La Fondation Conrad N. Hilton s’engage à faire don de 1,2 million de dollars au partenariat mondial des Nations unies Assainissement et eau pour tous (SWA)

GENÈVE, 12 décembre 2022/PRNewswire/ — La Fondation Conrad N. Hilton est le dernier donateur en date du partenariat mondial des Nations unies Assainissement et eau pour tous (SWA) ; elle s’est engagée à faire don de 1,2 million de dollars pour soutenir les projets d’accès à l’eau, à l’assainissement et à l’hygiène jusqu’en 2024.

La Fondation Hilton rejoint les autres donateurs de SWA, parmi lesquels figurent des gouvernements et des fondations de premier plan comme la Fondation Bill et Melinda Gates.

« L’accès à l’eau potable et à l’assainissement est un élément essentiel à la prospérité et au développement, a déclaré Nabil Chemaly, chargé de programme principal de l’initiative Safe Water à la Fondation Hilton. Nous sommes ravis de nous associer au SWA pour aider à atteindre l’objectif fixé par notre initiative Safe Water, qui consiste à garantir l’accès à une eau fiable, abordable et gérée en toute sécurité à un million de personnes vivant dans des foyers à faibles revenus, des établissements de santé et des écoles d’Afrique subsaharienne d’ici la fin de 2025. »

Les priorités clés de la Fondation Hilton comprennent l’accélération de l’accès à des services d’eau gérés en toute sécurité, conformément à l’Objectif de développement durable 6 en Éthiopie, au Ghana et en Ouganda.

Le SWA fournira à ces pays une assistance dédiée pour renforcer les services d’eau, d’assainissement et d’hygiène malgré les impacts climatiques et pour intégrer ces efforts dans les Plans nationaux d’adaptation.

En outre, le SWA aidera à identifier les obstacles financiers et à surveiller les affectations budgétaires nationales.

« La Fondation Hilton est un grand défenseur des droits de l’homme à l’accès l’eau et à l’assainissement en Afrique et dans le monde, a déclaré Catarina de Albuquerque, PDG du SWA. Nous sommes ravis qu’ils soutiennent le partenariat et impatients de célébrer l’impact que nous aurons ensemble. »

À PROPOS DE LA FONDATION CONRAD N. HILTON

Créée en 1944, la Fondation Conrad N. Hilton fournit des fonds à des organismes sans but lucratif qui travaillent à améliorer la vie des personnes qui vivent dans la pauvreté et défavorisées du monde entier. Pour plus d’informations, rendez-vous sur  www.hiltonfoundation.org .

À PROPOS DU PARTENARIAT ASSAINISSEMENT ET EAU POUR TOUS (SWA)

Assainissement et eau pour tous (SWA) est un partenariat mis en place par les Nations unies visant à atteindre un objectif commun : l’accès à l’eau, à l’assainissement et à l’hygiène pour tous. Nos partenaires comprennent des gouvernements, des fournisseurs, des organismes de réglementation, des donateurs, des institutions financières, des agences des Nations unies, des organisations de la société civile et de la recherche, et le secteur privé. Pour plus d’informations, rendez-vous sur  www.sanitationandwaterforall.org .

Logo –  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1441352/Sanitation_and_Water_for_All_Logo.jpg

St Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister takes lessons from Dubai to position twin-island federation as a business hub

Basseterre, Dec. 12, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Prime Minister Terrance Drew of the island nation of St Kitts and Nevis was in Dubai recently for a state visit that not only aims to strengthen bilateral relations but also glean lessons from the United Arab Emirates that will pivot the island into a sought-after business and leisure hub in the Caribbean.

The new prime minister and his delegation had several meetings and engagements over the four-day trip which took place from 29 November to 3 December 2022.

The two regions have enjoyed years of fruitful relations that have resulted in several areas of cooperation in which both countries have achieved together. This includes the signing of a historic Air Services Agreement. The seminal move paved the way for air traffic between the Federation of St Kitts and Nevis and the UAE.

The UAE also expressed previous interest in assisting the twin island Federation in adapting stronger climate change resilient measures, particularly as it relates to infrastructure. As climate related weather patterns become more fierce, St Kitts and Nevis is looking to tap into Dubai’s knowledge and expertise in constructing durable and resilient structures.

Just as recently as the 1960s, Dubai’s economy was merely dependent on the revenues generated from trade and oil exploration concessions. A major chunk of revenue obtained from oil reserves started to flow in 1969 and the rapid development of Dubai began – including major infrastructure like schools and hos­pitals and, over the years, it trans­formed Dubai into the business hub we know today.

St Kitts and Nevis developed and instituted its citizenship by investment programme in 1984 as a way to increase and diversify revenue generation. For nearly 40 years the programme has been instrumental in catapulting the nation from just a small island in the Caribbean to a globally recognized investment destination.

Without this foreign direct investment into the nation, St Kitts and Nevis would have certainly progressed at a much slower pace than desired.

The government of St Kitts and Nevis has made considerable progress in reducing its public debt and is among other countries in the Caribbean that supplement their economic activity through CBI programmes which provide astute investors with the option to obtain citizenship by investing in the country. The new government administration of St Kitts and Nevis believes that residents of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have a lot to benefit from its CBI programme.

The country is looking to build its reputation on the international stage and the CBI programme is one way to direct foreign direct investment to innovative projects across the spheres of education, health, agriculture and tourism.

For example, the travel and tourism sector accounted for one tenth of the gross domestic product (GPD) in St Kitts and Nevis in 2021, dropping for the second consecutive year. Part of the funds channeled the citizenship by investment programme will be used to revitalize the sector and re-establish St Kitts and Nevis as must-visit destination.

Attracting the right kind of developers who will inject cash into developing attractive real estate projects that will charm discerning investors, is one way to grow the tourism sector. Not only that but the upgrading and development of important infrastructure such as schools, hospitals, airports and hotel chains is another way the funds will be used to not only bring up tourist numbers but investors too.

The visit was also aimed at deepening relationships with important stakeholders including international investors and government approved agents, who play a vital role in promoting and supporting the country’s recently upgraded citizenship by investment programme.

St Kitts and Nevis is the first country of the Caribbean Community to establish a formal diplomatic presence in the UAE, recently opening an embassy and consulate in the region.

The members of the delegation which included, Cabinet Secretary, Dr Natta, Attorney General, Mr. Wilkin, Minister of Tourism, Ms. Henderson, Mr. Anthony and Ms. Galloway, were positive following the visit and believe that there were many lessons learned from visit that they could take back home and implement.

The visit also signifies to the world St Kitts and Nevis is open for business. During the visit, business partners, investors and citizens were able to meet the Prime Minister and the accompanying delegation members at an exclusive cocktail event that was hosted by the High Commission of St Kitts and Nevis during the trip.

The visit provided an opportunity for St Kitts and Nevis to attract investors who seek mutually beneficial partnerships with the nation.

Saint Kitts and Nevis administers one of the most successful citizenship by investment programmes in the world. This government delegation was aimed at showing investors, entrepreneurs and families from the UAE that they are all welcome in Saint Kitts and Nevis.

The Prime Minister’s visit has come at a time when the economies of many countries are affected by the lingering impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and by the consequences of the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

Prime Minister Drew is on a drive to find and implement solutions that will prosper St Kitts and Nevis and one of those actions included upgrading the country’s CBI programme – the government is taking measures to sustain and enhance the image of the twin-island federation’s CBI programme, so it is more transparent and follows the principles of integrity and good governance.

The St Kitts and Nevis government also recently launched its “Venture Deeper” campaign. This is a branding campaign aimed at highlighting the country’s famous and marked natural environment while introducing elements of introspective self-discovery and intention.

The campaign’s visual assets, showcased at a May 20 media premiere in New York, highlighted St Kitts and Nevis’ lush natural environment, including the territory’s rainforest, abundant historic landmarks and immersive cultural experiences.

St Kitts and Nevis’ revamped citizenship by investment programme is aimed at intelligent investors looking not only to prosper themselves, but those who are sustainability minded in their investment decisions.

PR St Kitts and Nevis
Government of St. Kitts and Nevis
mildred.thabane@csglobalpartners.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8712457

Cellebrite Signs an Over $10 Million Deal with Major West European National Police Force; Marking One of the Largest Digital Intelligence Deals Ever and Further Validating Digital Intelligence as Essential Accelerator for Investigations

The police force will combine Cellebrite’s Pathfinder with existing Cellebrite collect & review solutions to maximize efficiency and resources; also set to provide advanced training

PETAH TIKVA, ISRAEL and TYSONS CORNER, Va., Dec. 12, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cellebrite DI Ltd. (Nasdaq: CLBT), a global leader in Digital Intelligence (DI) solutions for the public and private sectors, today announced that a European national police force extended its long-term partnership with Cellebrite, resulting in the future deployment of Cellebrite Pathfinder across multiple sites.

This significant agreement should enable the police force to deploy Cellebrite’s industry-leading investigative analytics solution across its entire operations, further cementing Cellebrite Pathfinder as a premier investigative analytics solution. The expansion enhances the national police force’s current suite of Cellebrite collect & review solutions, which is producing vast amounts of data. Moreover, Cellebrite’s automated and secure DI solution enables investigators to collect, review and analyze data in an integrated workflow through optimized workflow streamlining.

Due to the volume of data retrieved, Cellebrite Pathfinder is aimed at providing investigators within this organization with state-of-the-art DI capabilities to accelerate investigations by streamlining the investigative process, automating data ingestion and using advanced artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze and visualize data from mobile, cloud and computer sources.

Cellebrite Pathfinder is aimed at aiding the police force by identifying patterns, revealing connections and uncovering leads with speed and accuracy.

According to the Cellebrite 2022 Industry Trends report, 74% of respondents agree or strongly agree that there is an IT or technological skills gap in policing. As part of the mission to close the public safety gap, Cellebrite will work with the European national police force to provide professional training and support to its investigative team.

Arthur Veinstein, Cellebrite President, International Business, commented: “We are honored to have a long-term customer choosing to continue modernizing its investigative efforts through increased adoption of Cellebrite’s DI solutions. Implementing Pathfinder at the national level should enhance collaboration among the police force’s examiners and investigators, resulting in more efficient, ethical and effective investigations that lead to convictions and exonerations.”

About Cellebrite

Cellebrite’s (Nasdaq: CLBT) mission is to enable its customers to protect and save lives, accelerate justice, and preserve privacy in communities around the world. We are a global leader in Digital Intelligence solutions for the public and private sectors, empowering organizations in mastering the complexities of legally sanctioned digital investigations by streamlining intelligence processes. Trusted by thousands of leading agencies and companies worldwide, Cellebrite’s Digital Intelligence platform and solutions transform how customers collect, review, analyze and manage data in legally sanctioned investigations. To learn more visit us at www.cellebrite.com, https://investors.cellebrite.com, or follow us on Twitter at @Cellebrite.

Caution Regarding Forward Looking Statements

This document includes “forward looking statements” within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward looking statements may be identified by the use of words such as “forecast,” “intend,” “seek,” “target,” “anticipate,” “will,” “appear,” “approximate,” “foresee,” “might,” “possible,” “potential,” “believe,” “could,” “predict,” “should,” “continue,” “expect,” “estimate,” “may,” “plan,” “outlook,” “future” and “project” and other similar expressions that predict, project or indicate future events or trends or that are not statements of historical matters. Such forward looking statements include estimated financial information. Such forward looking statements with respect to revenues, earnings, performance, strategies, prospects, and other aspects of Cellebrite’s business are based on current expectations that are subject to risks and uncertainties. A number of factors could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those indicated by such forward looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to: Cellebrite’s ability to keep pace with technological advances and evolving industry standards; Cellebrite’s material dependence on the acceptance of its solutions by law enforcement and government agencies; real or perceived errors, failures, defects or bugs in Cellebrite’s DI solutions; Cellebrite’s failure to maintain the productivity of sales and marketing personnel, including relating to hiring, integrating and retaining personnel; uncertainties regarding the impact of macroeconomic and/or global conditions, including COVID-19 and military actions involving Russia and Ukraine; intense competition in all of Cellebrite’s markets; the inadvertent or deliberate misuse of Cellebrite’s solutions; political and reputational factors related to Cellebrite’s business or operations; risks relating to estimates of market opportunity and forecasts of market growth; Cellebrite’s ability to properly manage its growth; risks associated with Cellebrite’s credit facilities and liquidity; Cellebrite’s reliance on third-party suppliers for certain components, products, or services; challenges associated with large transactions and long sales cycle; risks that Cellebrite’s customers may fail to honor contractual or payment obligations; risks associated with a significant amount of Cellebrite’s business coming from government customers around the world; risks related to Cellebrite’s intellectual property; security vulnerabilities or defects, including cyber-attacks, information technology system breaches, failures or disruptions; the mishandling or perceived mishandling of sensitive or confidential information; the complex and changing regulatory environments relating to Cellebrite’s operations and solutions; the regulatory constraints to which we are subject; risks associated with different corporate governance requirements applicable to Israeli companies and risks associated with being a foreign private issuer and an emerging growth company; market volatility in the price of Cellebrite’s shares; changing tax laws and regulations; risks associated with joint, ventures, partnerships and strategic initiatives; risks associated with Cellebrite’s significant international operations; risks associated with Cellebrite’s failure to comply with anti-corruption, trade compliance, anti-money-laundering and economic sanctions laws and regulations; risks relating to the adequacy of Cellebrite’s existing systems, processes, policies, procedures, internal controls and personnel for Cellebrite’s current and future operations and reporting needs; and other factors, risks and uncertainties set forth in the section titled “Risk Factors” in Cellebrite’s annual report on Form 20-F filed with the SEC on March 29, 2022,as amended on April 14, 2022 and in other documents filed by Cellebrite with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), which are available free of charge at www.sec.gov. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made, in this communication or elsewhere. Cellebrite undertakes no obligation to update its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, should circumstances change, except as otherwise required by securities and other applicable laws.

Cellebrite Contacts

Media
Victor Cooper
Public Relations and Corporate Communications Director
Victor.cooper@cellebrite.com
+1 404.804.5910

Investors
Investor Relations
investors@cellebrite.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8712276

Oil Minister participates in 10th summit of the OACPS

Luanda, Oil and Environment Minister, Special Envoy for Climate Affairs Dr. Mohammed bin Mubarak Bin Daina, participated in the 10th summit of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Organization (OACPS).

The summit was under the slogan “Three Continents, Three Oceans, a Common Destiny: Building a Resilient and Sustainable OACPS.”

The President of the Republic of Angola Joao Lourenco, and the heads of member states, were present.

The participation of Kingdom came within the framework of Bahrain’s commitment to cooperate with the international community to achieve economic growth and support sustainable development efforts.

The minister thanked Angola for hosting the summit, pointing out that Bahrain’s participation aims to achieve cooperation with the OACPS countries in the fields of sustainable investment in a way that achieves the interests of the Kingdom and the member countries.

He affirmed that the Kingdom, succeeded in maintaining its advanced position in all sectors thanks His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, and the support of His Royal Highness Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, Crown Prince and Prime Minister.

OACPS is an organization established under the Georgetown Agreement in 1975, and it consists of 79 countries from Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific. The largest in the member states and the main component of the group’s action plan until 2030.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Morocco’s World Cup Streak Brings a Joyful Arab Embrace

It’s a rare moment in the Middle East when the public’s voice roars louder than those of the governments. But Morocco’s surprise string of wins at the World Cup in Qatar have stirred a joy and pride among Arab fans that have, at least for a moment, eclipsed the region’s many political divisions.

Perhaps most striking is the love fest between Palestinians and the Moroccan team, despite the Moroccan government’s normalization of ties with Israel as part of the 2020 Abraham Accords.

The Moroccan team waved a Palestinian flag after its victory over Spain last week, thrilling Palestinians. Throughout the tournament, the Palestinian flag has been unfurled all over, carried by Arab fans and some non-Arabs — so much so that the running joke is that Palestine is the 33rd team at the World Cup.

Palestinians see it as a sign of Arab public support still runs strong for their cause even as they feel Arab governments have abandoned them, with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan also normalizing ties with Israel.

“I didn’t expect this. It’s spreading the word and showing that Palestine is not just a political issue, it’s a human issue,” said Ahmed Sabri, a young Palestinian in Doha after watching Morocco’s win over Portugal on Saturday. He had the Palestinian flag draped over his back.

His Egyptian friend, Yasmeen Hossam, wrapped in a Moroccan flag, said, “This is the first World Cup in the Middle East and the first one FOR the Middle East.”

Morocco is the first Arab and African team to make it this far in a World Cup, playing a semifinal Wednesday against France. Part of the Arab embrace of the team has come simply from having something to celebrate in a region where many countries are mired in economic crises, armed conflicts and political repression.

For some, it’s gratifying to see their culture displayed in a positive way on a massive international stage — whether it’s the Moroccan team doing a quick Muslim prayer during huddles or Morocco winger Soufiane Boufal dancing with his mother on the pitch after the quarterfinal victory over Portugal.

“We are all clinging to this Moroccan team as some sort of source of hope and happiness in a time where I think we all could really use some good news,” said Danny Hajjar, a Lebanese American music writer.

The excitement with each victory has crossed boundaries and political divisions.

Algerians joined in, even though their government cut ties with Morocco last year. The two countries have a long-running conflict over Western Sahara, which Morocco annexed in 1975 and where Algeria long supported Sahrawis in the Polisario Front seeking independence. Algeria was angered by the U.S. recognition of Moroccan sovereignty in the territory in exchange for normalization with Israel.

At Morocco and Algeria’s often tense border, fans lined up on both sides and cheered to each other across no-man’s land, videos on social media showed. In the French city of Nice, diaspora Algerians and Tunisians joined Moroccans in cafes and in each other’s homes for the matches, setting off fireworks in celebration on the famed Mediterranean boardwalk Promenade des Anglais.

In contrast, Algerian state TV has not even reported on Morocco’s wins, leaving them out of daily World Cup reports.

For Palestinians, the games have been a breath of fresh air. The peace process with Israel has long moldered in a jar on the shelf; a far-right government in Israel is poised to take office; tensions have risen in recent months with several deadly Palestinian attacks in Israel, near daily Israeli raids in the West Bank and increasing harassment by Jewish settlers.

At the same time, many Palestinians feel they have been forgotten by Arab governments; besides the Abraham Accords, countries like Egypt and Jordan have largely gone silent on the Palestinians’ future while increasing cooperation with Israel.

World Cup host Qatar has been a vocal supporter of Palestinians and a major economic lifeline for the Gaza Strip, governed by the Hamas militant group and under Egyptian and Israeli closure for years.

Ahmed Abu Suleiman, a soccer coach from the Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, said he feels proud seeing the Palestinian flag so much among fans in Doha.

“Regimes change, but the people remain unchanged. They are thinking about the Palestinian issue, about the Palestinian wound,” he said.

Thousands of people packed a Gaza City sporting hall with a large screen donated by Qatar to watch the Morocco-Portugal match. Many held posters showing the Palestinian and Morocco flags and the slogan, “One People, One Country.”

“It’s an indescribable feeling. I swear it’s as if it’s Palestinians that were playing,” said one fan, Ibrahim al-Lilli. “All of us are Morocco.”

Scenes of jubilation also took place across the West Bank after the win. In east Jerusalem, two men stood atop the Old City’s Damascus gate holding a red Moroccan flag while hundreds below cheered and chanted, “God, Morocco, Jerusalem is Arab.”

The Moroccan victory also reverberated in Israel, home to hundreds of thousands of Jews of Moroccan descent. Many Israelis, including ones attending in Doha, were rooting for the team.

Avi Nachmani, a spokesman for the Israel-based World Federation of Moroccan Jewry, said many Israelis of Moroccan origin maintain a strong connection to their roots. “This flourishing of the team really adds to the affinity,” he said.

He said scenes of players celebrating with their mothers reminded him of the way Moroccan Jews honor their parents. “They don’t forget where they came from,” he said.

But some were dismayed by shows of the Palestinian flag. In Israel and east Jerusalem, police moved quickly to tear down any display of the flag, though it is not specifically banned.

Rudy Rochman, an Israeli of Moroccan descent, said he felt a connection to the Moroccan team. But he called the unfurling of the Palestinian flag “intentionally offensive to Israel.”

On social media, some said Arab enthusiasm for Morocco erases the large ethnic Berber population that is equally if not more a part of the country’s identity. Other voices said Morocco’s hold on Western Sahara and discrimination felt by many Sahrawis were lost in the cheers.

Lebanon may be the most complicated, as sectarian divisions seep into soccer loyalties. While Lebanese are overwhelmingly Brazil or Germany fans, many have adopted Morocco and rejoiced in the streets after the win over Portugal.

The semifinal with France is more divisive. Much of the Arab world sees a chance for a former colony to give its one-time colonizer its comeuppance. But some in Lebanon feel cultural affinity with France, particularly Christians.

After the Portugal game, scuffles broke out in Beirut after a group of Morocco fans from a Muslim-majority neighborhood rode through a Christian area on motorcycles, some hoisting Palestinian flags and chanting “God is the greatest.” They were accosted by a group of men from the area who saw the convoy as a sectarian provocation.

Given the history of divisions and the 15-year civil war, the music writer Hajjar said he wouldn’t be surprised if there was more street friction around the semifinal. But, he said, he was “hoping that we can all just enjoy the match for what it will be.”

Source: Voice of America

South Africa’s Ruling ANC in Crisis of Leadership and Support

South Africa’s ruling African National Congress is kicking off its party conference this week amid a leadership crisis and dwindling public support. The divided party will have to decide whether to keep the current president in power — a decision that could drastically change the political landscape in the country.

In the township of Soweto, where South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) penned its first draft of the country’s post-apartheid constitution, residents say they feel like they’ve been forgotten by the party.

Aged government housing has been crumbling and a fire earlier this year wiped out several homes.

Roughly 20 families have been relocated — not to brick-and-mortar homes but to corrugated iron shacks that have no water or electricity.

Martha Meyer, 62, is among the residents.

“They just dumped us here and nobody [comes] to look after us. It’s raining and the wind blows the roof, and they say we must take our own money to fix it,” she said.

The replacement of brick homes with tin shacks is emblematic of the failures of the ANC to provide basic services, residents like Meyer said.

It’s why she and many others have stopped supporting the party that won them freedom from racial segregation nearly 30 years ago.

“I won’t vote for the ANC. They do nothing for us. They just eat the money and sit in their offices. And Cyril Ramaphosa just sit and relax. The ANC is no good. They’re crooks,” said Meyer.

The declining support for the party is worrying as it holds its leadership conference this Friday.

President Cyril Ramaphosa is facing contestation for party — and country — leadership amid a scandal over his handling of large sums of foreign currency stolen from his prize game farm.

But in Soweto, community activist Chriszelda Swartz says most people don’t care whether Ramaphosa survives or is replaced.

“People still feel that it’s the same party, it’s the same people, it’s the same principle. So, it boils down to the same people working in the same offices even though the change the leadership position,” said Swartz.

University of Pretoria political scientist Roland Henwood warns the ousting of Ramaphosa would be disastrous for the party that is eyeing the 2024 general election.

“With Mr. Ramaphosa, it is possible that they can get 50% plus — without him it is unlikely. On average, Mr. Ramaphosa is 10 to 12 percentage points more likable, and he gets more support than the party itself,” he said.

Regardless of whether Ramaphosa survives, a bigger political crisis is under way due to the disengagement of voters.

Henwood says less than half of eligible voters cast a ballot in the most recent polls.

“What we see in South Africa is what we call industrial-scale corruption. This is not small thieving that is happening. This is looting the resources of the country on a grand scale. And that is why you see the disillusionment. Probably what would need to happen is a different approach from a new leader,” he said.

Within the ANC, Henwood says there is no obvious alternative to Ramaphosa on the ticket, with many other party members also tainted by corruption scandals.

How the party decides to move forward will be determined when the conference ends December 20.

Source: Voice of America

How Committed Is US to Africa? $55B Worth, White House Says

The United States will demonstrate its commitment to the African continent with $55 billion in pledges, national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Monday on the eve of a three-day summit of 50 high-level African delegations in Washington.

“The U.S. will commit $55 billion to Africa over the course of the next three years, across a wide range of sectors, to tackle the core challenges of our time,” Sullivan said. “These commitments build on the United States’ long-standing leadership and partnership in development, economic growth, health and security in Africa.”

“We will shower you with details about those deliverables” as the summit progresses, he said.

In response to a question from VOA, Sullivan stressed that this money is not conditional on African nations’ condemning Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. In March, shortly after the invasion started, 17 African nations abstained from a vote to condemn Russia at the United Nations.

“We’re not putting a gun to anyone’s head,” Sullivan responded, adding: “We will make the case with passion and persistence to every country in the world that they should speak out against these flagrant violations of the U.N. Charter. We’re not imposing conditionality from the point of view of this summit on decisions.”

But corruption watchdogs say these big-dollar commitments pale in comparison with the estimated $88 billion that leaks out of the continent annually in illicit financial flows — through real estate purchases, offshore investments or anonymous shell companies.

“If you look at recent figures, U.S. government aid to sub-Saharan Africa has fluctuated between $6.5 and $7.5 billion a year,” said Ian Gary, executive director of the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency Coalition.

“On the other hand, Africa is losing much more than that every year through illicit financial flows. So it’s important to recognize that if you want to support African development, if you want to support economic development, if you want Africa to be able to address the climate crisis and the debt crisis, we need to do our part as Americans to ensure that African governments have the resources to tackle those challenges,” Gary said.

Sullivan said that the summit, which runs through Thursday, will include a small multilateral meeting between President Joe Biden and a select group of African leaders, who have yet to be identified. The leaders would discuss, among other things, the elections happening on the continent in 2023, Sullivan said. Polls of note include presidential elections in Congo, Sudan and the world’s newest country, South Sudan.

And on Wednesday night, Sullivan added, the heads of each of the 50 delegations will be invited to dine with the Bidens at the White House.

The White House has been careful in its references to Washington’s biggest competition on the continent: Beijing. China has been a major player in lending and building infrastructure in Africa and has faced criticism for its loan practices — a charge that China’s top diplomat in Washington disputes.

“China’s investment and financing assistance to Africa is not a trap, it’s a benefit,” said Qin Gang, China’s ambassador to the U.S., during the Semafor Africa summit in Washington on Monday. “There is no such trap. It’s not a plot. It’s transparent, it’s sincere, it’s obvious.”

Regardless, said White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, the U.S. is going to keep the focus narrow as the 50 delegations meet for three full days to discuss a range of issues — including development, governance, food security and more — that could determine the future of the world’s fastest-growing continent.

“It’s not going to be about China,” she said. “It’s going to be about Africa.”

Source: Voice of America