West Africa faces historic food crisis driven by conflict, price surge

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Reuters UK

By Nellie Peyton DAKAR (Reuters) – West Africa is facing its worst food crisis on record driven by conflict, drought, and the impact of the war in Ukraine on food prices and availability, aid agencies said on Tuesday. There are about 27 million people suffering from hunger in the region and that number could rise to 38 million by June, a 40% increase from last year and a historic high, said 11 international aid organizations in a joint statement. Large swathes of West Africa, including parts of Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Nigeria, are facing Islamist insurgencies that have forced millions of… Continue reading “West Africa faces historic food crisis driven by conflict, price surge”

Global bond sales to cross $10 trillion in 2022, S&P Global Ratings says

London, Global sovereign borrowing will reach $10.4 trillion in 2022, nearly a third above the average before the coronavirus pandemic, S&P Global Ratings said in a report.

Despite an economic recovery, borrowing will stay elevated because of high debt rollover requirements and war in Ukraine, the ratings agency said in an annual note.

While 137 countries will borrow an equivalent of $10.4 trillion in 2022, an estimated 30% lower than 2020, the overall figure is one-third higher than average borrowing between 2016 and 2019, S&P said.

“Tightening monetary conditions will push up government funding costs,” S&P analysts said.

“This will pose additional difficulties to sovereigns that have been unable to restart growth, reduce reliance on foreign currency financing, and where interest bills are already critically high on average.”

Borrowing in the economies of emerging Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) will rise $253 billion to the equivalent of $3.4 trillion by the end of the year, S&P said in an accompanying report on Thursday.

Egypt, which has recently sought IMF assistance, is set to overtake Turkey as the region’s largest issuer of sovereign debt, with $73 billion worth of bond sales, S&P analysts forecast, Reuters reports.

Among larger countries globally, Kenya, Egypt and Japan have the biggest share of debt that needs to be rolled over this year, the analysts said, pointing to short-term debt of 26% and 30% of total debt stocks in Egypt and Kenya respectively.

Commercial debt in EMEA emerging markets is set to increase to 37% of GDP from 31% in 2016, boosted by pandemic-related costs, a rise in commercial borrowing in Oman and Saudi Arabia and “persistently high fiscal deficits” in Egypt and Romania.

Across emerging markets, JPMorgan analysts said in a note on Monday, the corporate default rate could reach 8.5% this year, the highest since the global financial crisis.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Covid-19: South Africa formally ends national state of disaster

PRETORIA, In light of the shrinking COVID-19 cases, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa declared the country’s national state of disaster terminated at midnight on Monday.

“While the pandemic is not over, and while the virus remains among us, these conditions no longer require that we remain in the national state of disaster. Going forward, the pandemic will be managed in terms of the National Health Act,” he announced in a televised address on Monday.

After 750 days under the national state of disaster to combat the pandemic, Ramaphosa said the government decided to end the national state of disaster.

The declaration of the national state of disaster in March 2020 empowered the government to take the measures that prevented many more people from becoming severely ill and saved countless lives, Ramaphosa said.

The Disaster Management Act provides that certain elements of the regulations may remain in place for a limited period for “post-disaster recovery and rehabilitation,” he said.

According to the president, South Africa has entered a new phase in the COVID-19 pandemic. “Although we recorded a far higher number of infections in the fourth wave than in each of the previous waves, there were relatively fewer cases of severe illness, hospitalization, and death.”

Ramaphosa said certain transitional provisions would remain in place for 30 days following the termination of the national state of disaster to ensure necessary public health precautions and other services were not interrupted while the new regulations in terms of the National Health Act come into effect.

The transitional measures would include the wearing of masks in indoor public spaces, number limitations for indoor and outdoor venues, proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test for international travellers entering the country. And the 350 Rand Social Relief Grant introduced due to the effects of the pandemic would be continued.

South Africa has been the worst affected African country during the pandemic. Figures released by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases on Monday showed the country has recorded 3,667,560 laboratory-confirmed cases, and 100,052 deaths

Source: Nam News Network

South Africa Ends COVID-19 State of Disaster after 750 Days

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced Monday the end of the country’s state of disaster brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.

That means that many restrictions on daily life and business that have been in place for 750 days have officially been removed.

But some measures remain.

Ramaphosa introduced a 30-day transition period that would uphold an indoor mask mandate and requirements to show vaccine certificates or PCR test results to attend large public gatherings.

In addition, international travelers will have to be fully vaccinated or present a negative COVID-19 test result.

A social grant to those who lost their jobs during the pandemic will extend through the transition period, after which all measures will lapse.

The repeal of the state of disaster comes roughly five months after the last major variant, omicron, was discovered by the country’s scientists.

Ramaphosa said while case numbers are high, hospitalizations and deaths remain low. South Africa is the hardest-hit country in Africa with over 6 million COVID-19 deaths.

With less than half of the adult population vaccinated, Ramaphosa encouraged the public to get their shots.

Source: Voice of America

Iga Swiatek becomes 1st Polish tennis player ranked No. 1

Washington, Iga Swiatek moved up one spot to the top of the WTA rankings on Monday, becoming the first tennis player from Poland to be No. 1 in the sport, reports AP.

The 20-year-old Swiatek — pronounced shvee-ON-tek — takes over from Ash Barty, who announced last month she would retire at the age of 25 after more than two years at No. 1.

Swiatek won the 2020 French Open and and is currently on a 17-match winning streak that includes the title at the hard-court Miami Open, where she defeated Naomi Osaka 6-4, 6-9 in the final on Saturday.

That followed Swiatek’s triumph at Indian Wells, California, last month, making her only the fourth woman to complete what’s known as the “Sunshine Double”.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Train derails in DR Congo, kills seven

KINSHASA, At least seven people died when a goods train derailed in the South-East Democratic Republic of Congo, the second accident in the area in a fortnight.

The accident occurred in the village of Buyofwe, Lualaba province on Saturday. In mid-March, a train came off the tracks in the same village, killing at least 75 people and injuring 125, according to the official toll.

“Seven people died and 14 were seriously injured” in the latest accident, Lualaba Interior Minister, Deoda Kapenda, told newsmen on Monday.

“The toll could rise because a large number of clandestine passengers were trapped under the upturned wagons,” he said.

It was gathered that a rescue team had been dispatched to the scene.

A local official from the national railway company said that the eight-wagon train was traveling from Tenke, in Lualaba, to Kananga, in the neighboring province of Kasai-Central.

It left the rails in Buyofwe, around 200 kilometers from Kolwezi, the provincial capital of Lualaba.

Trains frequently derailed in the vast Central African country. There were not enough passenger trains and few negotiable roads, so people needing to cover long distances often traveled by freight train.

Source: Nam News Network