Critical mineral supply faces risks if local communities aren’t consulted enough: the case of lithium in Ghana

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Clement Sefa-Nyarko, Lecturer in Security, Development and Leadership in Africa, King’s College London

Clean technologies depend on critical minerals such as lithium and cobalt. Over 65% of the world’s cobalt is mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Nearly 40% of the world’s manganese is mined in South Africa. Substantial deposits of lithium are found in Zimbabwe. Ghana is emerging as a miner of that mineral of lithium too.

What’s less well understood is how the supply chains of these minerals are assessed and managed. The dominant view is that only three players matter: the mineral-mining industry, the host state where the minerals are found, and the wider geopolitical equation.

But there’s a fourth piece of the puzzle: the role of communities.

I am an academic researching justice and equity in critical minerals governance and energy transitions. In a recent paper, I examined the role of communities and the presence or absence of a social licence to operate. In other words, community “approval” that allows a project to proceed.

I focused on Ghana’s emerging lithium sector. Communities here are already feeling livelihood and social pressures following the commercial discovery. My research shows that weak and opaque governance around critical-mineral projects create early friction between communities, companies and the state. I found that delays in legal and regulatory processes, exclusion from decision making, and inadequate compensation routinely disrupt livelihoods in lithium rich communities.

These governance failures heighten local tensions. When communities feel sidelined or harmed, the risk of social conflict rises sharply. It can result in project delays, shutdowns and higher costs for both states and companies. These pressures are not incidental. They directly affect the stability of global supply chains.

I argue that effective risk governance must move beyond geopolitics. It must embed the fundamentals of social legitimacy. These include:

  • free, prior and informed consent

  • fair and transparent benefit-sharing

  • sustained, meaningful engagement with affected communities.

Without these basics, no amount of technological innovation or diplomatic negotiation can secure the minerals needed for the energy transition.

As global competition intensifies over access to strategic minerals, the governance of mining sites in the global south becomes important for supply chain assurance.

Why local participation matters

My argument is that local participation is one of the strongest predictors of whether mining projects gain or lose legitimacy, and therefore whether supply chains remain stable or face disruption.

When communities are involved early and meaningfully in decisions about land access, water use, environmental safeguards and compensation, they are more likely to see mining not as an imposed threat but as a negotiated partnership. This reduces uncertainty, builds trust and lowers the likelihood of conflict. Those conditions are essential for predictable mineral flows.

Research in sustainable mining consistently shows that communities are not passive recipients of mining impacts. They are active agents whose consent, cooperation or resistance can determine the lifespan of entire supply chains. Participation creates the space for communities to articulate their needs. It shapes benefit‑sharing mechanisms and ensures that mining does not undermine local livelihoods. When people have no voice in decisions that affect their land, water or social well-being, grievances accumulate and protests, legal challenges or operational blockages become far more likely.

Findings from my research further demonstrate that participation is a practical risk-management tool. It is not a symbolic gesture. In mining communities, weak engagement and unclear communication about land restrictions and compensation create perceptions of dispossession. They intensify tensions that threaten project timelines. Conversely, when engagement is consistent and meaningful, concerns are addressed early. This reduces the likelihood of costly shutdowns and strengthens the long‑term security of mineral supply chains.

Participation anchors mining projects in social legitimacy. It shifts extraction from something done to communities towards something negotiated with them. It turns potential flashpoints into points of cooperation. In a world where a single protest can disrupt global supply chains, community participation is no longer optional. It is a fundamental safeguard for the energy transition.

Way forward

Reducing the risk of supply-chain disruptions is not easy, but there is a clear path to it.

First, future global meetings like the COP climate summits and UN processes should explicitly include critical minerals, sustainable mining and community protections as formal agenda items. This will close the long-standing governance gap that leaves mineral supply chains exposed.

Second, international bodies should develop shared indicators for meaningful participation, benefit-sharing and community legitimacy. Social licence must be treated as a material risk factor that can halt mines and disrupt global markets.

Instead of resisting regulation, mineral-producing countries should help shape global environmental, social and governance expectations. They should reflect local priorities, environmental conditions and value-addition goals, while ensuring stable, responsible mineral flows.

Governments and companies should establish shared governance arrangements covering water use, land access, benefit-sharing and grievance processes. This will build trust early and prevent local conflict.

Also, mineral-rich countries should align on minimum social and environmental standards, free, prior and informed consent requirements, and value-addition policies. These will ensure diversification does not encourage weak oversight or exploitation.

– Critical mineral supply faces risks if local communities aren’t consulted enough: the case of lithium in Ghana
– https://theconversation.com/critical-mineral-supply-faces-risks-if-local-communities-arent-consulted-enough-the-case-of-lithium-in-ghana-275723

Binance et Africell se lancent dans la crypto-éducation et les services sur actifs numériques en Afrique

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

Binance (www.Binance.com), leader mondial des écosystèmes blockchain et des infrastructures de cryptomonnaie, et Africell, l’un des principaux opérateurs de réseaux mobiles africains, ont annoncé leur intention de collaborer dans les domaines de la formation à la blockchain, de la crypto-éducation et des services sur actifs numériques à travers l’Afrique.

Les principaux domaines de collaboration sont les suivants :

  • Crypto-as-a-Service (Crypto comme service) : 
  • Exploration des technologies de paiement avec cryptomonnaie, notamment Binance Link (https://apo-opa.co/4kGtEbr), afin de de permettre les paiements avec cryptomonnaie et les services numériques via les plateformes Africell.
  • Initiatives éducatives : 
  • Cours et ateliers en co-branding sur Binance Academy (https://apo-opa.co/40i3bHP) afin de renforcer les connaissances en matière de cryptomonnaie à travers l’Afrique. 
  • Offres conjointes pour les usagers :
  • Exploration d’offres promotionnelles conjointes pour les usagers, qui seront financées par le modèle de partage des revenus CPA (coût par acquisition) de Binance.
  • Améliorations p2p :
  • Intégration avec Binance P2P (https://apo-opa.co/3OOKRDG) pour améliorer la vitesse, la sécurité et la facilité des transactions en cryptomonnaie de pair à pair.

Jack Wong, responsable du développement commercial chez Binance, a déclaré : « Binance et Africell partagent la même volonté de donner aux communautés africaines les moyens de participer en toute confiance à l’économie numérique grâce à l’éducation, aux infrastructures et à des outils pratiques. En combinant notre expertise mondiale et notre présence locale, nous souhaitons soutenir l’adoption responsable de solutions en cryptomonnaie et blockchain, et ainsi créer une réelle valeur ajoutée pour les communautés. »

Du point de vue d’Africell, ce partenariat contribue à élargir son offre de services numériques. Nidal Safetli, responsable du développement commercial chez Africell, déclare : « Notre partenariat avec Binance nous permet d’apporter une expertise mondiale en matière de blockchain à notre écosystème local. Ensemble, nous souhaitons doter les communautés des connaissances, des compétences techniques et des outils nécessaires pour participer en toute confiance à l’économie financière numérique. »

De plus amples détails sur les programmes communs potentiels devraient être annoncés dans les prochains mois et pourraient éventuellement être étendus à l’ensemble du groupe Lintel.

Distribué par APO Group pour Binance.

À propos de Binance :
Binance est un écosystème blockchain mondial de premier plan qui sous-tend la plus grande bourse de cryptomonnaie au monde en termes de volume de transactions et d’utilisateurs enregistrés. Binance bénéficie de la confiance de plus de 300 millions de personnes dans plus de 100 pays pour sa sécurité, sa transparence, la rapidité de son moteur de trading, ses protections pour les investisseurs et son portefeuille inégalé de produits et d’offres d’actifs numériques, allant du trading et de la finance à l’éducation, la recherche, le bien social, les paiements, les services institutionnels et les fonctionnalités Web3. Binance se consacre à la création d’un écosystème crypto inclusif afin d’accroître la liberté monétaire et l’accès aux services financiers pour les personnes du monde entier, en utilisant la crypto comme moyen fondamental. Pour plus d’informations, rendez-vous sur : www.Binance.com

À propos d’Africell :
Le groupe Africell est une entreprise de technologie mobile qui fournit des services de voix, de messagerie, de données, d’argent mobile et d’autres services de télécommunications intégrés à près de 20 millions d’abonnés à travers l’Afrique. Il s’agit du seul opérateur de réseau mobile grand public détenu par une entreprise américaine en Afrique.

Media files

A Binance e a Africell vão explorar a educação cripto e os serviços de ativos digitais em África

Source: Africa Press Organisation – Portuguese –

A Binance (www.Binance.com), o principal fornecedor mundial de ecossistema de blockchain e infraestrutura de criptomoedas, e a Africell, uma das principais operadoras de redes móveis em África, anunciaram a sua intenção de colaborar em projetos de educação em tecnologia blockchain, literacia sobre criptomoedas e serviços de ativos digitais em toda a África. 

As principais áreas da colaboração proposta incluem:

  • Cripto-como-Serviço: 
  • Exploração de tecnologias de pagamento em criptomoedas, incluindo o Binance Link (https://apo-opa.co/4kGtEbr), para permitir pagamentos em criptomoedas e serviços digitais através das plataformas da Africell.
  • Iniciativas de Educação: 
  • Cursos e workshops em parceria com a Binance Academy (https://apo-opa.co/40i3bHP) para aumentar o conhecimento sobre criptomoedas em toda a África. 
  • Ofertas conjuntas para utilizadores:
  • Exploração de ofertas promocionais conjuntas para utilizadores, as quais serão financiadas através do modelo de partilha de receitas CPA (Custo por Aquisição) da Binance.
  • Melhorias do P2P:
  • Integração com a plataforma Binance P2P (https://apo-opa.co/3OOKRDG) para melhorar a velocidade, a segurança e a comodidade das transações ponto-a-ponto de criptomoedas.

Jack Wong, Desenvolvimento de Negócios na Binance, comentou: “A Binance e a Africell estão ambas empenhadas em capacitar as comunidades africanas com educação, infraestruturas e ferramentas práticas para que participem com confiança na economia digital. Aliando os conhecimentos especializados a nível mundial ao alcance local, pretendemos apoiar a adoção responsável de soluções blockchain e criptomoedas e criar valor real para as comunidades.”

Do ponto de vista da Africell, a parceria ajuda a expandir a sua oferta de serviços digitais. Nidal Safetli, Responsável pelo Desenvolvimento de Negócios da Africell, afirma: “A parceria com a Binance permite-nos trazer conhecimentos especializados a nível mundial em blockchain para o nosso ecossistema local.” Juntos, pretendemos dotar as comunidades dos conhecimento, competências técnicas e ferramentas necessárias para participarem com confiança na economia financeira digital.”

Mais informações pormenorizadas sobre os potenciais programas conjuntos deverão ser anunciadas nos próximos meses e poderão ser alargados a todo o grupo de empresas Lintel.

Distribuído pelo Grupo APO para Binance.

Sobre a Binance: 
A Binance é um dos principais ecossistemas de blockchain do mundo, responsável pelo maior câmbio de criptomoedas do mundo em termos de volume de transações e número de utilizadores registados. A Binance é uma plataforma que goza de confiança junto de mais de 300 milhões de pessoas em mais de 100 países, graças à sua segurança líder de mercado, transparência, velocidade do motor de negociação, proteção dos investidores e uma carteira ímpar de produtos e ofertas de ativos digitais, que abrangem desde a negociação e finanças à educação, investigação, bem social, pagamentos, serviços institucionais e funcionalidades Web3. A Binance dedica-se a criar um ecossistema cripto inclusivo para aumentar a liberdade financeira e o acesso a serviços financeiros para pessoas de todo o mundo, tendo as criptomoedas como meio fundamental. Para mais informações, visitar: www.Binance.com

Sobre a Africell: 
O Africell Group é uma empresa de tecnologia móvel que fornece serviços integrados de telecomunicações, incluindo voz, mensagens, dados, dinheiro móvel e outros, a quase 20 milhões de assinantes em toda a África. É a única operadora de rede móvel (https://apo-opa.co/4qIuZ32) tradicional de propriedade norte-americana em África.

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International Relations Committee Congratulates South Africa on its Re-Election to United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council

Source: APO – Report:

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The Portfolio Committee on International Relations and Cooperation today received a briefing from the Department of International Relations and Cooperation on its election to serve on the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) for the 2026–2028 term and the significance of work on the Council.

The Human Rights Council comprises 47 UN member states. The department reported that South Africa remains firmly committed to multilateralism and plays an active role in the UN system and its specialised agencies. The department works hard to promote the pillars of the UN Charter – peace and security, human rights, sustainable development and international law.

The committee applauded South Africa on being elected to the Council. The committee also noted that South Africa has been a founding member of the HRC in 2006 and played a key role in the transition from the former Commission on Human Rights to the Human Rights Council. South Africa has served on the Council for two consecutive terms, from 2006 to 2010 and again from 2014 to 2019. It was again elected for the 2026 to 2028 term.

Whilst acknowledging the role South Africa plays on the Council, the committee called on the department to strengthen the HRC to enable it to act against member states who do not adhere to international human rights and humanitarian law.

The committee also acknowledged the new US designate ambassador to South Africa, Ambassador Leo Brent Bozell III. The Chairperson of the International Relations and Cooperation portfolio committee, Mr Supra Mahumapelo, has advised that the committee usually meets with new ambassadors and once the designate ambassador has settled in and sends a request to meet, the committee will be available for this meeting.

As South Arica is celebrating the 30-year anniversary of its Constitution, Mr Mahumapelo further asked the department to focus on human rights in its celebration events.

– on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

Eritrea: Commendable Maternity and Infant Health Care Provision

Source: APO – Report:

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Pediatrician Dr. Bereket Gebremicael at Teseney Hospital stated that, as a result of integrated efforts to ensure maternal and infant health, the death rate related to childbirth has significantly declined.

Dr. Bereket further noted that the increased number of pregnant women seeking pre- and post-natal care, regular vaccination programs, as well as sustainable awareness-raising initiatives to enhance public understanding of health issues, are among the major factors contributing to the decline in the death rate. He also indicated that the introduction of modern medical equipment from time to time, coupled with qualified health professionals, has made a significant contribution to the commendable health care services being provided.

Dr. Bereket also called on parents to bring their children for proper medical treatment and to refrain from administering unprescribed medicines.

The beneficiaries, on their part, commended the health care services that the hospital is providing to the public in general, and to mothers and children in particular.

– on behalf of Ministry of Information, Eritrea.

Committees Urge Higher Education Institutions to Comply with Immigration Laws When Employing Foreign Nationals

Source: APO – Report:

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The Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training today warned universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges not to misuse internationalisation as a reason for ignoring South Africa’s immigration and labour laws.

The committee held a joint meeting with the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs to discuss the employment of foreign academics in universities and TVET colleges.

The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) and the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) briefed the committee on their respective roles, regulations and oversight responsibilities regarding the employment of foreign nationals. Thereafter, committee members raised serious concerns about the lack of accurate and reliable data on foreign academic staff across the post-school education sector.

Members stressed that the employment of foreign nationals must align with the Critical Skills List and address genuine skills shortages. It should not replace capable South Africans. The Minister of Higher Education and Training, Mr Buti Manamela, told the committee that without reliable data, it is difficult to determine whether institutions are complying with the law or bypassing it by employing foreign nationals in roles that are not critical or scarce.

The Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Higher Education, Mr Tebogo Letsie, said institutions must respect the country’s laws. “When South African students go to other countries, they are expected to follow the laws of those countries. We expect the same from those who come here,” he said.

“Internationalisation is important, but it must not be used as an excuse to ignore immigration laws.” The Chairperson said that if institutions need foreign academics, they must clearly demonstrate that such skills shortages exist. “We are not against foreign academics. We recognise the important contribution many make, especially in critical subjects such as mathematics.”

Members were concerned about weak coordination and oversight that allowed foreign nationals to be employed in positions that are not classified as critical skills. During oversight visits, the committee found that foreign nationals occupied senior management and administrative roles, including principals, Chief Financial Officers and other non-academic posts. The committee also raised concerns about poor vetting processes and recommended that the DHET urgently clean and verify its data, including reviewing the status of at least 67 foreign nationals employed in the TVET sector who are not linked to critical or scarce skills.

Members of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs reminded institutions that employing foreign nationals without valid work authorisation is a criminal offence. Section 38 of the Immigration Act (Act 13 of 2002) clearly prohibits employers from hiring undocumented foreign nationals. The committee also raised concerns that some institutions may be using the critical skills system without first confirming whether qualified South Africans are available. Members stressed that the system must not disadvantage South Africans.

The committees acknowledged the ongoing review of the White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Protection of Refugees. The committees resolved to interact closely once the Bill is tabled in Parliament. The meeting further resolved to meet with the Department of Employment and Labour in the coming weeks to address the issues raised by members.

Mr Letsie said the committee will continue its oversight to ensure compliance. “We have a serious problem in the sector where some universities and TVET colleges hire foreign nationals without following proper processes. This,” he said, “cannot continue at the expense of qualified South Africans. Institutions must comply with the law, improve transparency and ensure that employment practices are fair and lawful.”

– on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

Les analyses de Visa révèlent une hausse des dépenses des visiteurs dans les villes hôtes pendant la Coupe d’Afrique des Nations TotalEnergies CAN Maroc 2025

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

  • Rabat enregistre la plus forte progression, avec une hausse de 70 % des dépenses des visiteurs durant la période du tournoi.
  • Les dépenses liées au sport augmentent de 45 %, tandis que les livraisons de repas et les achats alimentaires à domicile progressent de 55 %.

Visa (www.VISA.com), leader mondial des paiements numériques, a publié aujourd’hui ses dernières analyses des dépenses de consommation relatives à la période du tournoi TotalEnergies CAF AFCON, Maroc 2025 (du 21 décembre 2025 au 18 janvier 2026), en utilisant le Retail Spend Monitor de l’équipe Visa Consulting & Analytics.

Les résultats mettent en évidence une croissance annuelle des transactions transfrontalières, soulignant l’impact des grands événements sportifs sur les flux touristiques et les comportements de consommation.

Faits marquants et tendances de dépenses des visiteurs pendant la période du tournoi

Tendances des dépenses Internationales

Les dépenses entrantes ont augmenté pendant le tournoi, avec une progression de plus de 190 % des transactions transfrontalières en provenance des pays participants (sur une base annuelle), principalement portée par les visiteurs en provenance de la Côte d’Ivoire, du Sénégal et de la République démocratique du Congo  À eux seuls, les visiteurs en provenances de ces pays ont représenté plus de 60 % de la croissance.

Tous marchés confondus, les visiteurs en provenance de France, des États-Unis et du Royaume-Uni ont représenté près de la moitié de la hausse totale.

Tendances de voyage et de séjour

Dans le prolongement de cette hausse de l’activité transfrontalière, les dépenses des visiteurs de courte durée (1 à 4 jours) issus des pays participants ont augmenté de 120 %, tandis que celles des visiteurs de longue durée (5 jours et plus) ont progressé de 210 %.

Les six villes hôtes ont enregistré une augmentation des dépenses entrantes sur l’ensemble des marchés visiteurs, avec Rabat (+70 %), Tanger (+55 %) et Casablanca (+50 %) affichant les hausses les plus significatives.

Dépenses liées au sport

Les dépenses liées au sport ont également progressé de 45 % sur la période, soutenues par une augmentation des achats de produits dérivés par les supporters et par une activité accrue dans les clubs sportifs.

Dépenses du quotidien

Les dépenses à domicile ont également augmenté, avec une hausse de 55 % des livraisons de repas et des courses alimentaires durant la période du tournoi.

Regards d’experts

Ismahill Diaby, Vice‑Président Afrique de l’Ouest et Centrale francophone et lusophone, déclare :

« Ces tendances de consommation témoignent d’une forte activité dans des catégories clés pendant le tournoi, notamment la croissance des dépenses transfrontalières, largement portée par les visiteurs de Côte d’Ivoire, du Sénégal et de la RDC. Les données révèlent également une hausse des séjours courts, des dépenses sportives et des achats du quotidien. Elles offrent un aperçu précieux de la manière dont les supporters et les visiteurs ont consommé durant l’événement. »

Nicolas Khoury, Senior Vice‑Président et Head of Visa Consulting & Analytics pour la région CEMEA, ajoute :

« Les données recueillies pendant la compétition permettent de mieux comprendre l’évolution des comportements de consommation lors des grands événements. Ces analyses aident les émetteurs et les commerçants à concevoir des solutions, des campagnes et des offres plus ciblées, en phase avec les besoins réels des clients. Chez Visa Consulting & Analytics, nous transformons ces données en stratégies concrètes pour aider nos partenaires à identifier de nouvelles opportunités et à offrir des expériences plus pertinentes. »

Les équipes qualifiées pour la TotalEnergies CAF AFCON, Maroc 2025 sont : le Maroc, le Sénégal, l’Égypte, l’Algérie, le Nigeria, la Tunisie, la Côte d’Ivoire, le Mali, la RDC, le Cameroun, l’Afrique du Sud, le Burkina Faso, le Gabon, l’Ouganda, l’Angola, la Zambie, le Bénin, la Guinée équatoriale, le Mozambique, les Comores, la Tanzanie, le Soudan, le Zimbabwe et le Botswana (1).


Distribué par APO Group pour Visa Inc..

Contact Média :
Yvan Guehi

Head of Corporate Communications, Afrique de l’Ouest et Centrale – Visa
yguehi@visa.com

À propos du Retail Spend Monitor de Visa :
Le Retail Spend Monitor de VCA est produit par Visa Consulting & Analytics  et analyse l’ensemble des activités liées au commerce de détail, aux voyages et aux expériences pendant la période de la Coupe d’Afrique des Nations (AFCON), du 21 décembre 2025 au 18 janvier 2026.

L’analyse repose sur un sous-ensemble de données VisaNet, complété par des estimations issues d’enquêtes pour les autres moyens de paiement.

À propos de Visa :
Visa (NYSE : V) est un leader mondial des paiements numériques, facilitant les transactions entre consommateurs, commerçants, institutions financières et entités gouvernementales dans plus de 200 pays et territoires. Sa mission est de connecter le monde grâce au réseau de paiements le plus innovant, pratique, fiable et sécurisé, afin de permettre aux individus, aux entreprises et aux économies de prospérer. Visa est convaincue que des économies inclusives, partout dans le monde, profitent à tous et que l’accès est un pilier fondamental de l’avenir des flux de paiement. Pour en savoir plus : Visa.com.

Les points de vue, opinions et/ou estimations exprimés dans le présent document (les « points de vue ») sont ceux de l’équipe Visa Consulting & Analytics et ne reflètent pas nécessairement ceux de la direction exécutive de Visa ni des autres employés ou entités affiliées à Visa. Ce contenu est fourni à titre informatif uniquement et ne doit pas être utilisé comme base pour des décisions opérationnelles, marketing, juridiques, techniques, fiscales, financières ou autres, ni être interprété comme reflétant des performances opérationnelles ou financières réelles ou prévisionnelles de Visa. Visa ne garantit ni l’exhaustivité ni l’exactitude des points de vue présentés et décline toute responsabilité pouvant résulter de leur utilisation. Ces points de vue reposent souvent sur les conditions actuelles du marché et sont susceptibles d’être modifiés sans préavis.

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United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) peacekeepers assess evolving security situation in Eastern Equatoria during four-day patrol

Source: APO – Report:

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In response to security concerns in Eastern Equatoria, a patrol of 60 uniformed and civilian peacekeepers made the challenging 280-kilometer-long journey by road from South Sudan’s capital, Juba, to Torit.

Their four-day mission aimed to assess the situation and engage with affected communities following clashes in Narus in mid-January, which caused casualties and displacement of civilians towards the border with Kenya.

Led by the Head of UNMISS’ Juba Field Office, Christopher Murenga, and protected by uniformed peacekeepers from Rwanda, the patrol was more important than ever given the mission had to close its large base in Eastern Equatoria in December 2025, due to the United Nations-wide financial crisis.

Given the lack of a permanent presence, the United Nations Mission in South Sudan has committed to continuing its mandated support for communities across the region through regular visits and remote engagements with key stakeholders, including state and local authorities, civil society, and community leaders.

“This patrol represents our new strategy to do our utmost to continue reaching every community and delivering our mandate, despite resource limitations,” explained Christopher Murenga.

While on the ground, the team assessed the evolving security conditions, relating to conflict driven by cattle-related disputes and intercommunal teams. They also advanced peacebuilding initiatives through dialogue with political leaders. In an important meeting with Members of Parliament, the mission outlined ongoing activities to support communities, ranging from the establishment of women’s centers through to the installation of solar power on key infrastructure.

Plans are also underway for a special dialogue to build trust and confidence between civilians and the military and support for a mobile court.

– on behalf of United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS).

Critical mineral mining faces risks if local communities aren’t consulted enough: the case of lithium in Ghana

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Clement Sefa-Nyarko, Lecturer in Security, Development and Leadership in Africa, King’s College London

Clean technologies depend on critical minerals such as lithium and cobalt. Over 65% of the world’s cobalt is mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Nearly 40% of the world’s manganese is mined in South Africa. Substantial deposits of lithium are found in Zimbabwe. Ghana is emerging as a miner of that mineral of lithium too.

What’s less well understood is how the supply chains of these minerals are assessed and managed. The dominant view is that only three players matter: the mineral-mining industry, the host state where the minerals are found, and the wider geopolitical equation.

But there’s a fourth piece of the puzzle: the role of communities.

I am an academic researching justice and equity in critical minerals governance and energy transitions. In a recent paper, I examined the role of communities and the presence or absence of a social licence to operate. In other words, community “approval” that allows a project to proceed.

I focused on Ghana’s emerging lithium sector. Communities here are already feeling livelihood and social pressures following the commercial discovery. My research shows that weak and opaque governance around critical-mineral projects create early friction between communities, companies and the state. I found that delays in legal and regulatory processes, exclusion from decision making, and inadequate compensation routinely disrupt livelihoods in lithium rich communities.

These governance failures heighten local tensions. When communities feel sidelined or harmed, the risk of social conflict rises sharply. It can result in project delays, shutdowns and higher costs for both states and companies. These pressures are not incidental. They directly affect the stability of global supply chains.

I argue that effective risk governance must move beyond geopolitics. It must embed the fundamentals of social legitimacy. These include:

  • free, prior and informed consent

  • fair and transparent benefit-sharing

  • sustained, meaningful engagement with affected communities.

Without these basics, no amount of technological innovation or diplomatic negotiation can secure the minerals needed for the energy transition.

As global competition intensifies over access to strategic minerals, the governance of mining sites in the global south becomes important for supply chain assurance.

Why local participation matters

My argument is that local participation is one of the strongest predictors of whether mining projects gain or lose legitimacy, and therefore whether supply chains remain stable or face disruption.

When communities are involved early and meaningfully in decisions about land access, water use, environmental safeguards and compensation, they are more likely to see mining not as an imposed threat but as a negotiated partnership. This reduces uncertainty, builds trust and lowers the likelihood of conflict. Those conditions are essential for predictable mineral flows.

Research in sustainable mining consistently shows that communities are not passive recipients of mining impacts. They are active agents whose consent, cooperation or resistance can determine the lifespan of entire supply chains. Participation creates the space for communities to articulate their needs. It shapes benefit‑sharing mechanisms and ensures that mining does not undermine local livelihoods. When people have no voice in decisions that affect their land, water or social well-being, grievances accumulate and protests, legal challenges or operational blockages become far more likely.

Findings from my research further demonstrate that participation is a practical risk-management tool. It is not a symbolic gesture. In mining communities, weak engagement and unclear communication about land restrictions and compensation create perceptions of dispossession. They intensify tensions that threaten project timelines. Conversely, when engagement is consistent and meaningful, concerns are addressed early. This reduces the likelihood of costly shutdowns and strengthens the long‑term security of mineral supply chains.

Participation anchors mining projects in social legitimacy. It shifts extraction from something done to communities towards something negotiated with them. It turns potential flashpoints into points of cooperation. In a world where a single protest can disrupt global supply chains, community participation is no longer optional. It is a fundamental safeguard for the energy transition.

Way forward

Reducing the risk of supply-chain disruptions is not easy, but there is a clear path to it.

First, future global meetings like the COP climate summits and UN processes should explicitly include critical minerals, sustainable mining and community protections as formal agenda items. This will close the long-standing governance gap that leaves mineral supply chains exposed.

Second, international bodies should develop shared indicators for meaningful participation, benefit-sharing and community legitimacy. Social licence must be treated as a material risk factor that can halt mines and disrupt global markets.

Instead of resisting regulation, mineral-producing countries should help shape global environmental, social and governance expectations. They should reflect local priorities, environmental conditions and value-addition goals, while ensuring stable, responsible mineral flows.

Governments and companies should establish shared governance arrangements covering water use, land access, benefit-sharing and grievance processes. This will build trust early and prevent local conflict.

Also, mineral-rich countries should align on minimum social and environmental standards, free, prior and informed consent requirements, and value-addition policies. These will ensure diversification does not encourage weak oversight or exploitation.

– Critical mineral mining faces risks if local communities aren’t consulted enough: the case of lithium in Ghana
– https://theconversation.com/critical-mineral-mining-faces-risks-if-local-communities-arent-consulted-enough-the-case-of-lithium-in-ghana-275723

Seychelles: Appointment of Advisor for Homeland Affairs

Source: APO


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The Office of the President wishes to announce the appointment of Mr. Ted Barbe as Advisor for Homeland Affairs. 

Consequent to this appointment, the Assistant Commissioner of Police, Mr. Godfrey Hermitte will assume the role of Acting Commissioner of Police with immediate effect. The necessary processes are currently underway to appoint a new Commissioner of Police in accordance with established procedures.

The Office of the President extends its sincere appreciation to Mr. Barbe for his continued dedication and service to the Police Force and for his commitment to national security and public service.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of State House Seychelles.