International Monetary Fund (IMF) Staff Completes 2025 Article IV Mission with Nigeria


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The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV Consultation with Nigeria.(1)

The Nigerian authorities have implemented major reforms over the past two years which have improved macroeconomic stability and enhanced resilience. The authorities have removed costly fuel subsidies, stopped monetary financing of the fiscal deficit and improved the functioning of the foreign exchange market. Investor confidence has strengthened, helping Nigeria successfully tap the Eurobond market and leading to a resumption of portfolio inflows. At the same time, poverty and food insecurity have risen, and the government is now focused on raising growth.

Growth accelerated to 3.4 percent in 2024, driven mainly by increased hydrocarbon output and vibrant services sector. Agriculture remained subdued, owing to security challenges and sliding productivity. Real GDP is expected to expand by 3.4 percent in 2025, supported by the new domestic refinery, higher oil production and robust services. Against a complex and uncertain external environment, medium-term growth is projected to hover around 3½ percent, supported by domestic reform gains.

Gross and net international reserves increased in 2024, with a strong current account surplus and improved portfolio inflows. Reforms to the fx market and foreign exchange interventions have brought stability to the naira.

Naira stabilization and improvements in food production brought inflation to 23.7 percent year-on-year in April 2025 from 31 percent annual average in 2024 in the backcasted rebased CPI index released by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics. Inflation should decline further in the medium-term with continued tight macroeconomic policies and a projected easing of retail fuel prices.

Fiscal performance improved in 2024. Revenues benefited from naira depreciation, enhanced revenue administration and higher grants, which more-than-offset rising interest and overheads spending.

Downside risks have increased with heightened global uncertainty. A further decline in oil prices or increase in financing costs would adversely affect growth, fiscal and external positions, undermine financial stability and exacerbate exchange rate pressures. A deterioration of security could impact growth and food insecurity.

Executive Board Assessment (2)

Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal. They commended the authorities on the successful implementation of significant reforms during the past two years and welcomed the associated gains in macroeconomic stability and resilience. As these gains have yet to benefit all Nigerians, and with heightened economic uncertainty and significant downside risks, Directors emphasized the importance of agile policy making to safeguard and enhance macroeconomic stability, creating enabling conditions to boost growth, and reducing poverty.

Directors agreed that the Central Bank of Nigeria is appropriately maintaining a tight monetary policy stance, which should continue until disinflation becomes entrenched. They welcomed the discontinuation of deficit monetization and ongoing efforts to strengthen central bank governance to set the institutional foundation for inflation targeting. Directors also welcomed steps taken by the authorities to build reserves and support market confidence and praised reforms to the foreign exchange market that supported price discovery and liquidity. They called for implementation of a robust foreign exchange intervention framework focused on containing excess volatility, stressing that the exchange rate is an important shock absorber. Directors also agreed with staff’s call to phase out existing capital flow management measures in a properly timed and sequenced manner.

Directors called for a neutral fiscal stance to safeguard macroeconomic stabilization with priority given to investments that enhance growth. Directors also called for accelerating the delivery of cash transfers to assist the poor. They commended the authorities on advancing the tax reform bill, an important step towards enhancing revenue mobilization and creating fiscal space for development spending, while preserving debt sustainability.

Directors recognized actions to strengthen the banking system, including the ongoing process of increasing banks’ minimum capital. They welcomed the authorities’ efforts to boost financial inclusion and promote capital market development, while emphasizing the importance of moving to a robust risk‑based supervision for mortgage and consumer lending schemes as well as the fintech and crypto sectors. Directors welcomed progress made in strengthening the AML/CFT framework and stressed the importance of resolving remaining weaknesses to exit the FATF grey list.

To lift Nigeria’s growth outlook, improve food security, and reduce fragility, Directors highlighted the importance of tackling security, red tape, agricultural productivity, infrastructure gaps, including boosting electricity supply, as well as improved health and education spending, and making the economy more resilient to climate events. They noted that addressing structural impediments to private credit extension is also needed to support growth. Directors welcomed the IMF’s capacity development to support authorities’ reform efforts and agreed that enhancing data quality is critical for sound, data‑driven policymaking.

Table 1. Nigeria: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2023–26

2023

2024

2025

2026

5/8/2025 13:03

Act.

Est.

Proj.

Proj.

 National income and prices

Annual percentage change

(unless otherwise specified)

Real GDP (at 2010 market prices)

2.9

3.4

3.4

3.2

Oil GDP

-2.2

5.5

4.9

2.3

Non-oil GDP

3.2

3.3

3.3

3.3

Non-oil non-agriculture GDP

3.9

4.1

3.7

3.7

Production of crude oil (million barrels per day)

1.5

1.5

1.7

1.7

Nominal GDP at market prices (trillions of naira)

234

277

320

367

Nominal non-oil GDP (trillions of naira)

221

260

303

351

Nominal GDP per capita (US$)

1,597

806

836

887

GDP deflator

12.6

14.5

11.4

11.4

Consumer price index (annual average)

24.7

31.4

24.0

23.0

Consumer price index (end of period)

28.9

15.4

23.0

18.0

Investment and savings

Percent of GDP

Gross national savings

31.8

39.6

37.5

37.7

Public

-0.1

3.9

2.2

1.7

Private

31.9

35.7

35.3

36.1

Investment

30.0

30.4

30.5

33.1

Public

3.2

4.8

5.4

5.5

Private

26.8

25.6

25.1

27.6

Consolidated government operations

Percent of GDP

Total revenues and grants

9.8

14.4

14.2

13.8

Of which: oil and gas revenue

3.3

4.1

5.1

4.9

Of which: non-oil revenue

5.8

9.2

8.8

8.8

Total expenditure and net lending

13.9

17.1

18.9

18.7

Overall balance

-4.2

-2.6

-4.7

-4.9

Non-oil primary balance

-4.9

-4.9

-7.2

-6.9

Public gross debt1

48.7

52.9

52.0

50.8

Of which: FX denominated debt

18.1

25.5

25.8

24.8

FGN interest payments (percent of FGN revenue)

83.8

41.1

47.3

49.2

Money and credit

Contribution to broad money growth
(unless otherwise specified)

Broad money (percent change; end of period)

51.9

42.7

17.9

22.3

Net foreign assets

10.5

30.4

2.1

7.2

Net domestic assets

41.3

12.3

15.8

15.1

     Of which: Claims on consolidated government

20.1

-11.9

6.2

4.1

Credit to the private sector (y/y, percent)

53.6

30.1

17.9

18.2

Velocity of broad money (ratio; end of period)

2.7

3.3

2.2

2.1

External sector

Annual percentage change

(unless otherwise specified)

Current account balance (percent of GDP)

1.8

9.2

7.0

4.6

Exports of goods and services

-12.8

-4.5

-6.0

1.3

Imports of goods and services

-4.4

-0.8

-6.8

8.4

Terms of trade

-6.1

-0.6

-7.4

-3.3

Price of Nigerian oil (US$ per barrel)

82.3

79.9

67.7

63.3

External debt outstanding (US$ billions)2

102.9

102.2

105.9

110.2

Gross international reserves (US$ billions, CBN definition)3

33.2

40.2

36.4

39.1

Equivalent months of prospective imports of G&S

5.4

5.7

7.5

7.7

Memorandum items:

  Implicit fuel subsidy (percent of GDP)

0.8

2.1

0.0

0.0

Sources: Nigerian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

1 Gross debt figures for the Federal Government and the public sector include overdrafts from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

2 Includes both public and private sector.

3 Based on the IMF definition, the gross international reserves were US$8 billion lower in December 2024.


(1) Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. Staff hold separate annual discussions with the regional institutions responsible for common policies in four currency unions—the Euro Area, the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union, the Central African Economic and Monetary Union, and the West African Economic and Monetary Union. For each of the currency unions, staff teams visit the regional institutions responsible for common policies in the currency union, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the currency union’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis of discussion by the Executive Board. Both staff’s discussions with the regional institutions and the Board discussion of the annual staff report will be considered an integral part of the Article IV consultation with each member. 

(2) At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm. The Executive Board takes decisions under its lapse-of-time procedure when the Board agrees that a proposal can be considered without convening formal discussions.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of International Monetary Fund (IMF).

R410.9bn allocated to local govt and service delivery programmes

Source: South Africa News Agency

In a move aimed at enhancing service delivery, government has announced a substantial budget allocation for Cooperative Governance, amounting to R410.9 billion over the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) period. 

The Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister, Velenkosini Hlabisa, announced that a staggering 96.7% of this budget is earmarked for intergovernmental transfers and support to various entities. 

“This significant investment will enable us to implement critical initiatives that deliver tangible and measurable improvements in the lives of our people,” he said during the budget announcement on Wednesday.

He announced that the budget allocation is focused on ensuring that every South African benefits from this allocation, particularly in underserved communities.

In addition to the allocations for Cooperative Governance, Vote 15: Traditional Affairs, will see an appropriated budget of R195 530 million for the fiscal year 2025/26. 

Within this allocation, Hlabisa said 24%, which is approximately R46.927 million, is specifically designated for transfers and subsidies, including a dedicated fund for the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious, and Linguistic Communities.

The Minister recognised the vital role that traditional leadership plays in cultural preservation and community cohesion. 

He believes that the budget reflects government’s commitment to supporting this crucial sector and ensuring that their voices are part of the national discourse.

The budget presentation and engagement form part of Parliament’s oversight function, providing a platform to transparently present the department’s financial allocations and strategic direction for the 2025/26 financial year.

The budget vote presentation detailed key areas of expenditure, offering a comprehensive breakdown of how the department’s resources will be allocated to drive impactful governance.

The Minister highlighted that a key component of the government’s reform agenda is the comprehensive review of the 1998 White Paper on Local Government, initiated on 19 May 2025. 

This review is part of a strategy to modernise local governance structures and improve service delivery amid challenges like urban growth and youth unemployment. 

“Through this review, we are committed to creating a local government system that is responsive to the needs of all South Africans and that delivers quality services to our communities.”

The Minister explained that the review’s importance extends beyond governance and embodies a commitment to socio-economic development, emphasising inclusivity in community engagement.

Empowering communities

He announced that government aims to rectify historical imbalances by providing a platform for the voices of informal traders, women, youth, and rural communities. 

In response to the high demand for broader community engagement on the discussion document concerning the Review of the 1998 White Paper on Local Government (WPLG), the submission deadline for the review has been extended to 31 July 2025. 

In addition to governance reforms, government is advancing targeted interventions in distressed municipalities, focusing on infrastructure maintenance and development support. 

As part of this initiative, the Inter-Ministerial Committee (IMC) is dedicated to 10 distressed municipalities, addressing fundamental issues such as outstanding debt resolution and improving governance structures.

“We reiterate that for us to make an impact in addressing the challenges at the local government sphere, we should eradicate working in silos, as espoused by the District Development Model (DDM),” said Hlabisa.

He said the DDM remains government’s flagship intergovernmental planning, coordination, and service delivery strategy, bringing all three spheres of government around one table to address the specific challenges across the 52 districts and metros. 

In addition, he announced that the Municipal Infrastructure Grant (MIG) is set to accelerate infrastructure delivery, with an allocation of R493.8 million to support critical projects in priority municipalities.

Hlabisa stated that the reallocation of R244.7 million from the MIG to the Integrated Urban Development Grant (IUDG) will promote integrated urban planning and development in growth areas.

Meanwhile, the Municipal Systems Improvement Grant (MSIG) is increasing from R151.1 million in 2025/26 to R165.3 million in 2027/28 to strengthen municipal systems and improve intergovernmental planning and budgeting under the DDM.

The Minister said collaboration with National Treasury is underway to establish a municipal debt relief framework, aimed at assisting municipalities in managing debt and enhancing financial sustainability.

With these substantial budget allocations and a renewed focus on local governance reforms, he stressed that government is positioning itself to create a responsive and effective local government system for all South Africans.

Hlabisa said the overarching goal remains clear, which includes delivering quality services that foster community development and resilience in democracy. – SAnews.gov.za

Ghana and India: Narendra Modi’s visit rekindles historical ties

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Pius Siakwah, Senior Research Fellow, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana

Narendra Modi’s trip to Ghana in July 2025, part of a five-nation visit, is the first by an Indian prime minister in over 30 years. The two countries’ relationship goes back more than half a century to when India helped the newly independent Ghana set up its intelligence agencies. Ghana is also home to several large Indian-owned manufacturing and trading companies. International relations scholar Pius Siakwah unpacks the context of the visit.

What is the background to Ghana and India’s relationship?

It can be traced to links between Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s first president, and his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, in 1957. It is not surprising that the Indian High Commission is located near the seat of the Ghana government, Jubilee House.

Nkrumah and Nehru were co-founders of the Non-Aligned Movement, a group of states not formally aligned with major power blocs during the cold war. Its principles focused on respect for sovereignty, neutrality, non-interference, and peaceful dispute resolution. It was also a strong voice against the neo-colonial ambitions of some of the large powers.

The movement emerged in the wave of decolonisation after the second world war. It held its first conference in 1961 under the leadership of Josip Bros Tito (Yugoslavia), Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt) and Sukarno (Indonesia) as well as Nehru and Nkrumah.

The relationship between Ghana and India seemingly went into decline after the overthrow of Nkrumah in 1966, coinciding with the decline of Indian presence in global geopolitics.

In 2002, President John Kufuor re-energised India-Ghana relations. This led to the Indian government’s financial support in the construction of Ghana’s seat of government in 2008.

Though the concept of the Non-Aligned Movement has faded this century, its principles have crystallised into south-south cooperation. This is the exchange of knowledge, skills, resources and technologies among regions in the developing world.

South-south cooperation has fuelled India-Ghana relations. Modi’s diplomatic efforts since 2014 have sought to relaunch India’s presence in Africa.

In recent times, India has engaged Africa through the India–Africa Forum Summit. The first summit was held in 2008 in New Delhi with 14 countries from Africa. The largest one was held in 2015, while the fourth was postponed in 2020 due to COVID-19. The summit has led to 50,000 scholarships, a focus on renewable energy through the International Solar Alliance and an expansion of the Pan-African e-Network to bridge healthcare and educational gaps. Development projects are financed through India’s EXIM Bank.

India is now one of Ghana’s major trading partners, importing primary products like minerals, while exporting manufactured products such as pharmaceuticals, transport and agricultural machinery. The Ghana-India Trade Advisory Chamber was established in 2018 for socio-economic exchange.

Modi’s visit supports the strengthening of economic and defence ties.

The bilateral trade between India and Ghana moved from US$1 billion in 2011-12 to US$4.5 billion in 2018-19. It then dipped to US$2.2 billion in 2020-21 due to COVID. By 2023, bilateral trade amounted to around US$3.3 billion, making India the third-largest export and import partner behind China and Switzerland.

Indian companies have invested in over 700 projects in Ghana. These include B5 Plus, a leading iron and steel manufacturer, and Melcom, Ghana’s largest supermarket chain.

India is also one of the leading sources of foreign direct investment to Ghana. Indian companies had invested over US$2 billion in Ghana by 2021, according to the Ghana Investment Promotion Center.

What are the key areas of interest?

The key areas of collaboration are economic, particularly:

  • energy

  • infrastructure (for example, construction of the Tema to Mpakadan railway line)

  • defence

  • technology

  • pharmaceuticals

  • agriculture (agro-processing, mechanisation and irrigation systems)

  • industrial (light manufacturing).

What’s the bigger picture?

Modi’s visit is part of a broader visit to strengthen bilateral ties and a follow-up to the Brics Summit, July 2025 in Brazil. Thus, whereas South Africa is often seen as the gateway to Africa, Ghana is becoming the opening to west Africa.

Modi’s visit can be viewed in several ways.

First, India as a neo-colonialist. Some commentators see India’s presence as just a continuation of exploitative relations. This manifests in financial and agricultural exploitation and land grabbing.

Second, India as smart influencer. This is where the country adopts a low profile but benefits from soft power, linguistic, cultural and historical advantages, and good relationships at various societal and governmental levels.

Third, India as a perennial underdog. India has less funds, underdeveloped communications, limited diplomatic capacity, little soft power advantage, and an underwhelming media presence compared to China. China is able to project its power in Africa through project financing and loans, visible diplomatic presence with visits and media coverage in Ghana. Some of the coverage of Chinese activities in Ghana is negative – illegal mining (galamsey) is an example. India benefits from limited negative media presence but its contributions in areas of pharmaceuticals and infrastructure don’t get attention.

Modi will want his visit to build on ideas of south-south cooperation, soft power and smart operating. He’ll want to refute notions that India is a perennial underdog or a neo-colonialist in a new scramble for Africa.

In 2025, Ghana has to navigate a complex geopolitical space.

– Ghana and India: Narendra Modi’s visit rekindles historical ties
– https://theconversation.com/ghana-and-india-narendra-modis-visit-rekindles-historical-ties-260281

How far is your closest hospital or clinic? Public health researchers explain why Africa needs up-to-date health facility databases

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Peter M Macharia, Senior postdoctoral research fellow, Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

The lack of reliable information about health facilities across sub-Saharan Africa became very clear during the COVID-19 pandemic. Amid a surge in emergency care needs, information was lacking about the location of facilities, bed capacity and oxygen availability, and even where to find medical specialists. This data could have enabled precise assessments of hospital surge capacity and geographic access to critical care. Peter Macharia and Emelda Okiro, whose research focuses on public health and equity of health service access in low resource settings, share the findings of their recent study, co-authored with colleagues.

What are open health facility databases?

A health facility is a service delivery point where healthcare services are provided. The facilities can range from small clinics and doctor’s offices to large teaching and referral hospitals.

A health facility database is a list of all health facilities in a country or geographic area, such as a district. A typical database should assign each health facility a unique code, name, size, type (from primary to tertiary), ownership (public or private), operational status (working or closed), location and subnational unit (county or district). It should also record services (emergency obstetric care, for example), capacity (number of beds, for example), infrastructure (electricity availability, for example), contact information (address and email), and when this information was last updated.

The ideal method of compiling this list is to conduct a census, as Kenya did in 2023. But this takes resources. Some countries have compiled lists from existing incomplete ones. Senegal did this and so did Kenya in 2003 and 2008.

This list should be open to stakeholders, including government agencies, development partners and researchers. Health facility lists must be shared through a governance framework that balances data sharing with protections for data subjects and creators. In some countries, such as Kenya and Malawi, these listings are accessible through web portals without additional permission. In others, such facility lists do not exist or require extra permission.

Why are they useful to have?

Facility listings can serve the needs of individuals and communities. They also serve sub-national, national and continental health objectives.

At the individual level, a facility list offers a choice of alternatives to health seekers. At the community level, the data can guide decisions like where to place community health workers, as seen in Mali and Sierra Leone.

Health lists are useful when distributing commodities such as bed nets and allocating resources based on the health needs of the areas they serve. They help in planning for vaccination campaigns by creating detailed immunisation microplans.

By taking account of the disease burden, social dynamics and environmental factors, health services can be tailored to specific needs.

Detailed maps of healthcare resources enable quicker emergency responses by pinpointing facilities equipped for specific crises. Disease surveillance systems depend on continuously collecting data from healthcare facilities.

At the continental level, lists are crucial for a coordinated health system response during pandemics and outbreaks. They can facilitate cross-border planning, pandemic preparedness and collaboration.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, these lists informed where to put additional resources such as makeshift hospitals or transport programmes for adults over  60 years of age.

The lists are used to identify vulnerable populations at risk of emerging pathogens and populations that can benefit from new health facilities.

They are important when it comes to making emergency obstetric and newborn care accessible.

What goes wrong if you don’t have them?

Many problems arise if we don’t know where health facilities are or what they offer. Healthcare planning becomes inefficient. This can result in duplicate facility lists and the misallocation of resources, which leads to waste and inequities.

We can’t identify populations that lack services. Emergency responses weaken due to uncertainty about where best to move patients with specific conditions.

Resources are wasted when there are duplicate facility lists. For example, between 2010 and 2016, six government departments partnered with development organisations, resulting in ten lists of health facilities in Nigeria.

In Tanzania, over 10 different health facility lists existed in 2009. Maintained by donors and government agencies, the function-specific lists didn’t work together to share information easily and accurately. This prompted the need for a national master facility list.

What needs to happen to build one?

A comprehensive list of health facilities can be compiled through mapping exercises or from existing lists. The health ministry should take responsibility for setting up, developing and updating this list.

Partnerships are crucial for developing facility lists. Stakeholders include donors, implementing and humanitarian partners, technical advisors and research institutions. Many of these have their own project-based lists, which should integrate into a centralised facility list managed by the ministry. The health ministry must foster a transparent environment, encouraging citizens and stakeholders to contribute to enhancing health facility data.

Political and financial commitment from governments is essential. Creating and maintaining a proper list requires significant investment. Expertise and resources are necessary to keep it updated.

A commitment to open data is a necessary step. Open access to these lists makes them more complete, reliable and useful.

– How far is your closest hospital or clinic? Public health researchers explain why Africa needs up-to-date health facility databases
– https://theconversation.com/how-far-is-your-closest-hospital-or-clinic-public-health-researchers-explain-why-africa-needs-up-to-date-health-facility-databases-259190

Uganda’s ride-hailing motorbike service promised safety – but drivers are under pressure to speed

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Rich Mallett, Research Associate and Independent Researcher, ODI Global

Motorcycle-taxis are one of the fastest and most convenient ways to get around Uganda’s congested capital, Kampala. But they are also the most dangerous. Though they account for one-third of public transport trips taking place within the city, police reports suggest motorcycles were involved in 80% of all road-crash deaths registered in Kampala in 2023.

Promising to solve the safety problem while also improving the livelihoods of moto-taxi workers, digital ride-hail platforms emerged a decade ago on the city’s streets. It is no coincidence that Uganda’s ride-hailing pioneer and long-time market leader goes by the name of SafeBoda.

Conceived in 2014 as a “market-based approach to road safety”, the idea is to give riders a financial incentive to drive safely by making digital moto-taxi work pay better. SafeBoda claimed at the time that motorcyclists who signed up with it would increase their incomes by up to 50% relative to the traditional mode of operation, in which riders park at strategic locations called “stages” and wait for passengers.

In the years since, the efforts of SafeBoda and its ride-hail competitors to bring safety to the sector have largely been deemed a success. One study carried out in 2017 found that digital riders were more likely to wear a helmet and less likely to drive towards oncoming traffic. Early press coverage was particularly glowing, while recent academic studies continue to cite the Kampala case as evidence that ride-hailing platforms may hold the key to making African moto-taxi sectors a safer place to work and travel.


Read more: Ride-hailing in Lagos: algorithmic impacts and driver resistance


Is it all as clear-cut as this? In a new paper based on PhD research, I suggest not. Because at its core the ride-hail model – in which riders are classified as independent contractors who do poorly paid “gig work” rather than as wage-earning employees – undermines its own safety ambitions.

Speed traps

In my study of Kampala’s vast moto-taxi industry – estimated to employ hundreds of thousands of people – I draw on 112 in-depth interviews and a survey of 370 moto-taxi riders to examine how livelihoods and working conditions have been affected by the arrival of the platforms.

To date, there has been only limited critical engagement with how this change has played out over the past decade. I wanted to get beneath the big corporate claims and alluring platform promises to understand how riders themselves had experienced the digital “transformation” of their industry, several years after it first began.


Read more: Kenya’s ride-hailing drivers say their jobs offer dignity despite the challenges


One of the things I found was that, from a safety perspective, the ride-hail model represents a paradox. We can think of it as a kind of “speed trap”.

On one hand, ride-hail platforms try to moderate moto-taxi speeds and behaviours through managerial techniques. They make helmet use compulsory. They put riders through road safety training before letting them out onto the streets. And they enforce a professional “code of conduct” for riders.

In some cases, companies also deploy “field agents” to major road intersections around the city. Their task is to monitor the behaviour of riders in company uniform and, should they be spotted breaking the rules, discipline them.

On the other hand, however, the underlying economic structure of digital ride-hailing pulls transport workers in the opposite direction by systematically depressing trip fares and rewarding speed.

Under the “gig economy” model used by Uganda’s ride-hail platforms, the livelihood promise hangs not in the offer of a guaranteed wage but in the possibility of higher earnings. Crucially, it is a promise that only materialises if riders are able to reach and maintain a faster, harder work-rate throughout the day – completing enough jobs that pay “little money”, as one rider put it, to make the gig-work deal come good. Or, as summed up by another interviewee:

We are like stakeholders, I can say that. No basic salary, just commission. So it depends on your speed.

We already know from existing research that the gig economy places new pressures on transport workers to drive fast and take risky decisions. This is especially the case for workers on low, unsteady pay and without formal safety nets.

And yet, it is precisely these factors that routinely lead to road traffic accidents. Extensive research from across east Africa has shown that motorcycle crashes are strongly associated with financial pressure and the practices that lead directly from this, such as speeding, working long hours and performing high-risk manoeuvres. All are driven by the need to break even each day in a hyper-competitive informal labour market, with riders compelled to go fast by the raw economics of their work.

Deepening the pressure

Ride-hail platforms may not be the reason these circumstances exist in the first place. But the point is that they do not mark a departure from them.

If anything, my research suggests they may be making things worse. According to the survey data, riders working through the apps make on average 12% higher gross earnings each week relative to their analogue counterparts. This is because the online world gets them more jobs.

But to stay connected to that world they must shoulder higher operating costs, for: mobile data (to remain logged on); fuel (to perform more trips); the use of helmets and uniforms (which remain company property); and commissions extracted by the platform companies (as much as 15%-20% per trip).

As soon as these extras are factored in, the difference completely disappears. The digital rider works faster and harder – but for no extra reward.

Rethinking approaches to safety reform

Ride-hail platforms were welcomed onto the streets of Kampala as an exciting new solution to unsafe transport, boldly driven by technological innovation and “market-based” thinking.


Read more: Uganda’s speedy motorbike taxis will slow down for cash – if incentives are cleverly designed


But it is important to remember that these are private enterprises with a clear bottom line: to one day turn a profit. As recent reports and my own thesis show, efforts to reach that point often alienate and ultimately repel the workers on whom these platforms depend – and whose livelihoods and safety standards they claim to be transforming.

A recent investment evaluation by one of SafeBoda’s first funders perhaps puts it best: it is time to reframe ride-hailing as a “risky vehicle” for safety reform in African cities, rather than a clear road to success.

– Uganda’s ride-hailing motorbike service promised safety – but drivers are under pressure to speed
– https://theconversation.com/ugandas-ride-hailing-motorbike-service-promised-safety-but-drivers-are-under-pressure-to-speed-259310

The World Health Organization (WHO) actively responds to anthrax epidemic in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)


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In mid-May, 57-year-old Pierre* was admitted to a health centre in the Lubero area after suffering from severe itching on his right hand, followed by pruritus and a swelling of his forearm. He was treated and, given the unusual symptoms, samples were collected and sent for analysis at the laboratory of the Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale (INRB) in Goma. 

An alert was previously issued at the end of March 2025 following the death of dozens of buffalo and hippopotamuses in Virunga National Park in North Kivu. Samples taken on 29 March from a recently deceased hippopotamus and examined at the Goma veterinary laboratory revealed the presence of spores of the bacillus responsible for anthrax.

Anthrax is a bacterial zoonosis (disease transmissible from animals to humans) that generally affects ruminants (cows, sheep and goats). Humans can become infected through contact with a sick animal or contaminated products (such as meat, blood, wool, hides and bones). All forms of human anthrax (cutaneous, gastrointestinal and respiratory) require hospitalization and medical treatment. 

To ensure a multi-sectoral response to this concerning health situation, the national departments of health, environment, fisheries and livestock, with support from partners including the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, FAO and CDC Africa, have put the “One Health” approach into practice. The close collaboration between the human, animal and environmental health services is designed to protect lives in response to health emergencies. 

A delegation from these departments and organisations visited the Binza and Rutshuru health zones from 25 to 28 May 2025 to strengthen surveillance and the response to outbreaks of suspected cases of anthrax in the Binza and Lubero health zones. 

“One of the high-impact measures led by the national authorities with the support of partners was the development of the national multi-sector anthrax preparedness and response plan. Through this common approach to the response, we can ensure a comprehensive response, from prevention activities to the clinical management of patients. We are confident that this health threat will soon be over,” said Dr Aline Katerekwa Ntamushigo, Medical Supervisor at the National Programme for Emergencies and Humanitarian Action (NPEHA). “Our discussions with those involved on the ground are helping us to manage this risk effectively to protect people, animals and the environment.” 

Since the announcement of the epidemic, WHO has supported the response on several levels. Dr Célestin Ndaliko, epidemiologist in charge of surveillance at the WHO Office in the DRC, was a member of the response team that went to Binza. “There are major challenges in terms of disease detection. So, every anthrax investigation becomes an act of resilience, a glimmer of hope to prevent the spread of this devastating disease.” 

As of 26 May 2025, 24 suspected human anthrax cases had been reported, alongside the deaths of 9 goats, one cow, 60 hippopotamuses and 27 buffalo reported in four health zones in the eastern province of North Kivu.

“Our support has been provided at several levels, and we are particularly keen to provide appropriate care for those affected. In most cases, the disease can be cured with antibiotics, which must be prescribed by a health professional,” explained Dr Leopold Ouedraogo, Emergency Manager in the provinces of North and South Kivu.

WHO has made more than four tonnes of medicines available to 12 health facilities, a large quantity of which has been handed over to the authorities in the Binza health zone in Rutshuru territory. 

“So far, even if our Binza health zone has not yet recorded any human cases, we have what it takes to prevent and be ahead of what could happen,” said Dr Bernard Kakule, Chief Medical Officer for the Binza health zone.

WHO has played a central role in cross-border coordination between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, facilitating communication and collaboration between the two countries in response to the re-emergence of anthrax in humans and animals. Surveillance has thus been strengthened, notably by activating the “One Health” unit in Rutshuru, to ensure early detection and rapid response in high-risk health zones by integrating the human, animal and environmental dimensions of health. 

To build local capacity, the WHO has also supported the training of community relays, the development of awareness-raising materials and the conduct of public and door-to-door awareness-raising campaigns on disease prevention measures. The Organisation also donated prevention kits (chlorine, hand sanitizers), essential medicines and medical equipment for treatment, and encouraged collaboration with technical partners such as INRB to improve epidemiological surveillance. 

Despite security and logistical challenges, WHO’s support has enabled the foundations to be laid for a coordinated response, while highlighting the need for greater commitment to community awareness-raising, the safe management of carcasses and the vaccination of animals at risk.

Since the epidemic was announced, 24 people have been treated in health facilities in the Binza and Lubero health zones, including Pierre, who has been discharged from the hospital and resumed his life.

On the ground, our teams are still working hard to continue protecting people and their herds, working together in the face of a common threat. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of World Health Organization (WHO) – Democratic Republic of Congo.

Eswatini : la Banque africaine de développement accorde au gouvernement un prêt de 47,5 millions de dollars pour stimuler la croissance économique


Le Conseil d’administration du Groupe de la Banque africaine de développement (www.AfDB.org) a approuvé un prêt de 47,5 millions de dollars au royaume d’Eswatini pour soutenir les efforts du gouvernement visant à transformer l’économie, parvenir à une croissance durable, créer des emplois, améliorer la prestation de services et renforcer les moyens de subsistance de la population.

L’appui de la Banque permettra de mettre en œuvre le Programme de renforcement de la résilience économique et de la compétitivité (EERCP), une intervention stratégique qui soutient le Plan national de développement de l’Eswatini (2023-2028).

Il s’agit de la première phase d’un programme de deux ans qui permettra de renforcer les bases économiques de ce pays d’Afrique australe et à favoriser une croissance durable, la reprise économique et des moyens de subsistance durables pour la population, tout en répondant aux pressions budgétaires croissantes liées à la baisse des recettes de l’Union douanière d’Afrique australe (SACU) et aux soubresauts économiques.

« Cette opération intervient à un moment critique pour Eswatini, alors que le pays traverse une conjoncture économique difficile tout en mettant en œuvre des réformes ambitieuses », a déclaré Moono Mupotola, directrice générale adjointe pour l’Afrique australe de la Banque africaine de développement. « Notre soutien aidera Eswatini à renforcer sa résilience budgétaire tout en créant un environnement propice à une croissance tirée par le secteur privé, susceptible de générer des emplois pour les jeunes et les femmes », a-t-elle ajouté.

L’économie d’Eswatini est confrontée à d’importants obstacles : la croissance du PIB est passée de 5 % en 2023 à environ 3,6 % en 2024, principalement en raison de l’impact des sécheresses extrêmes sur la production agricole. Le déficit budgétaire s’est creusé, passant de 1,5 % en 2023 à environ 1,7 % en 2024, en raison de la sous-performance des recettes douanières et de la pression accrue sur les dépenses publiques.

Avec un taux de chômage des jeunes atteignant 48,7 % et un taux de chômage national de 35,4 %, Eswatini a un besoin urgent de réformes structurelles pour libérer le potentiel de son secteur privé et créer des opportunités pour sa population majoritairement jeune.

Le programme se concentre sur deux piliers complémentaires : l’approfondissement des réformes de la gestion budgétaire et des finances publiques, et le renforcement de la compétitivité afin de promouvoir une croissance verte, inclusive et tirée par le secteur privé.

Le programme s’appuie sur les succès de la Banque africaine de développement en Eswatini, notamment le Programme d’appui à la relance économique et à la croissance inclusive, ainsi que sur l’assistance technique continue apportée aux réformes des entreprises publiques, à la passation des marchés et à la mise en œuvre de la politique de genre.

Le Programme de renforcement de la résilience économique et de la compétitivité met l’accent sur la promotion d’une croissance inclusive et de l’égalité des genres et la durabilité environnementale.

Le programme devrait apporter des améliorations mesurables en réduisant les arriérés domestiques, en augmentant la croissance du secteur privé dans le PIB, en stimulant la part des énergies renouvelables et en améliorant les scores de l’Évaluation des politiques et des institutions des pays (https://apo-opa.co/44KEUgw) en matière de politique budgétaire et d’inclusion sociale. L’Évaluation des politiques et des institutions des pays de la Banque africaine de développement est un outil de diagnostic qui évalue, tous les deux ans, la qualité des politiques et la performance des cadres institutionnels des 54 pays africains.

Le Programme de renforcement de la résilience économique et de la compétitivité a été élaboré en étroite collaboration avec la Banque mondiale, qui fournit un financement complémentaire.

Distribué par APO Group pour African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contact média :
Emeka Anuforo
Département de la communication et des relations extérieures
media@afdb.org

République Démocratique du Congo (RDC) : dans les mines d’or à Lomera, au Sud-Kivu, une épidémie de choléra se propage


Début mai, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) a lancé une intervention d’urgence pour faire face à une épidémie de choléra à Lomera, en République Démocratique du Congo (RDC). La découverte d’or dans le village a provoqué un afflux massif de population qui combiné à un grave déficit d’infrastructures d’hygiène a largement contribué à la propagation rapide de la maladie. Plus de 8 000 personnes ont été vaccinées et plus de 600 patients pris en charge. Les équipes de MSF se sont mobilisées sans relâche pour soigner les malades et améliorer l’accès à l’eau potable.  

Jusqu’à récemment, Lomera était un petit village au bord du lac Kivu, en République Démocratique du Congo (RDC). En décembre dernier, tout a changé du jour au lendemain lorsque de l’or a été découvert dans les collines environnantes. L’insécurité économique aggravée par les affrontements entre le groupe armé M23/AFC, l’armée congolaise (FARDC) et leurs alliés de la milice Wazalendo, a fait de Lomera un point de convergence pour des milliers de personnes venues chercher du travail et espérer un gain financier. 

Le choléra est une maladie endémique dans cette région de la RDC, le lac Kivu étant contaminé par la bactérie. Toutefois, une épidémie d’une telle ampleur reste exceptionnelle. À Lomera, les 13 premiers cas ont été signalés le 20 avril. En l’espace de deux semaines, ce nombre a augmenté de plus de 700 %, atteignant 109 cas — un chiffre probablement sous-estimé. Aujourd’hui, Lomera concentre à elle seule 95 % des cas de choléra enregistrés dans la zone de santé de Katana, qui compte plus de 275 000 habitants.  

En quelques mois, la population de Lomera est passée de 1 500 à plus de 12 000 habitants. Chaque jour, de nouveaux arrivants s’entassent dans des abris déjà surpeuplés—parfois jusqu’à 20 personnes vivent dans le même espace. « Nous vivons dans des conditions très difficiles, nous faisons ce que nous pouvons pour survivre », explique Chiza Blonza, 45 ans, qui a quitté sa ferme à Walungu (à environ 90 kilomètres de Lomera) pour venir travailler dans les mines.

« Tous les facteurs propices à une flambée de cas de choléra sont réunis ici », constate Matilde Cilley, référente médicale du projet pour MSF. « On observe une surpopulation extrême, le manque alarmant d’eau potable, la défécation à ciel ouvert sur les collines, et une absence totale de gestion des déchets. »  

MSF a été la principale organisation internationale à intervenir, lançant une réponse d’urgence dès le 9 mai. En seulement quatre jours, plus de 8 000 personnes ont été vaccinées — mais, faute de doses suffisantes, une seule injection a pu être administrée, au lieu des deux recommandées. Parallèlement, plus de 600 patients, dont beaucoup dans un état critique, ont été pris en charge dans une Unité de Traitement du Choléra (UTC), une structure temporaire de 20 lits mise en place par MSF.  

« La grande majorité de nos patients travaillent dans les mines, où ils utilisent l’eau contaminée du lac pour extraire l’or de la terre, ce qui les expose directement à la bactérie », explique le Dr Théophile Amani, médecin de MSF à Lomera. « Le travail physique intense, combiné à une forte consommation d’alcool, fait que beaucoup arrivent déjà déshydratés, même avant d’être infectés. »

Les équipes de MSF ont également installé une station de traitement et de distribution d’eau au bord du lac, fournissant environ 60 000 litres d’eau potable par jour. 100 latrines ainsi que 25 points de lavage des mains supervisés par des promoteurs de la santé, ont été mis en place dans le campement. « Sans investissements conséquents dans les infrastructures d’eau, d’assainissement et d’hygiène, des flambées comme celle-ci risquent de se répéter régulièrement », alerte Muriel Boursier, cheffe de mission MSF à Bukavu. « Actuellement, le puits le plus proche se trouve à trois kilomètres. Les partenaires internationaux et les autorités locales doivent se mobiliser pour mettre en place des solutions durables. »  

Compte tenu du flux constant de personnes arrivant et repartant, de nouvelles livraisons de vaccins sont également indispensables pour protéger la population. « Le Sud-Kivu—et l’est de la RDC en général—fait face à d’énormes défis logistiques pour acheminer les fournitures médicales essentielles, y compris vaccins, médicaments et équipements, là où elles sont le plus nécessaires », explique Muriel Boursier, cheffe de mission MSF à Bukavu. « Si l’insécurité a indéniablement un impact, la fermeture des aéroports de Bukavu et Goma a eu des conséquences encore plus lourdes, entravant considérablement l’acheminement de l’aide vitale. Par ailleurs, les réductions du financement humanitaire international limitent la disponibilité des fournitures médicales et leur distribution sur l’ensemble du territoire. »  

La lutte contre les épidémies de choléra reste une priorité pour MSF en RDC. En 2024, les équipes médicales ont traité plus de 15 000 cas de choléra à travers le pays, en collaboration avec les autorités sanitaires locales et les communautés. 

Distribué par APO Group pour Médecins sans frontières (MSF).

Speech by Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Nonceba Mhlauli, during the Budget Vote Debate for Statistics South Africa (Vote 14)

Source: President of South Africa –

Honourable Chairperson of the Session;
Minister in The Presidency, Honourable Khumbudzo Ntshavheni;
Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Honourable Kenny Morolong;
Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee, Honourable Thelisa Mgweba;
Honourable Members of Parliament;
Our Statistician General, Risenga Maluleka;
Our Chairperson of the Statistics Council, Dr Nompumelelo Mbele;
Fellow South Africans!

I want to start by recalling the words of English philosopher and physician, John Locke, when he said – “Our assent ought to be regulated by the grounds of probability.”

This timeless insight by Locke reminds us that belief, judgment and ultimately policy must be guided NOT by sentiment or speculation, but by evidence. And in the context of a democratic and developmental state such as ours, that evidence is found in official statistics – carefully produced, neutrally presented, and made available to all.

It is, therefore, both an honour and a duty for me to rise today in support of the Minister in the Presidency, Honourable Ntshavheni, as she tables Budget Vote 14 for Statistics South Africa, our country’s national statistical office, simple known as Stats SA.

Stats SA carries a profound responsibility: to ensure that our country has the statistical evidence it needs to make informed, transformative decisions.

As Members of Parliament and as policymakers, we cannot legislate in the dark. We must see the full picture – clearly, accurately, and regularly. That is why Stats SA’s advocacy mantra remains as relevant as ever: “Evidence-based decision-making.”

Honourable Members,

We debate this Budget Vote under the banner of a Government of National Unity -a collective political commitment to work together, across differences, to advance the aspirations of all South Africans. For this unity to succeed, it must be grounded in a shared understanding of the facts. That shared understanding can only come from a trusted and independent source of information such as Stats SA.

The department’s 2025/26 Work Programme is bold in scope and vital to our progress. It commits to the release of more than 290 statistical reports and publications, spanning the economic, social, and environmental domains. These outputs will help us understand the country we are building – its strengths, its fault lines, and its opportunities.

Among the most significant innovations in the year ahead is the continued development of the Continuous Population Survey – an ambitious re-engineering of household data collection into a modular system, enabling more detailed, localised data that aligns with our District Development Model.

This will be underpinned by updates to Stats SA’s geographic information frame, a technical but critical building block for precision in sampling and coverage.

However, Honourable Members, innovation alone is not enough. We need the public to understand and participate in Stats SA’s work. Increasingly, fieldworkers are finding it difficult to access sampled households due to rising mistrust and lack of awareness.

That is why public engagement campaigns must be prioritised. They help foster trust and improve response rates; without which our statistics lose accuracy and legitimacy.

We began our day early this morning with a community outreach initiative not far from these Chambers – in Gugulethu and Nyanga. This was not just a symbolic gesture. It was a deliberate effort to bring Statistics South Africa closer to the people, where it belongs. We engaged with commuters, distributed information, and most importantly, listened. Because statistics are not just numbers – they are our stories, our struggles, our progress or even failures.

That outreach was part of our broader mission: to demystify the work of Stats SA, encourage public participation in surveys, and remind communities that data is only powerful when it is shared, protected, and understood.

We are also mindful of the devastating floods that have impacted parts of our country. Natural disasters do not only destroy infrastructure – but they also displace lives, break routines, and often hit the poorest hardest. In times like these, Stats SA plays a critical role.

By providing accurate data on household vulnerability, migration patterns, service delivery, and access to housing, the national statistics office helps government and relief agencies respond better and faster. Data enables targeted disaster response and long-term recovery planning. In short, stats save lives.

Let us also salute the youth – not just as future leaders, but as present-day champions of change. 
We are a young nation with a median age of 28. This youthful population presents a powerful opportunity – a potential demographic dividend – that could drive economic growth and social progress. But this dividend is not automatic.

To unlock it, we must ensure our youth are well-educated, gainfully employed, and in good health. Only then can their energy, innovation, and numbers become the engine of our nation’s future.
So, as the Minister tables Budget Vote 14 before this House, we carry the voices of people from Gugulethu and Nyanga and the rest of the country we meet earlier today. Our engagements this morning reinforces a vital truth: that national progress starts with local trust. Stats SA does not work from afar.

The work of the national statistics office reinforces a simple fact – the interconnected of data collection, community participation, and policy formulation.

Together, let us keep building South Africa on facts – not fear.

Let me be clear:

A well-funded, capacitated Stats SA is not a luxury. It is an essential endowment to our democracy and our developmental state. Reliable data is the bedrock of reducing inequality, targeting services, and measuring progress.

Inadequate funding and persistent vacancies at Stats SA risk weakening one of the very tools meant to strengthen our country.

Honourable Members,

Recent debates around unemployment statistics remind us of the need for clarity about Stats SA’s mandate. The department is guided by the Statistics Act of 1999, now strengthened through the amendments signed into law in December 2024. The new Statistics Amendment Act (No. 29 of 2024) enables improved coordination across government and enshrines the professional independence required for statistical credibility.

Let us not forget:

Stats SA does not create unemployment. It measures it.
Stats SA does not make policy. It informs it.
It is for us – the policymakers, the lawmakers, the executive – to use these insights wisely.

Chairperson,

I would like to bring to your attention the operating environment of statistics offices worldwide. 

National statistics offices – including our own Stats SA – face modern challenges that demand innovation and resilience. These include growing mistrust in institutions, misinformation spreading faster than facts, declining survey response rates, digital exclusion in poor and rural communities, and the increasing cost and complexity of collecting reliable data. 

In this environment, we must adapt by embracing digital tools, investing in data literacy among our people, strengthening partnerships with community leaders, and reaffirming the independence and credibility of our statistical systems. Only then can we ensure that evidence-based decision-making remains the cornerstone of democracy and development.

I close by acknowledging the thousands of hardworking professionals at Stats SA, from fieldworkers to statisticians, whose quiet dedication helps all of us see South Africa more clearly. May we match their commitment with the resources, legislation, and support they require to do their work effectively.

As this House considers and adopts Budget Vote 14, let it be said that we chose not to govern by instinct, nor by ideology alone – but by truth, by facts, and by evidence.

Ke a leboga. Enkosi. Thank you.

Stats SA moves into digitally powered future

Source: South Africa News Agency

Statistics South Africa has now commenced with the development of its digital business transformation strategy, which will guide the institution going forward.

Minister in the Presidency, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, outlined the institution’s plans when she tabled its Budget Vote in Parliament on Wednesday afternoon.

“This strategy aligns with South Africa’s Roadmap for Digital Transformation of government that aims to, amongst others, enhance data exchange for improved access to information for improved service delivery.

“Stats SA’s digital transformation journey commenced with the Household Survey programme, transitioning from a paper-based data collection approach to a computer assisted methodology, thereby streamlining survey operations, resulting in significant cost savings,” Ntshavheni said.

She revealed that the institution will, over the next five years, “reinvent its statistical products and processes”.

Key initiatives over the medium-term include:

  • Researching the use of artificial intelligence in producing official statistics.
  • Introducing web-based data collection methods in economic statistics programmes.
  • Applying data science and modern methods to big data and alternative data sources.
  • Exploring the use of cloud technology in Stats SA.

“The shift to digital platforms is designed to streamline survey operations, making it more efficient and user friendly,” she said.

Ntshavheni said Stats SA’s allocation is R2.7 billion for the 2025/26 financial year, rising to R2.91 billion in 2026/27 and reaching R3.04 billion in 2027/28.

“In a world defined by rapid change, complex challenges and competing narratives, official statistics provides us with one constant: the truth told in numbers.

“They serve as a mirror through which a nation sees itself not just as it is but how its evolving. From economic performance and health outcomes to education levels and environmental conditions, statistics are the evidence base upon which sound decisions are made.”

The Minister urged Parliamentarians to support the budget vote to equip Stats SA to help government navigate ever changing global dynamics.

“It is important to support this budget vote because we are navigating a path in a world that is undergoing rapid and profound changes, and this is equally true in the realm of statistics.

“Global fundamental shifts are reshaping every aspect of human life from the escalating impact of climate change to the swift advancements in artificial intelligence, the rise of digital economies, changing social dynamics and global political tensions.

“By accurately capturing and analysing these trends, we can better equip ourselves to respond to the challenges and opportunities they present – ensuring that our nation remains resilient and forward thinking in this ever-evolving landscape,” Ntshavheni emphasised.

She assured that the institution remains “unwavering in its commitment to the strategy of improving lives through data economic systems”.

“As the landscape of information technology and data analytics continues to transform, our focus is on harnessing the power of data to enhance the wellbeing of our citizens,” she said. – SAnews.gov.za