Thursday, June 30, 2016

US Finds Progress Slow Against Human Trafficking in Africa

JOHANNESBURG—

The U.S. State Department released its annual Trafficking in Persons report Thursday and again, Africa continues to be a major source and destination for human trafficking of all kinds — from forced labor to sexual slavery.

Again this year, not one African nation made the report's top tier — which is dominated by developed Western nations like the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia.

The State Department says the ratings are based more on the extent of government action to combat trafficking than the size of the country's problem.

A significant number of African countries remain at the lowest possible ranking.

Migrant crisis

Susan Coppedge, a senior advisor to the U.S. secretary of state, said the migrant crisis that saw more than a million Africans, Iraqis and Syrians flee to Europe last year has had a negative effect. She said the U.S is trying to help the destination countries screen for trafficking victims.

"So the migrant crisis creates a whole new pool of individuals who are vulnerable and susceptible to trafficking. If they are stateless or without documents. or without jobs, without their families they become vulnerable to the false promises that traffickers can give them for jobs, or safety, or shelter," she said.

Jakob Christensen, a program manager for Awareness Against Human Trafficking, an anti-trafficking group in Nairobi, says he's especially worried about the effect of ongoing conflict in East and Central Africa.

"I think the main change is the different migration patterns that we are seeing at the moment from places like Burundi and Somalia and South Sudan," he said.

Anti-trafficking measures

The report notes that in 2015, six African nations improved or introduced anti-trafficking legislation. It also noted that countries that improved — like Burkina Faso, the lone improver in West Africa — stepped up efforts to prosecute and convict traffickers.

Ten African countries slid to the State Department's tier two watch list this year.

A tier 3 ranking — the lowest level — can have financial consequences. Countries with that rating may face restrictions on non-humanitarian, non-trade-related assistance from the U.S. The U.S. may also lobby the International Monetary Fund to deny loans to Tier 3 nations.

Half of the 27 nations on the tier 3 list are in Africa, including two fresh demotions this year — Djibouti and Sudan.

The tiny East African nation of Djibouti saw some 90,000 migrants pass through last year — creating opportunities for traffickers preying on vulnerable people. The report criticized Djibouti for not doing more to protect victims.

Sudan, which separated from South Sudan in 2011, saw more trafficking because of movement of people between South Sudan and from heavy flows of African and Syrian refugees through the country. The report also expressed concern over child labor in Sudan.

In 2015, law enforcement agencies across Africa reported the discovery of just over 12,000 victims of trafficking. But as anti-trafficking activists often say, such numbers are under-reported — sometimes because of poor law enforcement, chaos, or because victims do not want to come forward.

South Africa

Anti-trafficking activist Natalie Ogden says the continent's most developed nation, South Africa, is making strides despite not moving up in the rankings this year. Ogden founded the Red Light Anti Human Trafficking Initiative, which helps victims of sex trafficking in the South African city of Durban.

She says in South Africa — a magnet for migrants from around the continent — the causes of trafficking are complex.

"Human trafficking is almost a byproduct of various different other social ills within South Africa that haven't been taken care of," said Ogden.

The report acknowledges that no nation is without problems — including the U.S. — and that ending trafficking is a difficult task, and one with many complex roots. But the report says it is too important of a problem to ignore.


Source: US Finds Progress Slow Against Human Trafficking in Africa

SAA introduces new sector to Central Africa network

SAATINTSWALO BALOYIJOHANNESBURG, (CAJ News) – SOUTH African Airways (SAA) has enhanced its Central African route network.

SAA flies to five destinations in Central Africa – Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Douala in Cameroon, Brazzaville and Pointe Noire in the Republic of Congo, and to Libreville in Gabon.

With effect from 31 July SAA will reschedule its flights to operate from Johannesburg to Brazzaville and the same flight then continues to Pointe Noire.

SAA will continue to serve Cotonou, in Benin and will now do so utilising its service to Libreville, Gabon, effectively introducing a new sector between Libreville and Cotonou. SAA has secured traffic rights enabling it to pick up and drop off passengers between Libreville and Cotonou in both directions.

Aaron Munetsi, SAA General Manager Commercial (Acting), said destinations we serve in Central Africa, with flying times of just over five hours from Johannesburg are best served by this enhanced schedule which offers some of the markets non-stop flights from and to Johannesburg.

At the same time we are offering our valued customers increased frequencies and connections through our hub at OR Tambo International Airport to the entire South African Airways network," said Munetsi.

The enhancements to SAA's route network will enable the airline to offer more frequencies to other markets in its network such as Mauritius and Harare where demand keeps growing.

– CAJ News

Short URL: http://cajnewsafrica.com/?p=13835


Source: SAA introduces new sector to Central Africa network

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Why US tech giants are betting on Africa

Things have changed with the way big business deals with Africa. Previously a destination for CSR-related activities such as building schools and planting trees, the continent is now very much the investment destination of choice, especially for US tech giants.

It's been quite a turnaround. When, for example, Microsoft was founded in 1975, Nigeria was spiralling back into dictatorship and Portugal still had African colonies in Mozambique and Angola. Now, mobile-first Africa boasts seven of the world's 11 fastest growing economies, and the likes of Microsoft, Google and Facebook are scrambling for a piece of it.

Microsoft itself has led this charge, launching its US$75 million 4Afrika initiative three years ago in a bid to position itself for growth on the continent. From its more than 20 offices across Africa, the company has run a number of initiatives aimed at ensuring it creates a market for itself.

The one billion-strong population of the continent and its growing spending power is key to this.

money

"With its large youth population, Africa is a critical growth and investment market. Cloud computing is at the company's core, intersecting everything we do," said Amrote Abdella, regional director of the 4Afrika Initiative.

A combination of the growth in mobile devices, decreasing bandwidth costs and more international and local vendors offering a variety of new services, Africa is perfectly positioned to prosper from digital transformation.

Abdella says the opportunities are limitless. "With widespread access to technology and skills development, there is nothing that should hold Africa back," she said.

Collaborating on connectivity

This "widespread access to connectivity" is the key issue when it comes to Africa, and one US tech giants are focusing strongly on. An estimated 26.5 percent of Africans are connected to the internet, a figure that obviously needs to grow if people are to become avid consumers of the products and services provided by the likes of Microsoft, Google and Facebook.

A number of initiatives are underway to speed the growth of connectivity in Africa. Google has launched Project Link, in a bid to bring faster, more reliable internet to Africans. The company has rolled out a metro fibre network in Kampala, Uganda, and will do the same in Ghana.

The network offers last-mile Wi-Fi access, which ISPs and MNOs are able to leverage.

"Internet access is critical to doing business, and connectivity is indelibly tied into that," said Mich Atagana, head of communications and public affairs at Google South Africa.

Connectivity is an ongoing challenge and Google is working in partnership with people on the continent to help solve that, including through projects like Project Link. In South Africa we have invested in solar plants as well as participated in a TV white spaces project. Africans are coming online and as the cost of data and devices come down more Africans will be able to benefit from what the internet has to offer.

Microsoft has also been investing in white spaces technology – which uses unused radio spectrum to provide Wi-Fi connectivity at a much cheaper cost to get more people online. It's launched commercial networks with local firms in Ghana, South Africa and Kenya.

AFRICA

"Affordable access to low-cost broadband is crucial to helping Africa realise all of its opportunities, and it will have the biggest impact in the education, health, agriculture, government, financial services and retail sectors," Abdella said.

With connectivity, students can access world-class educational content to develop their employability or entrepreneurial skills. People living in last-mile areas can access critical healthcare services they never could before, through remote diagnosis, treatment and education.

Facebook, which has over 120 million users across Africa and opened its first African office in Johannesburg recently, is also looking to encourage the uptake of internet services through Free Basics. The Free Basics service offers user zero-rated access to services such as the BBC, and of course, Facebook, providing basic online services at no cost in a bid to encourage people to get online for the first time.

"People are coming online at a staggering rate in emerging markets and, in most cases, are doing so on mobile via 2G connections. In order to make sure another billion people can connect using Facebook we work hard on our product to work seamlessly regardless of mobile network and device," a Facebook spokesperson said.

Backing businesses

Getting people online is only part of the strategy. Assisting the development of successful businesses on the continent, which will in turn help create wealth and become customers of, say, Microsoft, is also a vital plank.

Abdella said Microsoft has been working to get many African businesses online for the first time, and was providing products like its Biz4Afrika portal, a virtual academy and PR toolkit to encourage the growth of SMEs.

"Within the SME sector there are opportunities for young entrepreneurs and innovators to grow wealth creation and job opportunities for the continent," she said.

In doing so, there are opportunities to form new online business models, enabling more efficient supply chains powered by technology and effectively creating bigger, more inclusive markets with critical mass. Finally, there are opportunities for regional integration, which will break historical structural constraints and stimulate cross-border trade and greater levels of regional investment.

These opportunities to encourage business development have not been lost on Microsoft's rivals either. Google's Atagana said the company was focusing on the promotion of digital skills to encourage the development of tech-based businesses, which in turn will likely become users of Google products.

googlemonopoly

In April the company announced its commitment to train one million Africans in digital skills over the next year, with its Digify program in partnership with Livity Africa offering a free three-month full time course on digital skills.

"The idea is to improve people's skills so that they can increase their chances of becoming employed or start their own businesses," Atagana said.

Facebook is on a similar push, both through an innovation challenge aimed at supporting tech startups, and other products to help businesses grow using the social media platform.

"Small businesses are the backbone of economies throughout the world and Africa is no different," the spokesperson said.

Facebook gives SMBs access to an instant digital – and mobile – strategy and a set of tools to grow their business. We're also, more and more, seeing small businesses integrating Instagram alongside Facebook to build their brand presence, as well as making the most of direct communication with customers through Messenger and WhatsApp.

The future is bright. The future is Africa.

Read next: Be your own boss with this Freelance Web Developer Bundle


Source: Why US tech giants are betting on Africa

Brexit and its impact on Nigeria, Kenya South Africa

In this special report, EXX Africa Admin analyses the impact of 'Brexit' on three of the United Kingdom (UK)'s most important African markets – Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya.

• The UK vote to leave the EU was based on a non-binding advisory referendum and does not guarantee the UK's departure from the EU. However, months of political uncertainty throughout Europe will rattle global and African markets.• If the UK does leave the EU, the impact on many African economies will be short-term and relatively insignificant. The UK will have two years to renegotiate trade agreements with African countries.•The South African economy is now more likely to fall back into recession and extreme currency volatility indicates that a downgrade of its credit rating to non-investment grade in December is now almost inevitable. Bi-lateral security cooperation and aid programmes face less disruption.• The effective implementation of a new foreign exchange mechanism and liberalisation of the fuel sector will face fresh hurdles as the UK withdraws from the EU. Nigeria will also struggle to attract interest in new debt sales aimed at financing its expansive budget.� �� Kenyan markets were relatively stable following the 'Brexit' vote, although any disruption in EU trade negotiations would negatively impact the cut flowers export market. It is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya, which could even benefit Kenya and other EAC members.

On June 23, the United Kingdom (UK) voted to leave the European Union (EU) in a non-binding advisory referendum, which resulted in the resignation of UK Prime Minister David Cameron and is likely to trigger fresh elections later this year or in 2017. Despite pressure from some EU countries, it is unlikely that exit negotiations will begin until a new UK government is firmly in place. There is a possibility that the next UK government will not trigger exit negotiations at all, based on a legal technicality or if it calls a second referendum.

Regardless of the probability of an eventual UK exit from the EU, the referendum result has caused market turmoil across the world, as investors worry that the result of the UK vote could drive fresh momentum to anti-establishment movements in other European countries. Global stocks lost $2 trillion in value on June 24 and the pound sterling fell to a 31-year low. UK companies and banks were some of the worst affected, with $55 billion wiped off banking stocks. The price of commodities also fell, with the price of oil dropping 3.9 per cent to $50 per barrel. However, the price of gold gained 4.7 per cent as a reflection of investors' perception of gold as a safe haven. At the time of writing on 27 June, Asian stocks and the UK pound were extending losses.

In Africa, currencies, stocks, and bonds also tumbled as a result of the UK referendum vote. The South African rand fell by eight per cent against the US dollar, before recovering to trade at 3.6 per cent weaker, while falling to a record low against the Japanese yen. Investors are worried that African countries will have less access to international capital markets, which would halt large infrastructure and other projects. There is also a concern that the UK will now disengage from Africa, as its economy inevitably slows, and foreign aid flows are cut. While the UK has a firm commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of its Gross National Income (GNI) on development aid, an eventual recession in the UK would decline GNI in absolute terms and thus diminish development aid to Africa.

Moreover, any trade deals that the UK has in place with African countries are essentially trade agreements with the EU, which has exclusive jurisdiction over its members' trade deals. Any exit from the EU could terminate the UK's access to the EU's single market, forcing the country to negotiate new trade accords with African countries, which is likely to be a cumbersome and lengthy process.

It is however likely that the UK would leave many existing trade agreements in place and thus mitigate risk of trade disruption. In this special report, EXX Africa assesses the likely implications of a UK departure from the EU for some of the UK's top African trading partners, as well as other implications on wider investment and security. We analyse two key drivers of risk, firstly the impact of a 'Brexit' on existing trade and other arrangements with the EU, and secondly the longer term effect of a probable economic slow-down of the UK economy, which is the fifth largest in the world with substantial ties to the African continent.

Impact on South Africa

The South African economy is now more likely to fall back into recession and extreme currency volatility indicates that a downgrade of its credit rating to non-investment grade in December is now almost inevitable. Bi-lateral security cooperation and aid programmes face less disruption.

The South African economy is the most exposed to the global economy and in particular its currency is the most volatile among its emerging market peers. South Africa is reliant on foreign capital to finance its wide current account deficit. Additional fears of euro-scepticism in other EU countries have also stoked fears that South Africa's trade with the EU is under threat. South African exports to the EU reached over $14.2 billion in 2015. However, the impact on the South African economy would be short-lived and relatively manageable. In a worst case scenario, where the UK economy were to shrink by five per cent and UK imports were to drop by 10 per cent, South Africa's economic growth would fall by only 0.1 per cent  (according to research by North West University).

South Africa's Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has said that the country's treasury and the central bank would take any additional measures to cope with the implications of the 'Brexit' vote, while South Africa's President Jacob Zuma has assured markets that South African banks and financial institutions could withstand the shock, as demonstrated during the 2008/09 global financial crisis. While a 0.1 per cent loss in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth is relatively small, the country's economic growth rate has already slumped, recording a 1.2 per cent contraction in the first quarter of 2016, as mining and farming output shrank. The UK exit vote thus indicates that a recession will be increasingly likely for the South African economy in 2016.

The impact on the currency would be more significant and have longer term implications on the country's debt rating. The rand has already lost 21 per cent against the US dollar so far in 2016. On June24, the South African rand was the worst performing currency after the UK pound, before paring some of its previous losses. This is due to South Africa's close financial ties to the UK and the fact that many large South African companies have a dual listing on the London and Johannesburg stock exchanges. According to research by unicredit, UK banks' claims on South African companies account for 178 per cent of South Africa's foreign currency. South Africa's already volatile currency and a probable recession further would increase the prospect of a downgrade of the country's credit rating to non-investment grade by December. The longer term implications would lead to weak growth, higher inflation and interest rates, as well as extensive capital flight.

According to Bloomberg, the UK is South Africa's fourth largest export destination, mostly dominated by metals and agricultural goods. The bulk of these exports have duty-free access to the EU under the terms of the Trade Development Co-operation Agreement. The trade terms with the UK will now need renegotiation and revision, which could take up to two years, and significantly impact investment in key industries such as mining and agriculture.

Moreover, South Africa is a member of the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), which is dominated by asymmetric trade with South Africa. Other SACU members such as  Botswana, Namibia, Lesotho, and Swaziland, will similarly be affected by the trade renegotiations with the UK. South Africa's Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies has offered UK companies that stand to lose their duty-free access to EU markets a base in South Africa, thereby continuing these companies' access to the EU through the EU-SADC Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), which includes six countries of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

Beyond trade and investment, the implications of an eventual 'Brexit' are less likely to be extensive. The presence of the British Peace Support Team (BPST) in South Africa, which provides for bilateral military co-operation such as joint exercises with the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), is unlikely to be affected. South Africa is one of the top ten countries receiving British aid, which could be cut down as the UK economy enters severe recession. Britain's bilateral development programme in South Africa came to an end in 2015, since when the relationship between the two countries has shifted to one of mutual co-operation and trade.

Impact on Nigeria

The effective implementation of a new foreign exchange (forex) mechanism and liberalisation of the fuel sector will face fresh hurdles as the UK withdraws from the EU. Nigeria will also struggle to attract interest in new debt sales aimed at financing its expansive budget.

The main impact of a 'Brexit' on Nigeria would be further deterioration of the country's already struggling economy, which has been caused by the fall in global oil prices and a steep drop in local crude production due to an insurgency in the Niger Delta. There is extensive trade and security cooperation between the UK and Nigeria that would be likely to face several years of disruption as the UK departs from the EU. Nigeria is the UK's second-largest export market in Africa. Bilateral trade between the two countries is currently worth $8.3 billion and projected to reach $25 billion by 2020. The UK is also Nigeria's largest source of foreign investment, with assets worth over $1.4 billion.

Moreover, UK-Nigerian remittances account for $21 billion a year. The UK is also one of the largest development assistance donors to Nigeria, although Nigeria is not as aid-dependent as most continental counterparts.

A slowing UK economy on the back of a departure from the EU and potential disruption as the UK renegotiates its trade agreements, would be likely to reduce trade flows, foreign direct investment, and Nigerian remittances. There is also no guarantee that other EU countries will make up the UK shortfall in trade and investment, as other EU countries look to Iran for more reliable access to oil and to Asia for cheaper labour.

On June 24, Nigerian stocks ended a three-day rally, falling 1.4 per cent over worries of Britain's vote to leave the EU. Nigerian banks, such as Fidelity Bank and Zenith Bank, recorded the biggest losses. Nigerian stocks had previously rallied 8.5per cent after the government floated the naira and ended a highly controversial currency peg.

As a result, new portfolio inflows will slow, which will hamper the implementation of the country's new foreign exchange mechanism. On June 20, the central bank introduced a more flexible foreign currency policy, removing a de facto peg of around 197 naira to the US dollar. The naira's 16-month peg to the dollar had overvalued the Nigerian currency, resulted in an economic contraction, and harmed investments. The implementation of the fuel sector liberalisation, including the termination of a burdensome state-subsidy scheme, would be likely to face implementation issues.

The sector's liberalisation will add to fuel importers' margins and will allow shipments of fuel to resume. The liberalisation of the fuel marketing sector and the proposed introduction of a flexible exchange rate are both aimed at soothing foreign investor concerns and to attract new fundraising to finance a record budget deficit widened by a fall in oil revenues. The effective implementation of the new currency regime and establishing its credibility will be key to attracting new Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and portfolio flows. Finance Minister Mrs. Kemi Adeosun is due to launch a planned eurobond sale later in 2016. The government plans to raise $10 billion of new debt of which $5 billion would come from foreign investors. Much of this planning would be delayed as risk-aversed investors steer away from Nigerian debt.

Beyond trade and investment, the UK is also a key partner in Nigerian security. The UK has been crucial to drawing international attention to the Islamist Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria's northeast. There is a risk that the UK would become distracted from international security threats, such as those by Boko Haram, as it negotiates its departure from the EU. However, the US and France have proven more crucial partners than the UK in combating Boko Haram, thus mitigating the effect on counter-insurgency efforts.

Impact on Kenya

 

Kenyan markets were relatively stable following the 'Brexit' vote, although any disruption in EU trade negotiations would negatively impact the cut flowers export market. It is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya, which could even benefit Kenya and other East African Community (EAC) members.

Kenyan officials were quick to respond to the market turmoil followed by the UK's vote to leave the EU. Finance Minister Henry Rotich assured investors that Kenya has adequate foreign exchange reserves to absorb any shocks from the crisis. Kenya has $5.6 billion in foreign reserves, which amounts to five months of import cover, which is higher than the four months the country usually holds.

The central bank also said it would be ready to intervene in money and foreign exchange markets if required. Such assurances steadied the impact on the Kenyan shilling, but some banking stocks still suffered losses. Equity Bank and Co-operative Bank were down over two per cent on June 24, while other stocks were unchanged.

However, there is a risk of capital flight from Kenya as risk-aversed investors seek safe havens. This would weaken the shilling and increase import costs. Kenya's import bill has steadily increased by more than 10 per cent over the past five years. Another key concern would be that ongoing negotiations of a trade agreement between the EU and the East African Community (EAC) would be delayed as the EU copes with the UK's departure. The Kenya Flowers Association expects any such delays would cost the Kenya flower industry USD38 million per month. Horticulture is a primary export market for Kenya and over one third of the EU's cut flower imports, mostly to The Netherlands and the UK, are derived from Kenya. However, it is likely that the UK would prioritise trade negotiations with Kenya given the two countries' long-standing bilateral relations. Such negotiations could even benefit Kenya and other EAC countries, as Kenya gains leverage over setting trade terms.

Although a series of diplomatic disputes have strained British-Kenyan relations over the past few years, Kenya is likely to feature as the UK's principal destination for emerging market investment. Despite diplomatic disputes, Kenya is likely to remain a preferred beneficiary of British foreign investment in agribusiness (tea, tobacco) and in oil and gas, with the UK being instrumental in the development of Kenya's region-leading financial sector.

Much like US investment, British investment is likely to increase in the renewable energy sector, especially financing and technical co-operation for geothermal, solar, and wind projects, which represent lower-risk sectors. Given these interests, and the large presence of British expatriates and tourists, the UK is likely to maintain security co-operation towards mitigating the threat posed by militant group al-Shabaab, which has British nationals active within its ranks.


Source: Brexit and its impact on Nigeria, Kenya South Africa

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Ethiopian Airlines to operate daily flights between Addis Ababa and Muscat from July 1

The airline currently operates four flights weekly. With the daily service, passengers will have more choice and flexibility, and it will also facilitate trade, investment, and tourism ties between Oman and  African countries, stated a press release.

Ethiopian Airlines has introduced special fares for passengers travelling from Muscat to Dar es Salaam and Zanzibar (Tanzania), Nairobi (Kenya), Johannesburg (South Africa), Khartoum (Sudan) and other African destinations.

"For our esteemed passengers from Oman, who are travelling onward and have transit time of more than six hours at Addis Ababa, the airline will also offer hotel arrangements. And this value-added service comes with no additional cost," said Sami Muctar, country manager, Ethiopian Airlines, Oman.

The airline also offers exciting safari packages in Kenya as well as short holiday breaks in Ethiopia, the release added.

During recent times, many Omani citizens and residents have visited Addis Ababa as a tourist destination.  

The airline offers a three nights/four days short holiday package to Addis Ababa. Named Addis Delight, it starts from RO199 and includes air ticket, hotel stay (bed and breakfast) and transfers.

Ethiopian visa

Omani nationals and residents can apply for Ethiopian visa through Ethiopian Airlines office in Muscat. The airline will facilitate processing of visa within ten working days of submission of required documents.

This facility is offered only to passengers traveling from Muscat on Ethiopian Airlines.


Source: Ethiopian Airlines to operate daily flights between Addis Ababa and Muscat from July 1

Qatar Airways offers special fares to amazing destinations around the world

Qatar Airways is offering customers in Azerbaijan an incredible early bird sales promotion to travel upon its network of more than 150 exciting destinations around the world.

Customers can visit places they always wanted to with early bird offers and enjoying fabulous savings to Asia, Australia, America, Arabian Peninsula, Africa and beyond with Qatar Airways. Unparalleled travel experience as customers enjoy the trip of a lifetime on their next vacation abroad, that is the promise of world best Airline.

Now through to 1 July 2016, customers in Azerbaijan can enjoy exclusive discounted fares when booking at qatarairways.com. Travel period for this great early bird promotion is 18 September 2016 to 10 June 2017.

Qatar Airways Country Manager, Mr. Nazir Abduvakhidov said: "This is a special promotion for Qatar Airways passengers to travel on board the World's Best Airline and to experience our signature premium service. Through this promotion, we would like to extend our gratitude to our customers for their continued support and loyalty in choosing Qatar Airways as their preferred airline."

Qatar Airways serves key business and leisure destinations around the world with 186 modern aircraft, including destinations such as Mumbai, Bangkok, Singapore, Hong Kong, Colombo, and Dubai via the airline's state-of-the-art hub, Hamad International Airport.

At the annual Skytrax 2015 World Airline Awards, Qatar Airways was awarded World's Best Airline, Best Business Class Airline Seat, and Best Airline in the Middle East.

Qatar Airways has seen rapid growth in just 19 years of operation and today flies a modern fleet of 184 aircraft to more than 150 key business and leisure destinations across Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific, North America and South America.


Source: Qatar Airways offers special fares to amazing destinations around the world

Monday, June 27, 2016

Britain’s exit from EU brings a mixed bag of fortune for Africa

Flowers are one of Kenya's top exports, with the UK a major destination. PHOTO | FILE 

On Friday morning the world woke up to the news that the UK had decided to leave the EU. The same day saw currencies, stocks and bonds plunge across Africa, and a slump in oil and other commodities.

From an African point of view, the immediate aftermath of Brexit has exacerbated problematic trends in international markets which have already hit the continent's growth prospects.

African currencies slipped against others like the US dollar and the Japanese yen but of course gained against the GBP. Further, in the aftermath of Brexit, some African Eurobonds plunged with yields rising for Nigerian, Ethiopian and Rwandan Eurobonds.

In the short and medium term, the departure of the UK from the EU complicates African access to EU markets. Countries and businesses that were using the UK as a point of entry for their goods into the EU will have to find new partners in mainland Europe.

Further, any trade deals that African countries had with the EU will have to be renegotiated with the UK as a standalone entity.

Although it is unlikely that the UK will effect drastic departures in terms of trade deals with African countries, the process of re-negotiation will take a period of time during which African exports to the UK will be negatively affected due to the uncertainty in the limbo period.

Closer home, Kenya's horticultural sector, particularly cut flowers, will suffer. Flowers are one of Kenya's top exports and the UK is a major destination.

Thus, again, any trade deals that Kenya had negotiated with the EU will stall with regard to the UK because of Brexit; and this may well translate into losses in the short to medium term for those firms.

Another example of how Brexit will negatively inform access to EU markets for African goods is the case of Kenyan tea.

If Brexit leads to the tightening of access to the EU markets for UK goods, Kenyan blended tea exports will suffer because the UK has been a major re-exporter of Kenyan tea into EU markets.

The UK's appetite for Kenyan tea was informed by this re-export function thus with Brexit, the UK may possibly lose easy access to EU markets which may lead to a cut in the volumes of tea the country imports from Kenya.

If one looks at the effect of the weakening of the GBP, Africa will be affected. Firstly, African exports to the UK will be more expensive for UK consumers and this may dampen their appetite for African products.

Further, with a weaker GBP, Kenya will become a more expensive tourist destination which will negatively affect a sector that has already been under-performing as the UK is an important source of tourists for Kenya.

On the other hand, a weaker GBP will be good news for an import economy such as Kenya as imports from the UK will be cheaper.

If Brexit triggers a UK recession, Africa will have to contend with more medium to long-term problems.


Source: Britain's exit from EU brings a mixed bag of fortune for Africa

Concerns about Zika are shifting destinations for ‘babymooners’

Six months after the Zika virus started making headlines in the U.S., its effects are being felt by agents who cater to the "babymoon" and, in some cases, honeymoon travel markets.

While business as a whole remains solid, babymoon and honeymoon specialists reported a shift in the destinations to which pregnant travelers or those looking to become pregnant are heading. Instead of more traditional Caribbean babymoons, soon-to-be parents are choosing Zika-free vacation spots like Hawaii and Canada, among others.

"I am really only seeing [the destination shift] in honeymoon couples, couples that are expecting babies and couples that are trying to get pregnant," said Margie Hand, an agent and Caribbean specialist with Andavo Travel.

Margie HandMargie Hand

The Zika virus is most dangerous for pregnant women. Many affected by the virus are asymptomatic, and those who exhibit symptoms tend to have mild fevers, rashes, joint pain, conjunctivitis, muscle pain or headaches, not unlike dengue and chikungunya.

But for pregnant women who become infected with Zika, the disease has been linked to microcephaly, a devastating birth defect in which a child is born with an undeveloped skull. It has also been linked to Guillaine-Barre syndrome, a disorder in which the immune system attacks the nervous system.

The virus is spread through mosquitoes and sexual transmission.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of last week there were no locally acquired mosquito-borne cases of Zika in the U.S. There were 755 travel-associated cases and one laboratory case reported. In total, 234 pregnant women in the U.S. had been diagnosed with Zika infections.

Zika is actively transmitted via mosquitos in dozens of countries in the Caribbean and South America as well as on some Pacific islands and Cape Verde, Africa. (For an updated list, visit CDC's website.)

With the virus' prevalence in the Caribbean, agents have noticed a shift in pregnant travelers away from that area.

Lynn CiccarelliLynn Ciccarelli

Lynn Ciccarelli, of Pittsburgh-based Bella Vacations, said many babymoon travelers who would have been interested in the Caribbean are instead heading north to destinations such as Canada, Montana and Niagara Falls or west to California. They are even going as far as the Maldives and Tahiti.

That shift is unusual, she said, considering "it's so much cheaper and so much easier to go to the Caribbean."

Hand is also seeing travelers heading to the coast in California, with Hawaii and the Florida Keys also popular destinations.

"My goal is to educate my clients the best that I can and be prepared to have alternate locations for them," she said.

Hawaii is a popular alternative destination all around. Tara McCoy, with South Carolina-based Two Sisters Travel, said about half her business consists of honeymoon and babymoon travel, and she has sent nearly all her clients to Hawaii in lieu of the Caribbean.

"Most of our clients that we plan honeymoons for, or babymoons, are primarily looking for warm, tropical, Caribbean-type destinations, so that really kind of limits you with the areas with [active transmission of] Zika," she said. "I mean, it's pretty much the entire Caribbean, so we've been pushing people to Hawaii."

While some Caribbean islands do not yet have any reported cases of active Zika transmission, since the virus was first discovered in South America and the Caribbean it has been steadily spreading through the area, and the CDC predicts the virus will continue to spread.

Some agents are still seeing interest from clients in countries where the virus is being transmitted, but they are in areas with fewer cases.

Katie Rahr KapelKatie Rahr Kapel

For Katie Rahr Kapel, owner of Fargo, N.D.-based Mode Travel Agency, Hawaii has been a popular Zika-free destination, but she said her clients have also been comfortable traveling to some areas of Mexico, particularly on the Pacific coast. Usually, the Caribbean side of Mexico is more popular, she said.

Darcy Allen of Travel by Darcy, a babymoon specialist based in New Hampshire, said many of her clients are taking three- to five-night trips to locations closer to home, such as weekend getaways to Canadian cities and islands, including Victoria Island. Alaska and Seattle are also popular.

"I'm seeing a lot more stateside babymoons and of shorter duration," she said.

While babymooners have definitively switched their final destination, agents are having mixed experiences with honeymooners and destination weddings. Some said couples have changed their plans out of caution for both themselves and their wedding guests.

"Because there are still so many unknowns about the virus and the long-term effects, it is a big concern for a lot of couples," Hand said. "We have had to shift our thinking and become a little more creative for the honeymoon and destination wedding market."

Darcy AllenDarcy Allen

Others, however, said their honeymoon business has been largely unaffected.

"Caribbean [and] Mexico for families, for honeymoons, for girlfriend getaways, for just general travel has stayed steady," Allen said.

In fact, Stephanie Nye of Ohio-based Travel by Stephanie, said Mexico and Caribbean locations remain "extremely popular" with honeymooners.

While most agents said their marketing practices remain the same despite growing concern about Zika, Ciccarelli has taken a slightly different tactic.

She frequently posts destinations on her Facebook page and has shifted in recent months to featuring Zika-free destinations, such as spots in the continental U.S. and Hawaii.

Meanwhile, agents said they were continuing to encourage their clients to buy travel insurance, and the majority do purchase that protection for their trip. McCoy, for example, said about 75% of her clients purchase insurance, and between half and 75% of those choose cancel-for-any-reason policies.

With most insurers, cancel-for-any-reason policies are the only kind that enable a traveler to cancel a trip for fear of Zika. Some insurers have clauses that allow clients who become pregnant after purchasing a policy to cancel their trip.


Source: Concerns about Zika are shifting destinations for 'babymooners'

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Perspectives on the continent of Africa have to change

The second panel session of the Routes Africa Strategy Summit saw esteemed professionals from the aviation industry discuss the impact of tourism within Africa. The panel was moderated by Edward Robertson, editor of Routes News, and featured Richard Bodin, chief commercial officer of fastjet; Fernando Estrada, chief strategy officer of Vueling; Stephanie Wear, director of economic and air service development Tenerife Tourism Corporation and Yolanta Strikista, director of Strikista Consulting.

The Routes Africa Strategy Summit, held in the Gran Hotel Bahía del Duque saw industry professionals come together to discuss the economic impact of tourism within Africa.

The second panel session of the Routes Africa Strategy Summit saw esteemed professionals from the aviation industry discuss the impact of tourism within Africa. The panel was moderated by Edward Robertson, editor of Routes News, and featured Richard Bodin, chief commercial officer of fastjet; Fernando Estrada, chief strategy officer of Vueling; Stephanie Wear, director of economic and air service development Tenerife Tourism Corporation and Yolanta Strikista, director of Strikista Consulting.

Questions were put to the panel via the sli.do website, allowing the audience members to submit their questions anonymously should they wish to do so.

The panel discussed the economic impacts of tourism in Africa, as well as the importance of island tourism for the likes of Tenerife.

The discussion kicked off with a debunking of the ideology of 'tourism.' Richard Bodin believes tourism is "a very broad word" as it can be broken down into various segments. This included commercial tourism, fly and flop (visiting a destination to go to the beach) and visiting friends and relatives.

Routes-Africa-Strategy-Summit-Panel-2

Speaking on the growth of Tenerife as a tourist destination, Stephanie Wear said although there has been considerable growth in recent years, this does not mean that Tenerife is happy with it. "We want to continue to put into place a strategy that helps us to open up new markets," she explained.

The markets in question focus around the US and Africa. Given Tenerife's close proximity to West Africa, they are an ideal location for those travelling from the US due to the short travel time onwards to the African continent. Wear shared with the audience that Tenerife Tourism Corporation has begun talks with tour operators in order to join forces to attract tourism from all points of the world.

One of the disadvantages faced by Africa when it comes to travel and tourism is the current perception of the continent. Richard Bodin believes that outside of Africa "people tend to lump all of the countries in one band" meaning potential customers view Africa as one entity rather than the regions it can be split in to.

"There is a lot of educating to be done there" he added. The issue of Africa being viewed as one whole continent as opposed to separate countries and regions was raised in the earlier panel of the day. In terms of security issues surrounding aviation, the point was made that if there is an aviation accident within Africa, the entire continent comes under the microscope as unsafe.

With Tenerife's close proximity, much of the focus leading up to the event looked at West Africa. During the panel, East Africa as a destination was highlighted. Richard Bodin of fastjet says his airline "are very pro-East Africa" with a great deal to offer the region. He does feel that within East Africa there is still a great deal of protectionism which is hard to overcome.

In terms of an African carrier, Yolanta Strikista believes there is no significant competitor to Ethiopian Airlines at the moment. It was said that the airline is heavily promoting an increase in passenger traffic – at present, the airline has a domestic schedule of 20 cities, serving the likes of Addis Ababa, Mekele and Shilavo. Across Africa, 51 cities are served.

Register for Routes Africa in Tenerife, Canary Islands, 26 - 28 June 2016


Source: Perspectives on the continent of Africa have to change

Gambling on Gambia: Best-selling author John Nichol takes a chance on an unusual destination – and is thrilled to discover he’s hit the jackpot

  • The Nichol family chose The Gambia for its year-round swimsuit weather 
  • Food was delicious and excellent value for money in and out of their hotel
  • John stayed by the pool but his daughter Sophie went on a tour of the area 
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    As we shivered in the drab weather, the question in the Nichol house was: 'Where do we go for some guaranteed sunshine without crossing half the planet?' 

    A few years ago, the answer may have been Egypt or Tunisia. But due to recent attacks at tourist resorts and regional instability, travellers are looking at previously less popular destinations in the search for safe, sunny, reasonably priced holidays. 

    We chose the west coast of Africa and its smallest mainland country, The Gambia, with its subtropical climate and year-round swimsuit weather.

    Safe bet: Above, the pool at Ocean Bay Hotel, where the Nichol family stayed during their time in The Gambia

    John, Suzie and Sophie on their break. They chose the west coast of Africa and its smallest mainland country, The Gambia, for its subtropical climate and year-round swimsuit weather

    Even though the disease never reached Gambia, the 2014 outbreak of ebola in West Africa had a devastating effect on the area's tourist industry. But now visitors are returning to enjoy the country's legendary beaches. 

    On holiday, I require sunshine and a sunlounger, while my wife Suzie has an eye for a decent spa and some 'off the beaten track' sights to explore. Daughter Sophie, 11, requires a pool, a beach, and other families so she can seek out new playmates.

    With its large pool, spa and beachfront setting, The Ocean Bay Hotel at Cape Point, where the River Gambia and the Atlantic Ocean merge, seemed the perfect choice.

    After a six-hour flight from Gatwick – with a time difference of only one hour – we were ready to hit the pool as soon as we arrived.

    The Ocean Bay staff were always ready with a beaming smile and a cheery greeting enquiring after 'the boss lady' or 'princess Sophie'.

    With its large pool, spa and beachfront setting, The Ocean Bay Hotel at Cape Point, where the River Gambia and the Atlantic Ocean merge, seemed the perfect choice

    Food, in and out of the hotel, was excellent and, with prices as low as 200 dalasi (about £4) for a main course, superb value for money. 

    We sampled some freshly caught fish such as barracuda , and local staples like yassa (chicken cooked with fresh lime, chilli, onions and black pepper) and domoda, which could be any meat cooked with peanuts, mustard and tomato paste.

    To experience the real Gambia, you need to step outside the neatly manicured grounds of the international hotels.

    At first, you will be pestered by 'bumsters' trying to sell everything from a coconut to an excursion, or begging for money. The official advice is to politely, but firmly, reject every advance.

    We followed the advice and we were largely left alone. Another tip is to use an official tourist guide. They were always outside our hotel and cost £11 for half a day.

    As I had important business lazing by the pool, it was Sophie who headed out of the hotel with a new friend and her family, in the care of one of the official Gambian guides. This is her review:

    'Halfway through our holiday I was invited on a tour. We got on a bus with no seatbelts, it was quite weird and we had to cling on because the roads were very bumpy.

    The Nichol family also visited a local school. Above, some of the school children, of all different ages

    The Nichol family also visited the vulture park where they saw the birds being fed and watered 

    'After a few minutes we pulled up outside an old shack. I was confused as I thought we were going to a school, but the guide explained that this was the school. 

    'I expected to see 30 children sitting on chairs with tables in front of them. It turned out there were 70 kids squashed up on narrow benches with no tables.

    'They were all different ages, ranging from three to ten. They were pretty good at English – compared to m y French – and they could all pronounce the words excellently. They were learning the letters and how to say different animal names.

    'We were asked to join in so we shouted words like "butterfly" as loud as we could. Afterwards they sang nursery rhymes. We gave them a few gifts of pens, sweets and books and they were very thankful.

    'One teacher was very strict, hitting the children, which was rather awkward. We left thinking about how lucky we were.

    'Next we headed to the vulture park where we saw the birds being fed and given a drink. They were incredibly ugly, but very graceful, too. 

    'Then we walked through a wood to see some monkeys who we could hand-feed. They took one shell at a time, carefully choosing which one they wanted before shaking it to make sure there was a nut inside. They carefully bit off the shell, ate the food, then too k another.

    'Then we saw some crocodiles and we were even allowed to touch them. We avoided the teeth and they seemed very friendly. Finally, after a tasty lunch, we headed back to the hotel to cool off in the pool. We had a very busy day and I really enjoyed our holiday.'

    Sophie's final thoughts sum up the holiday – a blend of sunshine and relaxation mixed with an insight into an impoverished yet welcoming country. Our trip was a perfect early spring break, and very good value for money.

    John Nichol's latest book, Return Of The Dambusters – What 617 Squadron Did Next, is published by William Collins, £8.99.  

    TRAVEL FACTS 

    The Gambia Experience (gambia.co.uk, 01489 866 939) offers seven nights' B&B at Ocean Bay hotel from £699pp, including return flights from Gatwick and t ransfers.


    Source: Gambling on Gambia: Best-selling author John Nichol takes a chance on an unusual destination – and is thrilled to discover he's hit the jackpot

    Saturday, June 25, 2016

    First Lady to Visit Africa to Promote Girls' Education

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama is scheduled leave Sunday for Africa and Europe to advocate for girls' education.

    The six-day trip – to Liberia and Morocco, with a final stop in Spain – will highlight Let Girls Learn, one of Obama's core initiatives. The first lady will be joined in her travels by daughters Sasha and Malia, and the girls' grandmother, Marian Robinson.

    Let Girls Learn is a global initiative launched by the president and first lady in 2015. The program addresses obstacles – such as forced marriage, poverty and violence – that keep more than 62 million girls globally out of school.

    "We believe very strongly that education and the empowerment of young people is going to be critical to a region that has known so much turmoil, particularly given the enormous youth population in those countries," Ben Rhodes, the White House deputy national security adviser, said Friday.

    The first destination is Liberia, where the first lady will attend a meeting with the first elected woman head of state in Africa, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

    Obama then will visit the Peace Corps training facility in the Liberian city of Kakata to speak with women participating at the Girls Leading Our World Program. The entourage also will meet with Peace Corps volunteers and trainees.

    The first lady will speak to adolescent girls at Unification Town, also in Liberia, about the educational obstacles they face. Moderating the meeting will be Indian actress Freida Pinto, who starred in the film "Slumdog Millionaire."

    "The conversation will highlight both educational barriers girls face as Liberia moves beyond the Ebola epidemic, and the U.S. government's efforts to continue to address those barriers and provide adolescent girls with equitable access to safe and quality education," said Tina Tchen, the first lady's chief of staff.

    Global initiative

    Some 250 million girls live in poverty, according to White House data. In developing countries, one in nine girls marries by age 15; one in three by age 18. Early marriage and early motherhood is associated with poor health and educational outcomes for both mother and children.

    Actress Meryl Streep is scheduled to join Obama and daughters in Morocco Tuesday and Wednesday for another conversation on helping girls go to school. About 85 percent of the north African country's girls are enrolled in primary school, but only 14 percent attend high school.

    The final destination abroad is Spain, a longtime U.S. ally that, the White House noted, has dealt with "significant" economic challenges in recent years.

    By visiting the three countries, Michelle Obama "is able to speak not just to government [officials] but to speak to people and to make clear that … a key part of our leadership is what we can do to lift up the lives of young people, particularly girls," Rhodes said.

    The White House said travel costs for Pinto and Streep will be covered by CNN Films, which is collecting documentary footage in Liberia and Morocco.

    Obama, who recently joined Snapchat, will document her travels in a daily diary at HelloGiggles.com as well as on social media.


    Source: First Lady to Visit Africa to Promote Girls' Education

    Friday, June 24, 2016

    Jumia Becomes the One Stop Online Destination in Africa

    Africa Internet Group is today connecting its companies into Jumia's (www.JUMIA.com.ng) ecosystem with a new vision, "Expand your horizons". The new Jumia ecosystem will give access to products and services from its 8 leading platforms.

    After 4 years of successfully establishing and growing its online services as leaders in their markets, Africa Internet Group, now Jumia, has become the N°1 E-commerce platform in Africa.

    "We founded our companies with a very strong belief: Internet can improve people's lives in Africa. Uniting all services allows us to better help our customers fulfill their daily aspirations. This is all possible because people connect to our platform to access those services and products in an environment that we have designed for them, addressing their needs and expectations on quality, choice, price, trust and convenience." said Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara, founders and co-CEOs of Jumia.

    People can now find on Jumia all their needs ; branded products with Jumia, local sellers with Jumia Market (prev. Kaymu), hotel booking with Jumia Travel (Jovago), food delivery with Jumia Food (Hellofood), classifieds with Jumia Deals (Vendito), Jumia House (Lamudi) and Jumia Car (Carmudi), and lastly logistics services with Jumia Services (AIGX).

    Furthermore, sellers will also benefit from this move, by getting access to more traffic and to a greater world of opportunities. Every day, Jumia helps and encourages restaurants, hotels, local sellers, brands, real estate agents, car dealers, large companies and logistic companies to become better, bigger, more performant, thus creating positive impact for Africa.

    The founders reiterated that, "Operating under the same brand name reinforces the legitimacy of proposing other services to our customers and to our sellers. We want to have one strong brand that is trusted and loved by our customers across Africa".

    Jumia's new vision, "Expand your horizons", expresses the group's ambition to transform people's lives through internet, overcoming the ground market challenges of the continent and giving all Africans the opportunity to access high quality services and products everywhere.

    Distributed by APO on behalf of Jumia.

    Media Contact: Bertille GUITTON Head of Communication & Public Relations JUMIA Group Phone NG: +234.817.223.5608 | FR: +33.629.832.731   bertille.guitton@jumia.com.ng

    About Jumia: Jumia (www.JUMIA.com.ng) aims at creating a connected digital Africa to improve people's lives on the continent, thanks to the Internet. Therefore, Jumia's mission is to connect African consumers and entrepreneurs to do better business together. Founded in 2012, with a presence all over Africa, the group has MTN, Rocket Internet, Millicom, Orange & Axa as investors. Jumia has been creating a sustainable ecosystem of digital services and infrastructures through online and mobile marketplaces and classifieds to expand your horizons. 


    Source: Jumia Becomes the One Stop Online Destination in Africa

    African Assets Slump as Brexit Vote Triggers Commodity Decline

    Currencies, stocks and bonds across Africa plunged after the U.K.'s vote to leave the European Union triggered a slump in oil and other commodities and sent investors scurrying for safe assets.

    South Africa's benchmark stock index fell the most since January, led by shares of banks and diversified mining companies. The rand dropped to a record against the yen and by the most since 2008 against the dollar before paring the decline, while yields on dollar bonds from Ghana to Kenya rose. Gold miners gained the most in four months as the precious metal, seen as a haven in times of turmoil, soared.

    "We're going into a very difficult, very volatile time with prices moving in all sorts of directions; lots and lots of uncertainty," Ron Kiplin, a money manager at Cratos Capital in Johannesburg, said by phone. "And we still need to see what impact really, from a South African perspective, it has on emerging markets."

    QuickTake Why Britain Voted to Leave the EU

    The victory for the "Leave" campaign may weigh on African economies as prices of raw materials fall, with the Bloomberg Commodity Index dropping 1.2 percent on Friday as crude oil fell 3.9 percent to below $50 per barrel. Gold gained 4.7 percent to $1,316.37 an ounce, the highest on a closing basis since January. The debate over the U.K.'s EU membership has dominated investor sentiment throughout June, with appetite for riskier assets having built up over the past week as bookmakers' odds suggested the chance of a so-called Brexit was less than one in four.

    The rand slumped 8 percent against the greenback before paring the decline to trade 3.6 percent weaker at 14.9484 by 10:57 a.m. in Johannesburg. The currency fell 6.6 percent to 6.8728 yen after plunging as much as 14 percent. It gained 2.7 percent against the pound to 20.8682.

    Most Volatile

    South Africa's currency is the most volatile among 24 emerging-market peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, suggesting it often trades as a proxy for risk sentiment. A British exit from the EU could shave about 0.1 percentage point off South Africa's economic growth, according to researchers from North-West University. The U.K. is the fourth-biggest destination of South African exports, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

    "The rand will be affected in the short term with a general knee-jerk risk-off perception," Philip Saunders, co-head of multi-asset management at Investec Asset Management Ltd., which oversees $116 billion, said by phone from London on Friday. "The initial reaction is probably going to be one whereby you see markets becoming somewhat disorderly and South Africa is going to be caught up in that backwash."

    For full coverage of the referendum, click here

    South African bonds fell the most since March, with yields on benchmark rand bonds due December 2026 climbing 15 basis points to 9.03 percent. Yields on Nigerian dollar debt due July 2023 soared 37 basis points to 7.45 percent.

    The Johannesburg Stock Exchange All-Share Index fell 3.4 percent, led by Naspers Ltd., SABMiller Plc and BHP Billiton Plc. The Johannesburg Banks Index dropped 4.1 percent as shares of lenders including FirstRand Ltd. plunged. Gold shares surged surged 14 percent, the most since 2008. The MSCI Emerging-Markets stock index fell 3 percent.

    Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. LEARN MORE
    Source: African Assets Slump as Brexit Vote Triggers Commodity Decline

    Thursday, June 23, 2016

    Air travel in Africa twice as pricey

    ADDIS ABABA - Air transport in Africa is twice as expensive as the world average, hindering continental trade links and economic growth in the 54 countries that make up the continent.

    That's according to Lars-Gunar Comen, director of Euroavia International, which advises the airports and aviation industry. It organised the Africa Air Cargo summit this week in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    Comen says the excessive costs of air travel hinder economic cooperation more than tariff barriers, though he added that Ethiopia was working to increase economic connectivity through air travel.

    According to Euroavia, Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa. is the leading flight destination in Africa, with 85 daily international flights out of Bole Addis International Airport, edging out Morocco's Casablanca with 82, and easily beating South Africa's Johannesburg, which he said had 48.

    Workneh Gebeyehu, Ethiopia's transport minister, told delegates that for landlocked nations like Ethiopia, air transport, especially of cargo, was critical for boosting international trade.

    With nearly 100 million people, Ethiopia is the most populous landlocked nation in the world, and its growing economy has put pressure on the ports of its neighbour Djibouti.

    "Ethiopia is already the second supplier of roses in Africa, next to Kenya, and plans to boost export through its air cargo, with a $107-million expansion of its main cargo terminal at Bole international airport," said Gebeyehu.

    He added that Ethiopian Airlines currently flies 37 freight destinations, with 19 airplanes transporting more than 820,000 tons annually.

    "A large part of the world's gross domestic product (GDP) is related to international trade, making transportation a crucial axis in it," he said.

    With a rising middle class and large tracts of uncultivated arable land which needed investment, Africa's need for leisure and cargo air transport would only grow.

    Africa News Agency


    Source: Air travel in Africa twice as pricey

    Dreaming of a job elsewhere? Top 10 most popular destinations for Britons working abroad revealed

  • USA and France most popular destinations for UK job-hunters, Indeed says
  • One in 10 Britons currently looking for a job overseas, findings suggest
  • 5.24million people born overseas currently work in the UK, ONS said 
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    Britons dreaming of a new life working abroad have the US, France and the UAE in their sights, new findings suggest.

    With gloomy weather and baffling referendum debates taking their toll, one in 10 Britons using Indeed's job site are hunting for a new role overseas.

    Canada and Ireland also make it into the top five most desirable destinations for Britons, with Australia, Germany and South Africa following closely behind.

    Popular: The USA is the most popular choice for Britons looking for a job overseas, Indeed said. Pictured is San Francisco

    At present, the majority of Britain's population still aims to get a job within the UK. But, 'this situation may not last forever', the report suggests.

    Nearly 37 per cent of job hunters using Indeed's site looking for a job overseas put the USA at the top of their list.

    TOP 10 GLOBAL DESTINATIONS FOR UK JOB-HUNTERS

    1. USA 36.5%

    2. France  11.2%

    3. UAE 9.4%

    4. Canada 8.5%

    5. Ireland 7.5%

    6. Australia 6.5%

    7. Germany 6%

    8. South Africa 5.9%

    9. Italy 4.4%

    10. Netherlands 4% 

    In second place, 11.2 per cent of Britons are on the lookout for a job in France. 

    Around 9.4 per cent are looking for a job in the UAE, perhaps lured by promises of sunshine and tax breaks. In Dubai, only about 8 per cent of the population are Emira ti – the other 92 per cent are expats. 

    Canada remains popular with Britons looking for a job overseas, coming in at fourth place. Attracting 7.5 per cent of all interest on Indeed's site, Ireland is another appealing prospect for Britons.

    Germany, South Africa, Italy and the Netherlands also feature in the top 10 most desirable destinations for UK job-hunters, Indeed said.

    While the USA is the most popular destination for Britons looking for work overseas, the statistics for London are slightly different.  

    Legendary: Nearly 37 per cent of job-hunters on Indeed's site look for a job in the USA

    Formidable: France is the second most popular destination for Britons looking to work abroad

    For people in the capital, Canada is the most desirable destination for a job overseas, followe d in second place by the USA.

    Nationally, Australia finds itself as the sixth most popular destination for job hunters looking for work abroad. But, for Londoners, Australia is the third most popular choice for overseas work, Indeed said.

    Last year, data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development revealed that there were around 3.97million Britons living abroad in 2010-11, with the number likely to have increased since.

    According to the ONS, 323,000 Britons emigrated overseas in 2014, with people jetting off for a variety of reasons, including retirement, work or family. 

    Last week, official data from the Office for National Statistics revealed that there are currently around 5.24million people born overseas working in the UK.

    This marks an increase of 330,000 compared to the same point a year earli er, the ONS said.

    The number of non-UK nationals working in the UK over the period increased by 229,000 to 3.34million.

    Sunshine: The UAE is the third most popular destination for Britons looking to work abroad, Indeed said

    Since 1997, the proportion of all people working in the UK accounted for by non-UK nationals increased from 3.5 per cent to 10.6 per cent.

    According to the ONS: 'This increase in non-UK nationals working in the UK reflects the admission of several new member states to the European Union.'

    In Indeed's latest 'Labor Market Outlook 2016' report, the UK comes out as the sixth most popular destination for job-hunters in the world. 


    Source: Dreaming of a job elsewhere? Top 10 most popular destinations for Britons working abroad revealed

    Wednesday, June 22, 2016

    Africa Travel: 5 popular African tourist destinations you should definitely visit this summer

    It's that time of the year when people head out in droves for the summer holiday, seeking exciting and exotic destinations to visit.

    In recent years, Africa has steadily proven itself to be a tourist haven with countries in East Africa attracting a significant amount of tourists, and for good reason too.

    Between the rich wildlife, exotic islands and hospitality, it's no wonder countries like Kenya and Tanzania regularly show up on must-visit country lists.

    But East Africa isn't the only region with exciting sites to offer, indeed the entire continent is laced with an interesting line-up of culture, food, sites and people to keep any tourist well entertained for the duration of their stay.

    That said, here are 5 popular African tourist destinations you should definitely visit this summer

    Also read: 10 life-changing trips every Nigerian should take before hitting 30

    1. Kenya: This East African country isn't new to celebrity tourists from Prince William and wife, Princess Kate to United States president, Barack Obama, Kenya's rich wildlife and culture remains a constant attraction to tourists around the world.

    2. Tanzania: Home to Mount Kilimanjaro, Lake Victoria and Serengeti National Park to name a few attractions, Tanzania is another great spot for nature lovers. Should you get bored with nature and seek a thrill, simply hop on a ferry to the island of Zanzibar for some sand, surf and great island food.

    3. Rwanda: If Rwanda conjures images of the genocide in the nineties then please understand that you're a little behind on things. Rwanda has since advanced into a tourist haven filled with breath-taking sites and truly warm, friendly people. The best part - it's super affordable to visit.

    4. Morocco: One of the most exotic countries on the African continent, Morocco's close proximity to Europe sees a good deal of influence on it's culture and lifestyle. Whether it's a stroll through the souks, a taste of its famed tea or an encounter with the snake charmers, you can be assured of a trip of a lifetime after a visit to Morocco.

     

    5. Gambia: This West African jewel has clear white beaches and picturesque resorts, amongst other things, going for it. Also explore the great wildlife not to mention engage in water activities like going fishing.


    Source: Africa Travel: 5 popular African tourist destinations you should definitely visit this summer

    The Prosecutor and the President

    Notions of human rights that transcend borders originate in antiquity, but the first international war-crimes tribunal, historians believe, did not take place until the 15th century. The first large and truly successful one was not until almost 500 years later, at Nuremberg. After the Cold War, human rights became a centerpiece of Western foreign policy, at least nominally, and in the 1990s, the United Nations Security Council set up criminal tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Sierra Leone, Cambodia and Lebanon followed. In June 1998, diplomats from 160 countries gathered in Rome to discuss a permanent international criminal court.

    African diplomats were particularly intent. On top of the genocide in Rwanda, the 1990s had brought civil wars or campaigns of systemati zed violence to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Somalia, Algeria, Burundi, Niger, Ivory Coast and Chad. Atrocities were committed by officials who also controlled their countries' justice systems. For its Western proponents, an international criminal court was largely a matter of conscience. For Africans, it was a way to fight impunity. "We wanted ways of enforcing good government in Africa," Betty Murungi, a lawyer in the Kenyan delegation in Rome, told me.

    When the court was formed, it was, one observer wrote, "an international epiphany." It was also, it seemed, a great moment for Africa. Senegal was the first country to ratify the court's founding treaty, the Rome Statute. Archbishop Desmond Tutu called the I.C.C. "Africa's court." Today, 34 of the court's 124 member states are African, the largest contingent after Europe's.

    < p class="story-body-text story-content" data-para-count="587" data-total-count="10980">In 2003, after the I.C.C. received the 60 ratifications it needed to begin work, Moreno-Ocam­po was appointed chief prosecutor and moved into the court's offices in a white metallic tower in The Hague. Member states had the ability to refer atrocities within their borders if they felt they could not handle investigations, as well as to refer them in other member states. The Security Council could refer investigations anywhere. And Moreno-Ocampo had the power to open investigations without any referral if he could show an atrocity had been committed and wasn't being redressed.

    In one of his first speeches in The Hague, Moreno-Ocampo announced he was monitoring the violence in Congo and invited its government to make a referral. The Congolese president did so several months later. Then the president of Ug anda, Yoweri Museveni, approached Moreno-Ocampo. Joseph Kony, whose Lord's Resistance Army had torn apart northern Uganda, had proved uncatchable. Perhaps the I.C.C. might force him out of the bush? Moreno-Ocampo began investigations in both countries. He was pleased: His first two inquiries addressed major atrocities in Africa, the continent that most concerned him and human rights advocates, and each had begun by invitation.

    For Uhuru Kenyatta, rule was a birthright. His father, Jomo Kenyatta, was imprisoned by the British colonial government during the fight for independence. After Jomo was freed and elected president of an independent Kenya in 1964, however, his revolutionary impulses didn't persist. He stocked the government and businesses with family members and fellow Kikuyu and "operated with little concern for the niceties of law," the historian Charles Hornsby writes, "traveling with his inner circle from residence to residence like a medieval monarch." Jomo's portrait still adorns every denomination of paper money in Kenya, and his family is believed to be the country's largest landholder.

    After graduating from Amherst College in Massachusetts, Uhuru showed little interest in politic s before 1997, when, in his mid-30s, he stood for Parliament and lost. In 2002, he ran for the presidency, on the strength of his name, and lost again. The man who beat him, Mwai Kibaki, had been a close friend of Jomo Kenyatta's. Kibaki took Uhuru under his wing, later putting him in the cabinet and, it was clear, grooming him as his successor.

    To many Kenyans, Uhuru — whose personal fortune, most of it presumably inherited, has been estimated at a half-billion dollars — embodies their country's inequity. More than a quarter of Kenyans live on less than two dollars a day, according to World Bank estimates. So taken for granted are corruption and impunity that the country's official and criminal classes are often indistinguishable.

    Kenyatta's rise coincided with the rise of Mungiki, the group Moreno-Ocampo would later accuse him of conspiring with in the postelection violence. Started as a tribal revivalist movement, Mungiki grew into a militaristic political fraternity and then into a criminal gang. Around the time Mungiki fought to take over the lucrative private bus lines that are the main form of transport in Kenya, in the early 2000s, the gang staged a massacre in northern Nairobi that left severed heads scattered in the streets.

    By then, Mungiki was being described as a "state within a state," with up to two million members, according to reports. They swore an oath of loyalty to the Kikuyu tribe and the Mungiki leader, a charismatic, ruthless man known as Maina Njenga. According to the I.C.C., new recruits "were told they would be killed if they violated the oath or left the organization." When clashes broke out between Kikuyu and other tribes, Njenga dispatched his men to fight.

    He also persuaded politicians to take the Mungiki oath. Paul Muite, a member of Parliament at the time and now a lawyer who represents Njenga and other members of Mungiki, which is still active, told me that almost every Kikuyu politician of consequence he knew during that era took the oath. For Njenga, it was "a way of collecting" power, Muite says. According to Muite and a former lieutenant of Njenga's with whom I spoke, one of the politicians who took the oath, before becoming president, was Kibaki.

    Photo Moreno-Ocampo, center, and colleagues listening during a September 2011 pretrial hearing in the I.C.C. cases of Uhuru Kenyatta, Francis Muthaura and Mohammed Hussein Ali. Credit Paul Vreeker/AFP/Getty Images

    Some Mungiki members, including Njenga, supported Kenyatta's 2002 presidential campaign. Kenyatta denounced the group and would later tell Moreno-Ocampo in court that "I have always publicly condemned and stated that I have no association whatsoever with Mungiki." Njenga's former lieutenant, however, described to me a series of meetings he attended with Kenyatta and Njenga in 2002, saying that Kenyatta was friendly with Mungiki. But, he added, Kenyatta didn't like or trust Njenga.

    In the 2007 election, Kenyatta did not run, instead supporting Kibaki in his race against Raila Odinga. By the close of Election Day, two days after Christmas, the vote was too close to call. The count was delayed. The tally center in Nairobi was mysteriously broken into. Then on Dec. 30, the government sudden ly announced Kibaki had won. He was hurriedly sworn in, and a media blackout was imposed. Odinga instructed his followers to protest. By New Year's Day, Kikuyu were being slaughtered. Mungiki began striking back in January.

    The government did little to stop the postelection violence, but afterward, it set up a commission of inquiry. Known as the Waki Commission, it issued a 529-page report in October 2008. The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, an autonomous government agency, published a comparably exhaustive report. Each was damning. Officials in Odinga's party had planned violence months in advance, while envoys of President Kibaki met with Mungiki to plan retaliatory attacks. Security agents and the police had conspired with the gang. "There were no good guys," a Waki commissioner, Pascal Kambale, told me. "There were only bad guys."

    Moreno-Ocampo, who monitored the violence as it was happening, traveled to Nairobi to speak with Kibaki. He encouraged Kibaki to refer Kenya to the I.C. C., as Congo and Uganda had made referrals. Government capacity wasn't the problem, Moreno-Ocampo knew. Kenya was capable of trying the suspects. The problem was as it had been in Argentina: The government was the criminal. And not only the government. The National Commission on Human Rights report listed more than 200 suspected inciters and funders of the violence, including presidential cabinet members, legislators, businessmen, shopkeepers, farmers. In a moment of collective insanity, Kenyan society had turned on itself.

    Still, Moreno-Ocampo continued to press Kenyan officials to begin prosecutions. In 2009, the Kenyan Parliament voted against a tribunal — unsurprisingly, as the Parliament itself was full of suspects — and Moreno-Ocampo requested that the I.C.C. judges allow him to open an investigation. They did. It was the first time he invoked his power to seek charges on his own a uthority, without a referral.

    The challenges were considerable, he knew. It was one thing to investigate militias at the invitation of a government, but quite another to investigate a government. Yet Moreno-Ocampo felt this was what the I.C.C. had been created for — to fight impunity. "This is a different kind of case," he told The Times in 2010. "This isn't about militias. It's about politicians and political parties. It's about investigating leadership."

    Polls showed a majority of Kenyans approved of the I.C.C.'s intervention. An editorial in The Nation, Kenya's main daily newspaper, said, "No one has ever come as close as [Moreno-Ocampo] to slaying the dragon of impunity in Kenya." On the buses of Nairobi, where operators compete for fares by adorning their vehicles with icons — Jesus Christ, Tupac Shakur, Arsenal forwards — Moreno-Ocampo's face appeared.

    The I.C.C.'s preliminary examination in Kenya was based largely on the work of the Kenyan commissions. Each had heard testimony that Kenyatta was at meetings with Mungiki. The Waki report didn't name Kenyatta, but the National Commission on Human Rights report did, saying that he reportedly "attended meetings to plan for retaliatory violence by the Kikuyus" and "contributed funds." Kenyatta was considered by many Kikuyu, including many Mungiki, to be their leader, and was understood to be the richest man in the country. If anyone had the motivation and funds to back an ethnic war, Moreno-Ocampo's investigators reasoned, it was Kenyatta.

    Moreno-Ocampo had by now built important cases in Uganda, Congo, Centr al African Republic and Sudan. "The world's prosecutor," as he was dubbed, seemed to be everywhere: magazine spreads, cable news, Davos. His critics complained that he thrust himself into the limelight, and they had a point — he allowed four different feature documentary crews access to The Hague — but even they couldn't deny that he put the court on the map.

    By the time the preliminary examination in Kenya began, however, the other cases had stalled. Only one trial, that of the Congolese warlord Thomas Lubanga, was underway. The court's lack of political and prosecutorial powers were partly to blame. The United States, China and Russia had refused to join it. George W. Bush openly tried to cripple it by, among other things, demanding immunity for Americans. And Moreno-Ocampo had none of the prosecutorial resources — subpoenas, surveillance, policing — available to his domest ic counterparts. Alex Whiting, a onetime federal prosecutor in Boston who became Moreno-Ocampo's prosecutions coordinator, told me the Kenyatta case "was like trying to prosecute an organized-crime case without the tools the Department of Justice uses to prosecute organized crime" — though, for this reason, Moreno-Ocampo's temperament was an asset. "You have to have a big ego, because you don't have much else."

    But Moreno-Ocampo himself may have been the greatest obstacle to the court's success, members of his staff told me. They didn't question his devotion — he often worked seven days a week, closely managing every case — but increasingly they questioned his judgment, which seemed always caught between that ego and his idealism. He inspired fierce admiration and dislike, sometimes in the same people. One attorney, who resigned because he couldn't stand Moreno-Ocampo, nevertheless lauded the prosecutor's commitment. Another, whom Moreno-Ocampo reduced to tears in meetings, defended him to me adamantly. When the journal World Affairs published a critical profile of Moreno-Ocampo, one former staff member attacked another in the online comments section.

    In Vienna, I heard Moreno-Oca mpo express remorse only twice. Once was when I asked about the atmosphere in The Hague. "It was a mess," he acknowledged. "I fought with all of my guys, because I was involved in everything. That's the problem: All of us were totally emotionally involved. If not, you're not there."

    A larger problem was his vision of the court's mission. He believed in the pre-emptive power of prosecution — "the shadow of the court," as he liked to call it. In his inaugural address in The Hague, Moreno-Ocampo said the court's success would be measured not by how many cases it tried but by how few. One investigator I spoke with said Moreno-Ocampo seemed to see the I.C.C. not as a forensic body so much as a "naming and shaming" organization, like Human Rights Watch or Amnesty International. And while it was true that the court's small budget limited the size of his investigations, he was, some say, already more interested in prominence than evidence. A former court attorney told me: "He would see the leader of a state and say: 'There must be evidence out there. Go get it for me.' "

    The investigation in Congo began calamitously. Bernard Lavigne, formerly a French domestic prosecutor, became Moreno-Ocampo's first lead investigator in Congo. "We accumulated a lot of information about one militia," Lavigne told me. "Then suddenly, because of a political decision by Luis or his political committee, we were obliged to change our planning and our investigative work and concentrate on a new target. It was completely crazy. ... We put in danger a lot of people." The case Moreno-Ocampo brought against Lubanga, for recruiting child soldiers, "barely scratched the surface of the conflict," Paul Seils, the first director of Moreno-Ocampo's preliminary-examination unit, says. Moreno-Ocam­po removed the lead attorney weeks before the trial commenced and clashed with the presiding justice, who accused him of trying to undermine the judiciary and pervert the Rome Statute.

    In conversation, Moreno-Ocampo has a habit of ignoring criticism. It's unclear if this is confidence or evasion. When I asked him about the censure, he described that judge as "brilliant" and "great."

    After the United Nations Security Council referred the atrocities in Darfur to the I.C.C. in 2005, the court charged President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan with crimes against humanity, war crimes and, later, genocide. The judges issued an arrest warrant. There is little question Bashir is guilty of the first two charges. He could be guilty of genocide too, but the court's investigation was not the best proof of it. An attorney involved told me the prosecutor's office did little independent work: Investigators never went to Darfur. When I brought this up, Moreno-Ocampo said: "Sometimes some of the lawyers are not going to understand the case. I'm sorry for them."

    Bashir was not popular in Africa, but he was the first head of state the court charged. This made other leaders, especially those accused of atrocities, nervous. It also vexed African Union diplomats who were trying to broker a peace in Darfur. (Muammar el-Qaddafi, whom the court would later charge with war crimes in Libya, was at the time the African Union's chairman.) In 2008, the African Union passed a resolution that said charging African heads of state was an affront to the "sovereignty and integrity of the continent." Bashir called the I.C.C. a "colonial court." Self-serving though his position was, it caught on. Complaints about the I.C.C.'s "Africa bias" piled up.

    Unbowed, Moreno-Ocampo pushed on in Kenya. In December 2010, he announced the suspects he wanted to charge. For the first wave of p ostelection violence, he named the chairman of Odinga's party and Joshua Arap Sang, a radio host who had broadcast anti-Kikuyu hate speech. A member of Parliament, William Ruto, was accused of being the ringleader. For the second wave, committed by Mungiki and the police, he named Kibaki's cabinet secretary, Francis Muthaura; the commissioner of police, Gen. Mohammed Hussein Ali; and Kenyatta.

    Before announcing the suspects, Moreno-Ocam­po met with Kenyans including investigators and lawyers at the Serena Hotel in Nairobi. The lawyers approved of his desire to combat impunity and prevent political violence during the next election in Kenya. But they warned him that Kenya wasn't Sudan or Congo. Its politicians were just as ruthless but more sophisticated. The suspects would try to kill the cases and discredit the I.C.C. So would President Kibaki's government. Kenyatta, elevated to deputy prime minister after the postelection violence, was his protégé. "They're going to fight back very, very hard," James Gondi, a Kenyan lawyer who had interned at the I.C.C., told Moreno-Ocampo. But the prosecutor seemed unconcerned. He pointed out that he'd put away generals in Argentina.

    Later, some questioned whether Kenyatta was as culpable as the case against him claimed. George Kegoro, the Waki Commission secretary, told me that when Kenyatta was questioned by the commission, he "saw himself as a peace­maker." Pascal Kambale, the Waki commissioner, said that "irrespective of Kenyatta's involvement, Mungiki was going to do what they did."

    In the I.C.C. system at the time, the prosecutor's office collected enough evidence for the court to hold pretrial hearings, in which the judges would decide whether there were sufficient grounds to confirm the charges. If they did, the cases proceeded. This gave defendants ample time to destroy evidence and interfere with witnesses, a recurring problem.

    By the time Moreno-Ocampo's team got moving in Kenya, more than two yea rs had elapsed since the postelection violence. Their investigation, which would go on for over four years, was far more rigorous than those in Congo or Sudan. They interviewed hundreds of victims and suspected perpetrators. But many witnesses who had opened up to the Kenyan commissions were no longer willing to speak.

    Faced with a dwindling pool of evidence, Moreno-Ocampo's team approached General Ali's attorney with a possible offer: If Ali testified against Kenyatta and Muthaura, the charges against him might be dismissed. The Kenyan commissions had gathered strong evidence against Ali, but circumstances had changed. The attorney general had forbidden the police to speak to the I.C.C. According to Kenyan investigators with whom I spoke, other police officers who were involved in the violence had been killed. Ali turned down the offer. The judges didn't confirm the charges against him. The prosecutor's office later withdrew the cases against Muthaura and Odinga's party chairman.

    There was one group willing to help the court: Mungiki. Many gang members were gone — "killed or forcibly disappeared in an apparent cleanup operation," the prosecution claimed — but some were still alive and willing to testify. Especially crucial were three confidential Mungiki "linkage" witnesses. One claimed he saw Kenyatta at meetings where attacks were planned; another, that he was told of these meetings, though he wasn't present; and a third, that he met with Kenyatta beforehand to discuss violence.

    Photo A portrait of President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya inside a tourist shop in Nairobi. Credit Michael Christopher Brown/Magnum, for The New York Times

    The case hinged on these men. But some people in the prosecutor's office worried about their reliability. Kenyatta's attorney claimed in court that the first two witnesses tried to extort him in exchange for information that could aid the defense, and when he refused, threatened him. He showed little evidence of the claim, but neither did the prosecution dispute it. ("It strikes me as entirely plausible," Benjamin Gumpert, an I.C.C. lawyer who worked on the Kenyatta case, told me.) Kenyans who knew the third witness, meanwhile, not only doubted his account but also questioned whether he was in Mungiki. Maina Njenga's former lieutenant says the witness was never in the gang. There were arguments in The Hague over whether to use him. The former court attorney told me it appeared the man would say anything to get into the court's protection program. But the case against Kenyat ta was too thin to sacrifice him.

    Moreno-Ocampo admitted to me that the evidence against Kenyatta was not as strong as he would have liked. But all he had to do for the moment was get through the pretrial hearings. After that, more evidence could be found. And he had a card up his sleeve: Maina Njenga.

    Moreno-Ocampo's team had considered charging the Mungiki leader. Instead, they had turned him. When Njenga was questioned by Kenyan investigators, he pleaded ignorance. But to the I.C.C. investigators, he came clean. He detailed the structure of his organization and its role in the violence. Njenga claimed to his lawyer, Paul Muite, that he had personally administered the Mungiki oath of loyalty to Kenyatta, though whether Njenga told this to I.C.C. investigators is unclear. Njenga was "very forthright," Muite told me, and he later agreed to testify in The Hague.

    Moreno-Ocampo cross-examined Kenyatta on Sept. 29, 2011. Kenyatta had traveled to The Hague with supporters, who filled the public gallery of the windowless blond-wood courtroom. Kenyatta was not required to attend the h earings, nor to testify, and some Kenyans had encouraged him to skip them in order to spite Moreno-Ocam­po. But he had a good reason to go: He intended to run for president, and he would use the trial as a campaign set piece, styling himself as a patriotic victim who had taken the fall for his sinister political opponents and been attacked by arrogant foreigners.

    At first Moreno-Ocampo had been popular in Kenya. Once the charges were announced, however, tribal ranks closed. The defendants stoked fears of ethnic persecution. Privately, proxies did worse. "People would come in knocking on the door at night and say, 'We know that your son is with the I.C.C.,' " Phakiso Mochochoko, who ran witness protection for the I.C.C., told me. " 'We're going to burn down your house tomorrow.' " Witnesses and court personnel were exposed. The court's Kenyan outreach coordinator rece ived death threats. One victim's attorney in the Kenyatta case left the country for his safety. Mochochoko says, "We have never had a case with this level of threats, directed not only at witnesses but anyone perceived to be witnesses, or perceived to be cooperating."

    But some of the indignation was genuine. There was a gulf of understanding between the court and Kenya, one Moreno-Ocampo, whose political guile was undercut by his political tone-deafness, never quite grasped. The court's very mission involves trying atrocities that stem from cultural conflicts whose nuances its lawyers and judges, from their remove in The Hague, can't hope to fully appreciate. "I'm not at all sure that international courts really are set up to understand the realities of the conditions they're investigating," Paul Seils, of Moreno-Ocampo's preliminary-examination unit, told me.

    Many Kenyans didn't see why so few should stand trial for a social upheaval caused by so many. They thought the defendants were guilty and were proud of them for it. Kikuyu believed Kenyatta had protected them in a tribal war. Non-Kikuyu felt the same of William Ruto. And the Kenyatta case in particular had unsettling reverberations. Kenyatta's father had been tried by the British for leading Mau Mau freedom fighters, most of them Kikuyu, whose rebellion in the 1950s precipitated Kenya's independence. (Mungiki traces its origin to these guerrillas.) The court had no sound evidence against the elder Kenyatta, who denied any connection to Mau Mau. He was convicted anyway. Now his son was facing eerily similar accusations. For many Kenyans, the trial felt like a return to colonialism. Indeed, after the I.C.C. defendants were named, they came to be known in Kenya as the Ocampo Six, a reference to the Kap enguria Six, the group of suspects that included Jomo Kenyatta.

    Uhuru Kenyatta knew he could portray his trial as a heroic struggle — but only if he upstaged Moreno-Ocampo in the cross-examination, which was being broadcast live on Kenyan television.

    For his own part, Moreno-Ocampo had debated whether to question Kenyatta himself. He had never interrogated a witness in the Hague courtroom. He decided to go ahead only days before the hearing. "I could not delegate," he told me: The case was too important. His preparations were bafflingly scant. When I asked how long he took to learn about Mungiki, the crux of the case, Moreno-Ocampo replied breezily: "Me? Two hours." His staff was worried but knew protest was pointless.

    As Moreno-Ocampo rose to begin the questioning, Kenyatta's face stiffened. The prosecutor hadn't been speaking long, however, when his team, next to him in the prosecution box, sensed something was wrong. Their boss was uncharacteristically awkward and hesitant. His queries were aimless. Kenyatta fended him off at every turn. He blamed Raila Odinga for the postelection violence and wedged in right­eous speeches. "Ultimately, violence does not help any particular situation, whether you are aggrieved or not," he said.

    Some members of Moreno-Ocampo's team grew nervous. One member put his hands to his face; another shifted in her chair. This is just embarrassing, one thought. At one point Moreno-Ocampo, seeming desperate for the defendant's help, asked: "So you have no information about the violence in detail?"

    Fifteen minutes in, Kenyatta, cottoning to Moreno-Ocampo's lack of preparation, relaxed in the stand. After Moreno-Ocampo asked a particularly ill phrased question, a wry smirk overtook the defendant's face. Looking at the judges, he said, coolly, "I think the prosecutor does not understand our system."

    Moreno-Ocampo gained his footing halfway through the 45-minute session, when he asked about the cash payments Kenyatta had reportedly made to Mungiki. Kenyatta scoffed, but then overstepped, saying: "I wish I did have that amount of money."

    Moreno-Ocampo knew this was preposterous: Kenyatta is among the wealthiest men in Africa. He had an opening. "Can you describe to the court the amount of your patrimony?" Moreno-Ocampo asked.

    Kenyatta chuckled and looked at the judges. "I did not understand what he has just asked," he said.

    Moreno-Ocampo, flustered, repeated the question: "Can you describe to the court the entire ty of your patrimony? How much money you have?" The presiding judge frowned and told Moreno-Ocampo to move on.

    When I asked Moreno-Ocampo about the cross-examination in Vienna, he responded tersely. "I took my decision, and I know why I did it," he said. "I don't think it was a big difference." He commended Kenyatta's performance, calling him "courageous" and "great."

    He never confronted Kenyatta with Maina Njenga's statements. When I asked why, Moreno-Ocampo told me it would have been irresponsible. "I didn't think I should expose Maina Njenga," he said. "I cannot protect him." There had already been multiple attempts on Njenga's life. Many followers had been killed, as had his wife. It was clear that powerful people wanted him dead.

    Though the charges against Kenyatta were confirmed, he had shown himself to be the defender of Kenya, its rightful president. Older Kenyans were reminded of the commanding performance his father gave in a courtroom a half-century earlier. He officially declared his candidacy after returning from The Hague. A campaign spokesman said Kenyatta was "anointed by God to lead the people." A Nation editorial said he deserved the Nobel Peace Prize for ending the postelection violence.

    The I.C.C. chief prosecutor's term is nine years, and in 2012 Moreno-Ocampo left the court. "For me, it was an honor and a pleasure to serve the Kenyan people," he said in his final news conference. The Kenya cases were important to him personally, "to do justice for the past" and "to be sure that the next elections are peaceful."

    The presidential election in March 2013 pitted Kenyatta against Raila Odinga. It was peaceful. Kenyatta won, with William Ruto as his running mate. It was assumed that they detested each other — Ruto, a member of the Kalenjin tribe, was formerly a close ally of Odinga's and faced almost identical charges at The Hague as Kenyatta, only for ordering the deaths of Kenyatta's tribesmen. But in running together, they had an unbeatable, if hugely cynical, message: hatred for the I.C.C. and, by extension, the West. "Kenyatta didn't have some grand electoral strategy," a campaign adviser to Kenyatta's party, Peter Kagwanja, told me. "Today, if you want to win an election in Africa, you just have to have the West bash you."

    Kenyatta invited President Yoweri M useveni of Uganda to speak at his inauguration. Nine years earlier, Museveni asked the I.C.C. to prosecute the Lord's Resistance Army, and the prosecutor's office had built its best cases against Joseph Kony and his deputies. (One of them, Dominic Ongwen, is currently awaiting trial in The Hague.) But in his speech, Museveni, who was marking his 28th year in power, congratulated Kenyan voters for rejecting "the blackmail" of the I.C.C., which the West used "to install leaders of their choice in Africa and eliminate the ones they do not like."

    Kenyatta and Ruto's alliance surprised Moreno-Ocampo. He knew they were smart, but "I never suspected they were so smart to create the ticket." Once they won, the Kenya cases disintegrated. It had emerged that in 2009, the third key witness against Kenyatta, who claimed to have discussed violence with him personally, had been tracked dow n by two Kenyan men in California. They recorded a video in which he went back on his testimony. After the election, the prosecutor's office dropped him. Several months later, the first two witnesses withdrew from the case. According to the prosecution, all three men were bribed. Paul Muite, who represents the first two witnesses, told me he believes this is true. There are now witness-interference cases pending at The Hague against three Kenyans. Muite added that even if they were paid off, the witnesses can never return to Kenya. Once the government "knows you're a witness, you have literally signed your death warrant," he said.

    When countries join the I.C.C., they agree to submit their highest officials, even their presidents, to prosecution if the occasion arises. The Kenyan government showed early on it had no intention of meeting this obligation. At the United Nations, its diplom ats lobbied, unsuccessfully, to have the cases suspended. The Kenyan Parliament voted to abdicate the court. Requests for information went unanswered. The attorney general refused to turn over phone, land and asset records of Kenyatta's. One man who was investigated (though not charged) by the I.C.C. for trying to expose witnesses, Dennis Itumbi, now works in Kenyatta's office. (Kenyatta's office did not respond to requests for comment for this article.)

    Photo The Kibera neighborhood in Nairobi. Credit Michael Christopher Brown/Magnum, for The New York Times

    In December 2014, the I.C.C. withdrew the charges against Kenyatta. A news release blamed unreliable witnesses and the Kenyan government's obstruction. In response, Kenyatta tweeted: "As they say, one case down, two more to go." In April of this year, the cases against Ruto and Sang were vacated.

    The Kenyatta case could technically be reinitiated, but it's difficult to see that happening. The prosecution tried to recruit new Mungiki witnesses but couldn't. People who had tried to help the court, like George Kegoro, the Waki Commission secretary, no longer trust it. Kegoro told me Moreno-Ocampo never seemed to appreciate the chances he and other Kenyans took. "They put a lot of people at risk," he said. "Living as I do here, the best thing is to keep off someone like Ocampo."

    Moreno-Ocampo now divides his time between Buenos Aires and New York, where he practices at the firm Getnick & Getnick. After a decade in the spotlight, he has disappeared from view. Today it is hard to find anyone working in international justice to speak well of him. "He rushed into something in the belief it would give him publicity and credibility," Cherif Bassiouni, an international lawyer and one of the drafters of the Rome Statute, told me of the Kenyatta case. "Instead he created a now almost impossible situation which has discredited the court."

    Even at The Hague, I found few people willing to defend Moreno-Ocampo. "There's perhaps a risk," the trial attorney Benjamin Gumpert said, "when you are concentrating first and foremost on the message a case is goi ng to send, that more technical considerations, like are we actually going to convict this person, may feel more subsidiary."

    Moreno-Ocampo says he did everything he could to convict Kenyatta, but he didn't dispute Gumpert's characterization. The message a case sends, the shadow of the court — that was the goal. The problem with courts, Moreno-Ocampo told me, is they "believe the trials are the most important things. No. The most important thing is the prevention of crime." He had set out to prevent future political violence in Kenya, and in this sense at least, the Kenyatta case was a success. "The suspect became president. But there was no violence in the elections."

    Kenyatta doesn't look at it that way. In a speech to the African Union after his inauguration, he said, "The West see s no irony in preaching justice to a people they have disenfranchised, exploited, taxed and brutalized." His efforts to banish the I.C.C. from Africa are backed by a growing list of African leaders. Among the most vocal, aside from Museveni, are the presidents of Zimbabwe and Rwanda, and, of course, Omar al-Bashir. That all of these men have been accused of atrocities of their own is not coincidental. But even President Jacob Zuma of South Africa, which was once the court's main advocate in Africa, has joined the chorus.

    What Kenyatta did not mention in his speech is that four of the court's 18 judges are African, as is almost a fifth of its staff. Moreno-Ocampo's successor as chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, is Gambian and has been trying to mend the court's relationship with the African Union. In The Hague, I asked her if she was troubled that almost all her cases concern Africa.< /p>

    "No," Bensouda replied. "I am an African, and a proud African for that matter. I love my continent dearly. But I cannot sit here and tell you that I'm not concerned about the trouble that my continent is in for the past I don't know how many years. I'm very troubled by that."

    In Vienna, I told Moreno-Ocampo about Eric, the man attacked by Mungiki in his home. The day after the attack, Eric woke up in a Nakuru hospital to find that half of his left arm had been amputated. His head was slashed. His wife explained that, while he was being tortured, she and their daughters hid in a cupboard in the bedroom. Police officers rushed to their home and took the family to the hospital, where they lived for weeks, because it was too dangerous to leave.

    They traveled across the country to the home of Eric's mother, who still supports them. Eric can't find work. Hoping for some compensation, he joined the case against Kenyatta. I asked him what he thought when he learned the case had been withdrawn. "I have not seen any justice," he said.

    The second time I saw Moreno-Ocampo express remorse was when I told him this.

    "It's awful," he said, his face dropping. "I remember a lady in [Kenya] who, the only hope for her was us. And now I imagine how bad she felt. That I feel badly about."

    The former lieutenant of Njenga's, like many Kenyans I've spoken with, says he regrets the violence but believes it was necessary. The Kikuyu, his tribe, faced a massacre, he is convinced.

    The last time we met, I asked if he thought Kenyatta was guilty of the I.C.C. charges. He recounted a meeting he attended in January 2008, in the midst of the postelection violence, where Kenyatta was the chief guest and Mungiki were present. In the meeting, Kenyatta was careful never to mention violence explicitly nor the gang by name. But he collected cash donations. I asked the former lieutenant if it was possible Kenyatta did not understand violence was being planned.

    "No," he said, "it is not possible."

    I asked again.

    "No," he repeated. "With capital letters."

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    Source: The Prosecutor and the President