South Africa’s economy is turning the corner 

Source: Government of South Africa

South Africa’s economy is turning the corner 

By Nomonde Mnukwa

As the year draws to a close and we stand on the threshold of a new year in 2026, the prevailing sentiment regarding our economy is one of confident optimism. Despite the formidable challenges our economy has navigated, we are now definitively turning the corner, accelerating towards a more stable and prosperous economic future.

It’s our spirit of never giving up and ingenuity that has made it possible for us to rise above recent hard times. Our ability to ‘make a plan,’ swiftly adapt to shifting circumstances, and pull together despite our differences is now paying dividends as we observe clear signs of a stronger economy.

In his recent address to the nation on South Africa’s successful hosting of the G20 Summit, President Cyril Rampahosa said: “Through the work we are doing together, we are beginning to see the green shoots of an emerging economic recovery. Unemployment has fallen in recent months. Our public finances are improving, allowing us to steadily reduce our national debt.”

The latest numbers show we have turned the corner towards a growth trajectory. For the first time since 2008, government debt is starting to level off. That means after years of borrowing more than we earned, we are changing direction and our country’s finances are getting healthier. Next year, debt is expected to stabilise at 77.9 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP).

This financial year, we project a primary budget surplus, which means we are no longer borrowing money just to cover day-to-day costs. By 2028/29, this surplus is expected to grow, freeing up more money to fund basic services like health care facilities and interventions to grow the economy to enable job creation. 
With the 7th administration’s no one priority being job creation, in the third quarter of 2025, more than 248,000 new jobs were created. The total employment is now over 17.1 million, marking the highest level recorded this year and confirming our steady path to full economic recovery. In a country where unemployment hurts so many families, these new jobs change lives and bring real hope.

The economy has posted its fourth straight gain with gross domestic product (GDP) expanding 0.5 per cent in the third quarter of the year, signalling an economy that is stabilising and beginning to build resilience.  Importantly, the growth was broad-based with mining, agriculture, trade, retail and accommodation all contributing positively which demonstrates that our economic recovery is taking root across multiple sectors rather than relying on a single driver. 

The agribusiness confidence also bounced back in the final quarter of the year, rising by five points to 67 in the Agbiz/IDC Agribusiness Confidence Index (ACI). 

Furthermore, initiatives such as the Youth Employment Service (YES) have to date, placed over 202 558 young South Africans in 12-month quality work experiences. The initiative which is enabled by more than 1 900 corporate partners has become a key driver of South Africa’s economic transformation, focusing on digital and technological skills development. 

The upward trend provides a solid foundation for stronger performance ahead, signalling renewed confidence and laying groundwork for deeper investment, job creation, and long-term economic renewal.

One of the clearest signs that things are improving came from S&P Global Ratings which recently upgraded South Africa’s outlook. For investors around the world and domestically, this says our reforms and careful financial management is working. South Africa is becoming a place people want to invest in again.
Eskom continues to provide consistent energy supply with South Africa having experienced 169 consecutive days without load shedding during the second quarter of the current financial year. 

This upward trend is not simply luck, but bold reforms that have set our economy on a new path. Through Operation Vulindlela we are fixing ports, speeding up new energy projects and cutting red tape, all of which are starting to deliver real results.

Structural changes like the establishment of a separate Transnet Rail Infrastructure Manager to manage the rail network while allowing for open access where private train operating companies (TOCs) can run their own trains, will bring about more competition, reducing costs, and ultimately shifting freight from road to rail. 

As part of major rail reforms, 41 freight rail routes will be opened to 11 selected private Train Operating Companies and will result in rail volumes increasing from 160-million tons to 250-million tons by 2030.

Moreover, joint work between Transnet, police and private companies has cleared blockages, reopened routes and made freight movement faster and safer. Businesses are saving money, factories can produce more, and our exports are growing.

Keeping inflation under control means more money back in people’s pockets as price increases are kept in check. Government wants to bring inflation even lower and has tasked the Reserve Bank to keep inflation around 3 per cent, which will match the best-performing countries.

Furthermore, we have also been taken off the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list. In just two and a half years, government kept its promise to tighten rules and enhanced our ability to combat illegal money flows. Being off the grey list improves our reputation, makes it easier to do business overseas and attracts more investors. It shows the world we are serious about good governance.

Our hosting the G20 Summit last month has been a game-changer for South Africa. The images of a safe, organised and vibrant South Africa went around the globe. Heads of State and Business leaders who flew in for the summit saw with their own eyes the world class infrastructure and our budding potential.
The progress we have made is real. Our strengths now outweigh the problems, and we are putting effort in fixing the remaining challenges with clear plans and teamwork.

While turning the corner is a big step, our journey is not finished, we must keep the momentum. Government, business, workers and communities all need to keep working together, supporting reforms, investing, innovating and making sure growth reaches every South African.

South Africa has entered a time of new possibility. If we stay united and keep pushing forward, the good signs we see today will grow into a strong, fair and thriving economy that works for all of us.

*Mnukwa is the Acting Director-General of the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS).

 

Neo

41 views

NTCSA provides update on Mozal electricity supply agreement negotiations

Source: Government of South Africa

NTCSA provides update on Mozal electricity supply agreement negotiations

The National Transmission Company South Africa (NTCSA) has confirmed that it is committed to concluding a new electricity supply agreement with the Mozal aluminium smelter in Mozambique.

In an update on the Mozal smelter, the NTCSA said it is committed to a new agreement as well as to protect South African electricity consumers from unintended cost impacts.  

“The National Transmission Company South Africa (NTCSA), a subsidiary of Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd, confirms that it remains committed to concluding a new electricity supply agreement with the Mozal aluminium smelter in Mozambique, in a manner that safeguards the NTCSA’s financial stability and protects South African electricity consumers from unintended cost impacts. The long standing supply agreement between the parties has been in place for more than 20 years, and all parties were aware that the new agreement is due on 15 March 2026,” the NTCSA said on Wednesday.

It added that to remain globally competitive, the Mozal smelter requires an electricity price that is significantly lower than the direct cost of supply.

“It has become clear that this arrangement is not sustainable for the NTCSA going forward. As such, a mutually beneficial solution, developed collaboratively with stakeholders in both Mozambique and South Africa, is essential to support regional industrial activity, while ensuring the NTCSA’s financial sustainability and fairness to South African electricity consumers.

“The NTCSA will continue engaging with stakeholders in both countries to explore the feasibility of such an arrangement,” NTCSA Chief Executive Officer, Monde Bala said.

It further added that the Negotiated Price Agreements (NPA) policy mechanism provided by the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA), does not extend beyond South Africa’s borders.

“The NTCSA remains available and open to finding a solution for the Mozal smelter. We have consistently indicated, over the past year, an appropriate price range for the supply of electricity to secure a new supply agreement with our valued customer,” Bala said.

The NTCSA remains committed to supporting industrial operations within a lawful and economically sustainable framework that balances the needs of industry with the rights of all customers.

Safeguarding households and small businesses from unintended cost impacts remains central to Eskom’s mandate.

The NTCSA will provide further updates as and when developments arise. –SAnews.gov.za

Neo

35 views

Minister Simelane to conduct oversight visit to Free State housing project 

Source: Government of South Africa

Minister Simelane to conduct oversight visit to Free State housing project 

Human Settlements Minister, Thembi Simelane, is expected to conduct an oversight visit to the Baken Park Catalytic Housing Project located in Bethlehem in the Free State today, Thursday, 18 December 2025. 

“The project, expected to cost over R370 million, is a mixed-income residential development which to yield 1248 housing units on completion. These include First Home Finance, Breaking New Ground (BNG), and social housing. Already one hundred serviced sites have been released for First Home Finance, thus enabling the missing middle to build houses for themselves,” the Department of Human Settlements said in a statement. 

The Minister will be joined on her oversight visit by Free State Premier Ma-Queen Letsoha-Mathae.

According to the department, the project represents a strategic intervention aligned with national and provincial priorities to accelerate housing delivery, promote spatial transformation, and stimulate inclusive economic growth.

The in-loco inspection will be led by MEC for CoGTA and Human Settlements, Saki Mokoena, and the Executive Mayor of Dihlabeng Local Municipality, Tseki Tseki. –SAnews.gov.za 
 

Neo

75 views

Call for students to apply for scholarship to study in Germany

Source: Government of South Africa

Call for students to apply for scholarship to study in Germany

The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) has officially opened a call for applications to eligible South African students for a fully funded scholarship to study in Germany at the Constructor University. 

 The scholarship is for a fully funded Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD studies, under the Funda Germany Scholarship Programme, commencing in September 2026.

“Constructor University is an English-medium, campus university in Bremen, ranked among the top 30% globally.  With students from around 120 different nations, it is among the world’s most international universities, offering Bachelor’s, Master’s and Doctoral degrees in a wide variety of fields,” the department said.

Who can apply for the scholarship?

  • South African citizens in good health.
  • Students with a strong academic record.
  • Bachelor applicants require a minimum average of 65% or above in their NSC (including Life Orientation as well as Mathematics and 1 other STEM subject).
  • Postgraduate applicants should have performed well in their previous studies, with a minimum of 60% average mark or above achieved in their previous studies.
  • Must have an interest to study in Germany and demonstrate commitment to the development of South Africa.
  • Available and eligible to study full-time in Germany from September 2026.
  • Meet the entry criteria for the selected study programme at Constructor University.

Fields of Study

  • A wide range of study fields is available for Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees and PhD projects, including various engineering fields, robotics, management, mathematics, fuel cell development, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, computational systems biology, nano electronics, specialist areas in physics, chemistry, applied mathematics and geosciences, social data sciences, cognitive psychology, computer science, biotechnology, accounting and auditing, political sciences, international logistics, computational drug discovery, communication science, history, economics, sociology and many more.

Deadline for receipt of applications

  • 15 February 2026

A comprehensive list of fields of study for the Bachelor’s degree is available at https://constructor.university/programs/undergraduate-education and for Master’s programmes at https://constructor.university/programs/graduate-education.

A comprehensive list of fields of study for the PhD can be accessed via https://constructor.university/phd-degrees-constructor-university

What the scholarship offers

The scholarship will cover the following:

  • Return airfare to Germany.
  • Tuition fees.
  • Monthly stipend for living expenses.
  • Accommodation.
  • A once-off settlement allowance.
  • Annual flights at the end of the academic year for Bachelor’s students. Master’s students may qualify for annual flights if accommodated on campus.
  • Mid-term flights after 18 months (PhD students).
  • Medical insurance allowance.
  • An annual allowance at the beginning of each academic year.
  • Academic support for qualifying postgraduate students.
  • Psychosocial support.
  • Pre-departure orientation.
  • SAQA verification of qualification and one professional board examination (if applicable).

Application process

Application for the scholarships is strictly online via the application portal.

Applicants at the Bachelor’s and Master’s level are required to complete the online application on the Constructor University application portal, accessible on the website by the deadline indicated and fulfil all requirements as stipulated.

Successful awardees who withdraw from the programme after signing the Constructor University contract will be liable for the full costs as stipulated in the Constructor University student contract. 

More information about the scholarship is available on: https://www.internationalscholarships.dhet.gov.za/index.php/scholarships/undergraduate-scholarships/496-germany-dhet-funda-germany-scholarship-programme-2026-2027. – SAnews.gov.za

nosihle

50 views

African States urged to strengthen women’s rights protections amid rising anti-gender pushback

Source: APO

At the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) 85th Ordinary Session, leading women’s rights organisation Equality Now (www.EqualityNow.orgissued a stark warning: women and girls across Africa continue to suffer serious human rights violations due to state inaction.

Equality Now urges all African governments to urgently enact and implement comprehensive measures to fulfil their legal obligations to uphold women’s and girls’ rights, outlined in key regional human rights instruments, including the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa, widely known as the Maputo Protocol. Human rights lawyer Deborah Nyokabi delivered Equality Now’s statement to the ACHPR (https://apo-opa.co/4pcnzEA), highlighting where states are falling short of their commitments.

Nyokabi pointed to weak legal safeguards against sexual violence, limited access to justice and support services, widespread impunity for perpetrators, and persistent failures to tackle sexual exploitation and trafficking. She also stressed how the lack of reproductive healthcare is a preventable crisis putting millions of women, girls, and babies at risk. Another concern is the rise of anti-gender rights movements seeking to dismantle legal protections and block progress.

Barriers to justice for sexual and gender-based violence survivors

Across Africa, survivors of sexual and gender-based violence continue to face formidable barriers to justice and support services, despite strong regional legal frameworks and progressive sexual violence laws in some jurisdictions.

Equality Now’s report, Barriers to Justice: Rape in Africa, Law, Practice and Access to Justice (https://apo-opa.co/44zPoPx), revealed that while rape is one of Africa’s most pervasive crimes, the majority of cases don’t make it to court, and even fewer result in a conviction. Gaps in laws and weak enforcement, under-resourced judicial systems, limited political will, and pervasive victim-blaming and discrimination foster a culture of impunity that emboldens perpetrators.

African governments must address sexual violence in conflict

A high-profile case illustrating the weaponisation of sexual violence by state actors was shared by Ugandan lawyer, journalist, and activist Agather Atuhaire (https://apo-opa.co/3L3he01), who has spoken out about being raped and tortured in Tanzanian state custody after being arrested on her way to support political opposition leader Tundu Lissu, a critic of Tanzania’s government.

Sudan’s devastating war provides a harrowing example of how sexual violence increases during conflict. In 2025, the International Criminal Court spoke of rape being used as a weapon of war (https://apo-opa.co/4p4dJo5), and a UN Fact-Finding Mission reported large-scale ethnically targeted sexual violence (https://apo-opa.co/3L9Wd3L).

In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the Ministry of Health recorded 73,400 sexual violence cases (https://apo-opa.co/4s92RYW) between January and July 2025, a 16% increase from the previous period. Alarmingly, the actual number is likely far higher, as countless incidents go unreported due to stigma, fear, insecurity, and significant legal and logistical obstacles faced by survivors in conflict-affected areas.

In August 2025, a historic judgment by the ACHPR held the DRC accountable for widespread sexual violence (https://apo-opa.co/4pHRtRQ) in a case filed to obtain justice for survivors of atrocities committed by Congolese military personnel on January 1, 2011, in South Kivu, where over 50 women were raped and tortured, with some murdered. The ACHRP ruled the DRC had violated multiple provisions of the African Charter and Maputo Protocol, including the rights to life, health, dignity, and protection from torture. Crucially, it recognised the gendered nature of the crimes, setting a precedent.

Nyokabi highlighted concerns over the DRC’s inaction following the ACHRP’s ruling, urging the government to issue a formal public apology to survivors, implement comprehensive reparative measures, and prosecute perpetrators. Equality Now also calls for a robust follow-up to ensure compliance with the ACHPR’s decision, including a hearing on the implementation status and reporting by the DRC within the mandated 180-day period.

In Kenya, 2025 marked a historic first: the Kenyan government paid compensation for conflict-related sexual violence (https://apo-opa.co/4q2QMmF) to four survivors of the 2007–2008 post-election unrest. While this represents a significant step toward accountability, it remains deeply inadequate as hundreds of survivors of post-election sexual violence have received no redress.

Sexual exploitation and human trafficking

Sexual exploitation and trafficking are pervasive across Africa, fuelled by poverty, conflict, climate change, displacement, and cross-border trafficking. Although legal instruments exist, enforcement is inconsistent, and better-coordinated regional action is urgently needed.

Governments must move from commitment to implementation by harmonising and strengthening anti-trafficking laws, ensuring reparations for survivors, and investing in specialised justice mechanisms and survivor-centred services.

Anti-gender rights movements in Africa

The rise of anti-gender rights movement (https://apo-opa.co/4rYXfQR) is jeopardising legal protections for women and girls and threatening to undo decades of legal progress, endangering the well-being of millions. These efforts are not occurring in isolation. Well-funded international networks are increasingly influencing, coordinating with, and empowering African actors who oppose gender equality.

At a regional convening in Kenya in June 2025, ultra-conservative campaigners from the US and Europe joined African counterparts to advance an agenda framed as “promoting and protecting the sanctity of life, family values, and religious freedom.” In practice, their regressive plan contests reproductive healthcare, comprehensive sexuality education, and LGBTQ+ rights.

Emerging from the convening is the ‘Draft African Charter on Family, Sovereignty and Values.’ Composed without participation from women’s rights organisations, this charter promotes a narrow model of the “traditional family” and womenhood rooted in rigid, hierarchical gender roles that discriminate against women, girls, and LGBTQ+ individuals.  It disregards diversity in family structures and aims to eliminate essential protections for family life and marriage equality.

Anti-gender rights ideology ignores the reality documented in Equality Now’s report, Gender Inequality in Family Laws in Africa (https://apo-opa.co/4p2i8aW), which identifies how family life for many women and girls is blighted by control, violence, discrimination, and marginalisation.

Anti-gender rights actors jeopardise efforts to end FGM

A troubling example of anti-gender rights activism is illustrated by a constitutional challenge submitted to The Gambia’s Supreme Court, requesting the country’s law banning FGM be overturned on the grounds that it violates Gambians’ constitutional rights to cultural, traditional, and religious freedoms. This follows a failed attempt in 2024, when MPs rejected a bill to repeal anti-FGM legislation.

Those striving to end FGM reject assertions that the practice is cultural or religious, emphasising that no tradition or religion can justify violating the rights, health, and safety of women and girls.

A 2025 ECOWAS Court ruling found Sierra Leone liable for human rights violations due to its failure to criminalise FGM (https://apo-opa.co/4pLlcJS), which the Court said “meets the threshold of torture.” Despite this judgment, the government still hasn’t banned the practice. In neighbouring Liberia, FGM remains legal and pervasive. However, a bill to permanently ban all harmful practices affecting girls and women, including FGM, is being considered by lawmakers.

Equality Now calls on every African government to fully enforce existing anti-FGM laws and swiftly introduce legislation where legal protections are lacking.

Africa’s reproductive justice crisis

Africa remains the most dangerous place globally to give birth, accounting for 70% of maternal deaths worldwide (https://apo-opa.co/48Mqm28). Most are preventable, with child marriage, criminalisation of healthcare services, and unsafe abortion all contributing factors.

Despite regional commitments, national laws often contain contradictions that hinder access to reproductive healthcare. In countries such as Kenya and Nigeria, outdated and overlapping laws create fear among healthcare providers and discourage them from offering safe abortion services. In Tanzania and Uganda, restrictive laws and policy reservations on the Maputo Protocol block access to critical reproductive healthcare.

Equality Now requests that the ACHPR continue advocating for African Union Member States to harmonise national laws with the Maputo Protocol’s Article 14, which specifies that women’s right to sexual and reproductive health should be ensured.

Nyokabi concludes, “Africa’s civil society urges ACHPR Member States to uphold their binding commitments. Legal equality is not optional. It is a prerequisite for lasting peace, development, and justice.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Equality Now.

Notes to editors:
For media enquiries,contact
Michelle Tuva
Regional Communications Officer, Africa
mtuva@equalitynow.org

Tara Carey
Global Head of Media
Equality Now
Tcarey@equalitynow.org
T. +44 (0)7971556340 (available on WhatsApp and Signal)

Social Media:
Bluesky: https://apo-opa.co/4skZU7J
Facebook: https://apo-opa.co/44xT2cG
Instagram: https://apo-opa.co/4s4oR76
LinkedIn: https://apo-opa.co/4p1C0Lp

About Equality Now:
Equality Now (www.EqualityNow.org) is a worldwide human rights organisation dedicated to securing the legal and systemic change needed to end discrimination against all women and girls. Since its inception in 1992, it has played a role in reforming 120 discriminatory laws globally, positively impacting the lives of hundreds of millions of women and girls, their communities, and nations, both now and for generations to come.

Working with partners at national, regional and global levels, Equality Now draws on deep legal expertise and a diverse range of social, political and cultural perspectives to continue to lead the way in steering, shaping and driving the change needed to achieve enduring gender equality, to the benefit of all.

Access our groundbreaking report on rape in Africa that analyses sexual violence laws and law enforcement practices across 47 countries in Africa, including DRC: Barriers to Justice: Rape in Africa, Law, Practice and Access to Justice (https://apo-opa.co/44zPoPx).

For more details, go to www.EqualityNow.org

Media files

.

President Ramaphosa receives interim report of Madlanga Commission

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa has on, Wednesday 17 December 2025, received an interim report of the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry into Criminality, Political Interference, and Corruption in the Criminal Justice System.

President Ramaphosa established the Commission, chaired by retired Constitutional Court Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga, in July 2025.

President Ramaphosa will study the interim report while the Commission, which is in recess, prepares to hear further testimony from new witnesses or persons who have previously testified.

President Ramaphosa has expressed his appreciation for the interim report as well as his expectation that the Commission will, as part of its terms of reference, refer actions thought to be criminal acts for prosecution.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Guinea Presidential Election 2025: Africa24 Group Delivers Unprecedented Coverage

Source: APO – Report:

The Republic of Guinea will elect its President on 28 December 2025 for a new term of office. This presidential election represents a decisive milestone in the country’s democratic consolidation, regional integration, and the strategic valorisation of its vast mineral resources in service of the people.

To mark this historic moment, Africa24 Group is deploying an exceptional bilingual editorial operation (French & English), enabling citizens, policymakers, and public opinion at national, regional, continental, and global levels to fully discover Guinea’s diversity, wealth, and deep aspirations.

Discover Guinea here: https://apo-opa.co/4pCiwhw

Exclusive Interviews, Landmark Debates & Immersive Reporting

Through Africa24 and Africa24 English, audiences will benefit from an outstanding TV & Digital coverage, featuring exclusive programming dedicated to the 2025 presidential election.

INTERVIEWS

Candidates and political leaders present their programmes in exclusive interviews with:

  • Amadou Bah Oury
  • Abdoulaye Yéro Baldé
  • Hadja Makalé Camara
  • Abdoulaye Kourouma
  • Ibrahima Abe Sylla

CAMPAIGN JOURNAL

Our reporters take viewers to the heart of the campaign, offering daily coverage of rallies, candidate proposals, political portraits, citizens’ expectations, and immersive reports across Guinea’s regions and emblematic sites.

https://apo-opa.co/4qiSznh

AFRICA NEWSROOM (ANR) :

Five exclusive high-level debates featuring political leaders and experts on key national challenges:

  • Women’s Leadership and Representation
  • Youth Employment & Human Development
  • Good Governance and Anti-Corruption
  • Mining & Natural Resource Management
  • Guinea of Talents

Guinea Presidential 2025 – Interviews & Debates

Abdoulaye Yéro Baldé

Presidential Candidate

Thursday, 18 December – 23:15 GMT

Amadou Bah Oury

Campaign Director for Candidate Mamadi Doumbouya

Friday, 19 December – 08:15 & 15:15 GMT

Hadja Makalé Camara

President, Front for the National Alliance (FAN)

Thursday, 18 December – 19:45 & 22:15 GMT

Abdoulaye Kourouma

President, Rally for Renewal and Development (RRD)

Saturday, 20 December – 19:45 & 22:15 GMT

Ibrahima Abe Sylla

President, New Generation for the Republic (NGR)

Monday, 22 December – 19:45 & 22:15 GMT

Africa News Room – 52-Minute Special Debates

In-depth debates and analyses featuring candidates or their representatives alongside Guinean and international experts:

  • Women’s Leadership & Political Representation
    Wednesday, 17 December – 17:15 & 20:15 GMT
     
  • Youth Employment & Human Capital Development
    Friday, 19 December – 17:15 & 20:15 GMT
     
  • Good Governance & Anti-Corruption
    Saturday, 21 December – 17:15 & 20:15 GMT
     
  • Mining, Environment & Sustainable Resource Management
    Tuesday, 23 December – 17:15 & 20:15 GMT
     
  • Guinea of Talents
    Thursday, 25 December – 17:15 & 20:15 GMT

Africa24 Group – 360° Coverage & Global Reach

“Guinea Presidential Election 2025” will be available live, replay and on-demand across all platforms:

  • AFRICA24 French (Channel 249) & AFRICA24 English (Channel 254) – Canal+ Afrique
     
  • myafrica24, Africa’s first HD streaming platform
     
  • www.Africa24TV.com, providing full access to all programmes

Africa24 Group reaches over 120 million households worldwide.

– on behalf of AFRICA24 Group.

Contact:
Communications Department – Africa24 Group

Gaëlle Stella Oyono
Email: onana@africa24tv.com
Tel. :+237 691 30 03 40 
www.Africa24TV.com

Social Media:
@ africa24tv

About Africa24 Group:
Founded in 2009, Africa24 Group is the leading pan-African television and digital media group, operating four Full HD channels broadcast through the world’s major TV platforms. A trusted reference among African decision-makers and executives, Africa24 French and Africa24 English are pioneers and leaders in African news broadcasting.

The Group has expanded its leadership through:

  • Africa24 Sport – Africa’s first 24/7 sports news and competition channel
     
  • Africa24 Infinity – The first channel dedicated to Africa’s creative industries, highlighting youth talent in art, culture, music, fashion, and design

Africa24 Channels

  • AFRICA24 TV – Leading African news channel in French

  • AFRICA24 English – Leading African news channel in English
     
  • AFRICA24 Infinity – Creative industries & cultural talents
     
  • AFRICA24 Sport – Sports news & competitions

Africa24 Group also operates myafrica24, the first global HD streaming platform dedicated to Africa, available on all screens. The Group reaches over 120 million households through major operators including Canal+, Bouygues, Orange, Bell, and boasts over 8 million digital followers worldwide.

Media files

.

Guinée Présidentielle 2025 : Le Groupe Africa24 vous offre une couverture inédite

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

La République de Guinée élira ce 28 décembre 2025 son président pour un nouveau mandat. Ce scrutin présidentiel marque une étape décisive dans la construction démocratique, de l’intégration régionale et la valorisation des immenses richesses minières au service du peuple.

Le Groupe Africa24 déploie un dispositif éditorial bilingue (français-anglais) exceptionnel afin de permettre aux citoyens, décideurs et à l’opinion nationale, régionale, continentale et mondiale de découvrir toute la diversité, les richesses et les aspirations profondes de la Guinée.

Découvrez la Guinée ici : https://apo-opa.co/4pCiwhw

FACE À L’AFRIQUE, Interviews des candidats, débats inédits sur les grands enjeux, Journal de Campagne et reportages immersifs

A travers Africa24 et Africa24 English, découvrez notre dispositif TV & Digital exceptionnel avec une programmation inédite.

INTERVIEW : Candidats et leaders dévoilent leurs programmes dans un entretien exclusif avec Amadou BAH OURY ; Abdoulaye YERO BALDE, Hadja Makalé CAMARA ; Abdoulaye KOUROUMA ; Ibrahima ABE SYLLA

JOURNAL DE CAMPAGNE : Nos reporters vous font vivre au quotidien, les meetings et propositions des candidats et leurs portraits ; les attentes des Centrafricains, une carte postale des régions et sites phares.                      

https://apo-opa.co/4qiSznh

AFRICA NEWSROOM (ANR) : 5 grands débats inédits avec des leaders sur : Enjeux du Leadership Féminin ; Défis de l’emploi jeunes et du Développement Humain ; Enjeux de la Bonne Gouvernance ; Mines et gestion des ressources Naturelles ; La Guinée des Talents

Guinée Présidentielle 2025 les Interviews et Débats

Interview : Rencontres exclusives avec les candidats déclarés qui se dévoilent et détaillent leurs visions pour la Guinée de demain.

Abdoulaye Yéro Baldé

Candidat à la Présidentielle

Jeudi 18 Décembre : 23H15 GMT

AMADOU BAH OURY

Directeur de campagne du candidat Mamadi Doumbouya

Vendredi 19 Décembre : 08H15 // 15H15 GMT

Hadja Makalé Camara

Présidente du Front pour l’Alliance nationale (FAN)

Jeudi 18 Décembre 

19H45 // 22H15 GMT

Abdoulaye Kourouma

Président du Rassemblement pour la renaissance et le développement (RRD)

Samedi 20 Décembre  19H45 // 22H15 GMT

Ibrahima Abe Sylla

Président du parti Nouvelle génération pour la République (NGR)

Lundi 22 Décembre  19H45 // 22H15 GMT

Africa News Room : 52 minutes de débat et d’analyses avec les candidats ou leurs représentants face à des experts guinéens et internationaux sur les grands défis du pays

Enjeux du leadership féminin et de la représentativité des femmes dans les hautes intances de décision

Mercredi 17 Décembre 

17H15 // 20H15 GMT

Défis de l’emploi jeune et développement du capital humain

Vendredi 19 Décembre 

17H15 // 20H15 GM

Enjeux de la bonne gouvernance et la lutte contre la corruption

Samedi 21 Décembre  

17H15 // 20H15 GMT

Mines, environnement et gestion durable des ressources naturelles

Mardi 23 Décembre  

17H15 // 20H15 GMT

La Guinée des Talents

Jeudi 25 Décembre  

17H15 // 20H15 GMT

Le Groupe Africa24 Une couverture 360° et une diffusion mondiale pour 120 millions de foyers

Retrouvez « Guinée Présidentielle 2025 » Disponible en direct, replay et à la demande sur tous vos écrans :

  • AFRICA24 en français (chaîne 249) et AFRICA24 English (chaîne 254) du bouquet Canal+ Afrique
  • Sur myafrica24 la première plateforme de streaming HD de l’Afrique.
  • Sur www.Africa24TV.com qui vous offre accès intégral à tous les programmes

Avec le Groupe Africa24, Ensemble, transformons l’Afrique.

Distribué par APO Group pour AFRICA24 Group.

Contact :
Direction de la Communication – Groupe Africa24

Gaëlle Stella Oyono
Email : onana@africa24tv.com
Tél. : +237 691 30 03 40
www.Africa24TV.com

Réseaux sociaux :
@ africa24tv

A Propos du Groupe Africa24 :
Initié en 2009, le Groupe Africa 24 est le premier éditeur TV & média digital du continent avec 4 chaînes full HD en diffusion dans les plus grands bouquets. Leader chez les décideurs et cadres dirigeants du continent, Africa 24 en Français et Africa 24 English, le Groupe est le pionnier et leader des chaînes d’informations sur l’Afrique. Africa 24 a renforcé ce leadership à travers le sport avec Africa24 Sport, première chaine en Afrique dédié à l’information sportive et aux compétitions et Africa24 Infinity, première chaîne dédiée aux industries créatives qui valorisent le génie créatif de la jeunesse africaine dans l’art, la culture, la musique, la mode, le design…

Première marque audiovisuelle du continent, le Groupe AFRICA24 dispose de 4 chaînes de télévisions en full HD chacune leader dans son segment :

  • AFRICA24 TV : Leader de l’information Africaine en Français, édité par AMedia
  • AFRICA24 English : Leader de l’Information Africaine exclusivement en Anglais
  • AFRICA24 Infinity : La chaîne des talents créatifs dédiée à la Musique, l’art, la culture.
  • AFRICA24 Sport : Première chaîne d’information sportive et des compétitions

Le Groupe AFRICA24 édite myafrica24 (Google store et App Store), la première plateforme de streaming HD mondiale sur l’Afrique disponible sur tous les écrans (Télévision, tablette, smartphone, ordinateurs) …Plus de 120 millions de foyers ont accès aux chaînes du Groupe Africa24 à travers les plus grands opérateurs : Canal+, Bouygues, Orange, Bell…et plus de 8 millions d’abonnés sur les différentes plateformes digitales et réseaux sociaux.

Media files

Closing remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the virtual Extraordinary Summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Heads of State and Government

Source: President of South Africa –

Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
We have come to the end of our meeting. Allow me to once more thank you for your participation.
 
We also extend our appreciation to the Ministers and senior officials for the preparatory work that went into this summit – as well as to the Executive Secretary and his team.
 
Our deliberations on the developments in the Republic of Madagascar have been substantive, detailed, constructive and most importantly, outcomes based.
 
The decision we have taken to deploy a Panel of Elders and Mediation Reference Group to Madagascar evidences our collective commitment to a peaceful and stable region.
 
The Mission will engage with all the stakeholders in Madagascar to ensure there is an inclusive process leading up to the holding of free, fair and credible elections.
 
We call on all the Malagasy people to take this opportunity to deeply reflect on the challenges facing their country and choose the path of peace, unity, reconciliation and development.
 
The unity of purpose that has governed our engagements on this and other critical matters affecting our region is indeed commendable. We must continue in this vein.
 
We welcome the restoration of calm in Madagascar and have noted the national consultation processes launched by the Transitional Government on the 10th of December 2025.
 
The Summit has urged the Transitional Government led by H.E. Colonel Micheal Randrianirina to initiate an inclusive national dialogue during the transitional period that is Malagasy-owned and led. This will pave the way for fresh elections and facilitate the peaceful return of political exiles.
 
We have further called on the Transitional Government of Madagascar to ensure that the reform processes are timely, inclusive of all stakeholders, and create a conducive environment in which political exiles can contribute meaningfully.
 
AS SADC we reaffirm our commitment to remain actively engaged with the political and security situation in the Republic of Madagascar, until an elected government is established through electoral processes.
 
Inasmuch as conflict and instability in one part of the region impacts us all, cooperation is key to the region’s stability, peace and progress.
 
Lastly but certainly not least, we congratulate His Excellency President Hichilema on his election as incoming chair of the SADC.
 
I look forward to working closely with you, my dear brother as we advance the mandate of SADC in pursuit of peace, security and shared prosperity for our region and all its peoples.
 
I wish you all a blessed festive season and a prosperous new year.
 
I thank you.
 

A Stronger Africa Requires Stronger Investment Policies (By NJ Ayuk)

Source: APO – Report:

.

By NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber (https://EnergyChamber.org/).

Investor confidence in Algeria’s energy sector is climbing. The country — already one of Africa’s most active oil and gas producers — has seen even more momentum in 2025.

In October, Algeria’s national oil company, Sonatrach, announced a USD5.4 billion partnership with Saudi Arabia’s Midad Energy to explore and develop new fields in the Illizi Basin. The government has also entered advanced talks with ExxonMobil and Chevron on a groundbreaking framework that would give US companies access to Algeria’s vast natural gas reserves — a first in the nation’s history. Earlier this year, Sonatrach and China’s Sinopec signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to jointly assess and potentially develop resources in the Gourara and Berkine-Est basins.

These agreements are not emerging in a vacuum. They reflect the deliberate reforms Algeria has enacted in recent years: simplifying business registration, establishing special economic zones, improving contract transparency, and signaling a stronger commitment to international partnership. As a result, the country is drawing a diverse roster of major players, from Eni and Equinor to TotalEnergies.

Algeria’s progress offers a timely lesson for African nations with petroleum resources. Africa’s oil and gas sector will require billions in new investment over the next decade, yet securing capital has become more difficult. As noted in the African Energy Chamber’s (AEC) “State of African Energy: 2026 Outlook Report,” Western financial institutions continue to retreat from fossil-fuel financing, and many investors remain cautious about perceived risks in emerging markets.

The governments that confront these challenges by adopting investor-friendly policies and strengthening governance will be the ones to realize the key benefits of oil and gas, including energy security, job creation, and broader economic growth.

Algeria shows what is possible when reforms align with clear investment objectives. Other countries that have taken similar steps, such as Angola and Nigeria, are also seeing renewed activity. But this cannot remain limited to a handful of markets. The resources are here. The opportunities are here. Now is the time to act.

The Opportunity Is Enormous. The Capital Isn’t.

Africa certainly doesn’t lack opportunity — it has an abundance of it. The continent holds an estimated 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves and roughly 625 trillion cubic feet of natural gas as of 2025. These are not abstract numbers; they represent jobs, infrastructure, and prosperity waiting to be unlocked.

According to our outlook report, Africa’s overall hydrocarbon production is projected to hold steady at around 11.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (MMboe/d). But maintaining — let alone expanding — that output requires continuous investment. Wells decline. Infrastructure ages. New discoveries must be developed. Without consistent capital inflows, Africa risks leaving its wealth in the ground.

And while our outlook points to encouraging signs of renewed spending — particularly in countries like Namibia, Angola, and Mozambique — the continent remains far from reaching its full investment potential. The AEC estimates that the continent faces an annual energy finance gap between USD31.5 billion and USD45 billion. External investment is expected to average roughly USD35 billion per year between 2020 and 2030 — a level that will not deliver the production growth Africa needs to meet rising domestic demand or strengthen export capacity.

Investment Won’t Come Without Reform

Whether Africa can increase production hinges on several factors, but few are more important than governments’ ability to offer investment terms that meet industry needs. Oil and gas projects demand massive upfront capital — often in the hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars — and investors are keenly aware of the risks associated with frontier markets. These risks include political instability, abrupt regulatory changes, contract uncertainty, weak infrastructure, and security concerns. On top of that, private-sector financiers continue to face global pressure to channel capital toward renewable energy rather than fossil fuels.

If African countries want to compete for scarce investment dollars, they must demonstrate that their markets are stable, predictable, and commercially attractive.

One of the greatest deterrents to investors is slow or unpredictable regulatory approval processes. Lengthy permitting timelines, unclear requirements, or frequent policy changes can stall projects and undermine returns. Governments must streamline approvals and establish transparent regulatory frameworks with firm timelines. Fast, direct communication channels between regulators and companies also make an enormous difference in reducing delays.

A proven approach is the creation of one-stop regulatory agencies that consolidate multiple approvals under one roof. Equatorial Guinea has implemented a system that allows investors to establish a business within a week, and Angola recently launched a one-stop center for local content compliance in the oil and gas sector. These reforms dramatically reduce friction and make markets far more competitive.

Equally important is ensuring strong governance and transparency. Stable fiscal regimes, predictable contract terms, and anti-corruption measures help de-risk projects and give investors the confidence to commit long-term capital. Countries such as Nigeria and Ghana have emphasized clear rules, transparent licensing processes, and improved sector governance as central pillars of their investment strategies — and these efforts are widely recognized as strengthening investor trust.

The Green Energy Gap Africa Cannot Afford

Ironically, even as global institutions push investors to prioritize renewable energy, Africa is experiencing a significant green-energy investment shortfall.

Our outlook report addresses this problem: “Africa’s renewable energy sector holds the potential to reshape the power landscape and enhance energy security for millions. However, given Africa is the second most populous continent in the world, the scale of investment in the renewable energy sector remains significantly behind that of other global initiatives.

“Between 2020 and 2025, Africa invested USD34 billion in clean power technologies, with 52% directed towards solar power and 25% towards onshore wind. Despite this investment, Africa’s share of global investments is projected to be just 1.5% in 2025.”

Just like the fossil-fuel financing gap, this shortfall is tied directly to investor risk perceptions. As the report explains, Africa continues to lag other regions because its energy markets are seen as high risk, marked by political instability, regulatory uncertainty, inadequate infrastructure, policy reversals, corruption concerns, and burdensome bureaucracy. Limited access to capital and high interest rates compound these challenges.

African governments must adopt policies that counter these concerns. The same reforms that draw investment into oil and gas — transparent rules, predictable contract terms, streamlined approvals, and stable fiscal regimes — will also increase investor confidence in solar, wind, hydrogen, and other green energy sources.

Strengthening renewable-energy financing is urgent, particularly because one of the power sources with the greatest potential to support Africa’s long-term energy security and economic growth is also among the costliest to develop: nuclear energy.

To grasp the scale of the challenge, consider that Africa plans to spend around USD105 billion to build 15,000 MW of new nuclear power capacity by 2035. Egypt’s 4,800 MW project on the continent is expected to cost nearly USD29 billion alone.

Yet the potential benefits of nuclear power cannot be overstated. As our report says, “Nuclear offers a unique advantage: it delivers stable baseload power, crucial for replacing fossil fuel generation and for stabilising grids that increasingly depend on intermittent renewable sources.” Without that stability, Africa risks unreliable supply as less-predictable solar and wind take on larger shares of the energy generation mix.

And while traditional nuclear infrastructure requires massive upfront capital, new small modular reactor technologies offer “smaller, more flexible project scales and lower capital requirements,” our report notes. For example, a microreactor with 10–20 MW output can cost between USD50 million and USD300 million, while a 300 MW SMR might cost around USD900 million to USD1 billion, much less than conventional nuclear plants.

For African countries seeking long-term, low-carbon energy security, encouraging nuclear investment will be worth the effort. But Africa cannot fully unlock its renewable-energy potential — or its nuclear potential — without creating a policy environment in which investors feel confident financing long-term, capital-intensive projects.

A Call for the World Bank to Step Up

Even with growing private-sector participation, Africa will need far greater financial support to develop its oil and gas resources, scale renewables, and build the foundation for a viable nuclear sector. Private capital alone cannot meet the scale of Africa’s energy needs.

This is why the AEC continues to call on the World Bank to end its 2017 ban on financing upstream oil and gas projects, a policy adopted in response to global concerns about greenhouse gases and climate change. Africa cannot eliminate its widespread energy poverty without responsibly developing its natural gas resources. Gas-to-power projects offer one of the fastest and most affordable pathways to expanding electricity access, providing the reliable baseload supply needed to power households, industries, and growing cities. And at a time when renewable-energy investment remains far below required levels, revenues from oil and gas can help finance the long-term transition to cleaner energy sources.

The AEC welcomes the World Bank’s decision to lift its ban on financing nuclear energy, as well as its ongoing review of restrictions surrounding natural gas exploration and production. But review is no longer enough. The pace of change must match the urgency of Africa’s energy crisis.

Population growth is accelerating faster than our electrification efforts, meaning every incremental gain is being swallowed by demographic realities. Africa needs the capital to expand access to electricity rapidly and at scale — not in 10 or 20 years, but now. By maintaining its prohibition on upstream oil and gas financing, the World Bank is unintentionally contributing to prolonged energy poverty, limiting Africa’s ability to industrialize and undermining progress toward a balanced and sustainable energy future.

Lifting this ban would not undermine global climate goals. On the contrary, it would support Africa’s responsible use of natural gas as a transition fuel, while enabling the continent to invest in renewables, storage, and nuclear power — the technologies that will power Africa for generations to come. What Africa needs from the World Bank is not hesitation, but partnership.

I would add that the AEC is not the only voice calling for change. The United States government has also urged the World Bank to reconsider its restrictions. As US President Donald Trump’s administration recently noted, multilateral development banks cannot fulfil their core mandates if the World Bank continues to restrict natural-gas financing. “An all-of-the-above energy strategy that provides for the financing of upstream gas would be a positive step towards reconnecting the World Bank, and all other multilateral development banks, to their core missions of economic growth and poverty reduction,” a spokesperson for the US Treasury Department told the Financial Times.

A Decisive Moment

Africa’s energy future will not be secured through rhetoric or cautious half-measures. It will be secured by creating the conditions that allow investment to flow — conditions that give global partners the confidence to support our oil and gas resources, expand our renewable-energy capacity, and build the nuclear infrastructure that can anchor our long-term energy security.

If African governments embrace reform rather than stagnation and if institutions like the World Bank commit to partnership instead of prohibition, Africa can end energy poverty, drive industrialization, and give millions the reliable power they need to thrive. Africa’s future depends on what we choose to do today.

“The State of African Energy: 2026 Outlook Report” is available for download. Visit https://apo-opa.co/3Yv2WZ8 to request your copy.

– on behalf of African Energy Chamber.