda and the Republic of Congo. He noted that Egypt was Russia's 'number one partner in Africa,' that the two countries did US$5 billion in annual trade, and that Russia was building a nuclear power plant there and creating industrial zones.

Clearly though, his trip was also designed to sell Russia's narrative that its Ukraine war was about countering Western global hegemony. And that sanctions against Russia - rather than Russia's blockade of grain exports from Ukraine's Black Sea ports - were causing the global food crisis being felt most acutely in Africa.

Indeed Lavrov was soon engaged in a virtual propaganda war with French President Emmanuel Macron, who was also on an African safari - perhaps not coincidentally -- visiting Cameroon, Benin and Guinea-Bissau. Macron called Russia 'one of the last remaining imperial, colonial powers.'

The rival visits were further evidence that Russia's war against Ukraine was regressive - taking the world back to Cold War postures and risking making Africa a proxy battleground again. United States President Joe Biden will hold his long-awaited African leaders summit in December, and Lavrov announced in Cairo this week that the second Russia-Africa summit would be held next year.

Lavrov's trip aimed to sell Russia's narrative that the Ukraine war is countering Western global hegemony

Jakkie Cilliers, Head of African Futures and Innovation at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), says it's no coincidence that Lavrov is visiting Africa soon after Russia consented to lift its blockade on Odesa and other Ukrainian Black Sea ports. The deal, brokered by United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres and Turkish President Tayyip Recep Erdoğan, would allow over 20 million tons of embargoed Ukrainian grain to be exported to global markets.

The embargo and consequent grain shortage helped double grain prices and aggravated food insecurity, especially in Africa. In June, the African Union (AU) quickly dispatched its chair Macky Sall and AU Commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat to Sochi to meet Russia's President Vladimir Putin and plead for relief.

'I think the whole agreement on opening up Odesa was a very strategic move by Russia,' Cilliers says. 'Ukraine has been smartly managing the global discourse; they've determined the narrative on Russia's invasion.'

Putin tried to blame Ukraine for the grain blockade because it had mined its ports (in fact, to protect them from Russian invasion). But this Russian narrative didn't sell well. 'Putin senses that they are losing the propaganda struggle.' And so lifting the grain embargo was a deliberate move to show that Russia was responsive to African pleas 'and to get Russia off the back foot on a global narrative that has really cornered Russia.'

Steven Gruzd, Head of the Russia-Africa project at the South African Institute of International Affairs, agrees that Putin sent Lavrov to Africa partly as a propaganda move. But also 'to counter the very effective public relations that President [Volodymyr] Zelensky has had on social media.' Gruzd also believes the visit is a 'deliberate ploy by Russia to show that it's not isolated and can still get support on the international stage.'

Lavrov chose African interlocutors who weren't very democratic and may have fallen out with the West

Africa, in that sense, was a good choice for Russia. The continent has been less critical of Russia than other regions, with 25 of 54 states abstaining or not voting to condemn Russia's Ukraine invasion during a UN General Assembly resolution on 2 March. That was a significantly higher average than in other regions. South Africa and many others among those 25 say they will remain 'non-aligned' - echoing the formal position developing countries took during the Cold War.

It makes sense for African states not to become entangled in a war in distant Europe. Yet the 'non-aligned' stance implies that the war is an ethically equivalent conflict between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Russia, rather than unprovoked aggression by Moscow against a democratic neighbour.

So visiting Africa helps Lavrov underscore the Cold War-type narrative, as Joseph Siegle, Director of Research at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies in Washington, observes. In fact, 'Russia is also vying to normalise an international order where might makes right,' he writes. 'And democracy and respect for human rights are optional.'

Siegle and others noted that Lavrov chose interlocutors who weren't very democratic and who may have fallen out with the West for this reason. This would be consistent with the intensifying activities in the Central African Republic, Mali and Libya of the Wagner private military company, which is propping up warlords and putschists. Wagner is widely regarded as a proxy force for Putin to counter Western influence.

Siegle suggests Russia has much more to gain from better relations with Africa than African states do. Russia is already the largest arms supplier to the continent and may hope to increase this. Besides weapons, Russia is a tiny investor and trader compared to the West and China.

Egypt particularly is strategically too important to the West for Lavrov's visit to sour relations