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Africa Now – Weekly Newsletter (Week 16, 2022)

Welcome to Africa Now, your weekly newsletter for Africa, presenting the most important developments in the continent – news that matters.

COMMENTARY

Africa’s dilemma in the Russia-Ukraine crisis

On March 2, the UNGA in New York voted on a resolution calling for the withdrawal of the Russian military from Ukraine; 141 countries out of 193 voted in favour of the resolution criticising Russia during the summit. Click here to read…

NEWS

UK to give illegal migrants a one-way ticket to Rwanda

British Home Secretary Priti Patel in the Central African nation to sign the controversial deal condemned by critics as shameful. Click here to read…

New Members of Somalia’s Parliament Sworn In

More than 80% of Somalia’s new parliament members were sworn in Thursday, following repeated poll delays and an ongoing feud between the president and the prime minister. Click here to read…

Ivory Coast prime minister and government resign

President Alassane Ouattara accepts resignation and says he plans to slim down the size of the cabinet, with appointments to be made next week. Click here to read…

DRC: M23 rebels ready to retreat from captured villages

The March 23 Movement (M23) rebellion announced on Sunday its withdrawal from the villages that came under its control at the end of the week in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Click here to read…

Germany tells Mali to halt work with Russian mercenaries

Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock also made continued German support contingent upon holding fresh elections during a trip to the crisis-ridden state. The military junta has postponed elections for at least five years. Click here to read…

Departure of second US envoy for Horn of Africa exposes Ethiopia and Sudan policy rifts

Disagreements within the State Department are understood to have hindered David Satterfield, making him the second ambassador to leave the position. Click here to read…

Algeria accuses Morocco of killing three in Western Sahara

Algeria accused its neighbour Morocco of killing three people in an attack on the edge of the contested territory of Western Sahara on April 12. Click here to read…

Gambia: National Assembly to Swear in Newly Elected Members Today

The National Assembly of the Gambia will today 14th April 2022, swear in the newly elected members, marking the beginning of the Sixth Legislature. Click here to read…

Zimbabwe: Mnangagwa is losing key allies who sanitised the military coup

After coming to power through a military coup that ousted long-time ruler Robert Mugabe in November 2017, President Emmerson Mnangagwa attracted businesspeople both at home and abroad with his mantra: Zimbabwe is ‘open for business’. Click here to read…

Uganda to be blacklisted over money laundering – Reports

Uganda’s financial industry risks being blacklisted by international systems for failure to put in place measures that can effectively prevent financial crimes like money laundering. Click here to read…

South Sudan President Kiir integrates rival’s officers into army

A unified army is a central pillar of the long-running peace process in the world’s youngest nation. Click here to read…

US approves arms sale to Nigeria despite human rights concerns

The United States has approved a nearly $1bn weapons sale to Nigeria after legislators had put a hold on the deal over concerns about possible human rights abuses by the Nigerian government. Click here to read…

Egypt steps up support to Sudan ahead of Nile dam third filling

Egypt sent aid and logistical and humanitarian support to Sudan as the two countries stress the need to continue consultations and mutual coordination on Ethiopia’s controversial Nile dam. Click here to read…

395 dead, dozens missing after ‘apocalyptic’ floods batter South Africa

“Sadly, the number of fatalities continues to increase with the latest figure standing at 395,” regional head of the disaster managing ministry Sipho Hlomuka said in a statement. Click here to read…

Democratic Republic of Congo invites Big Oil to world’s second-largest rainforest

The DRC government gave the green signal to auction 16 oil blocks in Cuvette Centrale, a sensitive ecosystem in the Congo rainforest, last week. Click here to read…

Draghi Bets on Africa for Italy’s Exit from Russian Gas

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi is chasing a raft of natural gas deals in Africa as he seeks to cut energy ties with Russia. Click here to read…

Italy and Spain Hold Talks to Head Off Tension Over Algerian Gas

Diplomats from Italy and Spain are holding talks after Rome’s move to secure large volumes of Algerian gas stoked concerns in Madrid that its own access to the key fuel could be affected, according to people familiar with the situation. Click here to read…

Italy to Buy More Algerian Gas in Bid to Cut Russia Reliance

Italy will boost natural gas imports from Algeria as the European country seeks to reduce its dependence on Russian energy following the invasion of UkraineClick here to read…

Morocco considers onshore, offshore options for LNG import facility

Morocco is studying options at several ports to build a floating or land-based facility to import liquefied natural gas (LNG), Energy Minister Leila Benali said on Friday. Click here to read…

75 Years of Operations: A Brief History of Sudan Airways

Sudan Airways is one of the oldest African airlines in operation, but there’s a reason you don’t see it too often. Click here to read…

Tunisia offers to sell its shares in Nouvlair airline firm

Tunisia on Friday offered for sale its shares in the Nouvlair airline company confiscated from a son-in-law of late President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali who was toppled in the 2011 uprising, Karama Holding Company said. Click here to read…

Africa’s Narco-State: An Attempted Coup and Drug Trafficking in Guinea-Bissau

On February 1, 2022, men armed with machine guns and assault rifles attacked the presidential palace in Bissau, Guinea-Bissau. Click here to read…

Coup: Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea given timelines to return to democratic rule

An extraordinary meeting of the ECOWAS Commission has ended in Accra with heads of states giving extended timelines to the coup countries of Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea to initiate processes towards the return to democratic and constitutional rule. Click here to read…

Russians unlikely to leave Libya, despite Ukraine war

Despite rumours that Russia’s Wagner will fight in Ukraine, analysts expect the paramilitary group to stay in Libya. Click here to read…

Brutal murder highlights rise of South Africa’s xenophobic vigilantes

Organised groups fill gap with violence as authority of ruling African National Congress wanes. Click here to read…

Prayers but no peace talks: Chad rivals bide time in Qatar

In the month since Chadian rebels and envoys of the military government started peace talks in Qatar, the two sides have prayed together most days but refused to face each other across the negotiating table. Click here to read…

Guinea junta turns up the heat on bauxite miners

The military junta that took control of Guinea in September is heaping pressure on multinational miners to refine raw bauxite, a raw material used to make aluminium, to more advanced materials before export. Click here to read…

Angola sets its sights on the global coffee market

Angolan coffee is a brew long coveted by aficionados around the world. In the 1970s, around a quarter of a million tonnes of this original Angolan black gold was produced a year. Click here to read…

Botswana detects new coronavirus variant

A new variant of Covid-19 discovered in Botswana is believed to be a mutation of the Omicron variant first detected in southern Africa late last year. Click here to read…

Kenya Airways Gets a Government Bailout To Allow Reorganization

Kenya Airways will receive another round of help from the government as it battles extreme financial struggles to stay afloat. The state treasury will loosen its purse strings once again just weeks after approving more than $170 million for the airline. Click here to read…

Africa’s dilemma in the Russia-Ukraine crisis

On February 24, as Russia began its air and missile assaults in Ukraine’s Donbas area, it escalated into a full-fledged war. Most western countries condemned the attack, and economic measures were imposed. Click here to read…

Ethiopia: Seizing the fragile opening for peace

While the situation remains fragile, the conditions for peace seem to have ripened in Ethiopia. Click here to read…

Africa investors reveal agribusiness opportunities in Zambia, Ghana and beyond

The local production of processed food items that are currently imported presents attractive opportunities in Zambia, according to Tue Nyboe Andersen, managing director of Lusaka-based Kukula Capital. Click here to read…

Cameroon Cholera vaccination campaign ends

A Cameroon five-day campaign to complete cholera vaccination for over 800,000 Cameroonians concludes today. Click here to read…

Turkey says normalising relations with Egypt ‘vital’

“Relations with Egypt must be improved. The two countries’ ties are significant for many regions. Reciprocal reappointment of ambassadors is possible,” Click here to read…

Draghi Heads to Algeria as Italy Seeks to Cut Russia Gas Imports

Mario Draghi will visit Algeria on Monday as part of a plan to wean Italy off Russian natural gas. Click here to read…

Zambia Starts Mass Export of Avocados to Europe

Zambia has started the mass export of avocados to Europe with the first consignment of over 37 tons, a senior government official said Friday. Click here to read…

Togo: Government allocates new monthly allowance for preschool and primary school directors

In Togo, the State will now allocate a new monthly allowance of 12,000 CFA francs to directors of preschools and public elementary schools. Click here to read…

Niger welcomes German Foreign minsiter

After visiting Mali, Germany’s top diplomat ANNELINA BERBOCK was in Niger as part of her tour to strengthen her country’s relations with leaders in the Sahel region. Click here to read…

Gota’s gotta go, Lankans say, Destination Uganda?

Visitors to one of the many homes of the embattled President of Sri Lanka, Gotabaya Rajapaksa — now facing a wave of street protests over a crippling economic meltdown — almost always stop to admire an unusual ‘aquarium’ in the living room. Click here to read…

Tanzania’s First Female President Wants to Bring Her Nation in From the Cold

Samia Suluhu Hassan became the only female head of government in Africa when her predecessor suddenly died. She is setting a new course. Click here to read…

South African army extends mission against Mozambique rebels

The deployment of South Africa’s military in northern Mozambique has been extended while its role has shifted from aggressively fighting Islamic extremist rebels to a peacekeeping effort. Click here to read…

INDIA IN AFRICA

Biden nominates Indian-American diplomat Rachna Sachdeva as his envoy for Mali

US President Joe Biden has nominated Indian-American diplomat Rachna Sachdeva Korhonen as his envoy to Mali, the White House has said, the third such nomination of an Indian-American in over a month. Click here to read…

India-Kenya conducts round 2 of foreign office consultations, reviews bilateral ties

In a key development, India and Kenya held the second round of Foreign Office Consultations (FoC) and reviewed the bilateral relations in areas including politics and finance. Click here to read…

Egypt turns to India for wheat

Egypt has agreed to buy wheat from India following disruption in supplies because of the Ukraine war. The African nation is looking to import 1 million tonnes (mt) from India, with an order for 240,000 tonnes in April. Click here to read…

Ghana India Trade Advisory Chamber to support Youth in Agriculture

Mr Dominic Oduro-Antwi, the President of the Ghana India Trade Advisory Chamber, said the Chamber is ready to support and provide direction for the public, especially the youth, willing to venture into agriculture. Click here to read…

India’s Haryana state explores textile trade opportunities in Ethiopia

Indian state of Haryana will soon begin consultations with textile industry to explore the feasibility of trade and investment with Ethiopia. Click here to read…

Egypt has approved India as a wheat supplier: Goyal

Egypt, one of the top importers of wheat from Russia and Ukraine, has approved India as a wheat supplier, commerce minister Piyush Goyal said on Friday. Click here to read…

India Teams with African Island Nation Madagascar to Fight Climate Change

Madagascar, the fourth-largest island in the world, is one its lowest emitters of carbon dioxide. Nevertheless, it is experiencing the cataclysmic effects of climate change first hand. Click here to read…

Indian Navy evacuates sick Seychelles Coast Guard official

The Indian Navy evacuated a crew member of a Seychelles Coast Guard ship after she reported a health problem when the vessel was on a voyage from Kochi to Victoria on Thursday, April 14. Click here to read…

Six Nigerian Army officers to get advanced flying training in India

This marks the continuation of a contract signed in April 2021 for imparting Phase-I flying training to six Nigerian Army aviation officers, which was successfully executed in December 2021. Click here to read…

EU defends IP waiver compromise amid pressure on India, South Africa to reject it

A broad international platform of activists, unions and experts has urged India and South Africa to reject the leaked compromise on intellectual property rights on COVID-19 vaccines, which the European Commission considers the ‘most promising path’ to resolve the issue. Click here to read…

Industry Experts discuss the growth and future of Fintech in Nigeria and India in symposium by CLI College, Nigeria and Christ University, India

There are over 200 FinTech companies in Nigeria offering financial solutions and inclusion for Nigerians and indeed Africans. Click here to read…

‘Indianish but not Indian’ describes Mauritius best

From garam masala made with Madagascar spices to fritters stuffed with prawns and béchamel sauce, local meals in Mauritius are familiar yet so exotic. Click here to read…

India’s tech geeks face bleak future in Tanzania

For 34-year-old Maisam Raj, the biggest challenge of his job as a creative head at Jema Printers in Tanzania’s bustling city of Dar es Salaam is not the complex logos and designs he has to create to impress corporate customers, but the number of hours he must toil every day to get things done. Click here to read…

To counter China, India-US strengthen Western Indian Ocean partnership

This week, the foreign and defence ministers from India and the United States (US) met for a 2+2 meeting in Washington DC. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: April 13, 2022

Afghanistan
Concerns Raised Over Drone Activity in Afghan Airspace: Tolo News

Residents in various provinces of Afghanistan, especially Kabul, Khost and Kandahar, have recently expressed concern over the increase in drone patrols in the country’s airspace. Click here to read…

Kabul Sees Hike in Coal Exports Amid Rise in Fuel Prices in Int’l Markets: The Khaama Press

While majority of the European countries continue to struggle with a rise on fuel prices since beginning of the war in Ukraine, Kabul witnesses a “significant” hike on its coal exports to the nearby country. Click here to read…

India, US ask Taliban to ensure Afghanistan does not become breeding ground for terrorism: The Print

India and the US on Monday (local time) called on the Taliban to abide by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution to ensure that the Afghan territory does not become a breeding ground for terrorists to launch attacks against any country. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
Difficult to adjust ties with Russia- The Daily Star

Bangladesh continues to maintain very close relations with Russia and it is “very difficult” for the country to try to “adjust” the relationship, even if anyone would like it to amid the current situation in Ukraine. Click here to read…

An effort to ensure efficiency- The Daily Star

Bangladesh Road Transport Corporation (BRTC) is bringing more of its vehicles under vehicle tracking system (VTS) to ensure transparency and efficiency in fleet management. Click here to read…

Soybean oil solely off foreign seeds- The Daily Star

Many of you, who know about the cultivation of soybean in Bangladesh, might think that the production of the oilseed contributes to meeting the country’s demand for edible oil to some extent. Click here to read…

Take steps against illegal lenders: HC- The Daily Star

The High Court yesterday ordered for setting up complaint boxes at all districts and upazilas to receive information and allegations from people about the functions of unauthorised financial and microcredit institutions and individual money lenders. Click here to read…

UN chief calls PM to join Crisis Response Group on Food, Energy, Finance- The Daily Star

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina received a telephone call from Antonio Guterres, secretary-general of the United Nations, this evening. They held a 12-minute conversation where the UN chief invited her to join the Champions’ Group of Global Crisis Response on Food, Energy, and Finance (GCRG), according to a press release issued by the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). Click here to read…

BGB hands over body of Indian national to BSF- The Daily Star

Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) handed over the bullet-hit body of an Indian national recovered at the Lalmonirhat border to the Indian Border Security Force (BSF) this afternoon. Click here to read…

Bhutan
India, Bhutan Discuss Waterways Cooperation for Development- NDTV

India and Bhutan discussed ways to harness the potential of waterways for the progress of both nations. Click here to read…

Japan to support Bhutan tackle Covid-19 and economy recovery- Kuensel

The government of Japan will diversify its area of support to help Bhutan recover from the economic damage caused by the pandemic. Click here to read…

India, Nepal agrees to Bhutan-like power trade model- Economic Times

India’s role in Nepal’s development projects got a fillip on Saturday with the launch of a cross-border railway link and power transmission line, besides inauguration of the ‘Joint Vision Statement on Power Sector Cooperation’ that has the potential to create a second Bhutan model in cross-border power trade. Click here to read…

Trade deficit to widen to 12.5 percent of GDP this FY- Kuensel

Increased imports against a marginal increase in exports could see the trade deficit widen to 12.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) this fiscal year (FY) 2021-22, according to the Royal Monetary Authority’s annual report, 2021. Click here to read…

ECB calls elections for 24 LG vacant posts- Kuensel

The Election Commission of Bhutan (ECB) has call for the local government (LG) elections for the remaining 24 vacant demkhongs in next month. Click here to read…

On RCSC’s media gag order- Bhutan Times

Tightening the noose on civil servants’ take on media and freedom of speech, the Ministry of Agriculture this week issued an ultimatum ordering RNR officials under the ministry to strictly abide by the civil service values and code of conduct before sharing any materials and views with the media. Click here to read…

Maldives
Work on food factory in Kulhudhuffushi to commence this year: SUN MV

state Trading Organization (STO) will begin work this year, on the food factory to be developed in Kulhudhuffushi City, which will be packing flour and rice. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Public to boycott Thingyan despite Myanmar junta’s best efforts – Mizzima

The New Year festivities run from 13 to 15 or 16 April depending on the year and everyone has the time off work. Traditionally people sprinkled each other with water over the New Year period but, over the years this has evolved into good-natured, unruly water fights with people attempting to soak each other along roads throughout the country. Click here to read…

21 illegal Myanmar migrants caught in Songkhla – Bangkok Post

Immigration police arrested 21 Myanmar nationals in Rattaphum district of this southern province on Tuesday, Pol Maj Gen Prapansak Prasansuk said. Click here to read…

UWSA-RCSS CONFLICT: Pure proxy war or autocracy versus democracy conflict?’ – BNI Online

On April 5 clashes broke out between the United Wa State Army (UWSA) and Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) near Thai-Shan border between Mong Hsat and Mong Ton, west of Tachilek in Mong Hta area, eastern Shan State at around 11 am, killing one UWSA member and five RCSS members. Click here to read…

India, BIMSTEC to enter agreement for free maritime movement of goods – Economic Times

The BIMSTEC regional grouping comprises Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. “This (agreement) will cover all kinds of ports and cargo related to BIMSTEC countries and it will provide benefits like concessional port dues…at par with domestic vessels for cargo operating between these countries,” said Kumar. Click here to read…

Nepal
Bangladesh Embassy releases video to commemorate 50 years of Nepal-Bangladesh friendship- The Himalayan

The Embassy of Bangladesh in Kathmandu has released a video to celebrate 50 years of diplomatic relations between Nepal and Bangladesh. Click here to read…

‘Utility corridor needed for coordinated development’- The Himalayan

Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba has underscored the need of formulating a bill on urban development along with utility corridor to carry out development and construction works in a coordinated manner. Click here to read…

Central bank paints grim picture of Nepal’s economy- Kathmandu Post

Inflation is rising, BoP is ballooning, remittances are falling and imports surging, Nepal Rastra Bank reports. Click here to read…

After FinMin’s plan to gobble up Rs 400 million failed, NRB Governor was suspended: Chairperson Oli- Republica

CPN-UML Chairperson KP Sharma Oli has said that the government’s move to suspend the governor of Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) is an irresponsible one. Click here to read…

President Bhandari approves army mobilization in May 13 election- Republica

President Bidya Devi Bhandari has granted approval to mobilize the Nepali Army in the May 13 local election. Click here to read…

Minister Ale directs CAAN officials to make airports efficient, safer- Republica

Minister for Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation Prem Bahadur Ale has directed the officials of the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN) including its newly-appointed board members to further develop Nepal’s airports and keep them in good condition. Click here to read…

Local level election will be held on stipulated date: Chief Election Commissioner- Republica

Chief Election Commissioner Dinesh Kumar Thapaliya said that the May 13 local election would be held on the stipulated date. Click here to read…

EXCLUSIVE U.S. to announce $750 million more in weapons for Ukraine, officials say- Republica

U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration is expected to announce as soon as Wednesday another $750 million in military assistance for Ukraine for its fight against Russian forces, two U.S. officials familiar with the matter told Reuters. Click here to read…

Pakistan
New PM sends positive signals to China, US: Dawn

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday reiterated the need for cooperation with the United States and India, while assuring Beijing of further deepening of relations. Click here to read…

Army top brass livid at smear campaign: The Express Tribune

The country’s top military brass has taken notice of the recent propaganda campaign by some quarters to malign Pakistan Army and create a division between the institution and society. Click here to read…

Miftah Ismail warns budget deficit to surge to Rs6.4tr: The News

Highlighting widening twin deficits i.e. budget deficit and current account deficit, the former finance minister Miftah Ismail on Tuesday said that Pakistan required external financing of $9 billion for averting a balance of payment crisis in the current fiscal year. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka stops debt payments as the economic crisis deepens: The NewYork Times

Sri Lanka suspended payments on its international debt Tuesday, effectively putting the small island nation in default as it plunges deeper into an economic crisis. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka defaults on entire external debt of $51bn: Times of India

Ahead of an International Monetary Fund bailout, Sri Lanka defaulted on its foreign debt on Tuesday as protests over the economic crisis threatened to spread to the hinterland. Click here to read…

Govt Defaults on External Debt of $51 Billion; Health System Crumbles, Protests Intensify in Colombo: News 18

Sri Lanka’s central bank said on Tuesday it had become “challenging and impossible” to repay external debt, as it tries to use its dwindling foreign exchange reserves to import essentials like fuel. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: April 12, 2022

Afghanistan
Assembly of Religious Scholars Calls to Reopen Girls’ Schools: Tolo News

Following domestic and international reactions to the closing of schools for girls above the sixth grade, the Assembly of Religious Scholars in Afghanistan issued a statement calling for the lifting of all restrictions on girls’ education and the reopening of girls’ schools. Click here to read…

Iran Asks for Security of its Diplomatic Agencies in Afghanistan: The Khaama Press

Following the protests of Afghan people in Kabul, Khost, and the burning of the door of Iran’s consulate in western Herat province, the Foreign Ministry of Iran has asked the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan to ensure the security of their embassy in Kabul and consulates. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
Difficult to adjust ties with Russia: Foreign secretary- The Daily Star

Bangladesh continues to maintain very close relations with Russia and it is “very difficult” for the country to try to “adjust” the relationship, even if anyone would like it to amid the current situation in Ukraine. Click here to read…

Golam Mosih political secy of Raushan Ershad- The Daily Star

Former ambassador Golam Mosih has been appointed political secretary of Leader of the Opposition Raushan Ershad. Click here to read…

Dhaka, Tokyo to work together- The Daily Star

Japanese Foreign Minister Hayashi Yoshimasa has said that his country would continue to assist Bangladesh in the efforts to repatriate Rohingyas to Myanmar. Click here to read…

PM laments lack of strong opposition- The Daily Star

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday expressed her frustration for not having a strong opposition in the country as the two main opposition parties, created by military rulers, don’t have a base among the mass people. Click here to read…

Wait for wages lingers- The Daily Star

Most of labourers in Lalmonirhat and Kurigram have yet to receive wages even after the completion of the government’s 40-day job scheme project. As a result, the labourers have run into debt to run their families. Click here to read…

HC says ACC can’t keep sacked Sharif Uddin’s reinstatement application pending- The Daily Star

The High Court today said the application submitted by former official of Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), Md Sharif Uddin, seeking reinstatement of his job cannot be kept pending for indefinite period. Click here to read…

Bhutan
Bhutan may have lost billions due to overcharging by Oil Companies in India- The Bhutanese

Last week, this paper did a story showing the vast differences in prices between what Indian Oil Companies charge fuel pumps in India as compared to Bhutan including cheaper fuel being sold to Nepal. Click here to read…

BHEL and MHPA resolve issues amicably as two Governments step in- The Bhutanese

Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL), an Indian Public Sector Undertaking (PSU), had taken Mangdechu Hydro electric Project (MHPA) to Delhi High Court after MHPA said it would deduct Nu 250 mn of BHEL’s Nu 700 mn bank guarantee after MHPA had to conduct extensive repairs to a BHEL supplied faulty third turbine unit. Click here to read…

Fourth booster dose for vulnerable to be provided in April- The Bhutanese

The Ministry of Health (MoH) will provide the fourth booster dose to vulnerable groups of population tentatively in the second half of April. Vulnerable groups are those at 60 and above and anyone with comorbid conditions. Click here to read…

High Bhutanese oil fuel prices linked to large and hidden profit margins by Indian Oil companies- The Bhutanese

The price of petrol in Thimphu is 95.21 and diesel is 100.5 while it is 92.79 for petrol in Phuentsholing and Nu 98.40 for diesel as of 31 March 2022. Click here to read…

Bhutan on path to graduate from LDC- Kuensel

Bhutan is on track to graduate from the Least Developed Countries (LDC) group by June 2023, according to senior government officials. Click here to read…

Third internet gateway rests on negotiation table- Kuensel

Bhutan’s push for a separate international gateway since 2011 remains on the negotiation table. Click here to read…

Many Bhutanese duped through online businesses- Kuensel

While the Office of the Consumer Protection (OCP) cautioned Bhutanese consumers not to do business with unknown online businesses and deal only with registered businesses, many are becoming victims. Click here to read…

GDP to grow at 4.5 percent in 2022- Bhutan Times

According to the Asian Development Outlook (ADO), 2022 released on 6 April, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) states that Bhutan has to create a strong footing for economic recovery. Click here to read…

Maldives
Maldives GDP growth surges 31.6 percent in 2021: Edition MV

The survey conducted by Asian Development Bank (ADB) identified that the significant increment in tourist arrivals; as well as the overall growth in the tourism sector paved way for a GDP growth increment by 31.6 percent last year. Click here to read…

“New connections” — China bridges the gap in Maldives’ hottest growth spot: XINHUANET

It all started a few years ago with the China-Maldives Friendship Bridge. Built with support from China, the opening of the bridge meant that for the first time, people could walk from capital Male to the neighboring island of Hulhumale. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Smuggled Sketches Offer Glimpses into Harsh Myanmar Prison – VOA News

In one drawing, dozens of men sit crammed into a single room, hunched with their knees together, every inch of space occupied. In another, they lie back to back on the floor, their faces straining with discomfort. Click here to read…

India, China in competition for Myanmar’s affections – Sentinelassam

The geostrategic significance of Myanmar intersects Chinese and Indian interests, and the contest between the two Asian giants over this would continue to shape the balance of power in this region. Click here to read…

How the Military Junta of Myanmar Killed the Free Voices – india.com

On Jan 7, 2022, Pu Tuidim, the founder and editor of “Khonumthung Media Group” was covering some clashes between Tatmadaw (Myanmar Army) and local rebels when he along with 9 other civilians were abducted by the military. His body was found after two days in Matupi Township bordering India. Click here to read…

Myanmar army launches air strikes against rebels near Thai border – Channel News Asia

Myanmar’s military conducted air strikes on Sunday (Apr 10) targeting ethnic rebels in Karen state, as fresh fighting broke out for control of the town of Lay Kay Kaw near the Thai border, according to a spokesman at the rebel group and media reports.
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/myanmar-army-launches-air-strikes-against-rebels-near-thai-border-2619531″ target=”_blank”>Click here to read…

Myanmar’s military reportedly suffers heaviest casualties since coup – RFA

Heavy fighting between junta troops and a joint force of ethnic fighters and prodemocracy paramilitaries in Myanmar’s Kayin state resulted in the largest number of casualties the military has suffered in clashes since it seized power last year, according to sources. Click here to read…

AA handed over three Burmese army prisoners on anniversary day – Narinjara

On the occasion of Arakan Army’s 13th anniversary, three prisoners of war were handed over by the organization to the Burmese army officials. They were handed over in front of village-elders at Sin Ingyi village under Ponnagyun township on 10 April at around 2:30 pm, said a villager while talking to Narinjara News. Click here to read…

Nepal
Nepal bans luxury items’ imports amid dwindling forex reserves: Report- Business Today

The biggest challenge at hand for the Nepalese government is the proper management of forex reserves, said Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) spokesperson Gunakar Bhatta. Click here to read…

(Blog) Global poverty- The Himalaya

The global poverty rate (at the US$1.90 poverty line) in 2018 is 8.6 percent, down from 9.1 in 2017, equivalent to a decline by 28 million poor people between the two years.
https://thehimalayantimes.com/blogs/global-poverty” target=”_blank”>Click here to read…

(Blog) Challenges of remittance- The Himalaya

Nepal is a nation afflicted by low income, poverty, rising unemployment and unsound dependence on agriculture. According to the Economic Survey of 2077/78, about 66 percent of the population rely on agriculture, but that population is invisibly quasi-unemployed or seasonal unemployed. Click here to read…

Men make financial decisions despite rising female literacy, experts say- Kathmandu Post

Women panellists highlight the challenges faced by women in being financially independent at a programme entitled Nirvik Nari. Click here to read…

Action against governor may put Nepal in IMF’s bad books- Kathmandu Post

One of the IMF’s conditions for approving $396 million credit facility is that central bank and its personnel’s autonomy should be strengthened further. Click here to read…

(Opinion)The tug of tradition- Nepali Times

Annual Biska Jatra of Bhaktapur begins even as locals struggle to pass down the ancient craft of making a chariot.Click here to read…

Pakistan

Pakistan’s policy continuity in doubt amid political turmoil, says Moody

’s: Dawn

While the Pakistan Stock Exchange and the rupee made a steep recovery, Moody’s Investors Service on Monday highlighted Pakistan’s “significant uncertainty over policy continuity” and falling foreign exchange reserves. Click here to read…

Shehbaz Sharif elected PM, unveils relief package: The News

Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif, soon after his election as the 23rd Prime Minister of Pakistan, announced various relief measures, including fixation of minimum wages at Rs25,000, subsidised wheat flour and 10 per cent raise in pensions as well as salaries of the government employees getting less than one lakh monthly salaries, with an immediate effect. Click here to read…

New govt’s foreign policy to focus on peace: The Express Tribune

The new government would maintain relations with the United States on the basis of equality with a “clear principle of no do more” and take parliament into confidence on all important decisions on foreign affairs. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka’s former PM has a message for President Gotabaya Rajapaksa: Quit or explain why you won’t: Indian Express

Speaking to The Indian Express, Wickremesinghe also said that to tide over the current food shortage, Sri Lanka must tap its friends in South Asia–India, Pakistan and Bangladesh — to “borrow” foodgrains that could be returned after two or three years. Click here to read…

Inside Sri Lanka’s worst economic crisis, people are dying in line for fuel: ABC News

As the sun rises over Colombo, vendors set up their stalls, hoping to sell enough goods — but they’re on the frontline of the worst economic crisis in Sri Lanka’s history. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka losing dollars on every second of stir says PM Rajapaksa: Hindustan Times
The pre-scheduled address to the nation had sparked speculation that Rajapaksa would resign to make room for his brother — President Gotabaya Rajapaksa — to appoint a premier more palatable to the opposition. Click here to read…

Global Developments and Analysis: Weekly Monitor, 04 April 2022 – 10 April 2022

Economic
US sanctions threat if China aids Russia stirs fear in Beijing about forex assets

Washington’s financial sanctions on Russia for invading Ukraine have raised concern in China over its large exposure to US government bonds, although experts say there is no real alternative for the country to invest its foreign exchange reserves. In recent weeks, former central bank adviser Yu Yongding and former vice-chairman of the Bank of China, Wang Yongli, have issued warnings about the effect that Western sanctions could have on China’s investment in foreign securities, amid US threats of “consequences” if Beijing helps Russia evade sanctions. “If China also encounters similar sanctions against Russia, its overseas assets may even face the danger of turning to zero,” said Yu, a prominent Chinese economist, in a blog post last week. A country like China that runs a trade surplus has to invest in foreign assets and there are few other choices but US bonds, said Michael Pettis, a professor of finance at Peking University and a veteran China observer. Last year, China’s trade surplus with the rest of the world rose 29 per cent from a year earlier to US$676.43 billion – the highest since records began in 1950. China has been reducing its exposure to US government bonds since 2015, although it has not been able to find a similar replacement. Click here to read…

Ukraine war disruptions send food prices to their highest ever

World food prices hit an all-time high in March following Russia’s invasion of agricultural powerhouse Ukraine, a United Nations agency said on April 08, adding to concerns about the risk of hunger around the world. The disruption in export flows resulting from the February 24 invasion and international sanctions against Russia has spurred fears of a global hunger crisis, especially across the Middle East and Africa, where the knock-on effects are already playing out. Russia and Ukraine, whose vast grain-growing regions are among the world’s main breadbaskets, account for a huge share of the globe’s exports in several major commodities, including wheat, vegetable oil and corn, their prices reached their highest levels ever last month. Ukrainian ports have been blocked by a Russian blockade and there is concern about this year’s harvest as the war rages on during the sowing season. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said its Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in international prices for a basket of commodities, averaged 159.3 points last month, up 12.6 percent from February. As it is, the February index was the highest level since its inception in 1990. FAO said the war in Ukraine was largely responsible for the 17.1 percent rise in the price of grains, including wheat and others like oats, barley and cornClick here to read…

Ukraine war’s impact on Asian economies splits global lenders

Two major global development banks are split on the impact of the Ukraine war on Asian economies: the World Bank is pessimistic, while the Asian Development Bank is confident that growth in the region will “continue to be strong.” In its economic outlook for 2022 published April 05, the World Bank projects that the East Asia and Pacific region will grow 5%, down from the 5.4% it previously projected in October. The lender warned that the Ukraine war threatens an uneven recovery from the pandemic in the region. But the Asian Development Bank, which put out its latest outlook report on April 06, forecast growth in Asia at 5.2% in 2022, despite headwinds such as the disruptions of commodity supply chains triggered by the Ukraine war. “There’s no doubt that the Ukraine war is going to delay the recovery,” Aaditya Mattoo, chief economist of the East Asia and Pacific Region of the World Bank, told Nikkei Asia in a recent interview. Mattoo said that the region faces a series of shocks that will set back growth momentum. The first is the Ukraine war, which is disrupting food and fuel supplies and has already led to big spikes in prices. “It’s going to increase financial volatility, reduce confidence and hurt global growth as well,” he added. Other shocks include the slowdown in China stemming from lockdowns to quell a surge in COVID cases and the U.S. responding to accelerated inflation through monetary tightening, Mattoo said. Click here to read…

U.S. aims to launch new Indo-Pacific framework as early as May

The U.S. could launch its new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework as early as May, a key trade official said April 06, as Washington seeks stronger trade and supply chain ties with Japan and Southeast Asia to counter China’s economic influence in the region. “We are hopeful that in the next month or so we should be in a position … to potentially launch” the IPEF, said Pamela Phan, deputy assistant secretary for Asia in the U.S. Commerce Department, at a two-day conference hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. The U.S. is working out the details with a range of countries in the region, including Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, New Zealand, South Korea and India. The IPEF will focus on four main pillars: trade facilitation, supply chain resilience, infrastructure and decarbonization, and taxation and anti-corruption. The U.S. plans to enter into agreements with different sets of countries for each pillar, but those seeking trade facilitation will be expected to sign on to all four. “We’re not doing a traditional trade agreement,” U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai has said of the IPEF. Unlike the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, the new framework will not lower tariffs or otherwise expand market access. Click here to read…

Russia halts plan to nationalize foreign firms – reports

The Russian government has suspended work on the recently proposed bill to nationalize foreign firms that have chosen to end their operations in the country amid Ukraine-related Western sanctions, Izvestia newspaper reported on April 11, citing sources. Last month, a government commission on legislative activity approved a draft law, which would allow for the introduction of external management in firms, at least 25%-owned by residents of “unfriendly states,” or of countries that have placed sanctions on Russia. The initiative was proposed in response to a mass exodus of foreign companies from the country due to Western sanctions related to the conflict in Ukraine. The measure was aimed at preventing these firms’ bankruptcies and the loss of jobs in Russia. According to Izvestia, the draft document has not yet been submitted to the government. One of the unnamed sources cited by the publication explained that “it does not make sense to launch such a serious mechanism at this stage” because foreign companies are increasingly expressing interest in negotiating the terms of their exit with Russian authorities, and many of them plan to resume work in Russia in April-May. “For the majority of companies, we do not yet see any actual steps, except for declarations. Even those who have suspended their activities, for example, closed shops or restaurants, often do not break lease agreements and continue to pay wages to their employees,” another source told the newspaper. Click here to read…

Ukraine war: one possible casualty may be Beijing’s economic relationship with Kyiv

A new metro line in Kyiv. A US$50 million revamp of a shipping port in Mariupol. A large wind farm on the Black Sea coast. Since Ukraine signed on in 2017 to Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) – a sweeping trade and investment plan to bolster China’s economic ties with the rest of the world – Chinese contractors and lenders have embarked on numerous ambitious infrastructure projects in the eastern European state. Those projects are in keeping with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s ambition for his nation to serve as a “bridge to Europe” for Chinese investment, as he told Chinese President Xi Jinping last year. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has now thrust that future into doubt, according to economists and BRI experts. Not only has the conflict disrupted projects in Ukraine and threatened Russia’s role as a critical BRI artery, but Beijing’s refusal also to condemn Russia’s invasion – or even recognise the attack as an invasion – has frustrated Kyiv and led some in Ukraine to question whether Beijing should remain its primary economic partner. China’s nominal neutrality was “de facto” support for Russia, argued Vasyl Yurchyshyn, director of economic and social programmes at the Razumkov Centre, a leading think tank in Kyiv. Click here to read…

EU fails to agree Russian energy ban

The European Union’s foreign ministers have not agreed on a ban on Russian oil and natural gas imports, Head Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell said on April 10, adding that discussions on the issue will continue. The energy ban was expected to be part of the latest EU sanctions package against Moscow. “We discussed, first of all, how to ensure the effectiveness of the existing sanctions in order to avoid gaps in their implementation. But we also discussed new steps we can take, including sanctions against oil and gas,” Borrell said. “We have not made decisions regarding such sanctions, we agreed to continue the discussion.” While the European Union agreed numerous sanctions against Moscow, member states have been at loggerheads over banning Russian energy imports. That’s because many EU countries are heavily dependent on Russian energy. Thus, Hungary has placed a veto on a total ban of Russian gas imports, saying it was the only option, as the country is landlocked and wouldn’t be able to directly receive liquefied gas from the US. Borell stressed the importance of EU countries becoming less reliant on Russian energy, arguing that buying gas from Moscow is “financing the war.” Click here to read…

Japan to phase out imports of Russian coal and oil

Japan announced April 08 it is expelling eight Russian diplomats and trade officials and will phase out imports of Russian coal and oil, with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida saying Moscow must be held accountable for “war crimes” in Ukraine. Kishida said Japan will also ban imports of Russian lumber, vodka and other goods, and will prohibit new Japanese investment in Russia. It will also step-up financial sanctions against Russian banks and freeze assets of about 400 more individuals and groups, including military-linked organizations, Kishida said at a news conference. He said atrocities against civilians and attacks on nuclear facilities in Ukraine are “severe violations of international law and are absolutely impermissible.” “We are at a critical moment in our efforts to get Russia to stop its cruel invasion of Ukraine and restore peace. Everyone, please cooperate,” Kishida said, referring to the sanctions’ impact on Japan, such as higher prices for gasoline, electricity and food. Earlier April 08, the Foreign Ministry announced it is expelling eight Russian diplomats and trade officials. Kishida said the expulsion is based on a “comprehensive decision taking into consideration Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.” He added that Japan will do utmost to ensure safety of Japanese nationals and companies still in Russia in case of a retaliation. Click here to read…

With Bonds in a ‘Coma,’ Buy Commodities: Bridgewater’s Patterson

Investors should get out of bonds as rates rise and diversify their portfolios with exposure to commodities such as agricultural products, oil and metals facing supply disruptions due to the war in Ukraine, according to Rebecca Patterson, chief investment strategist for Bridgewater Associates. “You should absolutely have commodities in your portfolio,” Patterson said during an interview April 08 with David Westin on Bloomberg Television. “We don’t know if bonds as a diversifier are dead or in a coma. I think they’re probably in a coma,” she said on “Wall Street Week.” Stocks and bonds swung wildly this week as investors sought clues to the economy’s direction, Federal Reserve policy and the impact of the war in Ukraine. The Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index is down 7.9% this year through April 08, compared with a 5.8% loss for the S&P 500 Index. Bridgewater Associates, which oversees $150 billion, posted a 16.3% return in the first quarter as macro funds benefited from volatility in global markets. Gregory Peters, co-chief investment officer at PGIM Fixed Income, said bonds are getting more attractive as yields rise and provide protection against a potential recession. “Bonds are increasingly attractive here, not less attractive,” Peters, whose firm had almost $1 trillion under management as of Dec. 31, told Westin. Click here to read…

Founder Ren Zhengfei urges Huawei to step up patent licensing as telecoms giant seeks to remake itself amid US sanctions

Chinese telecoms giant Huawei Technologies Co is stepping up efforts to turn its vast pool of patents into revenue via “reasonable pricing”, founder Ren Zhengfei said in an internal meeting, as the company continues a drive to diversify its sales mix while still subject to crippling US sanctions. “Previously our intellectual property [efforts] were made for self-defence and to keep our own business safe,” Ren told the company’s IP team in an internal meeting in March, with an internal memo documenting the meeting posted on Huawei’s employee forum last week. Ren noted that royalty charges “should not be too low” as that could have the effect of curbing innovation and the willingness to invest in R&D within society, and he also warned the company to prepare for a “protracted battle” to make patent licensing a success for Huawei. Huawei held a total of 110,000 active patents across 45,000 patent families by the end of last year, and in 2021 alone the company ranked number one for the number of granted patents in both China and Europe, according to the company’s annual results filing. Ren urged the company to update its IP strategies and bring out the “commercial value” of these confidential technology results by licensing them to external partners. Click here to read…

Samsung caught between rock and a hard place on Russia

Even as multinational companies have flooded out of Russia in response to the war in Ukraine, Samsung Electronics has yet to take a clear stance on the matter, fearing it could lose some substantial smartphone and television market share to Chinese rivals. When asked about pulling back from Russia at last month’s general shareholders meeting, CEO Han Jong-hee said only that the company “will monitor the situation and respond while minimizing the impact on our business.” Amid a flurry of exits from Russia following the Feb. 24 invasion, Samsung stopped shipping products there in early March, citing supply chain issues. Later that month, it renamed handsets such as the Galaxy Z Fold in certain markets, as the letter “Z” has become a symbol of support for the invasion. But the South Korean electronics maker has been less proactive than others in distancing itself from Russia, pointing to outside factors in its decisions, and has not made its position clear on the war itself. Samsung moved early into Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union, seeing promise in its wealth of natural resources. It spent heavily on marketing mobile phones, TVs and appliances, and the TV factory, started up in 2007, helped it amass further market share. It would be difficult for the company to leave just as it is recouping its investments. Click here to read…

China accelerates inward economic pivot with plan to create a ‘unified domestic market’

China has doubled down on its strategy to make the economy less dependent on the outside world by releasing plans for a “unified domestic market”, as geopolitical tensions and domestic coronavirus outbreaks add to supply chain disruptions. The strategy aims to promote more efficient production, distribution, circulation and consumption, while making China an even bigger magnet for global companies and investment, according to guidelines released on April 10 by the Central Committee of the Communist Party and the State Council. “[We should] step up building a unified national market that is highly efficient, rules-based, fair for competition and fully open, and push China’s market shift from big to strong,” said the guidelines, which have only just been made public after being approved by President Xi Jinping in mid-December. Analysts said the policy aims to tackle market fragmentation, while the business community has raised concerns about administrative interference and called for more concrete details. Publication of the text comes as lockdowns in Shanghai and other Chinese cities pile pressure on domestic logistics operations and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine weighs on the global supply chain, driving up prices for commodities like food, energy and fertilisers. The new guidelines vowed to clean up preferential policies that disadvantage foreign companies and introduce fair competition review of newly issued policies. Click here to read…

Chinese chipmakers see rising inquiries from Russia

Chinese chip producers are looking at increasing inquiries from Russian firms cautiously, with no concrete progress made due to a series of factors ranging from the threat of US sanctions to payment issues, an industry source told the Global Times. “There is indeed a pick-up in demand from Russia for various types of electromechanical equipment, and we are also trying to match up demand and supply, but domestic manufacturers are more cautious, and we have not learned that there is any substantial progress” from current inquiries, a senior industry expert familiar with the situation told the Global Times on April 10. Increased inquiries are being seen from Russian businesses amid Western sanctions related to the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Notably, Russia’s card payment system is reportedly soliciting “a couple of Chinese suppliers” for microchips used in the Russian Mir payment system, according to Reuters. Russian companies are also looking at ploughs, valves, meters, machine tools, spare parts for excavators and wind drums, according to notices posted on the official WeChat account of the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products (CCCMB) in recent days. Semiconductors are on a list of products Russian companies are seeking. CCCMB reportedly plans to hold a business-to-business meeting with Russian companies in May and June. Click here to read…

China to build SW China’s Beibu Gulf urban cluster into base for energy storage, boosting trade with ASEAN

China on April 07 launched a roadmap to construct the Beibu Gulf urban cluster in Southwest China, indicating more policy support for the region that would be key in facilitating commodity trade with neighboring Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) economies, and laying the ground for a more integrated industrial chain. The roadmap, seen in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) of the region, lists a range of detailed development plans highlighting industries from energy storage, marine economy to infrastructure connectivity and digitalization. A particular focus goes to energy. As the plan noted that relying on current facilities such as the Beihai liquefied natural gas (LNG) receiving terminal, the region will be built into an offshore natural gas hub and oil and gas storage base. The region also vows to expand imports of resource products, improve capacity of the agricultural products imports, develop crude oil, ore, coal and other commodity distribution transactions and supply chains, and strengthen cooperation with ASEAN. The region also plans to launch a China-ASEAN bilateral local currency business innovation experiment, and build an ASEAN-oriented yuan pricing and trading platform. China’s total LNG imports stood at nearly 80 million tons in 2021, making it the world’s largest LNG importer, according to customs data. Click here to read…

Positive Drug Tests Among U.S. Workers Hit Two-Decade High

The percentage of working Americans testing positive for drugs hit a two-decade high last year, driven by an increase in positive marijuana tests, as businesses might have loosened screening policies amid nationwide labor shortages. Of the more than six million general workforce urine tests that Quest Diagnostics Inc., one of the country’s largest drug-testing laboratories, screened for marijuana last year, 3.9% came back positive, an increase of more than 8% from 2020, according to Quest’s annual drug-testing index. That figure is up 50% since 2017. Since then, the number of states that legalized marijuana for recreational use grew to 18 from eight, plus the District of Columbia. Despite the increase in positivity last year, fewer companies tested their employees for THC, the substance in marijuana primarily responsible for its effects, than in recent years, said Barry Sample, Quest’s senior science consultant. The shifting legal backdrop and changing cultural attitudes have prompted some employers to stop testing for marijuana while companies in some states are barred from factoring the test results into hiring decisions, according to Dr. Sample. And those trends accelerated last year amid the recent shortage of workers, especially in states where recreational marijuana is legal, Dr. Sample added. Click here to read…

Strategic
China Is Accelerating Its Nuclear Buildup Over Rising Fears of U.S. Conflict

China has accelerated an expansion of its nuclear arsenal because of a change in its assessment of the threat posed by the U.S., people with knowledge of the Chinese leadership’s thinking say, shedding new light on a buildup that is raising tension between the two countries. The Chinese nuclear effort long predates Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but the U.S.’s wariness about getting directly involved in the war there has likely reinforced Beijing’s decision to put greater emphasis on developing nuclear weapons as a deterrent, some of these people say. Chinese leaders see a stronger nuclear arsenal as a way to deter the U.S. from getting directly involved in a potential conflict over Taiwan. Among recent developments, work has accelerated this year on more than 100 suspected missile silos in China’s remote western region that could be used to house nuclear-tipped missiles capable of reaching the U.S., according to analysts that study satellite images of the area. American leaders have said the thinking behind China’s nuclear advance is unclear. The people close to the Chinese leadership said China’s increased focus on nuclear weapons is also driven by fears Washington might seek to topple Beijing’s Communist government following a more hawkish turn in U.S. policy toward China under the Trump and Biden administrations. Click here to read…

Russia seeks to end US-dominated world order – Lavrov

Russia’s military action in Ukraine is meant to put an end to the US-dominated world order, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has explained. Washington has been seeking supremacy by imposing ad-hoc rules and violating international law, he claimed, in an interview aired by Russian television on April 11. He was referring to America’s attempts to impose its own so-called “rules-based international order,” which have met with strong resistance from Moscow and China. “Our special military operation is meant to put an end to the unabashed expansion [of NATO] and the unabashed drive towards full domination by the US and its Western subjects on the world stage,” Lavrov told Rossiya 24 news channel. “This domination is built on gross violations of international law and under some rules, which they are now hyping so much and which they make up on a case-by-case basis,” he added. Russia is among the nations who would not submit to Washington’s will, the Russian diplomat added. It will only be part of an international community of equals and will not allow Western nations to ignore its legitimate security concerns, Lavrov said. Lavrov blasted EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell for appearing to encourage more fighting in Ukraine. Click here to read…

US launches cybersecurity bureau

The US Bureau of Cyberspace and Digital Policy (CDP) has begun operating, the State Department announced on April 04. The bureau is subdivided into three branches dedicated to “cyberspace security,” “international information and communications policy,” and “digital freedom.” Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Jennifer Bachus, a career diplomat, will lead the bureau until an ambassador-at-large is confirmed to take her place. Bachus previously served in the Czech Republic, Kosovo, France, Vietnam, and Jamaica. In prepared remarks announcing the launch of the bureau, US State Secretary Antony Blinken said, “Democracies must together answer the question of whether universal rights and democratic values will be at the center of our digital lives.” During the Trump administration’s overhaul of the State Department in 2017, then State Secretary Rex Tillerson abolished the Office for the Coordination of Cyber Issues, which was created during the Obama administration to handle US diplomatic efforts at negotiating the rules and expectations of cyberspace, assigning cybersecurity responsibilities to the much broader Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs. The CDP Bureau’s inauguration is one more indicator that cybersecurity remains front and center in international affairs as the US and its allies compete with adversaries like Russia and China. Click here to read…

Nato chief Stoltenberg says bloc planning permanent military presence on eastern border

Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said military commanders are working on plans for a permanent troop presence on the alliance’s eastern border in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, The Telegraph reported, citing an interview. Stoltenberg said Nato is envisaging a “reset” that would shift the role of troops in eastern European member countries from serving as a tripwire in case of a Russian attack to becoming a full-fledged deterrent, according to the newspaper. Decisions are expected at a summit of Nato countries in June, he said. “We have the time now until the summit to make more longer-term decisions,” Stoltenberg was quoted as saying. “This is part of the reset which we have to make, which is to move from tripwire deterrence – which is the current concept – to something that is more about deterrence by denial or defence.” Mark Milley, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, told a congressional hearing on April 05 that he could envisage permanent Nato bases in countries such as Poland, Romania and the Baltic republics to host a rotating troop presence. US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said this week there’s no decision on “permanent basing forward or additional rotational forces in and out” or a combination of both. “These are things that have to be worked out” and “we’ll work with Nato on this,” he told a Senate hearing in Washington on April 07. Click here to read…

South Korea’s president-elect wants U.S. nuclear bombers, submarines to return

Advisers to South Korea’s president-elect sought redeployment of U.S. strategic assets, such as nuclear bombers and submarines, to the Korean peninsula during talks held on a visit to Washington, one of the advisers said on April 06. The team of foreign policy and security aides to incoming president Yoon Suk-yeol met U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan as Yoon seeks a more constant security presence to deter threats from North Korea as it steps up weapons tests. “Deploying the strategic assets is an important element of reinforcing the extended deterrence, and the issue naturally came up during the discussions,” Park Jin, a four-term lawmaker who led the delegation, told reporters. He added that both sides explored ways to bolster U.S. extended nuclear deterrence at the talks on coordinating efforts against the North Korean threat held on a trip that also aimed to secure an early summit with President Joe Biden. A White House official asked about such talks, and whether Washington supported the deployments to South Korea, responded that both sides had “discussed generally” the U.S. defense commitments, but did not elaborate. Yoon, set to be sworn in on May 10, is mapping out his foreign policy agenda after winning the March 9 election. Click here to read…

Yemen’s President Cedes Power Amid International Efforts to End Civil War

Yemen’s president handed over his powers to a leadership council on April 07 in a Saudi-backed move aimed at reviving negotiations with the Houthi rebels to end the country’s seven-year civil war. President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi also dismissed his vice president before leaving his own position. Both men were seen as obstacles by the Iran-allied Houthis and some of Saudi Arabia’s coalition partners to United Nations-led efforts to find a diplomatic solution to the conflict, which the international body says has caused the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. In a series of stage-managed moves early April 07, Saudi Arabia endorsed Yemen’s new leadership, urged the start of peace talks and released a video of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman receiving the eight-man council at his palace in Riyadh. The country announced $3 billion of direct economic aid and $300 million for the U.N. humanitarian response. The fighting has devastated Yemen—sparking famine, a cholera outbreak and killing tens of thousands of civilians, including from errant coalition airstrikes. Houthi spokesman and chief negotiator Mohammed Abdel Salam said Yemen’s present and future would be determined inside the country. “Any activity outside its borders amounts to farcical theatrics and recreational games practiced by the aggressor countries,” he said on Telegram. Click here to read…

Terrorist Attacks in Israel, Jerusalem Tensions Challenge Palestinian Strategy

A burst of terrorist attacks on civilians and rising religious tensions in Jerusalem are testing Israel’s U.S.-backed policy of eschewing peace talks and trying instead to improve Palestinian quality of life while building deeper ties with Arab countries aligned against Iran. A rare spate of violence against civilians within central and southern Israel has left 14 victims dead in four apparently unconnected attacks in different cities. The latest attack was April 07 night in central Tel Aviv, when a gunman opened fire at a bar, killing two immediately, and a third who died of his wounds on April 08. Israeli authorities are worried about the next two weeks when Jews and Muslims will seek to pray at the same sites in Jerusalem during an unusual convergence of the Jewish holiday Passover and Islam’s holy month, Ramadan. The presence of Jewish and Muslim worshipers has been combustible in the past, and Israeli security forces have already scuffled with Palestinians in recent days near the Old City. The mounting tensions highlight the vulnerabilities of a paradigm shift in Israeli-Palestinian relations that has accelerated in recent years: That peace talks, moribund for almost a decade, aren’t necessary for Israel to be embraced in the Arab world, and that Israel can manage its century-old conflict with the Palestinians through trust-building and economic measures. Click here to read…

In Africa, U.S.-Trained Militaries Are Ousting Civilian Governments in Coups

A flurry of military coups across Africa has disrupted the U.S. strategy of enlisting local armies to counter Islamist extremists and other security threats. The U.S. has trained thousands of African soldiers, from infantrymen rehearsing counterterrorism raids on the edge of the Sahara to senior commanders attending the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. The programs are a linchpin of U.S. policy on the continent, intended to help African allies professionalize their armed forces to fight armed opponents both foreign and domestic. But U.S. commanders have watched with dismay over the past year as military leaders in several African allies—including officers with extensive American schooling—have overthrown civilian governments and seized power for themselves, triggering laws that forbid the U.S. government from providing them with weapons or training. The strategic setback was apparent in recent weeks here at Fort Benning, where the U.S. Army hosted its annual gathering of top ground-force commanders from around Africa. The Army withheld invitations from coup leaders in Mali and Burkina Faso, West African countries engaged in existential struggles with al Qaeda and Islamic State. Guinean soldiers, who in September toppled the West African nation’s civilian government, were left out of the Fort Benning events and are no longer included in U.S.-led special-operations exercises. Click here to read…

China delivered FK-3 missile system to Serbian military, state media says

China’s air force flew 12 covert sorties to Serbia at the weekend, which state media said delivered three Chinese anti-aircraft missile systems in the biggest overseas airlift involving its Y-20 transport planes. Six Y-20As headed westward towards Serbia on April 09 with a stop at Baku in Azerbaijan before crossing the airspace of Nato members Turkey and Bulgaria, according to flight tracking website Flightradar24. They were reportedly delivering the new FK-3 medium-range missile system to the Serbian military. Another group of six planes followed a similar path on April 10. Associated Press reported that cargo planes with People’s Liberation Army markings had landed at the Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport early on April 09. Chinese state-backed tabloid Global Times said it had confirmed the FK-3 cargo, without citing a source. The cargo on the Y-20As could not be independently verified. The airlift has renewed concerns in the Balkans about the military build-up of Serbia, which is widely considered a close ally of Russia, and about Chinese military presence in the region often called “Europe’s backyard”. “China in recent days sent air force transport aircraft to Serbia to deliver regular military resources,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said in Beijing on April 11, without confirming or denying whether that included the FK-3 systems. Click here to read…

South China Sea issues handled ‘properly,’ Xi tells Duterte

Seeking to put a positive spin on a relationship that never quite produced the hoped-for benefits, Chinese leader Xi Jinping told outgoing Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on April 08 that the two nations have “properly” handled the sensitive issue of the disputed South China Sea. Xi made his remarks in a phone conversation with Duterte, who nurtured closer ties with Beijing after taking office in 2016. Despite cozier relations, however, sporadic territorial spats have persisted and Beijing has had limited success separating the Philippines from its treaty ally, the United States. Xi made no mention of disputes, saying the sides “have adhered to the important consensus reached, adhered to good-neighborly and friendly cooperation, insisted on properly handling differences, and insisted on working together for common development.” “The proper handling of the South China Sea issue by both sides has provided an important foundation for China-Philippines friendly cooperation, benefited the two peoples, and effectively safeguarded regional peace and stability,” Xi was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency. Xi also took a swipe at Manila’s security pact with Washington, saying that recent developments showed that “regional security cannot be achieved by strengthening military alliances.” Click here to read…

Japan, Philippines seek pact to further defense cooperation

Japan and the Philippines agreed April 09 to start talks toward a possible defense agreement that would allow closer cooperation between their militaries amid regional tensions with China and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi and Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi and their Philippine counterparts, Teodoro Locsin and Delfin Lorenzana, in their first so-called “2+2” security meeting agreed to begin formal discussions about a possible reciprocal access agreement — a defense pact that would allow their troops to visit each other’s countries for training and to exchange defense equipment to increase interoperability and cooperation. Japan and the Philippines, both U.S. allies, have in recent years stepped up joint exercises and defense cooperation. In 2020, Tokyo and Manila agreed on the export of Japanese air radar systems to the Philippine military. On April 09, the four ministers strongly opposed “actions that may increase tensions” in the East and South China seas and affirmed their commitment to a rules-based approach to resolving competing claims under international law. They also said Russia’s aggression in Ukraine affects not only Europe but also Asia under the international order, which does not accept any unilateral change to internationally recognized borders by force. Click here to read…

NATO, Asia-Pacific partners agree to bolster cooperation

NATO members agreed on April 07 to increase “practical and political cooperation” with Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea, in response to China’s failure to condemn Russia’s war in Ukraine. “We agreed to step up cooperation with our partners in the Asia-Pacific, because the crisis has global ramifications,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said at a news conference, concluding two days of meetings of foreign ministers from the military alliance. The four Asia-Pacific countries were invited to attend the NATO gathering in Brussels. China’s unwillingness to condemn Russia, and Beijing “join[ing] Moscow in questioning the right of nations to choose their own path” represent “a serious challenge to us all,” Stoltenberg said. “It makes it even more important that we stand together to protect our values,” he said. Areas of cooperation with the Asia-Pacific partners will include cyber defense, new technologies and countering disinformation. “We will also work more closely together in other areas such as maritime security, climate change and resilience because global challenges demand global solutions,” Stoltenberg said. Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea had first participated in a NATO foreign ministers meeting during December 2020. Click here to read…

U.S., U.K., Australia announce cooperation on hypersonic weapons

The U.S., U.K. and Australia will cooperate in developing hypersonic missiles and electronic warfare technology, the three countries announced in a statement April 05, as the trilateral alliance tries to respond to China’s military rise in the Indo-Pacific. The security alliance will “commence new trilateral cooperation on hypersonics and counter-hypersonics, and electronic warfare capabilities, as well as to expand information sharing and to deepen cooperation on defense innovation,” the statement said. Hypersonic weapons are gaining attention in the arms development race, with Russia claiming it used one such weapon in attacks on Ukraine in March. While the U.S. and Australia had already promised to work together in developing the technology, the U.K. now joins the fold. The statement suggests the scope of cooperation may be expanded to invite other nations. “As our work progresses on these and other critical defense and security capabilities, we will seek opportunities to engage allies and close partners,” it said. The alliance also made clear its attention to the region would not falter as the war in Ukraine heightens geopolitical tensions. Click here to read…

Iran rejects US’ nuclear demands

Iran’s foreign minister said April 10 that Washington is “imposing new conditions” in the negotiations to restore the 2015 nuclear agreement. “On the issue of lifting sanctions, they [the Americans] are interested in proposing and imposing new conditions outside the negotiations,” state news agency IRNA quoted Hossein Amir-Abdollahian as saying. “In the last two or three weeks, the American side has made excessive demands that contradict some paragraphs of the text,” he added. Iran has been engaged for a year in negotiations with France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China directly, and the US indirectly in the Austrian capital to revive the deal, known formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). “The Americans keep talking about the need for direct negotiations, but we have not seen the benefit of direct talks with the United States,” Amir-Abdollahian said. The 2015 agreement gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program to guarantee that Tehran could not develop a nuclear weapon – something it has always denied wanting to do. “We seek the lifting of sanctions, but with dignity and with a lasting agreement,” the foreign minister said, adding that “Iran has stood and will stand by its red lines.” Click here to read…

Russia’s war in Ukraine highlights UN fault lines

While Europe, the United States, Canada, Australia and Japan have strongly condemned Russia’s war in Ukraine, many nations don’t really want to choose sides. China, apparently, is one of them, along with India, the Gulf states and many African countries. But faced with various UN votes on Russia’s invasion of its neighbour, some have already shifted position. The United Arab Emirates and Senegal, for example, first abstained but then subsequently voted in favour of condemning Russia. China and India consistently abstained. The UN General Assembly votes are the only ones where all 193 UN member countries could vote, with no state having a veto power, as in the UN Security Council. According to Thierry Vircoulon, a researcher at the French Institute for International Relations (IFRI), there are a number of reasons for the high level of African abstentions, including Russia’s growing influence on the continent. Especially after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea which brought the first international sanctions, Moscow has sought to increase its clout in Africa, notably by selling arms and providing private security in conflict countries like the Central African Republic and Mali. North African countries like Egypt and Algeria are also heavily dependent on Russian wheat exports for food, with other clients including Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan and Tanzania. Click here to read…

Medical
WHO: Two-thirds of people in Africa may have had COVID

More than two-thirds of people living in Africa may have contracted COVID-19 over the past two years, about 97 times more than the number of reported infections, a World Health Organization (WHO) report has suggested. Laboratory tests have detected 11.5 million COVID-19 cases and 252,000 fatalities across the African continent. But according to the report released on April 07, some 800 million people could have already been infected by last September. Officials at the WHO’s Africa region said the study – which is still being peer-reviewed – suggests the officially confirmed numbers were “likely only scratching the surface of the real extent of coronavirus infections in Africa”. “A new meta-analysis of standardised sero-prevalence study revealed that the true number of infections could be as much as 97 times higher than the number of confirmed reported cases,” said WHO Africa boss Matshidiso Moeti. “This suggests that more than two-thirds of all Africans have been exposed to the COVID-19 virus,” she added. The report analysed more than 150 studies published between January 2020 and December last year. Click here to read…

Surgery by flashlight, not enough drugs: Sri Lankan doctors make life-death decisions as economic crisis deepens

Across Sri Lanka, doctors are being forced to make triage decisions on who gets to live or die as the supply of essential drugs runs dangerously low amid a debilitating economic crisis. The debt-laden country has been struggling to pay for imports, including medical supplies, due to a shortage of foreign exchange, and even financial support from India and China has failed to alleviate the situation. The International Monetary Fund has warned the government’s total foreign debt of US$35 billion is “unsustainable” and ratings agencies have warned of a potential default. Dr Minoli de Silva, a medical officer working in the emergency department of a teaching hospital in the country’s Western Province, said she was now having to choose which patients to treat. “In my hospital, only 10 more vials of an essential drug used for treating heart attacks and strokes are left,” Dr de Silva said this week. “So now we have to look at factors like age and prognosis and decide which patient has a better chance of surviving after taking the drug before starting treatments. If there are two patients, we may have to choose to treat one of them,” she said. Recent supply shortages led to a quota for certain essential drugs, meaning not everyone who needed them would be given them. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, April 13, 2022

Xi tells Party cadres to make every possible effort to ensure people’s happy lives: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, on Monday called on Party cadres to make “every possible effort” to ensure that people can live happy lives. Click here to read…

Chinese premier stresses need to stabilize macroeconomy, ensure people’s livelihoods: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has called for the accelerated implementation of established policies and measures, the stabilization of China’s macroeconomy, the maintenance of the country’s economy within an appropriate range, and work to ensure people’s livelihoods. Click here to read…

China’s anti-graft chief urges solid work ahead of 20th CPC national congress: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

China’s anti-graft chief has urged solid work on improving Party conduct, enforcing Party discipline and fighting corruption ahead of the 20th national congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) later this year. Click here to read…

Chinese, Russian party officials hold talks on inter-party exchanges: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

Song Tao, head of the International Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee talked with Boris Gryzlov, chairman of the Supreme Council of the United Russia party on Tuesday via video link. They had indepth exchange of views on inter-party exchange and cooperation and other issues of common concern. Click here to read…

China accelerates issuance of local-gov’t special bonds: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

The issuance of local-government special bonds in China has progressed much faster and is more advanced this year than in previous years, an official said Tuesday. The country has allocated all special bond quotas for project construction, Vice Minister of Finance Xu Hongcai told a press conference.Click here to read…

China rolls out five-year plan on family education: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

A five-year plan on the guidance and development of family education has been released by 11 relevant agencies, including the Ministry of Education and the All-China Women’s Federation. Click here to read…

Chinese mainland reports 1,500 new local confirmed COVID-19 cases: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

The Chinese mainland on Tuesday reported 1,500 locally transmitted confirmed COVID-19 cases, the National Health Commission’s Wednesday report showed. Of the new local confirmed cases, 1,189 were reported in Shanghai, while 233 were reported in Jilin, 22 in Guangdong, 14 in Hainan, and 12 in Zhejiang, according to the commission. Click here to read…

China at critical point in fight against COVID-19: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

China will maintain its dynamic zero-COVID approach as the country is at a critical moment in the fight against COVID-19, a spokesperson for the National Health Commission (NHC) said Tuesday. The epidemic is still surging and spreading, NHC spokesperson Mi Feng told a press conference. The Chinese mainland Monday recorded 1,251 locally transmitted confirmed cases and 23,295 asymptomatic cases. Click here to read…

China steps up COVID-19 response in schools: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

Chinese health and education departments have upgraded COVID-19 prevention and control measures in schools to cope with the latest outbreak. Universities, kindergartens, and middle and primary schools are required to tighten daily monitoring of the health of students and the faculty. They must collect body-temperature reports and follow up on those on sick leave, said the latest COVID-19 response guideline released by the National Health Commission and the Ministry of Education on Tuesday. Click here to read…

Beijing to have 700,000 electric vehicle charging piles by 2025: Xinhuanet
April 12, 2022

Beijing plans to build more electric vehicle charging infrastructure in the coming years, with the total number of charging piles reaching 700,000 by 2025. Local authorities will encourage the installation of electric vehicle charging piles in the residential quarters across the city in the coming years, said Chai Wenzhong, an official with the Beijing municipal commission of urban management. Click here to read…

China smooths logistics amid COVID-19 control to meet daily, industrial needs: China Daily
April 13, 2022

China has taken steps to facilitate logistics to ensure the supply of necessities for households and industries amid COVID-19 flare-ups in certain parts of the country, which it is tackling with rigorous measures. Click here to read…

Action plan puts measures in place to ensure national food security: China Daily
April 12, 2022

China released an action plan recently on expanding the planting of soybean and oil crops at State-owned farms to ensure national food security and the supply of important agricultural products, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs. This year, the country will plant more than 973,300 hectares of soybeans and 300,000 hectares of oil crops including rapeseed, sunflower and peanuts at State-owned farms, and the yield of soybean and oil crops is expected to increase by 2 percent, the plan said. Click here to read…

Railway services reduced to minimize virus risks: China Daily
April 13, 2022

A freight train loaded with anti-epidemic supplies for Shanghai pulls out of a freight station in Lhasa, Southwest China’s Tibet autonomous region, April 10, 2022. [Photo/Xinhua]
China’s railway operator has reduced or suspended passenger train services in epidemic-affected areas to limit the risk of spreading the virus via the railway network, China State Railway Group said on Tuesday. Click here to read…

Changes to ease shortages in Shanghai, Jilin introduced: China Daily
April 12, 2022

China’s top economic planner has launched an interprovincial system to increase vegetable supplies in support of Shanghai and Jilin province, the hardest-hit areas by the current outbreak of COVID-19, an official from National Development and Reform Commission said on Tuesday in Beijing. Click here to read…

John Lee secures 786 nominations, far exceeding Chief Executive applicant threshold, formally submits application: Global Times
April 13, 2022

Former Chief Secretary for Administration of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), John Lee Ka-chiu, formally submitted his nomination form to the Electoral Affairs Commission, and said he had secured 786 nominations as of Wednesday, which far exceeds the nomination threshold for the upcoming Chief Executive election to be held on May 8. Click here to read…

Motor vehicles prohibited on roads amid epidemic, says Shanghai public security authority: Global Times
April 13, 2022

Motor vehicles are prohibited from driving on roads amid the COVID-19 epidemic, except for those used for epidemic prevention and control, life support, urban operation, emergency response, emergency medical treatment and other necessary reasons, Shanghai Municipal Public Security Bureau said on Wednesday. Click here to read…

Home quarantine for asymptomatic COVID-19 patients risky for treatment and spread: Global Times
April 13, 2022

It is risky for COVID-19 patients who are asymptomatic to stay home instead of in centralized quarantine, as they might cause further transmission and miss the optimal treatment period, said Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Click here to read…

Pakistani new-elected PM Shehbaz vows to further strengthen bilateral cooperation with China: Global Times
April 13, 2022

Pakistani new-elected Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met with Charge d ‘affaires Pang Chunxue of the Chinese Embassy in Pakistan at the Prime Minister’s Office on Tuesday. Shehbaz noted that the new Pakistani government attaches great importance to developing relations with China and is willing to further strengthen bilateral cooperation in agriculture, science and technology, education and poverty alleviation. Click here to read…

Mountaineering flourishes in China’s Tibet autonomous region: People’s Daily
April 13, 2022

At 4:20 a.m. on May 25, 1960, Wang Fuzhou, Gonpo, and Qu Yinhua, mountaineers with an average age of 24 years old, ascended to the top of Mount Qomolangma from its northern slope, which is considered so high that even birds can’t fly over. It was the first time that Chinese people had reached the top of the world’s highest peak, and also the first time that mankind had climbed to the summit of Mount Qomolangma from its northern slope. Click here to read…

Tibet autonomous region fosters new growth areas of foreign trade: People’s Daily
April 13, 2022

“You have completed the order and received full payment,” said a transaction notification received by Li Chaohua, a man that runs a trade company in southwest China’s Tibet autonomous region, in late February this year. A double-decker pure electric tour bus manufactured by Chinese carmaker BYD drives by the Potala Palace, Lhasa. Click here to read…

Shanghai patients crowdsource medical help during COVID lockdown: Reuters
April 12, 2022

Shanghai residents have turned online for grassroots help on medical treatment as the city’s tough COVID-19 curbs limit access to healthcare and fuel frustration and anxiety. While the city of 25 million has used lockdowns and extensive testing to fight the disease, those suffering from other medical conditions are posting requests for help in mutual-help platforms and social media chat groups. Click here to read…

China’s imports unexpectedly fall on domestic COVID curbs: Reuters
April 13, 2022

China’s imports unexpectedly fell in March as COVID-19 curbs across large parts of the country hampered freight arrivals and weakened demand, while export growth slowed slightly and analysts expected trade to worsen in the second quarter. Click here to read…

U.S. human rights report says China continues “genocide” on Uyghurs: Kyodo
April 13, 2022

The U.S. State Department said Tuesday that acts of “genocide” have continued against the Muslim Uyghur minority in China’s far-western Xinjiang region, revealing the findings in its latest annual human rights report. The report, covering events of last year, also warned of the “creeping authoritarianism that threatens both human rights and democracy,” pointing to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as the most notable current example. Click here to read…

No home isolation for mild Covid-19 cases, China’s chief epidemiologist says: South China Morning Post
April 13, 2022

China will not let asymptomatic Covid-19 patients isolate at home because of the risk of spreading the disease or developing severe illness, according to one of the country’s top epidemiologists. “There remain risks if the so-called asymptomatic carriers are quarantined at home,” Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, said on Tuesday, as he defended the policy to send all asymptomatic carriers to centralised quarantine facilities. Click here to read…

Shanghai’s Covid-19 cases resume setting daily records after a one-day pause, extending horizon of citywide lockdown: South China Morning Post
April 13, 2022

Shanghai reported 26,330 confirmed Covid-19 infections on Wednesday, setting a daily record for the 11th time in 12 days, underscoring how the disease has defied more than a week of lockdowns and quarantines to be deeply entrenched in the population of 25 million people. Symptomatic cases surged again after ebbing for two days, rising to 1,189 cases from 914 a day earlier, according to data released by the local health commission. The vast majority of infections remained asymptomatic, and no fatality has yet been linked directly to Covid-19 since March 1. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, April 11, 2022

Xi inspects south China’s Hainan Province: Xinhuanet
April 11, 2022

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, on Sunday inspected the city of Sanya, south China’s Hainan Province. During the inspection, Xi visited a seed laboratory to learn about seed industry innovation, and a research institute of the Ocean University of China to learn about the development of marine science and technology. Click here to read…

Chinese premier stresses importance of stabilizing economic fundamentals: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has stressed the importance of efforts to keep the fundamentals of the economy stable and ensure the country’s economy runs within an appropriate range. Click here to read…

Full text of Xi Jinping’s speech at Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics review and awards ceremony: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

The following is the full text of a speech delivered by Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics review and awards ceremony on April 8, 2022. Click here to read…

Chinese embassy in U.S. urges Washington to cancel Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan: Xinhuanet
April 8, 2022

The Chinese embassy in the United States on Thursday reiterated China’s strong opposition to U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s planned visit to Taiwan, urging Washington to cancel it. Click here to read…

China to continue promoting financial cooperation among BRICS countries: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

China will continue promoting fiscal and financial cooperation among BRICS countries, according to Minister of Finance Liu Kun. Liu made the remarks at the First BRICS Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting in 2022, which was held virtually on Friday. Click here to read…

E-commerce platforms aid daily supplies amid Shanghai’s COVID surge: Xinhuanet
April 10, 2022

An increasing number of e-commerce giants and food delivery platforms have joined in the battle against the resurgence of the Omicron variant in Shanghai to secure the megacity’s daily supplies. Local authorities confirmed Sunday that e-commerce giants such as JD.com, online food delivery platforms Meituan and Eleme, and courier services companies have cooperated with the city to provide daily necessities for the residents. Click here to read…

China’s Guangzhou to suspend in-person school classes over COVID-19: Xinhuanet
April 10-, 2022

The southern Chinese metropolis of Guangzhou Sunday announced the suspension of in-person classes at local primary and middle schools starting April 11 for COVID-19 control. From 8 a.m. Saturday to 2 p.m. Sunday, the city has registered 22 local infections amid its latest COVID-19 outbreak starting from Friday, said local authorities during a press conference held Sunday. Click here to read…

Tibet donates materials to help Shanghai, Jilin battle COVID-19: Xinhuanet
April 10, 2022

Trains carrying the first batch of anti-epidemic supplies donated by southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region left the city of Xigaze and the regional capital of Lhasa on Sunday for Shanghai and Jilin Province, local authorities said. Click here to read…

China’s Nanjing to build four makeshift hospitals: Xinhuanet
April 10, 2022

The city of Nanjing, the capital of east China’s Jiangsu Province, will build four makeshift hospitals to receive and treat COVID-19 patients, said the municipal health commission. Click here to read…

1,948 COVID-19 patients discharged from hospitals on Chinese mainland: Xinhuanet
April 10, 2022

A total of 1,948 COVID-19 patients were discharged from hospitals on the Chinese mainland on Saturday, the National Health Commission said Sunday. The commission said in its daily report that 27,745 close contacts were discharged from medical observation on the mainland on Saturday. Click here to read…

Jiangsu Province aids neighboring Shanghai’s COVID-19 battle: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

Shanghai’s neighboring province of Jiangsu had received 5,504 people transferred from Shanghai for quarantine by 6 p.m. Friday. Jiangsu will prepare a total of 30,000 quarantine rooms to aid the metropolis in its fight against its COVID-19 resurgence, according to the Jiangsu provincial COVID-19 prevention and control office. Click here to read…

Local officials disciplined for failing to fulfill duties in COVID-19 response: Xinhuanet
April 10, 2022

Eleven officials in the city of Jilin, northeast China’s Jilin Province, have been dealt with for failing to perform their duties in COVID-19 prevention and control work, the city’s discipline inspection and supervisory authorities said on Saturday. Click here to read…

China’s supreme court steps up efforts to protect rights of senior citizens:
Xinhuanet

April 8, 2022

China’s Supreme People’s Court (SPC) on Friday issued a judicial directive to enhance the crackdown on crimes targeting the elderly. The SPC asked local courts to place more resources on criminals cases involving elderly victims, particularly cases of abusing, abandoning or assaulting the elderly as well as telecom fraud that targets their demographic. Click here to read…

Shanghai builds over 100 makeshift hospitals for COVID-19 treatment: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

Shanghai has built over 100 makeshift hospitals for COVID-19 treatment with over 160,000 beds, the Shanghai municipal government said at a press conference on Saturday. Click here to read…

Former provincial political advisor under probe: Xinhuanet

April 9, 2022

Sun Yuanliang, a former senior political advisor of northeast China’s Liaoning Province, is under probe for suspected serious violations of discipline and law. Sun, former vice chairman of the Liaoning Provincial Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, is being investigated by the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission, according to a statement released on Saturday. Click here to read…

Beijing registers one area as high risk for COVID-19: Xinhuanet
April 9, 2022

An area in Beijing was classified as high risk for COVID-19 on Saturday, according to a municipal press conference on COVID-19 prevention and control held on the same day. The area, Erjiefang, is located off Jiuxianqiao Street in Chaoyang District. A total of eight locally confirmed cases have been reported in the area in the past 14 days, as of midnight on Friday. Click here to read…

China to set up 27 more cross-border e-commerce pilot zones: Quishi
April 11, 2022

Twenty-seven more cities and regions in China were recently approved by the State Council to set up cross-border e-commerce pilot zones. It brought the overall tally of the pilot zones to 132, which cover foreign trade powerhouses and municipalities, as well as cities that see obvious advantages and prospering development in the foreign trade sector. Click here to read…

More funds for water conservancy: Quishi
April 11, 2022

China will intensify efforts to increase funding channels for investment in water conservancy projects and contribute to economic growth, officials said. Water conservancy investment could provide effective impetus to economic development, as shown by findings of research projects undertaken by some institutes, said Wei Shanzhong, vice-minister of water resources, on Friday. Click here to read…

Law to improve financial stability: Quishi
April 11, 2022

China’s new draft law on financial stability has proposed a comprehensive framework of financial risk prevention that will help navigate the world’s second-largest economy through the rising economic and financial headwinds at home and abroad, experts said on Thursday. Click here to read…

Water resources ministry plans new projects to drive growth: China Daily
April 8, 2022

China will accelerate the construction of water conservancy projects to help drive economic growth, said Wei Shanzhong, vice-minister of Water Resources. Investment in water conservancy projects could provide effective economic impetus according to research, Wei told a news conference organized by the State Council Information Office on Friday. Click here to read…

Xinjiang spokesman says US hearing hypocritical: China Daily
April 8, 2022

The holding of a public hearing in the US on the so-called “Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act” demonstrates the hypocrisy and absurdity of a legal and judicial system using long-arm jurisdiction, a Xinjiang government spokesman said. Click here to read…

Industry base points way for low-carbon transition: China Daily
April 08, 2022

Ningxia Baofeng Energy Group’s solar-agriculture project involving goji berries farmed under photovoltaic panels has won major accolades. [Photo provided to China Daily]
Editor’s note: China aims to peak its carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060, major goals in a national green transition drive. This series looks at efforts in various sectors to meet the goals. Click here to read…

Former senior official of Zhejiang indicted for graft: China Daily
April 11, 2022

Zhou Jiangyong, a former senior official in East China’s Zhejiang province, has been indicted on charge of taking bribes. Zhou was formerly a member of the Standing Committee of the Zhejiang Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and secretary of the CPC municipal committee of Hangzhou, Zhejiang’s capital city. Click here to read…

HK official calls for vigilance on security threats: China Daily
April 11, 2022

The security chief of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region said the city should remain on high alert to address lurking and emergent national security threats, and should take decisive actions to prevent homegrown terrorism and cyberattacks and counter the influence of external hostile forces. Click here to read…

New COVID team sent to HK: China Daily
April 8, 2022

The Chinese mainland has sent a fifth group of medical experts to Hong Kong to assist in the fight against its recent COVID-19 outbreak, the National Health Commission said on FridayClick here to read…

Guangzhou reports new cases, discourages travel: China Daily
April 10, 2022

Residents in Guangzhou, the Guangdong provincial capital, were asked by local authorities not to leave the city unless absolutely necessary due to new cases of COVID-19 discovered there. “Those who must leave Guangzhou for other cities are required to have a negative result from a nucleic acid test done within 48 hours of departure starting Monday,” Chen Bin, deputy director of the city’s health commission, said on Sunday. Click here to read…

HK seniors undergo ‘quarantine in reverse’: China Daily
April 11, 2022

City prioritizes efforts to help elderly during pandemic as vaccination drive proves effective

Last month in Hong Kong, staff members from Pleasure Lodge, a newly opened residential care home for seniors in Kwai Chung, New Territories, set off in a rehabilitation bus to pick up elderly residents from a nursing home in Tai Wai, about a 30-minute drive away. Click here to read…

Shanghai classifies communities according to COVID-19 risk: China Daily

April 11, 2022

A total of 7,624 communities in Shanghai were categorized as lockdown zones in the city’s next phase to contain the outbreak, while 2,460 communities were designated precautionary zones and 7,565 marked as controlled zones, the municipal government announced on Monday. Click here to read…l

HK’s John Lee joins Chief Executive race, highlighting national loyalty and rule of law: Global Times
April 9, 2022

Two days after China’s central government, the State Council, approved the resignation of John Lee Ka-chiu from the post of Chief Secretary for Administration of Hong Kong in accordance with the Basic Law, Lee announced on Saturday via an online press conference that he is joining the upcoming Chief Executive election, a decision made out of “the loyalty for the country, love for the city, and sense of duty toward local residentsClick here to read…

Shanghai officials sacked for dereliction of duty over COVID-19: Global Times
April 8, 2011

Three officials in Shanghai’s Pudong New Area have been dismissed from their administrative posts for dereliction of duty and failure to control the COVID-19 outbreak, Shanghai authorities said on Friday. So far, at least five officials have been punished amid this wave of the Omicron outbreak. Click here to read…

Former RTHK show host Allan Au arrested, ‘linked to Stand News’: Global News
April 11, 2022

Hong Kong Police Force’s national security department arrested Allan Au Ka-lun, a media veteran and former host of a RTHK program, on Monday morning for colluding and publishing inflammatory publications, local media reported. The reports said the case is related to Stand News. Click here to read…

Shanghai’s largest residential oxygen manufacturer suspends production as employees tested positive for COVID-19: Global Times
April 11, 2022

A major oxygen cylinder supplier in Shanghai has halted operation and remains closed on Monday after employees tested positive for COVID-19. The Shanghai Shenwei Medical Gas Company, the city’s largest residential oxygen cylinder supplier, supplies more than 90 percent of oxygen for home therapy. Click here to read…

S China’s Guangzhou suspends primary and middle schools’ in-person classes after reporting 23 COVID-19 infections: Global Times
April 10, 2022

Guangzhou, in South China’s Guangdong Province has announced the suspension of on-site activities in all kindergartens, primary schools and middle schools in the city starting Monday after another transmission chain of the Omicron variant was detected. Click here to read…

Guangzhou renovates key fair venue to makeshift hospital amid latest spike: Global Times
April 10, 2022

Local authorities in Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, announced on Sunday that they are renovating part of the exhibition hall of the world-renowned China Import and Export Fair into a makeshift hospital amid the latest COVID-19 spike. Click here to read…

Shanghai Big Data Center apologizes for inconvenience caused by network jam: Global Times
April 10, 2022

The Shanghai Big Data Center apologized on Sunday for the inconvenience caused by its newly launched nucleic acid code system, saying both WeChat and Alipay mini-programs have resumed normal while the Shanghai QR Code Application is still recovering. Click here to read…

Beijing COVID-19 cases associated with imported clothes: Global Times

April 8, 2022

New clusters of COVID-19 cases in a clothing store in Beijing may have been caused by imported clothes, the Beijing Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Friday after carrying out an epidemiological investigation and gene sequencing tests. Click here to read…

China opens 233 km of high-speed rail in Q1, makes progress on Xinjiang, Xizang links: Global Times
April 10, 2022

China opened 233 kilometers of new high-speed rail in the first quarter of 2022, with progress being made on the preliminary work of key projects linking Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and Southwest China’s Xizang Autonomous Region, China Railway said over the weekend. Click here to read…

Food delivery platforms offer free hotel and bonuses for riders during Shanghai : Global Times

Multiple Chinese food delivery platforms or delivery service providers including Meituan, JD.com, Ele.me and Dada have dispatched over 1,000 delivery riders to Shanghai from neighboring cities or provinces to secure the food supply for residents amid restrictions on public movement. Click here to read…

China’s inflation tops forecasts as supply pressures worsen: Reuters
April 11, 2022

China’s factory-gate and consumer prices rose faster than expected in March as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, persistent supply chain bottlenecks and production snags caused by local COVID flare-ups added to commodity cost pressures. Click here to read…

Shanghai jumps into group buying to stay fed during COVID lockdown: Reuters
April 8, 2022

When Shanghai first went into full COVID-19 lockdown last week, Ping Mai wasn’t expecting she’d become her housing compound’s unofficial broker for its meat supply. With her and her neighbours stuck at home and struggling to buy food amid lockdown curbs that have shuttered stores and dramatically reduced the number of couriers, she is among millions that are trying to figure out how to buy fresh supplies on a daily basis. Click here to read…

Shanghai food problems persist amid lockdown: Taipei Times
April 11, 2022

Shanghai reported nearly 25,000 locally transmitted COVID-19 infections yesterday, as residents of China’s most populous city voiced complaints over food and basic supplies, and concern spread that more cities might soon be in the same situation. Click here to read…

US virus ‘accusations’ displease China: Taipei Times
April 11, 2022

China defended its measures to curb a COVID-19 outbreak and expressed displeasure with the US over what it calls a “groundless accusation” of Chinese pandemic policies, even as cases in Shanghai continued to spread despite an extensive lockdown. Click here to read…

Shanghai rewrites daily cases record for 10th day, adding 26,087 new infections as lockdown strains supply chains and daily lives: South China Morning Post
April 11, 2022

Shanghai rewrote the daily Covid-19 infections record for the 10th straight day with 26,087 new cases on Monday, as six rounds of mass testing uncovered more carriers of the coronavirus in China’s financial hub. The number of people with symptoms dipped to 914 from more than 1,000 every day over the weekend, with the vast majority of the carriers displaying no symptoms of illness, according to health authorities. Click here to read…

Shanghai Covid lockdown spurs race to stockpile food across China: South China Morning Post
April 10, 2022

Stockpiling has become a hot topic on Chinese social media as news spreads of the plight of Shanghai residents who are struggling to secure food supplies under lockdown.
Over the past week multiple survivors’ guides have been published by media outlets and bloggers. These include a well-known medical site called Doctor Clove, which published a list of what items people will need if they are suddenly quarantined and advice on storing food for the long term. Click here to read…

Even Chinese billionaire Kathy Xu Xin struggles to buy milk and bread under Shanghai’s coronavirus lockdown: South China Morning Post
April 8, 2022

While residents in Shanghai try a variety of novel ways to buy daily essentials during the city’s coronavirus lockdown, billionaires it seems are no exception. The city recorded 19,982 Covid-19 cases yesterday, setting a daily record for the sixth day in a row, as the city’s 25 million residents remain under a hard lockdown as authorities struggle to contain the virus and carry out mass testing. Click here to read…

Shanghai residents risk punishment for breaching lockdown, sneaking out at night to barter for food: South China Morning Post
April 9, 2022

Each night under the cover of darkness, Shanghai resident Zhang Hongyan and her neighbours conduct barter transactions to get essentials which are in short supply due to the city’s coronavirus lockdown. The residents conduct their bartering at night to avoid being caught outside their homes by authorities who enforce strict penalties for anyone caught breaking lockdown. Click here to read…

Africa Now – Weekly Newsletter (Week 15, 2022)

Welcome to Africa Now, your weekly newsletter for Africa, presenting the most important developments in the continent – news that matters.

COMMENTARY

Justice for Thomas Sankara

This week, Blaise Compaoré was jailed for his role in the murder of Burkinabe revolutionary Thomas Sankara –but real justice can only be won by a movement that fights to bring Sankara’s socialist vision back to life. Click here to read…

Corridor in uncertainty

The Asia-Africa Growth Corridor, a joint initiative of India and Japan, was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a meeting of the African Development Bank in 2017Click here to read…

NEWS

Morocco, Spain mend ties after change in policy on Western Sahara

Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez and Moroccan King Mohammad VI met in Rabat after a year of tense relations. Spain said it backed the kingdom’s plan of limited autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty for Western Sahara. Click here to read…

EXCLUSIVE- Draft Sudan deal seeks to cement military’s grip

Factions aligned with Sudan’s military have drawn up a deal to form a transitional government that would cement the army’s control and bypass pro-democracy groups it shared power with before an October coup. Click here to read…

Russia blocks UN security council request for investigation into Moura massacre

A UN Security Council request for independent investigations into the alleged Moura massacre in Mali has been blocked by Russia. Click here to read…

Despite a recent agreement, new clashes broke out between supporters of South Sudan’s rivals

Less than a week days after a major agreement was sealed between South Sudan’s rival leaders, fighting erupted in the North of the country. Click here to read…

Sparring Somali leaders now at odds over expulsion of African Union envoy

Somalia’s prime minister on Thursday expelled the African Union representative because of “acts incompatible with his status” but the president rejected the order, signalling a new rift between the leaders of the Horn of Africa nation. Click here to read…

Tunisia to compensate victims of revolution

Tunisian President Kais Saied, facing political and economic crisis and accusations that he took power in a coup, announced compensation on Sunday for the families of those killed and wounded in the 2011 revolution that brought democracy to the country. Click here to read…

DR Congo’s Tshisekedi signs EAC Treaty

Tshisekedi’s accession signature immediately brought the DR Congo into the realms and provisions of all the protocols and regional policies of the EAC. Click here to read…

Nigeria’s electricity grid collapses for the second time in a month

Nigeria’s national electricity grid has collapsed for the second time in a month, the federal ministry of power said on Saturday, leaving the parts of the country it serves, including capital Abuja and Africa’s biggest city Lagos, without power. Click here to read…

Burkina ex-president moved to home after house arrest

Burkina Faso’s military-led government said in a statement that former president Kabore would return to his home after house arrest. Click here to read…

Eastern Libyan military commanders urge closure of road to west

Military commanders in eastern Libya said on Saturday they had suspended participation in a U.N.-backed joint military council, accusing the Tripoli-based government of failing to hand power to a new cabinet and calling for the road west to be closed. Click here to read…

The Gambia votes for a new National Assembly

Gambians to vote for 53 legislators on a five-year term, with President Barrow picking five others, including the parliament’s president. Click here to read…

What is happening with Chad’s peace talks in Doha?

About 300 rebels landed in the Qatari capital, seeking a peace deal, but find themselves in a curious cohabitation. Click here to read…

Guinea junta chiefs warns mining giants over inequality

The head of Guinea’s ruling junta, Colonel Mamady Doumbouya, has warned foreign mining companies to build processing factories locally and to share revenues with the country equally. Click here to read…

Angola: UN Supports Angola’s Transition to Middle Income Country

The resident coordinator of the United Nations in Angola Zahira Virami reaffirmed Wednesday the support of the UN system in the preparation process of Angola’s transition from Least Developed Country to Middle Income Country. Click here to read…

New COVID-19 variant discovered in Botswana

A new COVID-19 variant has been discovered in Botswana, a government official said. The new variant, which has characteristics of both the Alpha and Delta variants, has yet to be named. Click here to read…

Kenya’s Odinga running his fifth presidential race. Why outcome means so much for Kenya

“Odinga has a common touch that resonates with Kenyans who have felt locked out of the power matrix controlled by two ethnic groups.” Click here to read…

Life sentence for Burkinabe ex-leader Compaoré for Sankara murder

The long-awaited verdict brings to close a six-month trial for the assassination of Thomas Sankara on October 15, 1987. Click here to read…

Separatist commander killed in infighting in Cameroon’s restive Anglophone region

Security and local sources said on Saturday that a notorious separatist commander has been killed in Cameroon’s war-torn Anglophone region of Northwest in clashes between rival separatist groups. Click here to read…

Ghana on high alert against terrorist attacks – Minister of National Security assures

The Minister of National Security, Albert Kan-Dapaah, has given the assurance that the country will be able to respond and ward off any terrorist attacks in the country. Click here to read…

Coptic Christian Priest Killed in Egypt’s Alexandria

On Thursday 7 April 2022, the Ministry of Interior announced on its official Facebook page the arrest of a 60-year-old man who stabbed an archpriest to death in Alexandria. Click here to read…

US Alarmed by Reports of Atrocities in Ethiopia’s Tigray Region

The United States expressed concern Friday about reports of ethnically motivated atrocities in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. Click here to read…

Draghi Heads to Algeria as Italy Seeks to Cut Russia Gas Imports

Mario Draghi will visit Algeria on Monday as part of a plan to wean Italy off Russian natural gas. Click here to read…

Zambia’s President Hichilema goes eight months without salary

The Zambian leader, who was elected into office last August, says a salary was not his motivation for seeking public office. Click here to read…

Togo dismisses more teachers in new dispute with teachers’ union

The Togolese government has dismissed nine teachers, within a week of firing 137 others, even as the teacher’s union continues to demand that the Faure Gnassigbe administration honour its promises to them. Click here to read…

The problem with gaming in Uganda

The gaming industry in Uganda is highly informal, with individual-owned gaming parlours charging per hour of game time. However, the opportunity is huge. Click here to read…

Tanzania commemorates 100 years of founding leader Julius Nyerere

Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan on Saturday joined fellow citizens in commemorating 100 years of the birth of founding leader Julius Nyerere. Click here to read…

Negotiating Local Business Practices with China in Benin

Beninese officials have shown how even small countries can use close coordination between ministries and other negotiating tactics to strike deals with Chinese counterparts that better protect their own interests. Click here to read…

Mozambique: All eyes on suitors as they await news on bid round qualification

Thirteen players — including two from Russia — will hear this week if they have succeeded in their plans to take part in Mozambique’s upcoming licensing round. Click here to read…

29,000 COVID-19 Vaccines Expired in Botswana: Official

At least 29,000 AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have already expired and some will expire at the end of April in Botswana, an official said Saturday. Click here to read…

INDIA IN AFRICA

Haryana signs collaboration deal with Ethiopia to strengthen trade, investment ties

The FFC was signed by Haryana’s Principal Secretary Yogender Choudhary and Ethiopian Ambassador Dr Tizita Mulugeta. Click here to read…

India, Kenya holds 2nd Foreign Office Consultations, review bilateral relations

India and Kenya on Friday held the 2nd round of Foreign Office Consultations (FoC) and reviewed the entire gamut of bilateral relations including political and economicClick here to read…

MoU with Congo-based foundation

MS University has signed an MoU with the Vinmart Foundation of the Democratic Republic of the Congo for our scholarships to students of Congo who will be coming to Vadodara to pursue higher education. Click here to read…

Haryana, Ethiopian panel sign trade framework

During the two-day meeting of the Haryana-Ethiopia Investment Commission (EIC), a framework of collaboration (FFC) was signed between Haryana and the EIC. Click here to read…

Madagascar joins India-backed Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure

Madagascar has become the 30th country to join the India-backed Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) that aims to help small island nations develop resilience to deal with the adverse impact of climate change. Click here to read…

Fishermen team meets Kanimozhi for release of five captains from Seychelles

Thoothukudi MP and DMK leader Kanimozhi has assured a delegation from the International Fishermen Development Trust (INFIDET) that she will take efforts for the release of five captains and their boats detained in Seychelles. Click here to read…

Rwandans in India pay tribute to genocide victims

The Rwandan High Commission in New Delhi, India in collaboration with the India Africa Trade Council commemorated the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi on April 7Click here to read…

Why India’s beautiful flowers miss the plane of exports while Kenya & Ethiopia fly high

Ethiopia and Kenya have promoted floriculture in key markets, offered tax holidays, organised producers and worked to create infrastructure for farmers. Click here to read…

Why is a dragon carved on Jain temple in Mangalore? Medieval Africa-China trade holds answer

While many of us have heard of Indian interactions with Southeast Asia and China, or even Arabia, Africa is a gaping hole in how we think about premodern trade. But it was one of the most prosperous. Click here to read…

Review: India-Africa Relations: Changing Horizons by Rajiv Bhatia

A meticulously detailed book that tells us why Africa matters so much to India and presents good suggestions on how the India-Africa relationship should be enhanced and pushed ahead. Click here to read…

Chibuzor, who once ruled Kolkata football, dies in Nigeria

Nigerian striker Chibuzor Nwakanma – the first foreigner to play for Kolkata’s big three clubs and whose unique nose for goals often set the field afire with his special somersault celebration – is no more. Click here to read…

Egyptian Govt expresses interest to buy Indian wheat

Team from Cairo to visit New Delhi next week, to inspect facilities for imports by supplies and commodities authorityClick here to read…

Nigeria Exports Crude Oil worth NGN774.5 Bln to India in 4Q

Nigeria exported crude oil worth 774.5 billion Nigerian naira ($1.86 billion) to India in the fourth quarter of 2021, the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics said in a report. Click here to read…

Paree Sanitary Pads Eyes Global Expansion, Enters Tanzania, Africa, and Nepal

With an objective to cater to women’s needs and make sanitary pads easily accessible, Paree Sanitary Pad has now expanded its operations to Tanzania, Africa, and Nepal. Click here to read…

Indian community to strengthen economic relations with Ghana

The Indian community in Ghana has said it will expand business operations as part of efforts to boost investment and increase its economic relations with the country. Click here to read…

Myanmar Round Up – March 2022

27 March 2022 marked the 77th Armed Forces Day, and the military celebrated the day with the display of its might, with troops, tanks, missiles and aircraft. This day marks the Burmese army’s resistance to Japanese occupation in 1945. However, the current role of the military is being widely criticised. Internationally, two reports have condemned the role of the military. The Ukraine crisis that started in the last week of February got mixed reactions from two opposite forces in Myanmar. The protesters have outrightly spoken against the Russian actions, but the military has shown its support for Russia. The following article presents a detailed analysis of the events that happened in March 2022.

Political Situation

On the Armed Forces Day, Senior General, Min Aung Hlaing claimed that the military would not negotiate with “terrorist” opposition forces and vowed to annihilate them. The military celebrated the day with a parade of troops and weapons in the capital, Naypyitaw. However, the anti-coup protesters came out on the streets with slogans such as “uproot the fascist military.” [1] The month marked increased clashes between the military forces and Ethnic Armed Organisations (EAOs) and People Defence Forces (PDFs).

Fresh clashes broke out between the military and Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) in Mongkoe region, Shan State. It must be noted that the Mongkoe region is crucial to border trade with China. The military has been accused of increasing reinforcements since February 2022, when its founder died.[2] More than ten people were killed in a military raid on three villages in Gangaw Township in northwestern Myanmar’s Magway Region.[3]

Further, a Myanmar military convoy consisting of 80 vehicles, including artillery and armoured vehicles, arrived in the Mindat region, Chin State, according to the Chinland Defence Force (CDF). The regime has already shut down phone and internet services in Mindat and many other townships across Chin State, and blocked supply routes into the region. [4] Some 35 junta troops from Reed military outpost in Falam Township on the India-Myanmar border fortified their positions, according to the CDF. However, the CDF claimed that the military expansion would have little impact as they ran the local administration.[5] The Karen National Union (KNU) offices also called on non-striking government employees working for the regime in KNU-controlled areas to resign. To overthrow the military rule, in addition to attacks on the military, it is important to target its administrative mechanism.[6]

The military is also under attack for targeting the churches and the Christian communities. Two military aircraft attacked the Sisters of Reparation convent in the Kayah State during the month. It has been reported that since fighting began in May 2021, eight Catholic churches in Kayah State have been hit by artillery shelling or airstrikes. Kayah has around 300,000 people and a relatively large Christian population, including around 90,000 Catholics.[7]

To enhance its fight against the protestors, the Myanmar military regime has enacted a new law making it compulsory for law enforcement officers to fight alongside soldiers on the front lines. It has been argued that the military is facing huge casualties in urban and rural areas and also struggling with an increasing number of defectors and a drop in recruitments. Furthermore, the new police law gives authority to law enforcement officers to take action without a warrant against anyone who bangs pots and pans, which has been a popular method of protesting against the regime.[8] According to reports in the Australian media, given the increasing number of defectors, Australia has begun granting protection to those who have escaped Myanmar. The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age have spoken to two former members of the military whose pleas for asylum have been accepted by the Australian government.[9]

Furthermore, the state-run MRTV television announced that the military had terminated the citizenship of eleven opposition leaders because they allegedly fled the country and harmed the national interest. The eleven members include eight National Unity Government members and three other activists.[11]

On March 15, the ousted Religious Affairs Minister Thura Aung Ko from the National League for Democracy (NLD) government was sentenced to 12 years in prison for corruption, awarding Buddhist titles to people in exchange for bribes, and keeping a gold plate that was supposed to be donated to a pagoda. He was a former Brigadier General and was appointed deputy minister of religious affairs under the former military regime. He later joined the NLD government in 2016 and was again appointed as religious affairs minister. During his tenure, he drew the ire for abolishing the anti-Muslim and pro-military Buddhist radical group Ma Ba Tha and was a key figure in the move to prosecute the hate-preaching monk Wirathu. He was also in support of amending the military’s 2008 constitution[12]

Domestic Situation – Economic and Social

Due to the rising fuel crisis, reports have emerged that Myanmar seeks help from its neighbours. During the month, reports highlighted Myanmar’s Ministry of Home Affairs asking the police to escort a convoy of fuel being delivered from Thailand and entering through the Myawaddy border. Furthermore, the Myanmar-owned commercial airlines have announced that they will add fuel surcharges to the price of tickets to compensate for rising costs, and the Myanmar Container Truck Association (MCTA) announced that fuel fees would be added to freight costs from 14 March. In order to reduce dependence on US Dollar, the military approved the use of the Thai baht as an official currency in border trade dealings. Earlier this year, Myanmar had allowed direct currency settlements using the Chinese Yuan with its kyat. The military plans a similar arrangement for the use of India’s rupee. [13]

According to sources, the Myanmar military is building a new headquarters for Myanmar Economic Holding Ltd (MEHL) in the country’s capital Naypyitaw out of safety concerns. Currently, its headquarters are in Yangon. According to one of the sources, the military was concerned about resistance attacks on regime targets in Yangon. However, despite security concerns, the People’s Defence Forces have bombed many government offices in the Yangon, and the headquarters of MEHL and MEC have been not attacked as of today.[14]

On the Peasants’ Day, Senior General stated his deep attachment to improving the socio-economic conditions of the country’s farmers. However, these are considered to be false claims. Farmers in Myanmar’s Magway and Sagaing regions have emerged as the fiercest fighters against the military rule and therefore, faced wrath of the military. The impact of COVID-19 and the rise in inflation have further added to their worries. Farmers are concentrated in Magway and Sagaing, which has seen maximum fighting between the military and People’s Defence Force (PDF) para-militaries. Therefore, many farmers in Magwe and Sagaing regions marked Peasants Day by expressing their opposition to the military regime.[15]

On 15 March, Myanmar’s Ministry of Health issued an order to increase the maximum size of public gatherings from 200 to 400 people. The Ministry said the maximum ceiling of 400 people is allowed at public gatherings as COVID-19 cases and the death toll has declined. As of 15 March, Myanmar has recorded 606,910 confirmed coronavirus cases with 19,414 deaths. [16] The military announced that Thingyan (Burmese New Year Festival) events in Naypyitaw, Yangon and Mandalay and some major towns would be organised and the public would be allowed the public to set up pavilions upon request. In the previous two years, the country could not celebrate because of COVID-19 and military rule. [17]

In addition to this, the military stated that a COVID-19 vaccine called Myancopharm would be produced with Chinese help. The drug was developed in collaboration with China’s Sinopharm CNBG Pharmaceutical Plant in July 2021. In addition to transferring vaccine production technology, it says China also provided two experts to provide training in vaccine production and production supervision.[18]

Norwegian telecommunications firm, Telenor, is still awaiting final approval on sale of its Myanmar-based subsidiary to Lebanese investment firm M1 Group, with an 80 percent controlling stake to Myanmar conglomerate Shwe Byain Phyu. The subsidiary has been under pressure from the military to install intercept technologies that would give authorities access to users information. However, the anti-military activists are worried that their safety would be at risk if the military had access to phone records. Therefore, an anonymous Myanmar citizen and Norwegian law firm SANDS, supported by the Netherlands-based Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations, filed a complaint with the Norwegian Data Protection Authority alleging Telenor’s sale violates the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The complaint asked Norway’s privacy regulator to investigate and intervene to ensure the sale does not violate the right to privacy of its customers and put them at risk of exposure to military surveillance.[19]

International Responses

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, raised concerns over the new report that warned the international community of serious human rights abuses in Myanmar which may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity. She appealed to the international community to take “concerted, immediate measures to stem the spiral of violence” in Myanmar. The report, released at the 49th UN Human Rights Council session, upheld that Myanmar’s military and security forces have shown “a flagrant disregard for human life”. The report is based on interviews with more than 155 victims, witnesses, and advocates, whose accounts were corroborated using satellite imagery, verified multimedia files, and credible open-source information. Besides the killings and mass detentions, at least 440,000 have been displaced, with 14 million in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. Furthermore, military forces have largely blocked the delivery of humanitarian aid.[20]

A week after the UN report, another report was released on 24 March by Fortify Rights and Yale Law School’s Schell Center, which also confirmed that Myanmar’s military is involved in deploying snipers to kill protesters and soldiers are instructed to commit crimes and given a “field-craft” manual that contained no guidance on rules of war. The 193-page report analysed leaked documents and 128 testimonies from various sources, including survivors, medical workers, witnesses and former military and police personnel during the first six months of the coup. The report, called “Nowhere is Safe: The Myanmar Junta’s Crimes against Humanity Following the Coup d’ État”, also identified 61 military and police commanders who should be investigated for crimes against humanity.[21]

On 21 March, at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the Secretary of State Antony Blinken formally determined that violence committed against the Rohingya minority by Myanmar’s military amounts to genocide and crimes against humanity. The step comes after two State Department examinations – one initiated in 2018 and the other in 2020 – failed to produce a determination. As a result, Blinken had ordered his own “legal and factual analysis”. He also announced USD 1 million of additional funding for the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM). [22] However, in response to the determination, Myanmar’s military-ruled Ministry of Foreign Affairs categorically rejected the US Secretary of State’s determination. The Ministry reiterated that Myanmar, as a party to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide and the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is fully committed to all the existing obligations. The statement clearly stated that Myanmar has never engaged in any genocidal actions and does not have any genocidal intent against any racial or religious group.[23]

In addition to the determination, the United States imposed new sanctions targeting alleged arms dealers and companies involved in procuring weapons for Myanmar’s military. They also imposed sanctions on the Myanmar military’s 66th Light Infantry Division, which was accused of massacring civilians in the towns of Pyay and Hpruso in December 2021, and two military commanders. Canada also announced it was taking action against four individuals and two companies responsible for procuring and supplying arms to Myanmar’s military. In addition, the United Kingdom has imposed sanctions on arms dealers and companies linked to the Burmese Air Force’s supply. The list also includes newly-appointed Air Chief General Hutun Aung. [24]

The Burma Campaign UK reported that 55 British Parliamentarians from nine different political parties and Independent MPs joined the call for aviation fuel sanctions against the Burmese military. The report issued during the month said the Parliamentarians are backing Early Day Motion 908, which calls on the British government to introduce sanctions to stop aviation fuel from reaching the Myanmar military. The Myanmar military is increasingly using airstrikes against civilians and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee their homes. The motion also calls on the British government to support a referral of Burma t the International Criminal Court (ICC) and to join the Rohingya genocide case at the ICJ.[25]

To further affirm its position on the Myanmar crisis, the European Parliament passed a resolution on 10 March and provided an additional €1m to the UN Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar to collect evidence on human rights violations. In addition, it has been announced that the EU had allocated €65m for aid to Myanmar, of which €23m was provided in 2021. It was also announced that the EU will present a resolution to the Human Rights Council to ensure the “human rights situation in Myanmar remains high on the agenda of the international community.” [26]

During the month, ASEAN Special Envoy on Myanmar, Prak Sokhonn, Cambodian Foreign Minister, visited the country. Though the visit did not make any significant breakthroughs, the visit was the first by the ASEAN representative. [27] Preceding the ASEAN’s envoy visit, a Myanmar delegation led by the military’s Chief of Military Security Affairs, Lt-Gen Ye Win Oo, attended the 19th ASEAN Military Intelligence Meeting-AMIM-19 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The theme for the conference was “Solidarity for Harmonised Security”. On 03 March 2022, the Myanmar Police Colonel Zaw Lin Tun was appointed as the Executive Director of the ASEAN Police Secretariat and he and a delegation from the Myanmar Police Force attended the 40th ASEANAPOL Conference held in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.[28]

In a special emergency session, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) voted on a resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Of the 10 ASEAN members, eight – Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand – voted in favour. Vietnam and Laos were the only abstentions. However, Myanmar’s vote does not represent the current regime as the country’s UN seat is still held by Kyaw Moe Tun, who was appointed by the civilian government ousted in last year’s coup. Myanmar’s military, however, has offered firm support for Russia’s actions.[29]

India-Myanmar Engagements

On 30 March, the Fifth BIMSTEC virtual summit was conducted and was attended by the seven-member countries, including Myanmar. India’s Ministry of External Affairs defended Myanmar’s participation, given its geographical importance to the region. [30]

Following the fresh armed conflict, over 1000 people from Myanmar’s Chin State took shelter in the neighbouring Champhai district of Mizoram. Lalmuanpuia, village council president (VCP) said that while several refugees stayed with their relatives and friends, the rest of them are lodged in the commerce and industries department buildings and other government facilities, as Zokhawthar is the centre for Indo-Myanmar border trade where several buildings, including warehouses, were already constructed.[31] The Mizoram Government has provided around Rs 380 lakhs as humanitarian aid. According to official statistics, around 24,289 refugees have entered the state since the coup.[32]

Expressing concern over the situation in Myanmar, India and Japan called for an immediate cessation of violence throughout Myanmar and a return to the path of democracy. Prime Minister of Japan Kishida Fumio and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi reiterated their stance on Myanmar and called for the release of all political detainees in a joint press statement. They also reaffirmed their support for ASEAN efforts to seek a solution in Myanmar and welcomed Cambodia’s active engagement.[33] In addition to this, the Special Envoy of the Government of Japan for National Reconciliation in Myanmar met separately with several ethnic armed groups fighting the military in Thailand. On 10 March, Yōhei Sasakawa held talks with Karenni National Progressive Party leader Khu Oo Reh, the party’s second secretary, Aung San Myint and Ko Nelneh Plo, head of the Karenni Emergency Rescue Team, and discussed the issues of humanitarian aid. The Special Envoy also met with Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) leader Gen Yawd Serk.[34]

Conclusion

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, security forces have killed at least 1600 people and detained more than 12000 since the coup. The UNHCR data have stated that over 500,000 people have been internally displaced; as a result of this, thousands have fled as refugees to Thailand and India. Due to the current Ukraine crisis, the focus has been shifted away from the conflicts in the Asian region. The reports and determination will remain mere words until the military is held accountable for its actions.

Endnotes:

[1]https://kfgo.com/2022/03/27/myanmar-junta-chief-vows-no-talks-with-opposition-terrorists/
[2]https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/fresh-fighting-erupts-after-myanmar-junta-attacks-at-chinese-border.html
[3]https://www.myanmar-now.org/en/news/myanmar-army-storms-villages-murders-civilians-in-northwestern-resistance-stronghold-locals-say
[4]https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/massive-military-regime-convoy-arrives-in-western-myanmar.html
[5] https://www.mizzima.com/article/army-fortifies-its-positions-india-myanmar-border
[6] https://www.irrawaddy.com/in-person/interview/karen-ethnic-armed-group-tells-myanmar-govt-employees-in-its-area-to-quit.html
[7] https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2022/03/10/air-strike-damages-catholic-convent-as-myanmar-conflict-continues/
[8] https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-junta-enacts-law-allowing-it-to-deploy-police-to-front-lines.html
[9]https://www.mizzima.com/article/australia-grants-visas-myanmar-military-defectors
[10]https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/myanmar-military-revokes-citizenship-opposition-members-83267456
[11]https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-junta-starts-seizing-properties-of-activists-families.html
[12]https://www.persecution.org/2022/03/21/ousted-religious-affairs-minister-hit-12-year-sentence-junta/
[13]https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/world/myanmar-eyes-using-rupee-for-border-trade-378264
[14]MEHL is one of the Myanmar military’s two major holdings, the other being Myanmar Economic Corporation (MEC). Both are involved in nearly all of the country’s lucrative business sectors including oil and gas, copper and gemstone operations. https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-military-conglomerate-shifts-hq-to-capital-amid-juntas-security-fears.html
[15] https://www.rfa.org/english/news/myanmar/farmers-03032022192308.html
[17] https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplus/aseanplus-news/2022/03/16/myanmar-eases-covid-19-restrictions-to-allow-public-gatherings-of-up-to-400-people
[17] https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/public-to-boycott-myanmar-juntas-new-year-water-festival.html
[18] https://www.mizzima.com/article/junta-claims-myanmar-has-developed-covid-19-vaccine-chinas-help
[19] https://www.complianceweek.com/data-privacy/telenor-caught-in-gdpr-conundrum-over-myanmar-subsidiary-sale/31423.article
[20] https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/03/1113972
[21]https://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSKCN2LL0PP
[22]Since the Cold War, the State Department has formally used the term six times to describe massacres in Bosnia, Rwanda, Iraq and Darfur, the Islamic State’s attacks on Yazidis and other minorities, and most recently last year, over China’s treatment of Uyghurs and other Muslims. China denies the genocide claims. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/exclusive-biden-administration-rules-myanmar-army-committed-genocide-against-2022-03-20/
[23]https://elevenmyanmar.com/news/myanmar-categorically-rejects-us-secretary-of-states-conclusion-that-myanmar-tatmadaw-has
[24]https://thefinancialexpress.com.bd/world/us-issues-sanctions-on-alleged-arms-dealers-for-myanmar-military-1648262703
[25]https://www.mizzima.com/article/uk-mps-call-aviation-fuel-sanctions-against-myanmar-military
[26] https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2022/03/15/myanmar-s-message-to-the-eu-amid-ukraine-crisis-don-t-forget-about-us
[27] https://www.vifindia.org/article/2022/march/28/an-analysis-of-asean-s-special-envoy-visit-to-myanmar
[28]https://www.mizzima.com/article/myanmar-military-attends-19th-asean-military-intelligence-meeting
[29]https://thediplomat.com/2022/03/how-did-asian-countries-vote-on-the-uns-ukraine-resolution/
[30]https://www.aninews.in/news/world/asia/mea-defends-myanmars-participation-in-bimstec-hopes-for-restoration-of-democracy-in-country20220407194046/
[31]https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/1000-more-from-myanmar-flee-to-mizoram-after-fresh-conflict/articleshow/90023832.cms
[32]https://www.northeasttoday.in/2022/03/09/mizoram-government-provided-more-than-rs-380-lakhs-for-humanitarian-aid-to-myanmar-refugees/
[33]https://www.business-standard.com/article/international/india-japan-urge-myanmar-to-end-violence-and-return-to-democracy-122032000026_1.html
[34]https://www.bnionline.net/en/news/japanese-special-envoy-meets-ethnic-armed-groups-chiang-mai

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: April 08, 2022

Afghanistan
Afghan Refugees in Iran Complain of Harassment- Tolo News

Afghan refugees in Iran complained over their deteriorated condition, saying they have been facing harassment there. A video being circulated on social media shows Afghan refugees being harassed and tortured in Iran. Click here to read…

UNAMA: Closing of Girls’ Schools ‘Discriminatory’- Tolo News

Speaking to the Institute of International and European Affairs (IIEA), the deputy special envoy of the UN for Afghanistan, Mette Knudsen, called the decision over the ban of girls’ schools “discriminatory,” saying that its impact will deeply affect the future generation in “terms of literacy and numeracy and will contribute to the cycle of poverty.” Click here to read…

Kabul to Set Deadline for Qatar With Airport Contract- Tolo News

The meeting of the economic commission, chaired by the first deputy prime minister, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, tasked the Foreign Ministry to give a definite time by which a Kabul airport contract would be signed. Click here to read…

3,000 Families in Kabul Given Food Aid: Ministry- Tolo News

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation said it has provided food assistance to 3,000 needy families in Kabul with the cooperation of China.
Meanwhile, China says it has delivered 3,800 tons of food aid to Afghanistan in the past eight months. Click here to read…

Clerics Again Call to Reopen Girls’ Schools- Tolo News

Religious scholars in a conference under the name of “National Dialogue of Afghan Scholars” in Kabul once again called on the Islamic Emirate to reopen all girls’ schools in the country. Click here to read…

MSF voices concern at increasing measles cases- Pajhwok

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has voiced grave concern at the increasing incidence of measles in Afghanistan. Herat, Kunduz and Helmand are the worst-hit provinces, according to the humanitarian medical organisation, also known as Doctors without Borders. Click here to read…

Maryland University to house Afghans on its campus- Pajhwok

The University of Maryland (UMD) will offer provisional housing for refugee and evacuee families from Afghanistan, reports a US newspaper. Under a partnership with the International Rescue Committee, UMD is the first to provide space for Afghan families on its university campus. Click here to read…

Ban on poppy cultivation sends opium price soaring- Pajhwok

The price of opium has hit an all-time high after the Taliban banned poppy cultivation across the country. Earlier, the Taliban’s supreme leader issued a decree banning poppy cultivation and trade in other narcotics substances all over the country. Click here to read…

$32 million cash assistance arrives in Kabul- Pajhwok

Thirty-two million dollars cash assistance from the international community has reached Kabul. Click here to read…

After years, foreign tourists come to Nuristan- Pajhwok

Two foreign tourists have visited Afghanistan’s lush-green and mountainous Nuristan province after several years. Click here to read…

Al-Qaeda chief Zawahiri hits out at enemies of Islam- Pajhwok

Presumed dead, Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri has re-appeared in a fresh video that seems to have been filmed in Afghanistan, reports a British newspaper. The Daily Mail said the re-appearance of the elusive terror chief, one of the world’s most wanted men, had scotched speculation that he died in 2020. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
Dhaka-Washington: Closer to two defence deals- The Daily Star

Dhaka and Washington move closer to signing two defence deals that foreign policy analysts say is a notable progress in security cooperation in the areas of maritime, peacekeeping, counterterrorism and transnational crimes. Click here to read…

PM calls for enhancing digital security- The Daily Star

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina yesterday directed the authorities concerned to pay more attention to digital security in every sector of the country. Click here to read…

Laser strikes on aircraft: Caab efforts inadequate- The Daily Star

Pilots of different airlines have warned that major accidents can happen because of people shining laser beams at aircraft during take-off and landing after dark. Click here to read…

Govt lobbying foreigners to save itself- The Daily Star

BNP yesterday alleged that the government is lobbying foreigners to save themselves from their “misdeeds”. Click here to read…

Foreign minister’s comments were personal, does not reflect govt or party: Hasan- The Daily Star

Information and Broadcasting Minister Hasan Mahmud today said the BNP is afraid of elections and the foreign minister said it in front of US media as they (BNP) go to foreigners repeatedly on any issue. Click here to read…

Mexico-Bangladesh Parliamentary Friendship Group formed- The Daily Star

With an aim to grow partnership between the two countries, a friendship group named “Mexico-Bangladesh Parliamentary Friendship Group” was formed yesterday (April 6) at the Mexican parliament. Click here to read…

Onion farmers to get loan, incentive: agriculture minister – The Daily Star

Farmers will be given loan to make the country self-sufficient in production of onion and its seed, said Agriculture Minister Muhammad Abdur Razzaque. Click here to read…

Gas crisis likely to ease as Bibiyana field resumes full production- The Daily Star

After four days of disruption, the Chevron-operated Bibiyana gas field resumed full production from this morning – which is likely to end the gas crisis in parts of Bangladesh. Click here to read…

Must not lose focus on macroeconomic stability- The Daily Star

Macroeconomic stability, fiscal and debt management, and domestic resource mobilisation are the major areas Bangladesh need to keep its focus on, Asian Development Bank officials said yesterday referring to what the country can learn from the ongoing economic crisis in Sri Lanka. Click here to read…

Padma bridge now to open by year-end- The Daily Star

The wait for the completion of the Padma Bridge is set to prolong as the prime minister said yesterday that the bridge would be open to public by the end of the year. Click here to read…

‘No need for volunteers from Bangladesh to join Ukraine operation’- The Financial Express

In a statement posted on its Facebook page on Thursday, the embassy said it has been receiving “numerous letters from the Bangladeshi citizens who express their willingness to contribute on an unpaid basis to the liberation movement in Ukraine and Donbas”. The embassy, however, sees “no need for volunteers from Bangladesh to join the operation” as it is “going according to the plan, with the Russian Armed Forces successfully achieving set goals and objectives”. Click here to read…

Bangladesh abstains from voting on suspending Russia’s membership of UN Human Rights Council- The Daily Star

Bangladesh has abstained from voting on a resolution to suspend Russia’s membership of the UN Human Rights Council in the wake of human rights violations by Russia’s military operation in Ukraine. Click here to read…

Bhutan
RCSC leadership assessment raises eyebrows- Bhutan Times

Even as the Royal Civil Service Commission (RCSC) implements a paradigm shift in leadership in the civil service, there continues to be debate as to how efficient these measures will be in gauging their performance. Click here to read…

Safety of our tourists must reign supreme- Bhutan Times

The country saw the first tranche of tourists arrive at the Paro international airport after a wearisome lull of almost two years. The arrival of tourists not only means the resumption of business but is an important facet of our fight against the pandemic. Click here to read…

Overcoming COVID-19 the Bhutanese Way- The Diplomat

Compassionate leadership – and the resulting public trust and goodwill – provided the key to Bhutan’s remarkable pandemic success story. Click here to read…

Almost complete bypass to expand commercial farming in Nubi Gewog- BBS

Few works such as laying of Granular Sub-base on the road surface and the construction of sideway drains along the marshy and rocky areas are ongoing. But they are also nearing completion. Click here to read…

Canine Parvovirus outbreak in Paro- BBS

About ten cases of Canine Parvovirus have been reported every day at the Paro Veterinary Hospital since its outbreak about two weeks ago. And ten dogs have succumbed to the virus. Canine Parvovirus is a highly contagious virus that causes severe illness in young and unvaccinated dogsClick here to read…

Maldives
Maldives shelters sanctioned Russian billionaires’ yachts: CTV News

A day after coal and fertilizer billionaire Andrey Melnichenko was placed on the European Union’s sanctions list on March 9, his superyacht Motor Yacht A stopped broadcasting its location while in Maldives’ waters, maritime data shows. Click here to read…

India announces seven new High-Impact Community Development Projects in the Maldives: Rajje MV

Seven new projects have been announced under the Indian High-Impact Community Development Project (HICDP) grant assistance scheme. The announcement was made during India’s External Affairs Minister, Dr. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar’s recent visit to the Maldives. Click here to read…

Australia, Myanmar junta meeting ‘unacceptable’: HRW – Bangkok Post

Human Rights Watch on Thursday slammed a meeting between Australia’s ambassador to Myanmar and the military junta chief, saying it was “lending credibility” to a regime accused of war crimes. Click here to read…

Countries that sanctioned Myanmar’s junta still patronise regime’s timber: report – Eco Business

Myanmar’s military-led regime exported more than $190 million worth of timber in 2021, including to countries with active sanctions on the country’s state-controlled timber monopoly, according to a recent report from Forest Trends. Click here to read…

Myanmar’s National Unity govt warns China against engagement with junta – Times Now

Myanmar’s National Unity Government (NUG) has warned China’s government that its engagement with the country’s military junta could seriously damage Beijing’s international reputation. This comes after China’s foreign minister Wang Yi pledged Beijing’s support for the military. Click here to read…

Manipur town bordering Myanmar emerges smuggling hotspot – The Hindu

Police commandos led by SP Shrey Vats on Thursday arrested a van driver and seized 18 bars of gold, believed to have been smuggled in from Myanmar. The arrest took place at the Pallel police station in Kakching district. The gold bars weighed 166 gm each. Click here to read…

Myanmar Central Bank Vice-Governor Shot at Her Home – The Irrawaddy

The vice-governor of the junta-controlled Central Bank of Myanmar, Daw Than Than Swe, was shot at her house in Yangon’s Bahan Township on Thursday, becoming the highest-ranking regime official so far to be attacked. Conflicting reports have emerged over whether she survived the attack. Click here to read…

Nepal
President Bhandari administers oath of office, secrecy to newly appointed law minister- Himalaya

President Bidya Devi Bhandari administered the oath of office and secrecy to the newly appointed Minister for Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs, Govinda Sharma Koirala, today. Click here to read…

PM Deuba inaugurates vaccination campaign against typhoid- Himalaya

Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba initiated the typhoid vaccination campaign amidst a function organised at the Durbar High School, Ranipokhari here today. Click here to read…

Can Bandi bring the transitional justice process on track?- Kathmandu Post

Victims and rights activists say it is possible if he doesn’t compromise on the stand that he has so far been taking. Click here to read…

Ambassadors recommended for 20 countries including China- Kathmandu Post

Bishnu Pukar Shrestha, a rights activist and conflict victim, has been picked for Beijing under Maoist quota. Click here to read…

No data as malnutrition turns into major killer in Bajura villages- Kathmandu Post

Lack of detailed study in Muktikot, other villages worsens situation when the actual toll of deprivation is unknown. Click here to read…

UML objects to 6 points of the local election code of conduct- Online Khabar
The main opposition CPN-UML has objected to six points of the local elections code of conduct issued by the Election Commission. Click here to read…
Pakistan
Supreme Court restores National Assembly, orders no-confidence vote to be held on Saturday- Dawn

The Supreme Court on Thursday set aside deputy speaker’s ruling to dismiss the no-trust resolution against Prime Minister Imran and the subsequent dissolution of the NA by the president on the PM’s advice, with all five judges unanimously voting 5-0 against it. Click here to read…

US sought to punish ‘disobedient’ Imran Khan, says Russia- Dawn

Russia has lambasted “another attempt of shameless interference” by the United States in the internal affairs of Pakistan, adding that it sought to punish a “disobedient” Imran Khan. Click here to read…

PTI may be unable to delay Punjab CM election- Dawn

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) coalition government in Punjab may now find it difficult to further delay the election of the chief minister after the Supreme Court nullified the National Assembly deputy speaker’s ruling on the no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan. Click here to read…

Hawkish anti-US sentiments among workers trouble PTI- Dawn

It appears to have dawned upon the senior Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf leadership in Sindh that the strong anti-US sentiments rapidly growing in the party rank and files over the alleged interference in internal political affairs of the country and the alleged “conspiracy hatched to oust Imran Khan government” is not going to be very helpful for the political future of the party. Click here to read…

Health emergency extended again to deal with Covid-19 threat- Dawn

The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has extended health emergency for another three months to be able to deal with any immediate threat of Covid-19. Click here to read…

Opposition asks nation to observe thanksgiving day- Dawn

Applauding the Supreme Court’s verdict, the opposition parties on Thursday gave a call to the nation and their workers to observe thanksgiving day on Friday (today) and hold celebrations throughout the country over the ‘victory of democracy and the Constitution’ of the country. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Firms struggle amid Sri Lanka’s economic crisis: BBC

It is a daily struggle for Ranjith Koralage, the boss of a Sri Lankan clothing manufacturer, to find enough diesel to run his company’s machines and steam rollers. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka calls for $1 bln debt restructure as crisis rages: Reuters

Sri Lanka must urgently seek funds from multilateral lenders and aim to restructure a debt payment due in July, its outgoing finance minister said on Thursday, pleading for political stability amid the country’s worst economic crisis in decades. Click here to read…

Infographic: Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and political turmoil: Aljazeera

Sri Lanka is facing its worst financial crisis in more than 70 years. Food prices on the island nation rose by a record 30 percent in March alone. Here’s how much basic necessities now cost in the country of 22 million people. Click here to read…

West Asia Round up-March 2022

Abstract:
As the Ukraine -Russia war raged on, the countries in the region tried to assess their affiliations and predilections since these disconcerting developments would likely change the ongoing transitional global world order in unanticipated format and dimensions as they continued to also look at USA’s depleting influence and interest in the region. Votes at the UNSC and UNGA indicated their predicament as their relations with Russia and China have significantly deepened and they would prefer not to rock them despite coming under tremendous pressure from the West. PM Naftali Bennet, Qatar Foreign Minister, Saudi MBS and Turkey tried their best to diffuse the crisis and became interlocutors and hosts for the talks between warring sides.

Several regional and sub regional meetings were held including the Negev Foreign Ministers from Egypt, Morocco, Bahrain, UAE and US met at the initiative of the Yair Lapid , the Israeli Foreign Minister. Iran and the revival of JCPOA and creation of some regional architecture were discussed. Abraham Accords + will become a regular consultative Forum. Of course, Palestine- Israel issues were the mainstay for some Arab nations even though not much would have come out of it. Later, Egypt also hosted UAE Crown Prince and PM Naftali Bennet. While US is still keen to revive the JCPOA and significant progress has been made, despite standard public posturing by both sides, Israel and several Gulf countries remain vigilant and somewhat dissatisfied of not being included in the talks knowing too well that it could only be the signatories if the talks had to go forward.

King Abdullah II of Jordan is trying his diplomatic skills with Israel to ensure that the Ramadan period passes off peacefully in Jerusalem. He is the custodian of Al Aqsa -3rd holiest mosque in Jerusalem after Mecca and Media.

In a separate development, Jordan’s King Abdullah II hosted Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, Iraq’s Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi and Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, in the southern Jordanian city of Aqaba. The palace read out said that the meeting, which was also attended by a senior Saudi official, “covered means to advance ties between Jordan and these countries,” without elaborating. However, a statement from the Iraqi leader’s office said they discussed the global economic crisis and ways to confront food security challenges.

President Bashar al Assad was in the UAE, marking his first visit to an Arab country since the Syrian uprising began in 2011. It was also being seen as another marker of UAE’s independent foreign policy since US had imposed Caesar’s Act against Syria which also covers other countries dealing with Damascus.

Saudi Arabia executed 81 people convicted of crimes ranging from killings to ties to militant groups, a group that activists believe included over three dozen Shiites. Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh sharply condemned the executions as “a violation of basic principles of human rights and international law.” The talks between Riyadh and Tehran have also been held up. However, Houthis agreed to the ceasefire for three months pursuant to halt of attacks by Saudi led coalition and UN negotiations.

Qatar has finally been designated as the non-NATO ally by the US for its role in Afghanistan and largely supportive to US ventures in the region and elsewhere.

Israeli PM Naftali Bennet and Defence Minister Benny Gantz were slated to visit India to mark the 30th anniversary celebrations of establishment of full diplomatic relations. However, as PM Bennet suffered from Covid, the visit was rescheduled. PM Modi called Bennet to enquire about his health and wished him speedy recovery and early visit to India.

More Details …..
Negev Summit

On 28 March, the Negev Summit was attended by Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid al-Zayani, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita, and UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan. The Foreign Ministers of the UAE, Bahrain and Morocco condemned the recent attack on Israelis. The Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid during the press release called for erecting new architecture with shared capabilities that intimidates and deters common enemies i.e. Iran and its proxies. Lapid announced that following the meeting, it will be turned into a permanent forum. The US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken called on the participating states to work together to confront common security challenges and threats including those arising from Iran and its proxies. Blinken also mentioned about the US effort to work on a vision for the Palestinians and Israelis to enjoy equal measures if freedom, opportunity, security and dignity. The Emirati Foreign Minister stressed on the UAE’s support for efforts aimed at achieving peace, security, stability and development in the region.

The Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry noted that Egypt’s participation in the summit is aimed at strengthening the Israel-Palestine peace process. During the negotiations with Israeli side, the Egyptian leaders pushed for resumption of negotiations with the Palestinians and continue peace efforts. Egypt is also keen to intensify cooperation to face common challenges related to terrorism and extremism and achieve stability.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh condemned the summit calling such gatherings as free reward to Israel and Arab normalisation meetings without ending the occupation were just illusion and mirage.

Israel-Palestine Conflict

In March, there were series of shooting, stabbing and car ramming attacks in Israeli cities and Jerusalem. The attacks occurred in the backdrop on Negev Summit attended by top diplomats from the UAE; Bahrain, Morocco, Egypt, Israel and the US to interact on security issues. The recent attacks have raised the fear of violence during the month of Ramadan. The Jewish holiday of Passover and Christian holiday of Easter were also falling around the same time.

On 6 March, one Palestinian teenager stabbed two officers in Old City in occupied East Jerusalem. On 19 March, one Jewish jogger was stabbed and injured in West Jerusalem. On 22 March, four Israelis were killed in a knife and car ramming attack in Beersheba. Beersheba is not usually at the centre of Israeli-Palestine conflict. In recent years, tensions have increased in the Negev region over the ownership of land owned by Bedouins. The land disputes for many Palestinians are emblematic of the Israel-Palestine conflict. The attacker was a teacher in a close by Bedouin town reportedly pledged support for the Islamic State. The Islamic State (IS) operatives on 28 March killed two people and injured six in shooting attack in Hadera. The attack coincided with the Negev Summit. On 30 March, five Israelis were shot dead near Tel Aviv. The attack occurred in the ultra-orthodox city of Bnei Brak. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade took responsibility for the attack and called the attack as “a clear message written in blood in response to the Negev summit”.

In West Bank, there have been number of clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces in March. On 1 March, three Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in Beit Fajar and Jenin. ON 31 March, Israeli forces killed two Palestinians and injured seven others in a refugee camp in Jenin. On same day, one Palestinian man stabbed on Israeli bus near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank.

Israeli Defence Minister’s Visit to Amman

Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz visited Amman on 29 March and met with Jordanian King Abdullah. The meeting was seen as joint effort to reduce tensions between Israelis and Palestinians during the Ramadan period. The King appealed to Israel to respect Islamic rights to the Al Aqsa mosque compound which was crucial for maintaining the comprehensive calm. Gantz briefed about the measures taken by Israel to ensure freedom of prayer in Jerusalem and West Bank. The statement however did not elaborate on steps taken to carry out worship in Al-Aqsa Mosque. Notably, King Abdullah on 28 March visited the West Bank and met with Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas.

Egypt hosts Israeli Prime Minister and Abu Dhabi Crown Prince

Egyptian President Abdel Fatah Al Sisi hosted Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennet and the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan on 21 March. The Egyptian and the Emirati leaders agreed to expand bilateral talks on multiple issues including economic investments, Gulf security etc. The official Emirati news agency WAM mentioned that the visit was aimed at advancing cooperation in all fronts to benefit both states and their peoples. Both leaders discussed about recent regional and international issues and highlighted the necessity of emboldening Arab solidarity facing common challenges.

Notably, there is no official comment about Israeli Prime Minister’s meeting with Abdel Fatah Al Sisi. According to the Israeli media outlets, the three leaders shared concern about the possibility of revival of nuclear deal between Iran and the western states. The Gulf States have expressed unhappiness for excluding from talks to revive the nuclear pact as well as failing to address Iran’s missile programme and regional proxies.

Bashar Al Assad’s historic trip to the UAE

Syrian President on 18 March visited the UAE and met with Abu Dhabi Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. It was Assad’s first visit abroad since the 2011 civil war. Abu Dhabi Crown Prince expressed hope that the visit could promote peace and stability for Syria and the entire region. The discussion between Assad and the Dubai ruler focussed on expanding circle of bilateral cooperation in terms of economy, commerce and investments. Both leaders also shared their views on areas of shared concern about Syria’s territorial integrity and withdrawal of foreign forces.

The UAE has been one of the harshest critics of Bashar Al Assad since the 2011 civil war. The UAE backed Syrian opposition groups to topple Assad regime. Syria was expelled from the Arab League in November 2011 and faced years of isolation. Assad however managed to retain his political position due to backing from Iran, Hezbollah and Russia. The neighbouring states over the years have gradually re-engaged with Assad government. The UAE reopened its embassy in Damascus in December 2018. Jordan and Lebanon has requested the US to ease sanctions of Syria to facilitate bilateral trade. The US criticised Assad’s visit to the UAE saying it was profoundly disappointed.

Saudi Arabia- Houthi Conflict

Houthis in last week of March carried out drone strikes attacking oil depot in Jeddah and other facilities in Riyadh. Houthi spokesperson Yahya Sarea acknowledged the attack on Saudi Aramco’s facilities in Jeddah with missiles and Ras Tanura and Rabigh refineries with drones. Saudi Arabia destroyed two explosive laden drones heading towards Najran. The US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken condemned “reckless terrorist attacks striking civilian infrastructure” and called for immediate de-escalation. The attack in Jeddah endangered the planned Formula One race. The Saudi Motorsport Co. assured that race weekend schedule would continue as planned.

Saudi Arabia in response conducted air raids in Sanaa and Hodeida killing seven people. The Saudi coalition attacked one power plant; one fuel supply station and state run insurance office in Sanaa. In Hodeidah, oil facilities were targeted by Saudi forces. Houthis following the attack announced a three day truce and hinted the possibility of permanent ceasefire. The Saudi led coalition on 30 March eventually halted military operations after call from the UN for truce during the month of Ramadan.

Qatar commits to invest US$ 5 billion in Egypt

Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani visited Cairo and met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi. Qatari Foreign Minister visited Egypt in May 2021. The Qatari Foreign Minister promised to invest US$ 5 billion in Egypt to strengthen economic and investment cooperation between both states. The visit by the Qatari Foreign Minister indicates warming of ties with Al-Sisi government. Egypt joined Saudi Arabia and the UAE to boycott Qatar in 2017. Qatar is a strong supporter of Muslim Brotherhood and it has been critical of the heavy handed approach by the military and security forces. Qatar’s investment is likely to help Egypt which is facing high inflation triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The US officially designated Qatar as a major non-NATO ally on 10 March. The move has officially upgraded the partnership between both states. The designation would provide special economic and military privileges. Qatar is the third state in the Persian Gulf region after Kuwait and Bahrain to become a US major non-NATO ally.