President Ramaphosa delivers assessment on African security challenges

Source: Government of South Africa

President Ramaphosa delivers assessment on African security challenges

President Cyril Ramaphosa has warned that worsening conflicts, unconstitutional changes of government and humanitarian crises threaten to reverse Africa’s democratic and developmental gains.

The President delivered remarks on the report of the African Union’s Peace and Security Council at the 39th Ordinary Session of the African Union (AU) Assembly of Heads of States and Government held in Addis Ababa on Saturday.

“South Africa appreciates the report on the state of peace and security on our continent, and remains concerned about worsening conditions of conflict, war and instability on our continent. 

“South Africa reaffirms its unwavering commitment to the vision of a peaceful, prosperous and integrated Africa as articulated in agenda 2063,” President Ramaphosa said.

The President noted that several countries have been suspended from the AU due to unconstitutional changes of government, thus reversing “democratic gains and development of our continent”.

“The slow transition to constitutional order by the suspended countries is of concern.

“There must be demonstrable and comprehensive political engagement to assist any suspended country to navigate their respective transitions successfully and speedily; and to ensure they do not slide back into conflict,” President Ramaphosa said.

His comments come amid member suspensions by the AU following coups in several countries in parts of West and Central Africa since 2020.

Spotlight on Sudan

Turning to the Horn of Africa, President Ramaphosa emphasised concern about safety in the region where conflict between a paramilitary group and the army has led to the deaths of tens of thousands and the displacement of millions.

 “The situation in Sudan remains of concern to us all.

“We reiterate our call for all warring parties to lay down their arms immediately, allow unfettered humanitarian access and, most importantly, embark on an inclusive national political dialogue as the only way towards a sustainable resolution,” he said.

On the recent political and security developments in South Sudan, the President called for a ceasefire.

“We call for a ceasefire in all affected States and urge all stakeholders to engage in an all-inclusive dialogue that will pave the way for free, inclusive and credible elections to end the long transition.

“South Africa, together with other C5 Members and members of IGAD [Intergovernmental Authority on Development], is hosting a C5 Plus Summit here in Addis Ababa to consolidate South Sudan peace.

“There is a need for pragmatism and for an honest assessment of the minimum conditions required to conduct free, inclusive and credible elections, while acknowledging that certain processes may necessarily extend beyond the lifespan of the Revitalised Agreement,” President Ramaphosa said.

The eastern DRC

President Ramaphosa raised alarm that despite “several mediation and peace processes”, the security and humanitarian situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has not improved.

“We reiterate that the unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the DRC must be upheld and respected. We condemn the continued capture of territories by the M23/AFC in the Kivu and Ituri provinces. Such unlawful actions must be corrected decisively. 

“South Africa has assumed the role of the Regional Oversight Mechanism for the DRC and the Region, and during our tenure we will work with all signatory countries to the Framework to find a durable solution to this protracted conflict,” President Ramaphosa said. 

NeoB

56 views

Liberia and Seychelles Forge Historic Diplomatic Partnership at African Union Summit

Source: APO


.

The Government of the Republic of Liberia and the Government of the Republic of Seychelles have officially established diplomatic relations, marking a significant step toward strengthening bilateral ties and advancing cooperation across multiple sectors.  

The signing ceremony took place on the margins of the 39th Session of the African Union Assembly, in a spirit of optimism and solidarity.  

Her Excellency Sara Beysolow Nyanti, Minister of Foreign Affairs, expressed deep gratitude to the Government of Seychelles for its support of Liberia’s election to the United Nations Security Council and for its collaboration in other multilateral forums. She emphasized that the establishment of ties reflects Liberia’s renewed commitment to expanding its global partnerships and amplifying African voices on the international stage.  

His Excellency Mr. Barry Faure, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Diaspora of the Republic of Seychelles, described the occasion as “historic,” noting that it coincides with Seychelles’ 50th year of independence. He highlighted the symbolic importance of forging relations with Liberia during such a milestone year, underscoring his country’s dedication to partnerships that promote peace, cooperation, and sustainable development.  

Both Ministers reaffirmed their determination to deepen collaboration in areas of mutual interest. Trade and investment were identified as central pillars of the new relationship, alongside tourism, education, training, and regular political consultations. Seychelles, renowned globally as a premier tourism destination, expressed readiness to share expertise with Liberia as it seeks to diversify its economy and strengthen its tourism sector.  

The establishment of diplomatic ties with Seychelles represents a notable achievement under President Joseph Nyuma Boakai’s foreign policy agenda, which prioritizes forging new partnerships while consolidating existing ones. It also reflects Liberia’s broader vision of engaging with small island developing states and other nations that share common priorities in climate resilience, sustainable development, and global peace.  

This agreement signals the beginning of a new era of friendship and cooperation between Liberia and Seychelles, built on shared values, mutual respect, and a commitment to advancing prosperity for their peoples.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Liberia.

SONA 2026 in Numbers

Source: Government of South Africa

SONA 2026 in Numbers

At the State of the Nation Address (SONA) delivered on 12 February 2026 at Cape Town City Hall, President Cyril Ramaphosa set out an ambitious programme for economic growth, job creation, infrastructure investment and reform.

Infrastructure push:

  • R1 trillion committed to public infrastructure over the next three years — the largest allocation of its kind in South Africa’s history.
  • R156 billion dedicated specifically to water and sanitation infrastructure over three years.
  • R54 billion incentive introduced to help metros reform water, sanitation and electricity services.
  • First national infrastructure bond launched.

Economic recovery by the numbers:

  • 4 consecutive quarters of GDP growth.
  • 2 consecutive primary budget surpluses.
  • Inflation at its lowest level in 20 years.
  • South Africa removed from the Financial Action Task Force grey list.
  • Rand strengthened against the dollar.

Government has now set a target of raising R2 trillion in new investment over five years, building on the R1.5 trillion pledged at previous Investment Conferences — of which R600 billion has already flowed into projects.

Energy reform and renewables:

  • By 2030, more than 40% of electricity supply is expected to come from renewable sources.
  • First round of independent transmission projects to begin this year.
  • Eskom restructuring underway, including a fully independent transmission entity.

Water crisis response:

  • 56 municipalities criminally charged for failing to meet water obligations.
  • Government to lay charges against municipal managers personally.
  • National Water Crisis Committee established, chaired by the President.
  • Major projects advancing include the Lesotho Highlands Water Project and the Ntabelanga Dam.

Crime and law enforcement:

  • 5 500 new police officers to be recruited this year.
  • Builds on 20 000 officers announced in previous SONA addresses.
  • 10 000 additional labour inspectors to be hired to strengthen immigration and labour enforcement.
  • Lifestyle audits reached 93% compliance among senior public servants last year.

Jobs and small business support:

  • 2.5 million opportunities created through the Presidential Employment Stimulus.
  • If every SME hired one additional worker, 3 million jobs could be created.
  • R2.5 billion in funding this year for 180 000 small and medium enterprises.
  • Additional R1 billion in guarantees to support small businesses.
  • Youth Employment Service has placed over 200 000 young people in work experience opportunities.

Agriculture and mining:

  • R7.8 billion provided to black farmers through blended finance.
  • 10 000 new extension officers to support farmers.
  • 14 million cattle to be vaccinated against foot-and-mouth disease.
  • 28 million vaccine doses required over 12 months.
  • South Africa’s ore reserves valued at R40 trillion.
  • R300 million announced for the Frontier Rare Earths Project.

Education and skills:

  • The 88% matric pass rate for the Class of 2025 was the highest in history.
  • Employment equity target for persons with disabilities increased to 7% by 2030.
  • Skills development levy return to employers restored to 40%.

Health and social support:

  • Social Relief of Distress (SRD) Grant to continue and be redesigned.
  • Massive rollout of Lenacapavir, a 6-monthly HIV prevention injection.
  • Campaign to eliminate child stunting by 2030.

Housing and restitution:

  • R500 million allocated to Phase 4 of District Six restitution housing.
  • Shift toward subsidy models supporting ownership and rental in well-located areas.

Tourism and trade:

  • 10.5 million international tourist arrivals last year — a record high.
  • Every 13 international tourists support one job.
  • 55 data centres already built, with R50 billion in expected digital infrastructure investment over three years.

Africa and global positioning:

  • African Continental Free Trade Area market: 1.4 billion people.
  • Working-age population projected to double in 25 years.
  • International Just Energy Transition pledges now stand at R250 billion.

The President framed the address against key anniversaries:

  • 70 years since the 1956 Women’s March.
  • 100 000 petitions delivered by 20 000 women, Members of Parliament stood in silence for 30 minutes.
  • 50 years since the 1976 youth uprising.
  • 30 years since adoption of the Constitution in 1996.

SONA 2026 sets out a high-stakes agenda built around big numbers: R1 trillion in infrastructure, R2 trillion in new investment targets, millions of jobs, and large-scale reforms to energy, water, policing and local government. – SAnews.gov.za

Janine

63 views

Seychelles: Minister Barry Faure pays courtesy call on Chairperson of the African Union Commission

Source: APO


.

Mr. Barry Faure, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Diaspora of the Republic of Seychelles, paid a courtesy call on H.E. Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, Chairperson of the African Union Commission, on February 11th at the African Union Headquarters.

The Chairperson of the African Union Commission (AUC) welcomed the Minister and congratulated him on his appointment following the United Seychelles’ success in the recent polls. He reaffirmed the Commission’s commitment to working closely with Seychelles to promote Africa’s shared values, unity, and the comprehensive development agenda of the continent. He recognised Seychelles as a beacon of good governance in the region.

The discussions focused on matters of mutual interest, including regional peace and security, sustainable development, climate change, ocean governance and the blue economy. They also discussed institutional reforms in the AUC.

The meeting concluded with both sides expressing a shared desire to further strengthen the collaboration between Seychelles and the African Union Commission.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Diaspora, Republic of Seychelles.

Digital monitoring is growing in South Africa’s public service – regulation needs to catch up

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Lesedi Senamele Matlala, Senior Lecturer and Researcher in Public Policy, Monitoring and Evaluations, University of Johannesburg

Government departments across South Africa are increasingly relying on digital tools to evaluate public programmes and monitor performance. This is part of broader public-sector reforms. Their aims are to improve accountability, respond to audit pressure and manage large-scale programmes with limited staff and budgets.

Here’s an example. National departments tracking housing delivery, social grants or infrastructure rollout rely on digital performance systems rather than periodic paper-based reports. Dashboards – a way of showing visual data in one place – provide near real-time updates on service delivery.

Another is the use platforms that collect mobile data. These allow frontline officials and contractors to upload information directly from the field.

Both examples lend themselves to the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to process large datasets and generate insights that would previously have taken months to analyse.

This shift is often portrayed as a step forward for accountability and efficiency in the public sector.

I am a public policy scholar with a special interest in monitoring and evaluation of government programmes. My recent research shows a worrying trend, that the turn to technology is unfolding much quicker than the ethical and governance frameworks meant to regulate it.

Across the cases I’ve examined, digital tools were already embedded in routine monitoring and evaluation processes. But there weren’t clear standards guiding their use.

This presents risks around surveillance, exclusion, data misuse and poor professional judgement. These risks are not abstract. They shape how citizens experience the state, how their data is handled and whose voices ultimately count in policy decisions.

When technology outruns policy

Public-sector evaluation involves assessing government programmes and policies. It determines whether:

  • public resources are used effectively

  • programmes achieve their intended outcomes

  • citizens can hold the state accountable for performance.

Traditionally, these evaluations relied on face-to-face engagement between communities, evaluators, government and others. They included qualitative methods that allowed for nuance, explanation and trust-building.

Digital tools have changed this.

In my research, I interviewed evaluators across government, NGOs, academia, professional associations and private consultancies. I found a consistent concern across the board. Digital systems are often introduced without ethical guidance tailored to evaluation practice.

Ethical guidance would provide clear, practical rules for how digital tools are used in evaluations. For example, when using dashboards or automated data analytics, guidance should require evaluators to explain how data are generated, who has access to them and how findings may affect communities being evaluated. It should also prevent the use of digital systems to monitor individuals without consent or to rank programmes in ways that ignore context.

South Africa’s Protection of Personal Information Act provides a general legal framework for data protection. But it doesn’t address the specific ethical dilemmas that arise when evaluation becomes automated, cloud-based and algorithmically mediated.

The result is that evaluators are often left navigating complex ethical terrain without clear standards. This forces institutions to rely on precedent, informal habits, past practices and software defaults.

Surveillance creep and data misuse

Digital platforms make it possible to collect large volumes of data. Once data is uploaded to cloud-based systems or third-party platforms, control over its storage, reuse and sharing frequently shifts from the evaluators to others.

Several evaluators described situations where data they’d collected on behalf of government departments was later reused by the departments or other state agencies. This was done without participants’ explicit awareness. Consent processes in digital environments are often reduced to a single click.

Examples of other uses included other forms of analysis, reporting or institutional monitoring.

One of the ethical risks that came out of the research was the use of this data for surveillance. This is the use of data to monitor individuals, communities or frontline workers.

Digital exclusion and invisible voices

Digital evaluation tools are often presented as expanding reach and participation. But in practice, they can exclude already marginalised groups. Communities with limited internet access, low digital literacy, language barriers or unreliable infrastructure are less likely to participate fully in digital evaluations.

Automated tools have limitations. For example, they may struggle to process multilingual data, local accents or culturally specific forms of expression. This leads to partial or distorted representations of lived experience. Evaluators in my study saw this happening in practice.

This exclusion has serious consequences especially in a country with inequality like South Africa. Evaluations that rely heavily on digital tools might find urban, connected populations and make rural or informal communities statistically invisible.

This is not merely a technical limitation. It shapes which needs are recognised and whose experiences inform policy decisions. If evaluation data underrepresents the most vulnerable, public programmes may appear more effective than they are. This masks structural failures rather than addressing them.

In my study, some evaluations reported positive performance trends despite evaluators noting gaps in data collection.

Algorithms are not neutral

Evaluators also raised concerns about the growing authority granted to algorithmic outputs. Dashboards, automated reports and AI-driven analytics are often treated as the true picture. This happens even when they conflict with field-based knowledge or contextual understanding.

For example, dashboards may show a target as on track. But in an example of a site visit, evaluators my find flaws or dissatisfaction.

Several participants reported pressure from funders or institutions to rely on the analysis of the numbers.

Yet algorithms reflect the assumptions, datasets and priorities embedded in their design. When applied uncritically, they can reproduce bias, oversimplify social dynamics and disregard qualitative insight.

If digital systems dictate how data must be collected, analysed and reported, evaluators risk becoming technicians and not independent professionals exercising judgement.

Why Africa needs context-sensitive ethics

Across Africa, national strategies and policies on digital technologies often borrow heavily from international frameworks. These are developed in very different contexts. Global principles on AI ethics and data governance provide useful reference points. But they don’t adequately address the realities of inequality, historical mistrust and uneven digital access across much of Africa’s public sector.

My research argues that ethical governance for digital evaluation must be context-sensitive. Standards must address:

  • how consent is obtained

  • who owns evaluation data

  • how algorithmic tools are selected and audited

  • how evaluator independence is protected.

Ethical frameworks must be embedded at the design stage of digital systems.

– Digital monitoring is growing in South Africa’s public service – regulation needs to catch up
– https://theconversation.com/digital-monitoring-is-growing-in-south-africas-public-service-regulation-needs-to-catch-up-273288

Africa’s trade blocs were designed to unite the continent: four reasons they haven’t delivered

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, Professor of Practice, International Human Rights Law, Tufts University

In a rapidly fracturing world, regional integration could be a source of resilience for the African continent.

The African Union agreed in 2019 to establish the African Continental Free Trade Area founded on the building blocks laid by eight regional economic communities. These are the Arab Maghreb Union, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa), the Community of Sahel-Saharan States (Cen-Sad), the East African Community (EAC), the Economic Community of Central African States (Eccas), the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) and the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

But integration has made slow progress.

The World Bank issued a report 45 years ago which said a larger regional market would increase production and reduce “long-term obstacles to development”. Those obstacles included infrastructure deficits, payment and settlement systems, and political risk.

They persist to this day. Based on my research over more than three decades of work on regionalism in Africa, I suggest there are four main reasons why.

  • Integration experiments suffer from colonial dependency.

  • Integration has failed to address the informal nature of enterprise in Africa.

  • African countries do integration as an add-on to pre-existing colonial arrangements, instead of re-imagining them.

  • Regional integration in Africa has been burdened by mission creep, which makes its goals unclear.

I argue that institutions created by Africa’s leaders for this purpose must facilitate the continent as a space in which every African can thrive and diminish the tendency for national politics to trump shared progress.

The burden of colonial dependency

At the conclusion of the Berlin West Africa Conference in February 1885, European powers and the United States of America appointed themselves “to regulate the conditions most favourable to the development of trade and civilization … in Africa.”

In 1973, a pioneering study of Foreign Investments in the East African Common Market concluded that most of Africa’s post-colonial regional integration arrangements were “based on pre-independence links and institutions.”

For instance, the East African Common Market was successor to Britain’s colonial East African Federation and precursor of today’s East African Community. The Community’s recent effort to expand beyond this original geography has come at the price of cohesion, which endangers it.

Ecowas was the first to transcend patterns of colonial dependency. Uniquely, it included countries that won their independence from France, Portugal and the United Kingdom. Fifty years after Ecowas was founded, recent developments suggest the experience continues to be uneasy.

One reason for this is because the post-colonial association or partnership agreements between the European Union and African, Caribbean and Pacific countries is designed to farm and extract goods that are sent to be processed in Europe. From there, African countries import the processed goods at higher prices. This makes it impossible for Africa to grow industries that can employ its own people to process what it produces.

Informal nature of business activity

Around Africa, colonial rule thrived by routing or taking over indigenous enterprise. Those who survived it did so by going underground or operating informally. Since independence, most governments in the continent have failed to redress this historical pattern criminalising African enterprise.

As recently as 2023, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa estimated informal cross-border trade in Africa at “between 30% and 72% of formal trade between neighbouring countries.” This excludes a huge proportion of African enterprise from the benefits of regional integration.

Integration as an add on, instead of a shared future

African countries continue to enter into regional integration not to re-imagine but as add-ons to pre-existing colonial arrangements. Recent estimates put the number of these arrangements at over 156. For a continent of 55 countries, this means confounding overlaps of both membership and mission.

In response, many have advocated rationalisation of Africa’s regional integration arrangements.

The AU’s decision to recognise eight regional economic communities was supposed to respond to this. But it has not eliminated the overlaps. For instance, Tanzania and the DRC respectively belong to the EAC and SADC. Eritrea and Sudan were simultaneously in the IGAD, Comesa, and Cen-Sad. French-speaking west African countries belong to both Ecowas and the Economic and Monetary Union of West Africa, better known as l’UEMOA.

What needs to happen next

Popular resentment against continuing colonial projects in parts of Africa may be high but it requires political imagination to transform that into constructive energy.

Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger exited Ecowas following rupture in relations with the colonial power, France. However, they still belong to l’UEMOA, whose currency system is backed by France.

It will take more than formal rules of market access or tax harmonisation to shrink informal trade. Women, for example, do over 70% of informal cross-border trade in Africa. An effective solution to this problem will require better frontier regimes and eliminate policies that discourage women from lawful enterprise.

Addressing mission creep

Rationalisation of Africa’s integration arrangements may already be quietly underway. Much of the focus is on membership overlaps. Since 2000, for instance, Ecowas has lost 25% of its membership, reducing it from 16 to 12 member states. Rwanda has withdrawn from Eccas and Eritrea from IGAD.

But the problem may be lack of clarity in the mission of Africa’s integration arrangements. In addition to economic issues, Africa’s regional integration regimes have also assumed burdens of collective security and governance oversight. The outcomes have been both unconvincing and destabilising. The exit in 2025 of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger from Ecowas is a recent example.

Without a clear political commitment to a shared future, Africa’s governments have been unable to manage the contradictions between economic integration, collective security and governance in one mission. The time has come for them to decide what they must prioritise so that regional integration in Africa will finally get the opportunity to prove and improve the continent’s prospects.

– Africa’s trade blocs were designed to unite the continent: four reasons they haven’t delivered
– https://theconversation.com/africas-trade-blocs-were-designed-to-unite-the-continent-four-reasons-they-havent-delivered-274471

President Cyril Ramaphosa delivers remarks on the Report of the Peace and Security Council (PSC) of the African Union on its activities and the state of peace and security in Africa

Source: President of South Africa –

Your Excellencies, Heads of State and Government
Your Excellency, Mr Évariste Ndayishimiye, President of the Republic of Burundi and Chair of the African Union
Your Excellency Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, Chairperson of the African Union Commission,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

South Africa appreciates the report on the state of peace and security on our continent, and remains concerned about worsening conditions of conflict, war and instability on our continent. 

South Africa reaffirms its unwavering commitment to the vision of a peaceful, prosperous and integrated Africa as articulated in agenda 2063. 

As we meet here, a number of African countries are currently under suspension from our Union due to Unconstitutional Changes of Government (UCGs), thus reverses democratic gains and development of our continent. 

The slow transition to constitutional order by the suspended countries is of concern. There must be demonstrable and comprehensive political engagement to assist any suspended country to navigate their respective transitions successfully and speedily; and to ensure they do not slide back into conflict.

The situation in Sudan remains of concern to us all. We reiterate our call for all 
warring parties to lay down their arms immediately, allow unfettered humanitarian access and, most importantly, embark on an inclusive national political dialogue as the only way towards a sustainable resolution. 

With respect to the recent political and security developments in South Sudan, the situation is concerning. We call for a ceasefire in all affected states and urge all stakeholders to engage in an all-inclusive dialogue that will pave the way for free, inclusive and credible elections to end the long transition.

South Africa, together with other C5 Members and members of IGAD is hosting a C5 Plus Summit here in Addis Ababa to consolidate South Sudan peace. 

There is a need for pragmatism and for an honest assessment of the minimum conditions required to conduct free, inclusive and credible elections, while acknowledging that certain processes may necessarily extend beyond the lifespan of the Revitalised Agreement for the 

South Africa is concerned about the prevailing security and humanitarian situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, despite several mediation and peace processes.

We reiterate that the unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the DRC must be upheld and respected. We condemn the continued capture of territories by the M23/AFC in the Kivu and Ituri provinces. Such unlawful actions must be corrected decisively. 

South Africa has assumed the role of the Regional Oversight Mechanism for the DRC and the Region, and during our tenure we will work with all signatory countries to the Framework to find a durable solution to this protracted conflict.

I thank you.

Transport aérien au Bénin : Amazone Airlines obtient son permis d’exploitation

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French


Le vendredi 13 février 2026, les locaux de l’Agence Nationale de l’Aviation Civile (ANAC) ont abrité une cérémonie marquante pour le secteur aérien national : la remise officielle du Permis d’exploitation à la compagnie Amazone Airlines.

La cérémonie s’est déroulée en présence de plusieurs personnalités du secteur aéronautique, notamment le Directeur Général d’Amazone Airlines, Monsieur Lambert LOKO, le Chef projet Certification, Monsieur Elisée DANSOU, ainsi que le Directeur Général de l’ANAC, Monsieur Karl LEGBA.

A cette occasion, Monsieur Lambert LOKO, Directeur Général d’Amazone Airlines, a salué l’aboutissement d’un processus exigeant, fruit de plusieurs mois de travail rigoureux et de collaboration étroite avec les autorités de régulation. Il a exprimé sa reconnaissance à l’ANAC pour son accompagnement technique et administratif, tout en réaffirmant l’engagement de la compagnie à respecter scrupuleusement les normes nationales et internationales en matière de sécurité, de sûreté et de qualité de service.

De son côté, Monsieur Elisée DANSOU, Chef projet Certification, a rappelé les différentes étapes franchies par la compagnie pour obtenir le précieux sésame. Il a souligné la conformité des procédures opérationnelles, la qualification du personnel navigant et technique, ainsi que la mise en place d’un système de gestion de la sécurité répondant aux standards en vigueur.

Pour sa part, Monsieur Karl LEGBA, Directeur Général de l’ANAC, a insisté sur l’importance du respect des exigences réglementaires dans le développement d’un transport aérien sûr et fiable. Il a indiqué que la délivrance du permis d’exploitation atteste de la capacité d’Amazone Airlines à opérer dans le strict respect des normes établies.

La remise officielle du Permis d’exploitation marque une étape décisive pour Amazone Airlines, qui s’apprête désormais à lancer ses opérations commerciales. Elle traduit également la volonté des autorités de renforcer le paysage aérien national, en favorisant l’émergence de compagnies structurées et conformes aux standards internationaux.

Avec cette certification, une nouvelle page s’ouvre pour le transport aérien national, porteuse d’espoir en matière de connectivité, de compétitivité et de développement économique.

Distribué par APO Group pour Gouvernement de la République du Bénin.

Uganda: President Museveni Urges National Resistance Movement (NRM) Chairpersons to Promote Wealth Creation, Accountability and Service Delivery

Source: APO


.

President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni yesterday evening met with the National Resistance Movement (NRM) Chairpersons for districts, cities, municipalities, and divisions at State House Entebbe.

During the meeting, President Museveni, who is also the National Chairman of the NRM, congratulated the leaders upon their victory in the recently concluded elections.

The President also noted that he detected greater national cohesion in the recent elections compared to previous cycles, likening it to the unity witnessed during the 1996 elections, where, he noted, the population strongly rallied behind the NRM due to its problem-solving approach.

He explained that this cohesion was built on what he described as “okukyenura” — leadership that responds to people’s needs — citing the restoration of security through a disciplined army and the stabilization of essential commodities such as sugar in the early years of NRM governance.

The President said that after 1996, new challenges such as household poverty became more visible, prompting the introduction of revolving funds at sub-county level in 1997 to support wealth creation. He noted that subsequent interventions, such as NAADS were rolled out to distribute seedlings and boost agricultural productivity, though a significant percentage of the population remained outside the money economy.

This, he said, led to the introduction of the Parish Development Model (PDM), designed to send funds directly to beneficiaries and empower parish committees to determine allocation transparently. He observed that PDM is performing well in some districts and more funding will be added to enhance its impact, thus urging party leaders to closely monitor its implementation.

On education, President Museveni said the NRM foresaw a looming crisis and introduced free education to expand access, but expressed concern over what he termed as sabotage by some teachers, as well as insufficient oversight by leaders.

He also raised concerns about corruption, particularly within some District Service Commissions accused of selling jobs, cases of land grabbing, and theft of medicines from government health facilities. He urged NRM leaders to intensify supervision and ensure accountability.

The President further criticized poor road maintenance and substandard works, attributing part of the problem to weak budgeting priorities, including the creation of new districts and municipalities at the expense of services that directly benefit the masses.

On job creation, President Museveni emphasized agriculture as the primary source of employment, with manufacturing and services generating higher-value jobs. He pledged that in the coming term, he will produce more literature focused on addressing the needs of the masses and consolidating socio-economic transformation.

He stressed that beyond programs such as PDM and Emyooga, there is a need to strengthen the private sector through affordable financing, particularly via the Uganda Development Bank (UDB), to enable enterprises to expand.

President Museveni added that once production challenges are resolved, attention must shift to markets, noting that local consumers are the first buyers.

Increasing household incomes, he said, will stimulate demand for products such as milk, cement and steel, eventually necessitating expansion into regional markets.

The NRM Deputy Secretary General, Hon. Rose Namayanja, congratulated President Museveni on what she described as a landslide presidential victory, saying it reflects the NRM’s commitment to visionary leadership and service delivery.

The NRM Chairperson for Gulu District, Mr. Christopher Ochen, thanked the President for empowering party structures to effectively campaign during the elections, which he said contributed significantly to the overwhelming support.

He requested that district chairpersons be incorporated into District Executive Committees to enhance their capacity to supervise government programs.

Mr. JB Wamala Ssalongo, NRM Chairperson for Mukono Municipality, appealed for municipality and city chairpersons to be represented on the National Executive Committee, similar to their district counterparts, to ensure inclusive participation in party decision-making.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of State House Uganda.

Ambassador Yin Chengwu Meets with Minister of Local Government of Liberia, Hon. Francis Sakila Nyumalin

Source: APO


.

On February 13, Yin Chengwu, Chinese Ambassador to Liberia, met with Hon. Francis Sakila Nyumalin, Minister of Local Government of Liberia.

Yin briefed Hon. Nyumalin on the outcomes of the Fourth Plenary Session of the 20th CPC Central Committee and expressed his willingness to work together to earnestly implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state and to promote the continuous development of China-Liberia strategic partnership, creating new opportunities for local cooperation between the two countries.

Hon. Nyumalin expressed his gratitude and briefed Amb. Yin on the recent works of the Ministry of Local Government. He also expressed his willingness to explore new cooperation projects with China and actively promote the development of friendly relations between the two countries.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the Republic of Liberia.