New Partnership for Africa’s Development-Infrastructure Project Preparation Facility (NEPAD-IPPF) marks 20 years of impact at 40th Oversight Committee Meeting

Source: APO – Report:

.

The NEPAD-Infrastructure Project Preparation Facility (NEPAD-IPPF), a multi-donor special fund hosted by the African Development Bank (https://AfDB.org/), has successfully held its 40th Oversight Committee  Meeting  to take stock of progress and chart a renewed course for Africa’s regional infrastructure transformation.

The meeting, held online on 27th October 2025, brought together donor representatives, partner institutions, Regional Economic Communities and implementing agencies. It coincided with the 20th anniversary of NEPAD-IPPF, marking two decades of partnership, knowledge, and impact in advancing Africa’s regional connectivity agenda.

The committee reviewed and approved the NEPAD-IPPF 2024 Annual Report, the 2025 Mid-Year Report and Technical Assistance Fund Activities. It endorsed the proposed 2026 Work Programme and Technical Assistance Fund,  with an envelope of USD 16 million focused on accelerating the preparation of regional infrastructure projects under PIDA-PAP 2 and deepening collaboration with stakeholders.

Since its inception, NEPAD-IPPF has supported 113 regional projects across energy, transport, ICT, and water, committing over $124 million in project preparation and helping to mobilize more than $13 billion in downstream investment.

For Mike Salawou, Director of Infrastructure and Urban Development Department at the African Development Bank, it was a moment to celebrate enduring collaboration and renewed ambition. He noted that NEPAD-IPPF’s achievements are made possible through the steadfast support of donors.

“At the heart of NEPAD-IPPF’s operations are our valued partners — the Regional Economic Communities, Power Pools, Corridor Authorities, and Regional Specialized Agencies,”  Salawou said.

The facility’s evolving role in accelerating corridor development and bankable project pipelines is aligned with the G20 Regional Project Preparation Toolkit and the African Union’s Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA PAP 2), Salawou said.

Ambassador Ben Marc Diendéré, Canada’s Permanent Observer to the African Union and Special Envoy for Africa who participated in the meeting, reaffirmed Canada’s longstanding partnership with NEPAD-IPPF. “Canada’s continued engagement in NEPAD-IPPF aligns closely with our broader priorities for Africa—particularly our commitment to inclusive economic growth, regional integration, and sustainable development,” Diendéré said.

Birgit Pickel, Director-General for Africa (BMZ), commended NEPAD-IPPF for its impressive track record in driving regional infrastructure development.  She said since its inception, the Fund has supported the preparation of more than 60 infrastructure projects, half of which have reached financial closure and are now under construction or completed. “These efforts have helped catalyze over USD13 billion in investment commitments, demonstrating the Facility’s strong ability to turn technical studies into bankable and impactful projects.”

Other donor countries participating in the session included Spain and the United Kingdom, who commended the Fund’s achievements and its work in advancing Africa’s infrastructure agenda through sound governance, effective partnerships, and tangible results.

– on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contact:
Amba Mpoke-Bigg
Communication and External Relations Department
email: media@afdb.org

Technical contact:
Kareen Njounkwe
NEPAD-IPPF Coordinator
email: knjounkwe@afdb.org

About the African Development Bank Group:
The African Development Bank Group is Africa’s premier development finance institution. It comprises three distinct entities: the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF). On the ground in 41 African countries with an external office in Japan, the Bank contributes to the economic development and the social progress of its 54 regional member states. For more information: www.AfDB.org

About  NEPAD-IPPF:
NEPAD-IPPF provides financial and technical assistance to African countries, Regional Economic Communities and Specialized Agencies to prepare viable and bankable regional infrastructure projects across the energy, transport, information technology and communication (ICT), and trans-boundary water sectors. The Facility pools resources from multiple donors to support early-stage project preparation and strengthen Africa’s infrastructure investment pipeline.

Click here (https://apo-opa.co/4nJhLl3) to learn more. 

O Nova Parceria para o Desenvolvimento de África-Mecanismo de Preparação de Projetos de Infraestruturas (NEPAD-IPPF) comemora 20 anos de impacto na 40ª Reunião do Comité de Supervisão

Source: Africa Press Organisation – Portuguese –

Baixar .tipo

O NEPAD- Mecanismo de Preparação de Projetos de Infraestruturas (NEPAD-IPPF), um fundo especial multidoadores administrado pelo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento (https://AfDB.org/), realizou com sucesso a sua 40ª Reunião do Comité de Supervisão para avaliar o progresso e traçar um novo rumo para a transformação da infraestrutura regional africana.

A reunião online, realizada a 27 de outubro de 2025, reuniu representantes de doadores, instituições parceiras, Comunidades Económicas Regionais e agências de implementação. Coincidiu com o 20.º aniversário do NEPAD-IPPF, marcando duas décadas de parceria, conhecimento e impacto na promoção da agenda de conectividade regional de África.

O comité analisou e aprovou o Relatório Anual do NEPAD-IPPF 2024, o Relatório Semestral de 2025 e as Atividades do Fundo de Assistência Técnica. Aprovou o Programa de Trabalho e o Fundo de Assistência Técnica propostos para 2026, com um envelope de 16 milhões de dólares focado em acelerar a preparação de projetos de infraestruturas regionais no âmbito do PIDA-PAP 2 e aprofundar a colaboração com as partes interessadas.

Desde a sua criação, a NEPAD-IPPF apoiou 113 projetos regionais nas áreas da energia, transportes, TIC e água, comprometendo mais de 124 milhões de dólares na preparação de projetos e ajudando a mobilizar mais de 13 mil milhões de dólares em investimentos a jusante.

Para Mike Salawou, Diretor do Departamento de Infraestruturas e Desenvolvimento Urbano do Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento, o encontro foi um momento para celebrar a colaboração duradoura e a ambição renovada. As conquistas da NEPAD-IPPF são possíveis graças ao apoio constante dos doadores, apontou.

“No centro das operações do NEPAD-IPPF estão os nossos valiosos parceiros – as Comunidades Económicas Regionais, os Power Pools, as Autoridades dos Corredores e as Agências Regionais Especializadas”, disse Salawou.

O papel em evolução do mecanismo na aceleração do desenvolvimento de corredores e de projetos bancáveis está alinhado com o Kit de Ferramentas de Preparação de Projetos Regionais do G20 e com o Programa da União Africana para o Desenvolvimento de Infraestruturas em África (PIDA PAP 2), afirmou Salawou.

O Embaixador Ben Marc Diendéré, Observador Permanente do Canadá junto da União Africana e Enviado Especial para África, que participou na reunião, reafirmou a parceria de longa data do Canadá com o NEPAD-IPPF. “O envolvimento contínuo do Canadá no NEPAD-IPPF está em estreita sintonia com as nossas prioridades mais amplas para África – em particular, o nosso compromisso com o crescimento económico inclusivo, a integração regional e o desenvolvimento sustentável”, afirmou Diendéré.

Birgit Pickel, Diretora-Geral para África no Ministério Federal para a Cooperação e o Desenvolvimento Económico (BMZ), elogiou o NEPAD-IPPF pelo seu impressionante historial na promoção do desenvolvimento de infraestruturas regionais. Desde a sua criação, o Fundo apoiou a preparação de mais de 60 projetos de infraestruturas, metade dos quais alcançaram a conclusão financeira e estão agora em construção ou concluídos. “Estes esforços ajudaram a catalisar mais de 13 mil milhões de dólares em compromissos de investimento, demonstrando a forte capacidade do Fundo para transformar estudos técnicos em projetos financiáveis e impactantes”, afirmou.

Outros países doadores que participaram na sessão incluíram Espanha e o Reino Unido, que elogiaram as conquistas do Fundo e o seu trabalho na promoção da agenda de infraestruturas de África através de uma governação sólida, parcerias eficazes e resultados tangíveis.

Distribuído pelo Grupo APO para African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contacto para os media:
Amba Mpoke-Bigg
Departamento de Comunicação e Relações Externas
media@afdb.org

Contacto técnico:
Kareen Njounkwe
Coordenadora do NEPAD-IPPF
knjounkwe@afdb.org

Sobre o Grupo do Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento:
O Grupo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento é a principal instituição financeira de desenvolvimento em África. Inclui três entidades distintas: o Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento (AfDB), o Fundo Africano de Desenvolvimento (ADF) e o Fundo Fiduciário da Nigéria (NTF). Presente no terreno em 41 países africanos, com uma representação externa no Japão, o Banco contribui para o desenvolvimento económico e o progresso social dos seus 54 Estados-membros. Mais informações em www.AfDB.org/pt

Sobre o NEPAD-IPPF:
O NEPAD-IPPF presta assistência financeira e técnica a países africanos, comunidades económicas regionais e agências especializadas para preparar projetos de infraestruturas regionais viáveis e financiáveis nos setores da energia, transportes, tecnologias da informação e comunicação (TIC) e águas transfronteiriças. O Fundo reúne recursos de vários doadores para apoiar a preparação de projetos em fase inicial e reforçar o pipeline de investimentos em infraestruturas em África.

Clique aqui (https://apo-opa.co/4nJhLl3) para saber mais.

Afreximbank’s Calls for Stronger Trade Finance Capabilities to Accelerate Inclusive Growth across Africa

Source: APO – Report:

Speaking at the opening of the 25th Afreximbank Trade Finance Seminar (ATFS) in Abidjan, Ms Gwen Mwaba, Managing Director for Trade Finance and Correspondent Banking at Afreximbank (www.Afreximbank.com), called for stronger trade finance capabilities and deeper collaboration among African financial institutions to accelerate inclusive and sustainable growth across the continent. 

“Africa is richly endowed with natural resources such as minerals, hydrocarbons, agricultural commodities, and a growing array of value-added opportunities across energy, metals, and logistics. These resources present immense potential for development when they are financed responsibly, efficiently, and with rigorous risk management. To translate this potential into tangible outcomes, we need banks and financial institutions that are not only risk-aware but structurally proficient,” said Ms Mwaba. 

She emphasized the pivtal role of skilled financial professionals in shaping Africa’s trade future and the importance of capacity building in translating Africa’s abundant natural and human resources into tangible economic development. 

“Well-trained bankers with sophisticated deal-structuring capabilities can tailor financing to capital-intensive value chains and align project finance with local development needs and environmental safeguards,” said Ms Mwaba. 

“Trade finance built on trust, risk assessment, and liquidity remains the lifeblood of commerce, investment, and job creation. Our collective task is to ensure that this lifeblood flows reliably to the firms that need it and that its benefits are broadly shared.” 

The opening ceremony was attended by among others representatives from the Government of Côte d’Ivoire, including Mr. Patrick Olivier Daipo, Deputy Director of Cabinet, Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, Ministry of Trade, Mr Chalouho Coulibaly, National Director of  the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) who represented Dr. Jean-Claude Kassi Brou, Governor, BCEAO, and Mr. Jérôme Ahua, Deputy Managing Director of BNI Bank who also represented the Bankers Association.  

Now in its 25th year, this annual Afreximbank Trade Finance Seminar is Afreximbank’s flagship capacity-building programme providing training for thousands of African bankers, lenders, financiers and policymakers since its inception. This year’s edition marks a major milestone: a quarter-century of empowering African financial professionals and deepening the continent’s expertise in structuring and delivering trade finance solutions. 

Highlighting Afreximbank’s leadership in Africa’s trade finance ecosystem, Ms. Mwaba said that the Bank has, over more than three decades, built a portfolio of programmes and facilities supporting regional integration, value addition, and job creation. These include: 

  • Large-scale financing for export-oriented sectors and trade-enabling infrastructure; 
  • Innovative risk-sharing and credit enhancement tools to mobilize private capital; 
  • Specialized facilities for commodity and project finance aligned with environmental and social safeguards; and 
  • Targeted capacity-building programmes to strengthen the skills of African bankers and policymakers. 

The Afreximbank Trade Finance Seminar will explore key themes shaping the future of trade finance in Africa, including the role of digitalisation, data, technology and transparency; robust risk management in an increasingly volatile global environment; and the importance of collaboration among banks, multilateral development institutions, fintechs, exporters, and policymakers to create scalable and sustainable solutions. 

Concluding her address, Ms. Mwaba expressed confidence that the discussions in Abidjan would lead to tangible outcomes and further strengthen Africa’s trade finance ecosystem. 

The Afreximbank Trade Finance Seminar runs from 4–6 November 2025 in Abidjan under the theme, “Strengthening Trade Finance Capabilities for Inclusive and Sustainable Growth in Africa”. The Seminar will be followed by a one-day Factoring Workshop on 7 November 2025. 

– on behalf of Afreximbank.

Media Contact:
Vincent Musumba
Communications and Events Manager (Media Relations)
Email: press@afreximbank.com

Follow us on:
X: https://apo-opa.co/3JJXVrR
Facebook: https://apo-opa.co/49C1T0f
LinkedIn: https://apo-opa.co/4ogDwd0
Instagram: https://apo-opa.co/49wL86z

About Afreximbank:
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) is a Pan-African multilateral financial institution mandated to finance and promote intra- and extra-African trade. For over 30 years, the Bank has been deploying innovative structures to deliver financing solutions that support the transformation of the structure of Africa’s trade, accelerating industrialisation and intra-regional trade, thereby boosting economic expansion in Africa. A stalwart supporter of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), Afreximbank has launched a Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) that was adopted by the African Union (AU) as the payment and settlement platform to underpin the implementation of the AfCFTA. Working with the AfCFTA Secretariat and the AU, the Bank has set up a US$10 billion Adjustment Fund to support countries effectively participating in the AfCFTA. At the end of December 2024, Afreximbank’s total assets and contingencies stood at over US$40.1 billion, and its shareholder funds amounted to US$7.2 billion. Afreximbank has investment grade ratings assigned by GCR (international scale) (A), Moody’s (Baa2), China Chengxin International Credit Rating Co., Ltd (CCXI) (AAA), Japan Credit Rating Agency (JCR) (A-) and Fitch (BBB-). Afreximbank has evolved into a group entity comprising the Bank, its equity impact fund subsidiary called the Fund for Export Development Africa (FEDA), and its insurance management subsidiary, AfrexInsure (together, “the Group”). The Bank is headquartered in Cairo, Egypt. 

For more information, visit: www.Afreximbank.com

Media files

.

Remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the handover of the Report of the G20 Extraordinary Committee of Independent Experts of Global Inequality, Tuynhuys, Cape Town

Source: President of South Africa –

Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Mr Ronald Lamola,
Professor Joseph Stiglitz and members of the G20 Extraordinary Committee of Independent Experts on Global Inequality,
Representatives of Oxfam,
Distinguished guests,
Members of the media,

I am honoured and please to receive this seminal report on global inequality.

This is the first time that a report of this nature – on a matter so fundamental to global stability and human progress – is presented for consideration by the G20.

When I announced the establishment of this Extraordinary Committee in August 2025, I said:

“People across the world know how extreme inequality undermines their dignity and chance for a better future. They saw the brutal unfairness of vaccine apartheid, where millions in the Global South were denied the vaccines to save them. 

“They see the impacts of rising food and energy prices, of debt, of trade wars, all driving this growing gap between the rich and the rest of the world, undermining progress and economic dynamism.”

The report that is being handed over today is a rigorous and analytical account of what so many of the world’s people know from their daily experience. This report examines the causes and the drivers of inequality. Most importantly, this report lays out prudent and pragmatic steps we can take to reduce it.  

This report, which is a blueprint for greater equality, supports the goal of South Africa’s G20 Presidency to put inequality on the international agenda. It correctly asserts that inequality is a betrayal of people’s dignity, an impediment to inclusive growth and a threat to democracy itself.  

Addressing inequality is our inescapable generational challenge. We have the means to build a fair, just and equal world. We have the resources to narrow gap between and within countries.

Now, with this report, we have clear actions that we can take as governments, as societies and as the global community to reduce inequality.

It is now up to us, the leaders of the G20 and the leaders of the world, to demonstrate the necessary will and commitment.

I congratulate Professor Joseph Stiglitz and his Extraordinary Committee of such renowned experts for this effort. I am grateful also to those individuals and organisations that provided resources and support for this work.

This report is a work of great quality and significance. 

It provides a solid platform on which to launch a renewed global effort to tackle inequality.

I am looking forward to discussing this report at the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg later this month.

This remarkable work is not just for the benefit of the leaders of the G20. 

It is for the benefit of the broader international community, for national governments and for all people who want to make the world a better, fairer and more equal place.

I thank you.

African countries need strong development banks: how they can push back against narratives to weaken them

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Misheck Mutize, Post Doctoral Researcher, Graduate School of Business (GSB), University of Cape Town

A quiet but consequential contest is playing out in the global financial architecture. One that could determine Africa’s ability to finance its own development.

In recent months, powerful voices from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Paris Club and US investment bank JP Morgan have questioned the preferred creditor status of African multilateral development finance institutions. These institutions include the Africa Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and the Trade and Development Bank (TDB).

Preferred creditor status is a long-standing practice in global finance. It gives multilateral development finance institutions priority in being repaid when a country faces financial distress. The idea is simple. These institutions lend to promote development. During crises, they step in with counter cyclical lending – increasing support when commercial creditors pull out.

This reliability depends on their strong credit ratings, which in turn rest on the assurance that they will be repaid even when others are not. That assurance is what the preferred creditor status guarantees. The World Bank, IMF and regional development banks in Asia and Latin America all enjoy this protection as a matter of practice. Borrowers respect it because breaching it would threaten their access to future concessional lending – loans offered on much lower interest rates and other terms.

The voices against African multilateral finance institutions argue that they are too small to deserve preferred creditor status. Or that, unlike the World Bank and IMF, they do not lend at concessional rates. JP Morgan has even warned that Africa’s development banks might lose their status altogether.

The debate about the preferred creditor status of Africa’s multilateral development finance institutions may sound technical. It is not. If left unchallenged, this narrative could justify the continued high interest rates Africa faces on international markets.

Drawing on decades of researching Africa’s capital markets and the institutions that govern them, I recommend that African governments must reaffirm and defend the preferred creditor status of multilateral development banks. African multilateral development banks must also act collectively to defend their credibility. And the African Union must embed the preferred creditor status of the continent’s development banks in its financial sovereignty agenda.

Unwritten privilege vs law

For the IMF, World Bank and Paris Club, the preferred creditor status is an unwritten privilege. For African multilateral development banks, it is law.

The founding treaties of Afreximbank, the African Development Bank and TDB explicitly enshrine this status. These treaties are registered under Article 102 of the UN Charter, making them binding under international law. African member states have also ratified them into law, domestically.

This makes the status of African multilateral development banks more legally secure than that of Bretton Woods institutions. Yet it is the African banks whose status is now described as “uncertain” or “controversial”.

African governments must correct this perception. The African Union and its members have already endorsed this principle, but stronger, coordinated public statements are needed, especially from finance ministers and central banks. The aim will be to reassure investors that these protections are real, enforceable and backed by political will.

Collective action

Institutions such as Afreximbank, the AfDB, TDB, Shelter Afriqué Development Bank and the Africa Finance Corporation have grown rapidly. Together, they hold more than US$640 billion in assets, expanding by about 15% a year. They have mobilised billions from global capital markets and stepped up lending when global finance withdrew. They have diversified into the panda bonds in China, proving their resilience and capacity to tap into nontraditional capital markets.

Their success, however, has attracted resistance. International creditors and rating agencies have started questioning their preferred creditor status, describing it as “weak” or “shaky”. This has real consequences. It weakens investor confidence. Investors demand higher returns, raising the cost of borrowing for the banks and, by extension, for African countries, based on a risk factor that does not exist.

To counter this, African multilateral development banks must coordinate their responses. The newly formed Association of African Multilateral Financial Institutions is a promising platform. It should be more active and become the unified voice defending the preferred creditor status. It should be used to issue joint legal opinions, engage directly with credit rating agencies and Paris Club members, and run global investor education campaigns that clarify the legal standing and strong performance of African multilateral development banks. The continent’s development banks must speak with one voice. Silence allows others to define their credibility.

Continent’s financial sovereignty

Protecting preferred creditor status is about more than technical finance. It is about sovereignty. Africa is building its own financial ecosystem through the African Credit Rating Agency. The other financial institutions in the ecosystem – which aren’t yet operational – are the African Central Bank, African Investment Bank and African Monetary Fund. Their purpose will be to reduce dependence on external actors and keep Africa’s development agenda in African hands.

A battle of perception

Global finance runs on perception which is shaped by narratives. Those who control the narratives control the cost of money. If the preferred creditor status of African multilateral development banks continues to be misrepresented, Africa’s access to affordable finance will remain hostage to external opinion rather than legal reality.

It will also weaken African development banks just as they are becoming more effective. Their ability to borrow cheaply and on favourable terms depends on their credit ratings, which rest on the assumption that they will be repaid first in case of distress. If that assumption is shaken, borrowing costs will rise.

By reaffirming the legal basis of the preferred creditor status of African multilateral development banks, coordinating their response and embedding this status in the AU’s financial sovereignty framework, African governments and multilateral development lenders can protect one of the most important tools for affordable development finance.

This is not just about defending institutions, it’s about defending Africa’s right to finance its own future on fair terms.

– African countries need strong development banks: how they can push back against narratives to weaken them
– https://theconversation.com/african-countries-need-strong-development-banks-how-they-can-push-back-against-narratives-to-weaken-them-267989

AI in the courtroom: the dangers of using ChatGTP in legal practice in South Africa

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Jacques Matthee, Senior Lecturer, University of the Free State

A South African court case made headlines for all the wrong reasons in January 2025. The legal team in Mavundla v MEC: Department of Co-Operative Government and Traditional Affairs KwaZulu-Natal and Others had relied on case law that simply didn’t exist. It had been generated by ChatGPT, a generative artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot developed by OpenAI.

Only two of the nine case authorities the legal team submitted to the High Court were genuine. The rest were AI-fabricated “hallucinations”. The court called this conduct “irresponsible and unprofessional” and referred the matter to the Legal Practice Council, the statutory body that regulates legal practitioners in South Africa, for investigation.

It was not the first time South African courts had encountered such an incident. Parker v Forsyth in 2023 also dealt with fake case law produced by ChatGPT. But the judge was more forgiving in that instance, finding no intent to mislead. The Mavundla ruling marks a turning point: courts are losing patience with legal practitioners who use AI irresponsibly.

We are legal academics who have been doing research on the growing use of AI, particularly generative AI, in legal research and education. While these technologies offer powerful tools for enhancing efficiency and productivity, they also present serious risks when used irresponsibly.

Aspiring legal practitioners who misuse AI tools without proper guidance or ethical grounding risk severe professional consequences, even before their careers begin. Law schools should equip students with the skills and judgment to use AI tools responsibly. But most institutions remain unprepared for the pace at which AI is being adopted.

Very few universities have formal policies or training on AI. Students are left with no guide through this rapidly evolving terrain. Our work calls for a proactive and structured approach to AI education in law schools.

When technology becomes a liability

The advocate in the Mavundla case admitted she had not verified the citations and relied instead on research done by a junior colleague. That colleague, a candidate attorney, claimed to have obtained the material from an online research tool. While she denied using ChatGPT, the pattern matched similar global incidents where lawyers unknowingly filed AI-generated judgments.

In the 2024 American case of Park v Kim, the attorney cited non-existent case law in her reply brief, which she admitted was generated using ChatGPT. In the 2024 Canadian case of Zhang v Chen, the lawyer filed a notice of application containing two non-existent case authorities fabricated by ChatGPT.

The court in Mavundla was unequivocal: no matter how advanced technology becomes, lawyers remain responsible for ensuring that every source they present is accurate. Workload pressure or ignorance of AI’s risks is no defence.

The judge also criticised the supervising attorney for failing to check the documents before filing them. The episode underscored a broader ethical principle: senior lawyers must properly train and supervise junior colleagues.

The lesson here extends far beyond one law firm. Integrity, accuracy and critical thinking are not optional extras in the legal profession. They are core values that must be taught and practised from the beginning, during legal education.

The classroom is the first courtroom

The Mavundla case should serve as a warning to universities. If experienced legal practitioners can fall into AI traps regarding law, students still learning to research and reason can too.

Generative AI tools like ChatGPT can be powerful allies – they can summarise cases, draft arguments and analyse complex texts in seconds. But they can also confidently fabricate information. Because AI models don’t always “know” when they are wrong, they produce text that looks authoritative but may be entirely false.


Read more: AI can be a danger to students – 3 things universities must do


For students, the dangers are twofold. First, over-reliance on AI can stunt the development of critical research skills. Second, it can lead to serious academic or professional misconduct. A student who submits AI-fabricated content could face disciplinary action at university and reputational damage that follows them into their legal career.

In our paper we argue that, instead of banning AI tools outright, law schools should teach students to use them responsibly. This means developing “AI literacy”: the ability to question, verify and contextualise AI-generated information. Students should learn to treat AI systems as assistants, not authorities.


Read more: Universities can turn AI from a threat to an opportunity by teaching critical thinking


In South African legal practice, authority traditionally refers to recognised sources such as legislation, judicial precedent and academic commentary, which lawyers cite to support their arguments. These sources are accessed through established legal databases and law reports, a process that, while time-consuming, ensures accuracy, accountability and adherence to the rule of law.

From law faculties to courtrooms

Legal educators can embed AI literacy into existing courses on research methodology, professional ethics and legal writing. Exercises could include verifying AI-generated summaries against real judgments or analysing the ethical implications of relying on machine-produced arguments.

Teaching responsible AI use is not simply about avoiding embarrassment in court. It is about protecting the integrity of the justice system itself. As seen in Mavundla, one candidate attorney’s uncritical use of AI led to professional investigation, public scrutiny and reputational damage to the firm.

The financial risks are also real. Courts can order lawyers to pay costs out of their pockets, when serious professional misconduct occurs. In the digital era, where court judgments and media reports spread instantly online, a lawyer’s reputation can collapse overnight if they are found to have relied on fake or unverified AI material. It would also be beneficial for courts to be trained in detecting fake cases generated by AI.

The way forward

Our study concludes that AI is here to stay, and so is its use in law. The challenge is not whether the legal profession should use AI, but how. Law schools have a critical opportunity, and an ethical duty, to prepare future practitioners for a world where technology and human judgment must work side by side.

Speed and convenience can never replace accuracy and integrity. As AI becomes a routine part of legal research, tomorrow’s lawyers must be trained not just to prompt – but to think.

– AI in the courtroom: the dangers of using ChatGTP in legal practice in South Africa
– https://theconversation.com/ai-in-the-courtroom-the-dangers-of-using-chatgtp-in-legal-practice-in-south-africa-267691

Social work is a serious profession – why not youth work? What South Africa needs to get right

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Thulani Andrew Chauke, Lecturer, University of South Africa

About 3.5 million South Africans aged 15-24 are disengaged from the formal economy and education system. In the first quarter of 2025, 37.1% of young people were not in employment, education, or training.

These alarming figures highlight an urgent need for youth development. Interventions such as skills and entrepreneurship development are needed to expertly guide young people towards participating in the mainstream economy.

Designing and running those interventions requires professional youth workers.

Youth work is an emerging profession within the social services sector. It aims to promote positive youth development through young people’s voluntary participation. The expertise needed in this work includes empathy, strong communication, and advocacy skills. It’s similar to social work but its main focus is the empowerment of young people. Examples include peer-to-peer literacy support and community-based drug prevention campaigns.

For youth work to be regarded as a profession, it must be organised and subject to regulations and standards that guide practice. This involves the establishment of a code of ethics and standardised formal training in the higher education sector.

In South Africa, much of this kind of work is done by non-profit organisations. It is often performed by a mix of qualified practitioners (people with a degree or diploma in youth development) and dedicated, yet unqualified, volunteers. The country does not have a database to indicate how many youth workers there are.

It’s often treated as voluntary or ancillary work. The result is that some practitioners are poorly remunerated and the field lacks the stature and regulation of other social services, such as social work.

South Africa does have policy and legislative frameworks to support youth work. These include the National Youth Policy 2015 and the National Youth Development Agency’s 2022 Integrated Youth Development Strategy.

So, given the need for youth work and the supporting policies, why hasn’t youth work been professionalised in South Africa? As an academic who researches youth development initiatives, I wanted to understand this better. In a recent study, my co-author Doris Kakuru (a social scientist in Canada) and I asked youth work stakeholders for their perspectives on the barriers to professionalisation.

We asked a selection of 30 people involved in youth development work, including qualified youth workers, a policymaker, and youth development experts from universities. They identified three main barriers:

  • lack of political will

  • absence of organised spaces for the profession

  • non-existence of a standardised curriculum.

Removing these barriers would result in a sector with formal ethics, qualifications and standards. This would protect the workers and the young people they work with, and make their work more effective.

South Africa’s youth work landscape

Unlike that of teachers or social workers, youth work remains unregulated. Practitioners are not required to hold accredited qualifications, there is no professional association representing them, and there is no uniform standard of practice.

The University of Venda in South Africa’s Limpopo province offers a four-year Bachelor’s degree in Youth Development and the University of South Africa (distance learning) previously offered a diploma. Many youth workers have been trained since 1999. But the field has not achieved full professional recognition: rules, ethics, formal training, standards, organisation.

To explore the reasons for this, our study used a qualitative research approach. The participants had a qualification in youth development, work experience in the sector, or teaching experience in youth development qualifications.

Our findings identified three main barriers to the professionalisation of youth work in South Africa:

The first is lack of political will. Despite policy acknowledgements, in practice there is no political commitment to regulating youth work. Respondents in our study said that individuals in positions of political authority fear that formal regulation, which would require formal qualifications, could jeopardise their own positions as “gatekeepers” in the sector.

The second barrier is an absence of advocacy spaces. Fragmentation within the sector means there is no organised, professional youth work association to advocate for regulation. Qualified practitioners are not sufficiently organised to champion their profession.

Thirdly, there is no standardised curriculum to train youth workers. This has weakened the professional identity of youth work. Universities use different programme titles (such as Diploma in Youth Development and BA in Youth in Development), making it difficult for graduates to be uniformly recognised as “youth workers”.

Strengthening the machinery of youth development must start with the formal recognition of youth work as a profession. For youth work to be regarded as a profession, it must be organised and subject to regulations and standards that guide youth work practice. This involves the establishment of a code of ethics and formal training in the higher education sector.

This step is crucial to ensuring that interventions are designed, coordinated and managed by skilled, accredited practitioners.

Benefits of recognition

Formal recognition of youth work in South Africa would deliver several benefits:

  • a code of ethics to guide practices, protecting both the youth workers and the young people they serve

  • formal qualifications, ensuring practitioners work with young people in an effective and professional manner

  • minimum standards for all individuals working with young people in informal education settings.

The way forward

To regulate youth work as a profession in South Africa, key stakeholders, including the government and civil society, must take decisive action:

  1. Establish a dedicated task team: The parliamentary portfolio committee on women, youth and persons with disabilities should set up a task team. This should be composed of senior government officials, heads of departments from institutions offering youth development qualifications, youth workers from NGOs, and experts in the field. The task force must oversee the translation of regulatory frameworks into concrete practices.

  2. Standardise curriculum and qualifications: Institutions of higher education must agree on what to teach. This will ensure that graduates share a common understanding of youth development work.

  3. Organise a professional association: Qualified youth workers must form an association. It could accommodate current practitioners (even those without formal qualifications), encouraging them to pursue training.

  4. Prioritise youth work in academia: Staff who teach, design curricula and supervise research must have postgraduate qualifications in youth development.

  5. Mandate qualifications: Qualifications should be a prerequisite for youth development positions in government departments, local government and civil society.

The professionalisation of youth work is not a mere bureaucratic formality; it is an economic and social imperative for the future of South Africa’s youth.

– Social work is a serious profession – why not youth work? What South Africa needs to get right
– https://theconversation.com/social-work-is-a-serious-profession-why-not-youth-work-what-south-africa-needs-to-get-right-267298

Union Africaine (UA) et Les Trophées de la Musique Africaine confirment les dates du 7 au 11 janvier 2026 pour la 9ème édition à Lagos

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

La Commission de l’Union Africaine (CUA) et le Comité Exécutif International des Trophées de la Musique Africaine (https://AFRIMA.org) ont officiellement annoncé que la 9ème édition des prestigieuses récompenses musicales panafricaines se déroulera du mercredi 7 au dimanche 11 janvier 2026 à Lagos, au Nigeria. 

Initialement prévue du 25 au 30 novembre 2025, la nouvelle date a été fixée après des consultations avec les partenaires, artistes et parties prenantes à travers l’Afrique et la diaspora. 

“La Commission de l’Union Africaine est fière de poursuivre son partenariat avec Les trophées de la musique africaine pour célébrer l’excellence créative de l’Afrique et son influence mondiale”, a déclaré Mme Angela Martins, Directrice par intérim du Développement social, de la Culture et des Sports et Cheffe de la Division Culture et Sport de la CUA. “Ce partenariat s’aligne parfaitement sur la Politique culturelle de l’Union Africaine et l’Agenda 2063 de l’UA, qui font de l’économie créative un moteur du développement durable, de l’autonomisation des jeunes et de l’intégration continentale. Les nouvelles dates de la 9ème édition des Trophées de la musique africaine en janvier 2026 offrent une occasion passionnante de mettre en valeur la riche diversité, l’innovation et l’unité de la musique et de la culture africaines dans le monde entier.” 

Expliquant cette décision, Nde Ndifonka, Directeur régional des trophées de la musique africaine pour l’Afrique centrale et artiste camerounais connu sous le nom de Wax Dey, a indiqué que ces nouvelles dates en janvier permettront une participation plus large et garantiront une expérience de haute qualité pour tous les participants. 

“Les trophées de la musique africaine ne sont pas seulement une cérémonie de remise de prix; c’est la scène mondiale de la musique africaine”, a déclaré Ndifonka, qui est également avocat.  “Reprogrammer la 9ème édition en janvier nous permet d’offrir un événement de classe mondiale qui reflète véritablement la puissance créative de l’Afrique. Cela garantit également une participation plus large de nos partenaires, artistes, fans, médias et parties prenantes. Il s’agit de donner à la musique africaine la grande plateforme qu’elle mérite.” 

La 9ème édition des Trophées de la musique africaine, organisée en partenariat avec la Commission de l’Union Africaine, le Gouvernement fédéral du Nigeria en tant que pays hôte officiel, et l’État de Lagos en tant que ville hôte officielle, proposera une semaine complète d’activités musicales, culturelles et artistiques. 

Le plus grand festival musical du continent débutera officiellement le mercredi 7 janvier avec la Soirée de bienvenue exclusivement destinée aux nominés, délégués, invités et médias internationaux, offrant un espace privilégié de réseautage pour les artistes, les leaders de l’industrie, les sponsors et les professionnels des médias. 

Le même jour, le Diamond Showcase de la 9ème édition des Trophées de la musique africaine, une scène spéciale dédiée aux talents africains émergents, accueillera 15 artistes prometteurs, leur offrant l’opportunité de faire découvrir leur musique à un public plus large et d’accéder à la réussite musicale grand public. 

Le jeudi 8 janvier, l’attention portera sur le Sommet africain de la musique (AMBS) —la conférence phare des Trophées de la musique africaine consacrée au leadership intellectuel et à la collaboration au sein de l’écosystème musical africain. 

Plus tard dans la soirée, les invités assisteront à la Nuit des Icônes de la Musique, une célébration en l’honneur des figures légendaires qui ont façonné l’héritage musical du continent. 

L’effervescence se poursuivra le vendredi 9 janvier avec un programme dynamique comprenant des visites communautaires dans des écoles, une visite culturelle de la ville hôte, ainsi qu’une réception de courtoisie avec le gouvernement de l’État de Lagos. 

La journée se terminera en apothéose avec le Village musical des Trophées de la musique africaine, une scène de spectacles en plein air avec des concerts de stars et une ambiance festive. 

Le samedi 10 janvier, l’énergie montera d’un cran avec la Soirée des nominés et de l’industrie musicale de la 9ème édition des Trophées de la musique africaine, une nuit glamour dédiée aux anciens lauréats, aux nominés actuels ainsi qu’aux précieux partenaires et sponsors de l’événement. 

La semaine de célébrations culminera le dimanche 11 janvier 2026 avec la cérémonie de remise des prix des 9ème Trophées de la musique africaine, retransmise en direct depuis le Eko Convention Centre, Eko Hotels & Suites à Lagos. 

Cet événement grandiose comprendra la marche sur le  tapis rouge diffusé en direct et mettra en vedette des performances électrisantes d’artistes parmi les plus célèbres du continent africain. La cérémonie sera diffusée dans plus de 84 pays à travers le monde. 

Distribué par APO Group pour All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA).

CONTACT : 
Badé Olusesan  
Directeur de La Communications, AFRIMA  
ajibade.olusesan@afrima.org  

Media files

Centre De Service Civique De Daloa : Les Inscriptions Ouvertes Jusqu’au 7 Novembre 2025

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French


Le ministère de la Promotion de la Jeunesse, de l’Insertion Professionnelle et du Service Civique, à travers l’Office du Service Civique National (OSCN), annonce, dans un communiqué reçu le lundi 3 novembre 2025, l’ouverture officielle des inscriptions pour la rentrée au Centre de Service Civique de Daloa.

Les inscriptions, gratuites, sont ouvertes jusqu’au 7 novembre 2025, dans les Directions régionales et départementales de la Jeunesse des districts du Sassandra-Marahoué, des Montagnes et du Gôh-Djiboua. 

Sont concernés les jeunes filles et garçons de nationalité ivoirienne, âgés de 16 à 35 ans, sans emploi, déscolarisés ou en quête d’une deuxième chance.

Les jeunes retenus bénéficieront, pendant six (06) mois en internat, d’une formation civique, citoyenne et professionnelle dans des domaines variés, tels que l’agropastoral, la menuiserie bois et aluminium, les métiers des arts, la maçonnerie et carrelage, l’électricité bâtiment, la plomberie, la construction métallique, le paysagisme, la pâtisserie-cuisine et la peinture bâtiment.

Cette initiative s’inscrit dans la volonté du Gouvernement de favoriser l’insertion socio-professionnelle des jeunes par le Service Civique, tout en renforçant la cohésion sociale, la discipline et la citoyenneté.

L’appel à candidatures fait suite à l’inauguration du Centre de Service Civique de Daloa par le Premier Ministre Robert Beugré Mambé, le 4 octobre 2025.

Ci-après le communiqué

https://www.gouv.ci/uploads/publications/176226007541.pdf

Distribué par APO Group pour Portail Officiel du Gouvernement de Côte d’Ivoire.

African Union (AU), All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA) Confirm January 7-11, 2026 for 9th Awards in Lagos

Source: APO – Report:

The African Union Commission (AUC) and the International Executive Committee of the All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA) (https://AFRIMA.org) have officially announced the 9th edition of Africa’s global music awards will now take place between Wednesday, January 7 to Sunday, January 11, 2026, in Lagos, Nigeria. 

Previously scheduled for November 25–30, 2025, the awards’ date adjustment followed extensive consultations with partners, artistes, and stakeholders across Africa and the diaspora. 

“The African Union Commission is proud to continue its partnership with AFRIMA in celebrating Africa’s creative excellence and global influence,” said Ms. Angela Martins, Acting Director of Social Development, Culture and Sports and Head of the Culture and Sport Division, AUC. “This relationship aligns perfectly with the AU’s Cultural Policy for Africa and the AU Agenda 2063, which prioritise the creative economy as a driver of sustainable development, youth empowerment, and continental integration. The new dates for the 9th AFRIMA in January 2026 provide an exciting opportunity to further showcase the rich diversity, innovation, and unity of Africa’s music and culture to the world.” 

Explaining the decision, Nde Ndifonka, AFRIMA’s Regional Director for Central Africa and Cameroonian music star popularly known as Wax Dey, said the new dates in January will allow for broader participation and ensure a top-quality experience for everyone involved. 

“AFRIMA is not just an award show; it is Africa’s global music stage,” said Ndifonka, who is also a lawyer. “Rescheduling the 9th edition to January allows us to deliver the kind of world-class celebration that truly reflects Africa’s creative power. It also ensures that more of our stakeholders, artistes, fans, media, and partners can participate fully. This is about giving African music the grand platform it deserves.” 

The 9th AFRIMA, held in partnership with the African Union Commission, the Federal Government of Nigeria as the Official Host Country and Lagos State as the Official Host City, will feature a week-long lineup of music, culture, and entertainment. 

The continent’s biggest music festival will commence officially on Wednesday, January 7 with the exclusive Welcome Soirée for nominees, delegates, guests and international media offering a premium networking space for artistes, industry leaders, sponsors, and media professionals. On the same day, the 9th AFRIMA Diamond Showcase, a special performance platform for undiscovered African music acts, will host 15 budding talents creating an opportunity for them to connect their sounds to a larger audience and break into mainstream music success.  

On Thursday, January 8, the spotlight will shift to the Africa Music Business Summit (AMBS) —AFRIMA’s signature conference for thought leadership and collaboration within the African music ecosystem. Later that evening, guests will be treated to the Music Icons’ Night, a celebration of legendary figures who have shaped Africa’s music heritage. 

The excitement continues on Friday, January 9 with a vibrant lineup that includes community outreach visits to schools, a host city cultural tour, and a courtesy reception with the Lagos State Government. The day will close on a high note with the AFRIMA Music Village, an open air live performances, star studded concert & festival arena  

Saturday, January 10, will bring the energy up further at the 9th AFRIMA Nominees & Industry Party, a glamorous night dedicated to past winners, current nominees, and AFRIMA’s valued sponsors and partners. 

The week-long celebration will culminate on Sunday, January 11, 2026, with the live broadcast  9th AFRIMA Awards Ceremony at the Eko Convention Centre, Eko Hotels & Suites in Lagos. The grand event will include a live Red Carpet broadcast and feature electrifying performances from some of Africa’s biggest music stars. The ceremony will be aired to over 84 countries around the world. 

– on behalf of All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA).

CONTACT: 
Badé Olusesan 
Communications Manager, AFRIMA
ajibade.olusesan@afrima.org   

Media files

.