August 2019

The radio audience measurement survey has indicated a significant growth for some of the SABC radio stations.

The survey indicates that the biggest radio station in Africa, Ukhozi FM, now reaches a weekly audience of 7.7 million people.

This is the largest audience the isiZulu language station has recorded since 2016.

The SABC’s combined radio stations market share for January 2019 to June 2019 was 73.2% indicating a 1.4% increase compared to the 72.1% market share recorded for the same period last year.

SABC spokesperson Vuyo Mthembu says the public broadcaster is committed to delivering on its mandate in an increasingly competitive broadcasting landscape.

The survey further shows another record breaking performance from the Afrikaans language station Radio Sonder Grense (RSG) which now records 1.3 million in its weekly audience.

She says: “The daily delivery of content in indigenous South African languages is a key strength of the public broadcaster and these large audiences are testament to the trust that South Africans have in SABC radio. The SABC would also like to express its gratitude to the millions of South Africans for their loyalty and support.”


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Prime Minister Boris Johnson will suspend Britain’s parliament for more than a month before Brexit, enraging opponents and raising the stakes in the country’s most serious political crisis in decades.

Cheered on by US President Donald Trump, Johnson launched his boldest move yet to take the country out of the European Union by October 31 with or without a divorce deal, by setting a new date for a state opening of parliament.

Known as the Queen’s Speech, the formal event will be held on October 14 and be preceded by a suspension of the House of Commons, meaning parliament will not sit between mid-September and mid-October.

The move, which had to be approved by Queen Elizabeth, limits the time opponents have to derail a disorderly Brexit, but also increases the chance that Johnson could face a vote of no-confidence in his government, and possibly an election.

It also risks dragging the 93-year-old, politically neutral Queen into the dispute. So incensed were leaders of the opposition parties by Johnson’s plan that several have written to the monarch asking for a meeting to express their concern.

The Queen acts on the advice of her Prime Minister. Her office declined to comment. Her speech at the opening of parliament is written by the government, outlining its plans for legislation.

“There will be ample time in parliament for MPs (members of parliament) to debate the EU, to debate Brexit and all the other issues, ample time,” Johnson told reporters.

Asked if he was trying to block MPs from delaying Britain’s EU departure, he replied: “That is completely untrue.”

While suspending parliament ahead of a Queen’s Speech is the historical norm in Britain, the decision to limit parliamentary scrutiny weeks before the country’s most contentious policy decision in decades prompted an immediate outcry.

“Make no mistake, this is a very British coup,” John McDonnell, the second most powerful man in the opposition Labour Party, said. More than half a million people signed an online petition to object and the pound fell sharply.

Cries of “Shame on You” and “Stop the Coup” could be heard from inside the walls of the parliamentary estate, as a couple of hundred protesters gathered near the bank of the River Thames to wave EU flags and show their disgust.

“Democracy is so important. It’s taught from such a young age as such a vital thing about being a British person and today just completely ruins that, tramples it and throws it out,” said 17-year-old student Dylan Butlin, one of the protesters.

In a sign that Johnson’s move had marked a significant escalation in the long-running dispute, a group of cross-party lawmakers sought a legal injunction and the speaker of parliament said the nation’s democratic process was at risk.

The Church of England said a chaotic Brexit would hurt the poor and further damage a fractured nation.

But Johnson’s gamble was welcomed by Brexiteers, including Trump, an early backer of Britain’s departure from the EU, who said “Boris is exactly what the UK has been looking for, & will prove to be ‘a great one!’ Love UK”

A spokesperson for the European Commission, when asked about the British suspension of parliament, said it was a matter for Britain to answer.

More than three years after the United Kingdom voted 52% to 48% to quit the European Union, it is still unclear on what terms the bloc’s second largest economy will leave the club it joined in 1973.


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Uganda on Tuesday relaunched its national carrier, Uganda Airlines, hoping to take a slice of the East African aviation business that is dominated by Ethiopian Airlines.

The country is banking on its emerging oil industry and the traditional tourism sector to generate international traffic to sustain the airline.

Though air traffic in Africa is forecast to grow 6% a year, twice as quickly as mature markets, over the next two decades, most state-owned flag carriers on the continent are losing money. The notable exception is Ethiopian Airlines, which analysts say has avoided the mistakes of other regional carriers and not fallen prey to political interference.

“We undertake to be a world class airline that will exceed customer expectations through high quality service,” Ugandan Airlines Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Ephraim Bagenda said at a ceremony at Entebbe, the country’s sole international airport, south of the capital Kampala.

The airline will initially fly to seven regional destinations in Kenya, Tanzania, Somalia, South Sudan, and Burundi, the CEO said ahead of the inaugural flight to Kenya’s capital Nairobi.

In November, the airline would launch flights to destinations in south and central Africa, he said.

However, Uganda Airlines will face stiff competition not only from Ethiopian Airlines but also from Rwanda and Tanzania which have also poured cash into their flag carriers in the past few years, though with far less success than Ethiopia. Another rival regional carrier Kenya Airways has also faced challenges in its efforts to expand. It became loss-making in 2014 after buying a number of aircraft which coincided with a slump in tourist and business travel to Kenya blamed on a spate of attacks by Somalia-based Islamist militants.

The airline has not recovered and was renationalized in July in what analysts said was a last-ditch effort to save it.

Uganda Airlines, founded by the country’s former dictator Idi Amin in 1976, was liquidated in 2001 during a push to privatize state firms.

Its revival will “reduce the cost of air transport and ease connectivity to and from Uganda,” Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda said at the ceremony.

Ugandans spend about $450 million annually on foreign travel and the state-owned airline would help keep some of this cash within the national economy, Rugunda said.

Citizens would also benefit from direct flights from their capital over expensive, indirect routes on rival airlines, the prime minister said.

The airline received its first two CRJ900 planes from Canadian aircraft manufacturer Bombardier in April. Two more of those planes are expected next month, according to the airline.

It expects to receive an Airbus A330 Neo in late 2020, then a second in early 2021, the CEO told Reuters in July, adding that the two wide-body planes will enable the airline to expand to destinations in the Gulf and China.

Each Bombardier cost around $27 million while the carrier will pay about $110 million for each of the Airbus aircrafts.

The airline is wholly publicly funded and forecasts that it will be self-financing after two years, the CEO told Reuters in July.

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The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) says it is not able to fully implement its turnaround strategy because it has still not received the financial injection it requires from government.

Government however insists that the public broadcaster has to meet a stringent set of conditions before the money can be released.

These include identifying initiatives for revenue enhancement, producing separate financial reports for its public and commercial services as well as identifying non-core assets for sale.

The SABC CEO Madoda Mxakwe says while they are going ahead with efforts to stabilise the organisation’s finances, it will take about two years after they receive the funds for the strategy to be fully implemented.

“Like any strong strategy, what is really needed is the capital injection for it to be successful. We had said earlier on that we developed and implemented the strategies starting last July. So far we’ve been able to ensure that we drive revenue, reduce costs and deal with the inefficiencies in the system. So I would say like any solid turnaround strategy would need at least between 18 to 24 months,” says Mxakwe.

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China has denied a request for a US Navy warship to visit the Chinese port city of Qingdao in recent days, a US defense official told Reuters on Tuesday, at a time of tense ties between the world’s two largest economies.

This marks at least the second time China has denied a request by the United States this month, having earlier rejected a request for two US Navy ships to visit Hong Kong, as the political crisis in the former British colony deepened.

The defense official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the destroyer was supposed to visit on Sunday but China denied the request prior to that.

US military warships have occasionally made visits to China, most recently in 2017, the defense official said. The last US Navy ship to visit Qingdao was the destroyer Benfold in 2016.

Asked why the US request was denied, the US defense official said the question should be directed to Beijing. China’s Defence Ministry, however, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A trade war between the world’s two largest economies has damaged global growth and raised market fears that the world economy could tip into recession.

But, US President Donald Trump on Monday raised hopes for a deal that could de-escalate the tariff war.

Earlier this month, China denied a request by the US Navy transport dock ship Green Bay and guided-missile cruiser Lake Erie to visit Hong Kong. The proposed visit would have taken place at a time when anti-government protests in Hong Kong are posing the biggest challenge China’s Communist Party rulers since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012. Authorities in Beijing have sent a clear warning that forceful intervention is possible to subdue the violence.

China’s 2019 defense spending will rise 7.5 percent from 2018, according to a budget report issued earlier this year, and its military build-up has raised concerns among neighbors and Western allies, particularly as Beijing has become more assertive in territorial disputes in the East and South China Seas and over Taiwan, a self-ruled territory Beijing claims as its own.

Last year, the US military put countering China, along with Russia, at the center of a new national defense strategy, shifting priorities after more than a decade and a half of focusing on the fight against Islamist militants.


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Zimbabwe’s teachers and doctors, who make up the bulk of the public service, on Monday rejected the government’s wage offer, with medical personnel threatening a strike if their demand to have their wages bench marked in the US dollar is not met.

The government on Friday proposed a 60% pay increase for doctors, while offering a 76% raise for the rest of the civil service, in a bid to avert crippling strikes by state workers.

But in separate statements, the main unions representing the doctors and the teachers said they rejected the government offers, which would see the lowest paid worker earning 1 023 Zimbabwe dollars ($98.75) a month.

The Apex Council, which is an umbrella group for public sector unions, has demanded the equivalent of $475 for the lowest paid government worker.

In a letter sent to the government on Monday, the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA) said its members could no-longer afford to report for duty amid surging inflation and continued deterioration of Zimbabwe’s economy.

“We maintain our request to have our earnings, which were previously pegged in United States dollars, be paid at the prevailing inter-bank rate,” the ZHDA said, adding that they would strike on September 3 if their demands were not met.

The Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta), the biggest single union of public workers with about 44 000 members, also said the government’s wage offer was unacceptable, but committed to further negotiations.

Hope that the economy could recover under President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who replaced the long-ruling Robert Mugabe in a November 2017 coup, has made way for widespread anger over the slow pace of reforms and recovery.

Last week, the police banned a series of protests called by the opposition in the country’s major cities. They used teargas, baton sticks and water cannons to disperse demonstrators and arresting scores of protesters.

Ten leaders of a smaller teacher’s union were arrested on Friday along with their lawyer when they tried to petition the minister of finance for higher wages.

The police on Thursday also arrested Amos Chibaya, a senior MDC official, on charges that he failed to stop the banned Harare protests.

Chibaya was released on 400 Zimbabwe dollar bail by a Harare magistrate on Monday.

He also faces a separate subversion charge over protests staged in January 2019 over a sharp fuel price increase.


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Economist Mike Schussler has welcomed the release by Finance Minister, Tito Mboweni of a new document outlining the country’s economic approach to increasing growth and creating jobs.

Mboweni wants the public to make comments on a paper titled: ‘Economic transformation, inclusive growth and competitiveness: Towards an Economic Strategy for South Africa’.

The paper has been published on the National Treasury’s website.

It proposes the opening up of ports, rail and spectrum to more competition. It urges municipalities to correct their over-reliance on electricity revenue and that an independent electricity transmission company be created from the unbundling of Eskom.

Schussler says the document will help with discussions about fixing the economy.

He says, “While some unions may oppose it, it is a very sensible document and we know that we need labour intensive growth, we have to bring in more smaller medium sized business to create jobs and reduce red tape, something we have to have real discussion on.”

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The United Nations (UN) Secretary General has told the G7 Summit in France that the globe is facing a climate emergency just as world leaders there agreed to provide logistical and financial support to help fight devastating fires in the Amazon rain forest.

French President, Emmanuel Macron, earlier announced that a 22-million-dollar fund would immediately be made available for Brazil and other regional countries fighting multiple fires on various fronts in the region.

UN Chief, Antonio Guterres, is attempting to rally world leaders ahead of an all-important Climate Change Summit to be held just ahead of the General Assembly in New York in September.

Among the main agenda items for the world leaders gathered in Biarritz, France, was the urgent, even critical need for the earth’s temperature rise to be kept below 1.5 degrees Celsius and a carbon neutral world by 2050.

“He pointed out how July was the hottest month on record and how the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is the highest during human life. The SG emphasized that we need more ambition and a stronger commitment, but pointing out how society, particularly the youth are mobilizing ahead of the Climate Change Action Summit that is being held here in New York in September,” says Secretary General’s Spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric.

“The SG added that the G7 Summit would’ve been an excellent opportunity for him to appeal for the international communities very strong engagement.”

But it was a vacant chair belonging to United States President, Donald Trump, during the G7 climate roundtable that created a news stir, just as world leaders were discussing how best to help the fire-ravaged Amazon and reduce carbon emissions.

At a press conference and in response to a question on climate change, President Trump said he was not going to lose his country’s energy wealth on dreams and windmills.

“We’re the number one energy producer in the world. Soon it will be by far the number one. It’s tremendous wealth. Liquefied Natural Gas is being sought all over Europe and all over the world and we have more of it than anybody else and I’m not going to lose that wealth on dreams, on windmills, which frankly aren’t working too well.”

Guterres also earlier played down the impact of Mr Trump’s intransigence.

“The fact that United States President Donald Trump and Guterres speak is not what matters here. What matters here is to have a strong engagement of the American society and of the American business community and the American local authorities.”

As the rainforest responsible for roughly a fifth of the world’s oxygen, while absorbing some of the globes carbon dioxide emissions, is itself a raging furnace on Monday, with the last five years on track to be the hottest on record, the UN boss is pushing for world leaders to attend his climate action summit in September and bring with them new commitments to raise ambition above what was agreed to in the Paris Climate Change Accord.

And as the G7 Presidency now shifts to the United States where the next summit will be held in 2020, climate change – at least in that forum – could very likely be put on the back burner with President Trump at the helm.


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Zambia has introduced a cap on the price of maize to keep the staple food affordable, sparking protest from commercial farmers who accused the government of bringing back price controls.

Agriculture Minister Michael Katambo said on Sunday that millers, stockfeed manufacturers, chain stores and grain traders agreed in a meeting with the government to peg the price of maize at a maximum of 2,600 kwacha ($198.93) per tonne.

The price of maize meal, Zambia’s staple food, has in some cases doubled to 150 kwacha per 25 kg bag from 75 kwacha early this year.

Zambia’s 2019 maize production is expected to fall 16% to about 2 million tonnes from 2.39 million tonnes last year largely due to prolonged dry weather, Katambo said in May.

Katambo said on Sunday that the private sector panicked and rushed into the market thinking that there was not enough maize and this pushed up prices.

“Maize prices were rising every week because of this panic and the implication was that the mealie meal price was getting higher,” Katambo said, referring to maize meal.

Katambo said Zambia still had sufficient maize stocks and indications were that less than 1 million tonnes of maize had been bought from the 2 million tonnes the country produced.

“This price is not coming from the government but the private sector players who attended the meeting,” Katambo said.

In a statement on Sunday, the Zambia National Farmers’ Union (ZNFU), which represents commercial farmers condemned the cap, saying prices should be left to market forces.

ZNFU said its members were not invited to the gathering where the price was agreed and had called for an urgent meeting this week to discuss the decision.


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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Sunday said he and President Donald Trump were “gung-ho” about a post-Brexit trade deal but cautioned the United States would be tough negotiators and that he would not rush talks.

Trump promised a big trade deal for Britain after it leaves the European Union, which he said had been a drag on Britain’s ability to cut a good deal.

Facing a delicate task of assuaging European allies while not angering Trump at a G7 summit in France, Johnson said there were huge opportunities for British businesses in the U.S. market, but hinted at differences between the two sides on the scope of a deal.

Moreover, he added, Washington would have to relax some “protectionist” policies.

“They want to do it within a year, I’d love to do it within a year, but that’s a very fast timetable,” he told Sky News.

Earlier, before the two leaders began a trade-focused bilateral meeting, Trump said he was looking forward to discussing big numbers with Johnson.

“We’re going to do a very big trade deal – bigger than we’ve ever had with the UK,” Trump said. “At some point, they won’t have the obstacle of – they won’t have the anchor around their ankle, because that’s what they had.”

With less than three months until an October 31 deadline, it is still unclear, how, when or even whether Britain will leave the EU. The uncertainty around Brexit, the United Kingdom’s most significant political and economic post-war move, has left allies and investors aghast and roiled markets.

Britain has yet to agree any kind of exit deal to smooth the divorce between the world’s fifth largest economy and its biggest trading partner, raising fears of shortages and widespread disruption.

However, Johnson said meetings with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron last week had helped his case for a better exit deal. There was a “dawning realisation” in Brussels that Britain’s objections to the existing deal were implacable.

“I think it’s going to be touch and go but the important thing is to get ready to come out without a deal,” he told the BBC.

Opponents fear Brexit will make Britain poorer and divide the West as it grapples with both Trump’s unconventional presidency and growing assertiveness from Russia and China.

Supporters acknowledge the divorce might bring short-term instability, but say in the longer term it will allow the United Kingdom to thrive if cut free from what they cast as a doomed attempt to forge European unity.

Johnson also met European Council head Donald Tusk, who on Saturday said Johnson would go down as “Mr No-Deal” if he took Britain out of the EU without a withdrawal agreement.

A British official said Johnson told Tusk that Britain would be leaving the EU on Oct. 31 whatever the circumstances.

Sky News reported that Johnson would tell Tusk Britain would only pay 9 billion pounds ($11 billion) instead of the 39 billion pound liability agreed by former prime minister Theresa May under a no-deal Brexit.

Asked about the report, Johnson said: “If we come out without an agreement it is certainly true that the 39 billion is no longer, strictly speaking, owed.”

Trump and Johnson were in the French seaside resort of Biarritz for a summit of G7 industrialised nations where sharp differences have emerged over trade protectionism and an array of issues including Iran and North Korea.

On his arrival on Saturday, Johnson said of the escalating U.S.-China trade war that he was “very worried” about the growth of protectionism. Those who “supported tariffs risked incurring the blame for the downturn in the global economy”, he said.

Sitting opposite Trump on Sunday, Johnson praised the performance of the U.S. economy before adding: “But just to register a faint, sheep-like note of our view on the trade war – we are in favour of trade peace on the whole.”

London’s preference is for a comprehensive free trade deal with the United States post Brexit, UK government officials say, while some U.S. officials including Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton have talked of a sector-by-sector approach.

As Johnson said London and Washington would do a “fantastic deal”, Trump interrupted to say: “lots of fantastic mini-deals, we’re talking about many different deals but we’re having a good time.”


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Hong Kong police said on Monday they arrested 36 people, the youngest aged 12 after violence during anti-government demonstrations escalated as protesters hurled Molotov cocktails at security forces who responded with water cannon and tear gas.

Sunday’s protests saw some of the fiercest clashes yet between police and demonstrators since protests escalated in mid-June over a now-suspended extradition bill that would have allowed Hong Kong people to be sent to mainland China for trial.

Police fired water cannon and volleys of tear gas in running battles with brick-throwing protesters on Sunday, the second day of violent clashes in the Chinese-ruled city.

Six officers drew their pistols and one officer fired a warning shot into the air, police said in a statement.

“The escalating illegal and violent acts of radical protesters are not only outrageous, but they also push Hong Kong to the verge of a very dangerous situation,” the government said in a statement.

More demonstrations are planned in the days and weeks ahead, including a rally at Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways (0293.HK) headquarters on Wednesday to protest against perceived “white terror”, a common expression to describe anonymous acts that create a climate of fear.

Cathay has emerged as the biggest corporate casualty of the protests after China demanded it suspend staff involved in, or who support, the anti-government demonstrations that have plunged the former British colony into a political crisis.

The protests also pose the gravest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping since he took power in 2012, with Beijing eager to quell the unrest ahead of the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China on October 1.

Protesters once again adopted cat-and-mouse tactics on Sunday evening, moving swiftly to locations across the former British colony, where they set up barricades to block some roads, following a largely peaceful rally earlier in the day.

Police said they arrested 29 men and seven women, aged 12 to 48, for offences including unlawful assembly, possession of offensive weapons and assaulting police officers.

The clashes on Saturday and Sunday marked a return to unrest after days of calmer demonstrations. The protests, which escalated in June over a now-suspended extradition bill, have rocked Hong Kong for three months, occasionally causing serious disruption including forcing the closure of the airport.

The city, a major Asian financial center, is facing its biggest political crisis since the handover of power from British rule in 1997.

Protesters say they are fighting the erosion of the “one country, two systems” arrangement under which Hong Kong returned to China with the promise of continued freedoms, not enjoyed on the mainland, for 50 years.

The protests are taking a toll on the semi-autonomous Chinese city, where hotels and restaurants are half-empty and several global events have been postponed.

Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index .HSI dropped more than 3% early on Monday, outpacing falls in regional markets, as the latest salvo in the Sino-U.S. trade war rattled investors.


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South African authorities have impounded an Airbus 220-300 aircraft leased by Tanzania’s national flag carrier, the Tanzanian government said.

The plane had been scheduled to fly from the OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on Friday.

“The plane was impounded following an order issued by the Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg,” Tanzania’s transport ministry said in a statement on Friday.

It was not immediately clear why the plane was seized. Calls to the courts in South Africa went unanswered outside of usual business hours.

President John Magufuli has personally taken charge of the revival of loss-making state carrier Air Tanzania Company Limited (ATCL), spending hundreds of millions of dollars purchasing eight new planes since 2016.

The airline’s existing fleet, which is leased from the state-run Tanzania Government Flight Agency (TGFA), includes one Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, two Airbus A220-300 jets and three DHC Dash 8-400 aircraft, formerly known as the Bombardier Q400 turboprop.

Analysts have said Tanzania’s planes had been put under the ownership of the TGFA to avoid possible confiscation of the planes from lawsuits related to Air Tanzania’s multi-million dollar debts from previous suppliers.

“I can confirm that the impounded plane is an Airbus. The government has more details on why the plane was seized,” ATCL managing director Ladislaus Matindi told Reuters, confirming the aircraft was an Airbus 220-300.

“We have made arrangements for the passengers to board on another plane to resume their flight.”

Tanzania has pinned hopes on the revival of the national airline to turn the country into a regional transport hub and boost the tourism sector, its biggest foreign exchange earner.

In 2017 a Canadian construction firm, Stirling Civil Engineering Ltd, seized one of Tanzania’s new Q400 turbo-prop planes in Canada over a $38 million lawsuit, before it had been delivered.

Stirling’s claim stemmed from a 2010 compensation ruling by the International Court of Arbitration, a court of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), over a road contract that was terminated before Magufuli became president.

The Q400 was released in March 2018 after Magufuli sent the country’s prime minister and attorney general to Canada to negotiate it’s release.

No details were given at the time, but aviation sources said the government reached a financial settlement to secure the aircraft.


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Squabbles erupted among G7 nations on Saturday as their leaders gathered for an annual summit, exposing sharp differences on global trade tensions, Britain’s exit from the EU and how to respond to the fires raging in the Amazon rainforest.

French President Emmanuel Macron, the summit host, planned the three-day meeting in the Atlantic seaside resort of Biarritz as a chance to unite a group of wealthy countries that has struggled in recent years to speak with one voice.

Macron set an agenda for the group – France, Britain,Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States – that included the defence of democracy, gender equality, education and the environment.

He invited Asian, African and Latin American leaders to join them for a global push on these issues. However, in a bleak assessment of relations between once-close allies, European Council President Donald Tusk said it was getting “increasingly” hard to find common ground.

“This is another G7 summit which will be a difficult test of unity and solidarity of the free world and its leaders,” he told reporters ahead of the meeting. “This may be the last moment to restore our political community.”

US President Donald Trump had brought last year’s G7 summit to an acrimonious end, walking out early from the gathering in Canada and rejecting the final communique.

Trump arrived in France a day after responding to a new round of Chinese tariffs by announcing that Washington would impose an additional 5% duty on some $550 billion worth of Chinese imports, the latest escalation of the tit-for-tat trade war by the world’s two largest economies. “So far so good,” Trump told reporters as he sat on a seafront terrace with Macron, saying the two leaders had a special relationship.

“We’ll accomplish a lot this weekend.” Macron listed foreign policy issues the two would address,including Libya, Syria and North Korea, and said they shared the objective of preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Trump later wrote on Twitter that lunch with Macron was the best meeting the pair has yet had, and that a meeting with world leaders on Saturday evening also “went very well.”

However, the initial smiles could not disguise the opposing approaches of Trump and Macron to many problems, including the knotty questions of protectionism and tax.

Before his arrival, Trump repeated a threat to tax French wines in retaliation for a new French levy on digital services,which he says unfairly targets U.S. companies.

Two U.S. officials said the Trump delegation was also irked that Macron had skewed the focus of the G7 meeting to “niche issues” at the expense of the global economy, which many leaders worry is slowing sharply and at risk of slipping into recession.

French riot police used water cannons and tear gas on Saturday to disperse anti-capitalism protesters in Bayonne, near Biarritz.

A police helicopter circled as protesters taunted lines of police. The leaders themselves were gathering behind tight security in a waterfront conference venue, the surrounding streets barricaded by police.

SPAT OVER ‘MR NO DEAL’ BREXIT

Macron opened the summit with a dinner at the base of a clifftop lighthouse overlooking Biarritz, where a menu of piperade, a Basque vegetable specialty, tuna and French cheeses awaited the leaders.

Adding to the unpredictable dynamic between the G7 leaders are the new realities facing Brexit-bound Britain: dwindling influence in Europe and growing dependency on the United States.

New Prime Minister Boris Johnson will want to strike a balance between not alienating Britain’s European allies and not irritating Trump and possibly jeopardising future trade ties. Johnson and Trump will hold bilateral talks on Sunday morning.

Johnson and Tusk sparred before the summit over who would be to blame if Britain leaves the EU on Oct. 31 without a withdrawal agreement.

Tusk told reporters he was open to ideas from Johnson on howto avoid a no-deal Brexit when the two men meet.

“I still hope that PM Johnson will not like to go down in history as Mr No Deal,” said Tusk, who as council president leads the political direction of the 28-nation European Union.

Johnson, who has said since he took office last month that he will take Britain out of the bloc on Oct. 31 regardless of whether a deal can be reached, later retorted that it would be Tusk himself who would carry the mantle if Britain could not secure a new withdrawal agreement.

“I would say to our friends in the EU if they don’t want a no-deal Brexit then we’ve got to get rid of the backstop from the treaty,” Johnson told reporters, referring to the Irish border protocol that would keep the border between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland open after Brexit.

“If Donald Tusk doesn’t want to go down as Mr No Deal then I hope that point will be borne in mind by him, too,” Johnson said on his flight to France.

Johnson is trying to persuade EU leaders to drop the backstop from a withdrawal agreement that was negotiated by his predecessor but rejected three times by the British Parliament as the United Kingdom struggles to fulfill a 2016 referendum vote to leave the bloc.

‘NOT THE WAY TO PROCEED’

Despite the Brexit tensions, diplomats played down the likelihood of Trump and Johnson joining hands against the rest,citing Britain’s foreign policy alignment with Europe on issues from Iran and trade to climate change.

“There won’t be a G5+2,” one senior G7 diplomat said. Indeed, Johnson said he would tell Trump to pull back from a trade war that is already destabilising economic growth around the world. “This is not the way to proceed,” he said. “Apart fromeverything else, those who support the tariffs are at risk of incurring the blame for the downturn in the global economy,irrespective of whether or not that is true.” Anti-summit protests have become common, and on Saturdaythousands of anti-globalisation activists, Basque separatistsand “yellow vest” protesters marched peacefully across France’sborder with Spain to demand action from the leaders. “It’s more money for the rich and nothing for the poor,”said Alain Missana, an electrician wearing a yellow vest -symbol of anti-government protests that have rattled France formonths. EU leaders piled pressure on Friday on Brazilian PresidentJair Bolsonaro over fires raging in the Amazon rainforest. Even so, Britain and Germany were at odds with Macron’sdecision to pressure Brazil by blocking a trade deal between theEU and the Mercosur group of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay andParaguay. A spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel said notconcluding the trade deal was “not the appropriate answer towhat is happening in Brazil now.” The UK’s Johnson appeared to disagree with Macron on how torespond. “There are all sorts of people who will take any excuseat all to interfere with trade and to frustrate trade deals andI don’t want to see that,” he said.


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President Cyril Ramaphosa will use the G7 Summit to market South Africa as an investment destination. The president is currently in France on a working visit to the summit, which is focused on eliminating inequalities globally.

His spokesperson, Khusela Diko, elaborates: “The working visit will also provide a platform for the President and accompanying members of cabinet to invite global partners to experience SA as an investment destination and a preferred trading partner. This is in the country’s efforts to secure faster, sustainable and more inclusive economic growth and job creation. The President was received by the AU Chair, President El-Sisi in a meeting of African Heads of State which includes the Presidents of SA, Rwanda, Senegal and Burkina Faso.”

South Africa and other emerging economies have been invited to attend.

On Sunday,  French President Emmanuel Macron welcomed leaders of some of Africa’s countries and top institutions to the G7 summit in Biarritz.

Macron invited the African leaders and representatives to discuss the problems facing the continent, looking to broaden the scope of the debate.

Among those present for the working session were Senegal’s Macky Sall, South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, as well as African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina and Chair of the AU Commission Moussa Faki Mahamat.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Macron met some of the leaders.  Merkel and Macron met with Burkinabe President Roch Marc Christian Kabore.

The G7 group includes the United States, France, Britain, Japan, Germany, Italy and Canada. The European Union also attends, along with the United Nations. – Additional Reporting Reuters


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Eradicating malaria is biologically feasible and a lofty aim, the World Health Organization said on Friday, but the focus for now should be getting the funds, tools and political will to control it.

Launching the findings of a three-year long analysis of the global fight against malaria, WHO experts said that while ending the mosquito-borne disease ‘can be done’, it’s not yet possible to put a price tag or target date on achieving eradication.

Setting unrealistic goals with unknown costs and endpoints can lead to “frustration and backlashes”, said the director of the WHO’s global malaria program, Pedro Alonso, so the world should focus first on developing new medicines, vaccines and insecticides to get malaria cases and deaths under control.

“With the tools that we have today, it is most unlikely that eradication could be achieved,” Alonso told reporters in a telephone briefing. “We need to focus on getting back on track.”

After a decade or so of significant declines in malaria case numbers and deaths, latest WHO data show progress is stalling.

Malaria infected around 219 million people in 2017 and killed around 435,000 of them – the vast majority of them babies and children in the poorest parts of Africa.

These totals are little changed from 2016, but global case numbers had previously fallen steadily from 239 million in 2010 to 214 million in 2015, and deaths from 607,000 to around 500,000 from 2010 to 2013.

A number of drugs are available to successfully treat malaria, and insecticide-treated bednets have proved able to control mosquitoes and infections. A partially effective vaccine – the world’s first against malaria – has been developed by the British drugmaker GSK and is being deployed in Ghana and Malawi, with plans for rollout in Kenya.

“TRANSFORMATIVE TOOLS”

But the WHO’s malaria eradication report, a summary of which was published on Friday, said these tools would not be sufficient to wipe out malaria altogether.

It urged scientists and global health funders to renew a drive towards research and development of “transformative tools and knowledge” to control mosquitoes and create more effective vaccines and medicines to prevent and treat the disease.

It also called for political leadership in the fight against malaria, and for funds and data analysis to be used in the places where it is likely to be most effective.

Currently, less than 1% of global funding for health research and development investment goes to developing tools to tackle malaria, it said.

“Our priority now should be to establish the foundation for a successful future eradication effort while guarding against the risk of failure that would lead to the waste of huge sums of money, frustrate all those involved… and cause a lack of confidence in the global health community’s ability to ever rid the world of this disease,” the report said.


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Asian shares struggled to make headway on Friday as uncertainty over how much further the US Federal Reserve would cut interest rates added to investors’ worries over slowing global growth.

With a trade war between the United States and China dragging on, and political tumult in Hong Kong, Italy, and Britain adding to the tense backdrop, investors were keenly awaiting Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at a gathering of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, later in the day (1400 GMT).

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged 0.1% higher and was up 0.8% for the week, on track to break a four-week losing streak.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei added 0.3% and Australian stocks rose 0.3%.

The Shanghai Composite and the blue-chip CSI300 were up 0.5% and 0.7%, respectively, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 0.5%.

Business surveys on Thursday suggested further slowing in advanced economies in August, but service sector activity remained resilient, offsetting some of the drag from weak manufacturing.

“It’s going to be another wait-and-see day for traders ahead of Powell’s Jackson Hole speech. Investors are hoping for some soothing words from him,” said Hirokazu Kabeya, chief global strategist at Daiwa Securities.

Wall Street stocks were mixed on Thursday, with the S&P 500 closing little changed, while the Dow was up 0.2% and the Nasdaq falling 0.4%.

In the US bond market, the closely watched two-year, 10-year Treasury yield curve briefly moved back into inversion overnight, a shift that also occurred last week and sent financial markets into a tailspin amid worries of a sharp global downturn.

An inversion in the US yield curve has presaged several past US recessions, raising fears the decade-long expansion in the world’s biggest economy might be nearing its end.

While markets overwhelmingly expect the Fed to follow up its first-rate cut in a decade with more stimulus at its meeting next month, some policymakers disagree.

Kansas City Fed President Esther George, who dissented against the decision to ease in July, and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker, who said he “reluctantly” supported the cut, both said the US economy does not need more stimulus at this point.

Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan said the businesses had become much more cautious due to surprises on trade policy and he was “going to at least be open-minded about making some adjustment” if he sees continued weakness.

All of that has made Powell’s speech in Jackson Hole pivotal for markets as they look for any clues on future easing, after the Fed last month cut rates for the first time since the financial crisis.

Any indications of hawkishness in the Fed chief’s comments might hurt riskier assets, though the dollar stands to benefit.

The greenback slipped on Thursday but moved within narrow ranges. In early Asian trading, the dollar was up 0.1% against a basket of major currencies to 98.293.

The euro also was little changed against US currency at $1.1073. A survey showing a surprise uptick in euro zone business growth for August was offset somewhat by trade war fears knocking future expectations to their weakest in over six years.

The pound jumped to a three-week high of $1.2273 overnight after traders interpreted comments from German Chancellor Angela Merkel to mean that a solution to the Irish border problem could be found before Britain leaves the European Union on Oct. 31.

Merkel on Wednesday challenged Britain to come up with alternatives to the Irish border backstop within 30 days, but French President Emmanuel Macron cautioned there would be no renegotiation of the Brexit deal. Sterling last quoted at $1.2234, 0.1% weaker on the day.

China’s yuan extended losses, threatening to stoke trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

Spot yuan slid to as low as 7.0992 per dollar, its weakest since March 2008, although the central bank set the midpoint rate at 7.0572, its weakest level in 11-1/2 years, but was much stronger than traders had expected.

Washington labeled China a currency manipulator early this month after a sharp slide in the yuan.

Concern about China’s economy is growing because US tariffs on roughly $150 billion of Chinese goods will take affect from Sept. 1.

Oil prices weakened overnight, with both Brent crude and US West Texas Intermediate down 0.6% each, on worries about the global economy.

Brent crude was last up 0.3% at $60.11 per barrel and WTI crude added 0.2% to $55.46.

Gold prices dipped on Thursday but held near the pivotal level of $1,500 per ounce, underpinned by demand for the precious metal amid uncertainties around monetary policy, trade and geopolitical tensions.[GOL] Spot gold was last down 0.2% at $1,494.99 an ounce.


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Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday ordered a like-for-like response to a recent US missile test, which he said showed that Washington aimed to deploy previously banned missiles around the world.

The Pentagon said on Monday it had tested a conventionally-configured cruise missile that hit its target after more than 500 km (310 miles) of flight, its first such test since the demise of a landmark nuclear pact this month.

Washington formally withdrew from the Cold War-era Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) on August 2 after accusing Moscow of violating it, a charge dismissed by the Kremlin.

The pact had prohibited land-based missiles with a range of 310-3 400 miles, reducing the ability of both countries to launch a nuclear strike at short notice.

Putin told his Security Council on Friday that Russia could not stand idly by, and that US talk of deploying new missiles in the Asia-Pacific region “affects our core interests as it is close to Russia’s borders”.

US Defense Secretary Mark Esper said this month he was in favour of placing ground-launched intermediate-range missiles in Asia relatively soon, and Putin complained this week that the United States was now in a position to deploy its new land-based missile in Romania and Poland.

“All this leaves no doubts that the real intention of the United States (in exiting the INF pact) was to … untie its hands to deploy previously banned missiles in different regions of the world,” said Putin.

“We have never wanted, do not want and will not be drawn into a costly, economically destructive arms race. That said, in the light of unfolding circumstances, I’m ordering the Defence Ministry, the Foreign Ministry and other appropriate agencies to analyze the threat to our country posed by US actions, and to take exhaustive measures to prepare a reciprocal response.”

Despite his order, Putin said Russia remained open to talks with the United States aimed at restoring trust and strengthening international security.


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Sudan’s new Prime Minister, Abdalla Hamdok, was sworn in on Wednesday as leader of a transitional government, and he vowed to make achieving peace and solving the country’s economic crisis a priority.

The appointment of the renowned economist came as General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the outgoing head of the military council, was sworn in as leader of the new Sovereign Council that will run the country for three years until an election after decades of autocratic rule.

“The revolution’s deep-rooted slogan, ‘freedom, peace and justice,’ will form the program of the transitional period,” Hamdok told reporters at a news conference in the capital Khartoum.

Burhan and other military officers overthrew veteran leader Omar Hassan al-Bashir in April in response to months of protests over economic hardships and dictatorship.

While Sudanese people celebrated Bashir’s fall, they also pressed for a handover of power to civilians during a turbulent period of protests and violence, including a crackdown on a protest camp outside the Defence Ministry that opposition medics say killed more than 100 people in June.

The United States, Britain and Norway welcomed Hamdok’s appointment, calling it a historic moment for Sudan and urged the military to “engage constructively” with the new government.

“The appointment of a civilian-led government presents an opportunity to rebuild a stable economy and create a government that respects human rights and personal freedoms,” the Troika, as the three countries are known, said in a joint statement.

The composition of the 11-member Sovereign Council that will run the country for the transition period, superseding the military council which has been disbanded, was completed on Tuesday, consisting of six civilian and five military figures.

Nine members of the council were sworn in about two hours after Burhan took the oath on Wednesday. The final member, Mohamed al-Hassan al-Taishi, will be sworn in at a later, unspecified date, state news agency SUNA said.

However, some opposition members and analysts expressed concern that the power-sharing deal may fall short of expectations in a country where the military, backed by Islamists, has dominated for decades.

“With the start of the transition period, we have entered the most complex phase, the phase of building and reform,” said Al-Rashed Saeed, spokesperson for the Sudanese Professionals Association, a key part of the Forces for Freedom and Change coalition that negotiated with the military council.

Among the military men sworn in were General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, commonly known as Hemedti, outgoing deputy head of the military council. Hemedti has become a growing political force in Sudan and some analysts say he hopes to become president.

Hemedti heads the Rapid Support Forces, a widely feared paramilitary group that has a heavy presence in Khartoum and stands accused of atrocities against civilians in the Darfur war. Bashir’s government denied the charges.

PM NOMINATION

Civilian representatives on the council are mostly little-known figures, including Rajaa Nicola Abdel Maseeh, a Christian, who was the civilian member jointly chosen by the military and the opposition coalition.

Burhan, dressed in military uniform, was sworn in before the head of the judiciary at the presidential palace in Khartoum. The other members were sworn in before the judiciary head and Burhan in the afternoon.

The Sovereign Council, which held its first meeting shortly after the members’ swearing in, is now the highest authority in the country but will largely delegate executive powers to a Cabinet of ministers led by the prime minister.

The nomination of Hamdok to the role underlines the daunting task of repairing an economy battered by years of US sanctions and government mismanagement during Bashir’s 30-year rule.

A shortage of foreign currency, resulting in a cash crunch and long lines for fuel and bread, triggered the protests that helped push Bashir out.

The dramatic changes in Sudan have evoked memories of the Arab Spring uprisings that swept across many of the region’s countries in 2011.

Those upheavals raised hopes of political and economic reforms in countries such as Egypt, where the army watched patiently from the sidelines and then capitalized on the turmoil to widen its influence in politics.

Egypt’s current president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, led the overthrow of his country’s first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.

Rights activists say Sisi has presided over the country’s worst crackdown on freedoms in its modern history. He has said tough measures are needed to root out terrorism.


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Federal Reserve policymakers were deeply divided over whether to cut interest rates last month but were united in wanting to signal they were not on a preset path to more cuts, a message not likely to sit well with US President Donald Trump.

Minutes from the two-day meeting released on Wednesday showed policymakers’ ultimate decision to lower the central bank’s benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point drew more opposition than was reflected in the rate-setting panel’s 8-2 vote, announced after the meeting adjourned on July 31.

While a “couple” of participants favored a deeper cut of half a percentage point to help lift inflation toward the Fed’s target and thwart fallout from global trade tensions, a larger number – characterized in the minutes as “several” – favored no change at all.

The depth of the debate raises the stakes for the signal that Chairman Jerome Powell is set to deliver on Friday at the Fed’s annual policy retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. It also shows a Federal Reserve not eager to give Trump the larger rate reductions he is demanding.

“I think the thing that surprised me was how divided they were,” said Mary Ann Hurley, vice president for fixed income trading at D.A. Davidson in Seattle. “We’re really in uncharted territory. They are really concerned about doing or not doing the right thing.”

The divisions revealed in the minutes indicate there might have been more dissents if all participants had a vote. While Fed board governors are permanent voters, only five of the 12 regional reserve bank presidents have a vote at each meeting.

At the same time, the minutes also showed broad concern among policymakers over a global economic slowdown, trade tensions and sluggish inflation.

Since that meeting, the Fed has come under increasing pressure to cut borrowing costs more, including a call by Trump on Wednesday for the Fed to slash its benchmark rate.

However, Fed policymakers agreed at their July 30-31 meeting that they did not want to give the impression they were planning more rate cuts.

“Participants generally favored an approach in which policy would be guided by incoming information … and that avoided any appearance of following a preset course,” according to the minutes.

KEEPING FLEXIBLE

US stocks held on to session gains after the minutes were released, with the benchmark S&P 500 Index. SPX up about 0.77% on the day.

“The Fed clearly wants to be flexible. They are clearly worried about some of the global tensions that are out there, whether it is trade or Brexit or some of those international developments,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Baird in Milwaukee.

Yields on longer-dated US Treasury securities rose after the minutes were published. The 10-year note US10YT=RR yield climbed to 1.58%, while the 30-year bond US30YT=RR rose further above the key 2% level, last trading at 2.06%. It fell below 2% for the first time ever last week as diminishing expectations for US economic growth fueled demand for safe assets.

The dollar strengthened against the safe-have yen and Swiss franc.

The comments on Wednesday by Trump, who has repeatedly criticized the Federal Reserve’s policies, come as he seeks to downplay worries that a trade war between the United States and China could weigh on the US economy and trigger a possible recession before the November 2020 presidential election.

Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari, who does not have a vote on the Fed’s monetary policy committee this year but participates in policy discussions, urged the Fed on Wednesday to use pledges about future policy, known in central banking as “forward guidance,” to boost the economy.

The July 30-31 policy meeting also included discussion of the Fed’s research into potential changes to its approach to setting policy. A number of policymakers said the Fed could have been more aggressive in using bond purchases to fight the 2007-09 recession.

However, policymakers also said tools like bond purchases and forward guidance might not be enough to eliminate the risk of policy being hampered in the future when the Fed’s benchmark rate gets close to zero.


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Italy’s head of state wants political parties to reach a deal to form a new coalition government in the next few days if they want to avoid snap elections, a source familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

The euro zone’s third-largest economy is in political turmoil after its government, riven by months of infighting, collapsed this week, forcing Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte to resign just as Rome was to begin preparing the 2020 budget.

The collapse was triggered by the right-wing League party whose leader Matteo Salvini declared the ruling coalition dead two weeks ago, saying he could no longer work with his coalition partner, the anti-establishment 5-Star party.

Salvini, the interior minister, has called for fresh elections, aiming to return to power as prime minister with a mandate to launch a big spending spree in 2020 and challenge the European Union’s fiscal rules.

President Sergio Mattarella has begun consultations to find a new government after Conte quit on Tuesday, Conte accused Salvini of endangering the economy for personal and political gain in a blistering resignation speech. On Thursday, Mattarella will meet delegations from the opposition centre-left Democratic Party (PD) and the 5-Star party.

Usually political enemies, they have already begun backroom discussions about forging a governing alliance. Both parties fear Salvini, whose anti-EU and anti-immigration stance has won him support in opinion polls at their expense, could score a major victory if polls were held now.

Financial markets have rallied since Conte’s resignation, seemingly hopeful that a 5-Star-PD coalition could avoid snap polls.

Some investors fear that if Salvini becomes prime minister, he will ramp up spending and set the heavily indebted nation on a collision course with the EU. However, Mattarella is insisting on a tight deadline and wants to see clear signals of a possible new coalition deal on Thursday and major developments by early next week, said the source familiar with the matter.

Italian stocks rose and government bond yields extended their decline in early trading on the report that the president was urging progress on the new government.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who has had testy relations with Salvini and 5-Star leader Luigi Di Maio, said on Wednesday that Italy deserved leaders who were up to the task.

“The Italian lesson is that when one does an alliance with the far-right, in the end it’s always a win for the far-right,” Macron told reporters in Paris on Wednesday.


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Zimbabwe police deployed in force on Tuesday to block a street protest for the third time in five days, as the main opposition party said hopes were vanishing that the government might become more tolerant of dissent than the regime it replaced.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa was elected a year ago on a pro-reform ticket, promising a break with the political repression that characterised Robert Mugabe’s 37-year rule and an economic upturn.

But the economy is mired in its worst crisis in a decade, and security forces have used strong-arm tactics to snuff out three attempts by the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to hold street demonstrations since Friday.

“There is a determined effort by the regime to ensure that there is no more democratic space,” MDC national spokesman Daniel Molokele said.

“They are also deploying a lot of military and police in the streets… It clearly shows that the new government is even worse than that of Robert Mugabe.”

Tuesday’s heavy security deployment was in the central city of Gweru, where police – who had banned the march on Monday night – patrolled on foot and in lorries and cordoned off a university, a local journalist told Reuters.

The MDC said it would challenge the ban in court on Tuesday. The party failed to overturn two previous bans on marches in the capital Harare on Friday – where police rounded up MDC followers and dispersed them with batons and water cannon and tear gas – and in the second city Bulawayo on Monday.

In the days before the planned Harare demonstration, six political activists were abducted from their homes at night and beaten by armed men, rights groups say. [nL8N25B4N3]

They also say the government has this year levied subversion charges against at least 24 activists and opposition leaders, the highest number in a single year.

The MDC says the protest bans are unconstitutional, while police said they have had evidence the protests would turn violent and did not have enough manpower to monitor them.

Bulawayo saw massive looting and destruction of property in January as protests against a steep rise in the price of fuel turned violent, triggering an army crackdown that killed more than a dozen people.

Those deaths set a question mark against the 76-year-old president’s pledge to end the Mugabe-era repression – which the bans of recent days have further undermined.

“The move to ban demonstrations predicated on a spurious assertion that the opposition is plotting violent regime change, is not sustainable,” said analyst Piers Pigou, Crisis Group’s senior consultant for southern Africa.

“…This is contrary to the precepts of a “new administration” that President Mnangagwa and his team want to sell to the world.

The president, who served as a Mugabe aide over four decades, is also struggling to make good on promises that austerity-driven reforms will revive the economy, as popular anger mounts over triple-digit inflation, rolling power cuts and shortages of U.S. dollars, fuel and bread.

The crisis has revived memories of the hyperinflation of a decade ago that forced Zimbabwe to ditch its currency.


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Denmark’s Prime Minister says the abrupt postponement of a State visit by United States President Donald Trump will not affect cooperation between the two countries.

Danes reacted with surprise on Wednesday after a tweet overnight by President Trump postponing the visit over the refusal of his Danish counterpart to discuss the possible sale of Greenland to the United States.

Denmark’s Head of State Queen Margrethe II extended the invite to the President and First Lady with Trump’s actions now being viewed in the Scandinavian country as a snub.

The tweet from the President follows earlier reports that Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen referred to the idea of purchasing Greenland – an autonomous territory of Denmark – as an absurd discussion.

Trump then fired off a tweet on Tuesday night saying that because of the Prime Minister’s comments that she had no interest in discussing the sale of Greenland, the visit was off.

Just hours before the President’s tweet, there was one from the United States Ambassador in Copenhagen saying the country was ready for the President’s visit, calling Denmark a partner, ally and friend.

Danish PM Mette Frederiksen says:”It is with regret and surprise that I received the news that US President Donald Trump has cancelled his state visit to Denmark on the second and third of September.”

“I had been looking forward to the visit, our preparations were well underway. It was an opportunity, I think, to celebrate Denmark’s close relationship with the US and who remains one of Denmark’s closest allies.”

“I was looking forward to having a dialogue on the many shared interests Denmark has with US.”

Greenland is a massive island between the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans and is considered a strategic location for military and surveillance purposes.

The President’s latest reaction was even more surprising after he’d – just days earlier – said his proposed visit to Denmark was not about Greenland at all and that it was not his number one issue.

“Well, a lot of things could be done. Essentially it’s a large real estate deal. A lot of things could be done. It’s hurting Denmark very badly because they are losing almost $700-million a year carrying it.”

“So, they carry it at a great loss. And, strategically for the United States, it would be nice and we are a big ally of Denmark and we help Denmark and we protect Denmark and we will. In fact, I’m supposed to stop, I’m thinking about going there.”

“I am not necessarily definitely going there, but I may be going. We are going to Poland and we may be going to Denmark, not for this reason at all. But, we are looking at it. It’s not number one on the burner.”

Astonishment is how Danes greeted the news, with some welcoming the cancellation.

Hans Christian says: “I think it’s an excellent idea (that the visit is cancelled) for Denmark because we don’t own Greenland and it’s absurd that he thinks that he can buy another country.”

Isabell Corsky: “No, I don’t think he should be able to because I think he doesn’t know what he’s doing and I don’t know what he’s going to do with Greenland, and like it’s just scary.”

American tourist in Copenhagen Heidi Davis says: “I am embarrassed because I think when you commit to a plan and you agree to come and obviously Denmark has spent some time planning and putting money into this, then to cancel it, for any reason, it better be for a really important reason and to me it sounds like he cancelled because his feelings were hurt.”

The Danish Royal Palace expressed surprise through a spokesperson that had no further comment.

Local media headlines in Denmark referred to the relationship between the two countries as ice cold or at a freezing point as a result of President Trump’s snub.

But Prime Minister Frederiksen maintains the two nations are closely connected, that the United States remains an important NATO ally and that cooperation will continue to expand.

Click video below:


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World Entrepreneurs’ Day (WED) is commemorated every year on August 21, the purpose of which is to create awareness for entrepreneurship, innovation and leadership across the globe.

It’s a day to honour those who start their business alone. It is the day of founders, managers, producers, contractors, industrialists, innovators, administrators, designers and producers.

Founded by the Alliance of International Business Associations (AIBA) WED is a great opportunity to push philanthropic, social and ethical business practices via conferences, awards and initiatives.


Celebrating Mokopane entrepreneur Basetsane Matsetela

Basetsana Matsetela, an entrepreneur from Mokopane in Limpopo says she always wanted to make a difference in people’s lives. Basetsana’s company produces aluminium doors and window frames. The business now employs about forty people.


Celebrating entrepreneurs – Kimberley

Wednesday 21st August is World Entrepreneurs’ Day and that couldn’t be a better time to recognise innovation and leadership. With the unemployment rate having increased to 29% in the country, start-ups may potentially regenerate economies and create jobs. The purpose of the World Entrepreneurs’ Day is to create awareness and celebrate the people who embark on the journey of starting their own business.


 Observing World Entrepreneurs’ Day with Florence Ndlovu


Creating awareness about entrepreneurship

The pedestrian economic environment presents a perfect opportunity for entrepreneurs to thrive. This is according to two entrepreneurial experts who share insights on how entrepreneurs can achieve this. Their advice comes as the World observes World Entrepreneurs’ Day today – the 21st of August.


Port Elizabeth man farms roaches and worms

A Port Elizabeth man’s entrepreneurial nous took him down this road and he added this unusual farming idea to his other agricultural products.


Observing World Entrepreneurs’ Day with Vuyi Zondi

Vuyi Zondi, speaks about her skincare brand, Corium Skincare at the Riverside Incubation Hub in Sandton.


Afrika Mkhangala on World Entrepreneurs’ Day

Afrika Mkhangala is a farmer and entrepreneur who also works in the media, and logistics spaces. He speaks to SABC News on World Entrepreneurs’ Day .


Unpacking the spirit of Entrepreneurship with Inga Gubeka

A 31-year old Johannesburg-based entrepreneur has sold out his entire range of luxury leather bags…all of this after tweeting about it online. Described as a fusion of African luxury and Scandinavian design elements, Inga Gubeka’s line of leather goods earned him recognition in Forbes’ Top 30 Africans Under 30 in 2016.


Riverside Incubation Hub on World Entrepreneurs’ Day 2019

SME specialist reporter Liabo Setho at the Riverside Incubation Hub in Sandton.


World Entrepreneurs’ Day 2019 creates awareness for entrepreneurship and leadership

The pedestrian economic environment presents a perfect opportunity for entrepreneurs to thrive. This is according to two entrepreneurial experts who share insights on how entrepreneurs can achieve this. Their advise come as the world observes World Entrepreneurs’ Day today. World Entrepreneurs’ Day creates awareness about entrepreneurship, innovation and leadership throughout the world.


Women and farming | Challenges facing emerging farmers

African problems require solutions by Africans from Africa – that’s according to an International non governmental organization, AGCO. The organisation’s Metti Richenhagen is currently in South Africa visiting agricultural projects in KwaZulu-Natal. AGCO was launched in 2018 to help address hunger challenges in various countries. SABC News chats to Metti Richenhagen who is the managing director of AGCO agriculture foundation.


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Former Zimbabwean Vice President, Phelekezela Mphoko has been declared a fugitive from justice by the Zimbabwean anti-corruption Commission (ZACC).

He failed to surrender himself to officers of the Commission on Monday in Bulawayo.

Mphoko faces criminal abuse of office charges during his time as Vice President under former President Robert Mugabe and becomes the second high profile figure and former government official to be investigated by the ZACC.

Former minister of Tourism Prisca Mupfumira was arrested last month on similar charges.

It is reported that Mphoko who had resisted arrest on Saturday had agreed to surrender himself to police.


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President Donald Trump said on Tuesday his administration was considering potential tax cuts on wages as well as profits from asset sales, and sought to play down market anxieties that the world’s top economy could be heading for a recession.

Speaking to reporters during a White House visit by Romanian President Klaus Iohannis, Trump said “we’re looking at various tax reductions,” adding that a “payroll tax is something that we think about.”

Recession fears were stoked last week when bond investors briefly demanded a higher interest rate on 2-year Treasury bonds than for 10-year Treasury bonds, a potential signal of lost faith in near-term economic growth.

Trump dismissed fears of a slowdown, extolling low unemployment and a rising stock market over his tenure.

“I think the word “recession” is a word that’s inappropriate…We’re very far from a recession,” he said.

The Washington Post reported a temporary payroll tax cut was under consideration to juice growth, but Trump said the White House has been weighing tax cuts for some time.

A slowdown would be bad news for Trump, who is building his 2020 bid for a second term around the economy’s performance, but whose year-long trade war with China is weighing on growth.

On Tuesday, Trump said he would not need the approval of Congress to link a tax on profits from asset sales, known as capital gains, to inflation. According to tax code experts, investors would pay far less capital gains tax if it was linked to an inflation index.

“I’m not talking about doing anything at this moment, but indexing is something that a lot of people have liked for a long time. And it’s something that would be very easy to do,” he said. “It is something I am certainly thinking about.”

Former Vice President and Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden, campaigning in Iowa, said lowering the capital gains tax would only help the wealthy.

“The route that the president has us going down is a big mistake,” Biden told reporters after a campaign rally. “We should be focusing on how you re-empower the middle class; we should be rewarding work, not wealth.”

Payroll taxes fund the Medicare health insurance program for the elderly and Social Security, which in turn provides income payments for retirees.

Lowering them temporarily could boost consumer spending, a key driver of the US economy, but it would also deprive the government of tax revenues, at least in the short term.

At the end of 2017, Trump signed a massive tax overhaul passed by the Republican-led Congress and has since promised to follow up with another round of major changes.


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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo acknowledged on Tuesday that Islamic State militants are gaining strength in some areas but said the militant group’s capacity to conduct attacks has been greatly diminished. “It’s complicated. There are certainly places where ISIS is more powerful today than they were three or four years ago,” Pompeo said in an interview with CBS “This Morning.” But he said the group’s self-proclaimed caliphate is gone and its attack capability has been made much more difficult.

Pompeo was asked about a New York Times report that the Islamic militant group was gaining new strength in Iraq and Syria. President Donald Trump said in December that U.S. troops succeeded in their mission to defeat Islamic State in Syria and were no longer needed in the country. “We won,” he said at the time.

Pompeo said the plan to defeat Islamic State in the region was executed with 80 other countries and was very successful. However, he cautioned that there is always risk that there will be a resurgence of “radical Islamic terrorist groups,”including al Qaeda and Islamic State. In Geneva, a senior Chinese official warned on Tuesday that there was a danger of Islamic State militants re-emerging in Syria and called for progress in the political process between the Damascus government and the opposition to end the war.

China has long worried about ethnic Uighurs from China’s far western region of Xinjiang who have traveled clandestinely to Syria and Iraq to fight with Islamist groups there. Islamic State claimed responsibility for a wedding suicide attack that killed 63 people and wounded 182 on Saturday in the Afghan capital of Kabul.


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Kenya will for the first time count intersex persons during the upcoming national population census. For the first time the census questionnaire will have three markers Male, Female and Intersex.

This follows a successful petition to the Kenyan government by intersex persons who are fighting for legal recognition. Intersex persons are individuals born with sex characteristics that do not fit the typical definitions of male or female bodies.

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Yet another former South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) interim board member, Krish Naidoo, has disputed the Special Investigating Unit (SIU) report on the SABC security tender. Naidoo says the report is fatally flawed and filled with various factual errors.

Earlier, former acting Group CEO at the time, Tseliso Ralitabo also maintained that there was no wrongdoing in the awarding of the R185 million security tender to Mafoko Security in 2017. Mafoko’s competitor, MJAYELI is reported to have been a bidder scoring high in pricing, but the Board overruled its own supply chain processes and awarded the contract to Mafoko.

Naidoo says there is something fishy about this report.

“What is a matter of serious concern is the way this report is being treated and the only person that can see an SIU report is the President. As far as I understand this report has never been made public by the President, so how it got to the public space, somebody either at the SABC or at the SIU needs to explain. The question I’m asking myself is there an ulterior motive here, and if there is those of us that are fighting, standing for good governance must deal with that and root out this rogue elements that are dealing with this report in the manner that it has been dealt with,” says Naidoo.


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Britons should get vaccinated against measles and ignore online “mumbo-jumbo” about dangers of the jabs, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday after a resurgence of the disease.

Britain has lost its “measles-free” status three years after the virus was eliminated and there were more than 230 new cases of measles recorded in the first quarter of 2019.

Johnson has called for a summit of social media companies to discuss how they could promote accurate information about the Measles Mumps Rubella (MMR) vaccine, while his office said the National Health Service’s (NHS) website was being updated to address misleading online information about the dangers of jabs.

“The UK generally has a great record on fighting measles, but for the first time we’re suddenly going in the wrong direction,” Johnson said on a visit to a hospital in Truro, south-west England.

“I’m afraid people have just been listening to that superstitious mumbo-jumbo on the internet, all that anti-vax stuff, and thinking that the MMR vaccine is a bad idea. That’s wrong, please get your kids vaccinated.”

Johnson added that some parents were also complacent about making sure their children receive their second doses of the MMR vaccine.

Johnson’s office said that currently just 87% of children are getting their second dose of the jab, likely contributing to the spread of the disease. The government has a target of 95% of children to get both doses of the jab.

“It’s not just the right thing for them, but also of course it’s the right thing for the whole population,” Johnson said. “It might not be your kid that gets it, it could be somebody else’s.”


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Tanzanian President John Magufuli says the West should remove sanctions against Zimbabwe. He made the call at the 39th Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit in Dar es Salaam as he assumed the chairmanship of the body.

The two day affair was themed “A Conducive Environment for Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development, Increased Intra-Regional Trade and Job Creation.”

Magufuli says member states should stand together to ensure sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe are removed.

He says the country is ready for a new future, and that United States and European Union sanctions are no longer necessary due to recent political and economic reforms.

“These sanctions have not only affected the people of Zimbabwe and their government but our entire region.”

SADC Executive Secretary Stergomena Tax says: “The private sector is the engine of development as it creates jobs, undertakes economic production, contributes to government revenue and helps to lift the living standards of our people.”

Meanwhile, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa says he is happy with the deliberations.

Turning to his work in Lesotho where he was appointed to facilitate the reform in that country, the President says there is progress.

The summit has also agreed to adopt Kiswahili as the fourth official language of the bloc.

Currently, the official languages of the 16-nation body are English, French and Portuguese.

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Mafoko Security has distanced itself from any wrongdoing after the Special Investigating Unit(SIU) found evidence of serious irregularities in the SABC’s awarding of a tender to the firm two years ago.

Former SABC Interim Board Members, who were involved in the procurement and awarding of the R185 million security tender could now face legal action.

Mafoko Security Patrols’ Director-General Lebo Nare says the firm was not involved in the procurement processes by the public broadcaster.

He says what is happening is unfortunate considering that they have seen the leaked report and it does not implicate the company in any wrongdoing.

He says: “It is very unfortunate that we should be on the receiving end for something that we were not responsible for. We are not involved in the procurement processes of the SABC or clued up as to how they come up with the conclusion of the winning bidder.”

“The process is an internal one at the SABC. We only received an appointment letter and we come and render quality security services at the SABC.”

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Thousands of protesters, most clad in black, gathered under a downpour for an anti-government rally at a Hong Kong park on Sunday, in the eleventh week of what have been often violent demonstrations in the Asian financial hub.

The turnout for the rally could show whether the movement still has broad-based support after the ugly scenes witnessed during the past week when protesters occupied the city’s airport, for which some activists apologised.

Anger over a now-suspended Bill that would allow criminal suspects in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China erupted in June, but the rising unrest is fuelled by broader worries about the erosion of freedoms guaranteed under the “one country, two systems” formula put in place after Hong Kong’s return from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

“Hong Kongers are tired of protesting, this is really the last thing they want. It’s bloody hot and it’s raining. It’s a torture just to turn up, frankly,” said a 24-year-old student named Jonathan.

“But we have to be here because we have no other choice. We have to continue until the government finally shows us the respect that we deserve,” he said.

Seated on concrete soccer fields in the sprawling Victoria Park in the city’s bustling Causeway Bay district, protesters held placards with slogans including “Free Hong Kong!” and”Democracy now!”, and umbrellas to shield them from the heavy rain.

Demonstrators are seeking complete withdrawal of the extradition bill, a halt to descriptions of the protests as’rioting’, a waiver of charges against those arrested, an independent inquiry and resumption of political reform.

They have also called for the resignation Hong Kong’s Beijing-backed leader, Carrie Lam.

“When we were young, we didn’t think about it. But my son tells me: After 2047, what will happen to me?,” said a history teacher named Mrs. Poon, referring to the year when the 50-year agreement enshrining Hong Kong’s separate system will lapse.

“I will come again and again and again. We do not know how any of this is going to end. We will still fight,” she said.

Police have come under criticism for using increasingly aggressive tactics to break up demonstrations, and on Sunday some people handed out balloons resembling eyeballs, a reference to the injury suffered by a female medic who was hospitalised after being hit by a pellet round in the eye.

On Saturday, however, a demonstration in support of the government attracted what organisers said was 476 000 people, although police put the number of attendees at 108 000.

The anti-government protests present one of the biggest challenges facing Chinese President Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012. And with the ruling Communist Party preparing to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic on October 1, the crisis in Hong Kong has come at a sensitive time.

Beijing has struck an increasingly strident tone over the protests, accusing foreign countries including the United States of fomenting unrest.

Scenes of Chinese paramilitary troops training at a stadium in the city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, gave a clear warning that mainland intervention by force is possible.

Last week, protesters who occupied the terminal at Hong Kong’s airport forced the cancellation of nearly 1 000 flights and detained two men they thought were pro-government sympathisers, prompting Beijing to liken the behaviour to terrorism.

“We are Hong Kongers. We are here for our future. We feel for the teenagers,” said Frances Chan, 60, a retired journalist attending Sunday’s rally.

She said only a few protesters had used violence, sparingly and that it was brought on by pressure from authorities and police.

“Actually, we want peace and freedom,” she said. “If the government would just listen to the five requests, things would calm down.”


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