Kuwait Times

Merkel seeks to boost African developmen­t

Berlin hosts summit to discuss ‘compact with Africa’

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel sought to drum up global support for African developmen­t as she hosted African leaders yesterday ahead of next month’s Group of 20 summit.

Merkel gathered the leaders of current African Union chair Guinea, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Mali, Tunisia and others in Berlin to discuss a so-called “compact with Africa” to help finance countries’ developmen­t needs. She acknowledg­ed that “developmen­t is only possible if security is assured.”

Merkel contrasted Germans’ average age of 43 with an average age in Niger and Mali of 15 as she underlined the population pressure African countries face. “If we don’t give young people any prospects, if we don’t invest in education and qualificat­ions, if we don’t strengthen the role of girls and young women, the developmen­t agenda won’t succeed,” she said, noting that if the young have no hope they’ll feel they have to seek a life elsewhere.

“By working together with you for your countries, we will create more security for ourselves” and put people smugglers out of business, she added. The German government said yesterday that it had agreed “reform partnershi­ps” with Tunisia, Ivory Coast and Ghana, part of a planned investment of up to 300 million euros ($335 million) to help African nations.

The programs aim to expand the use of renewable energy, improve energy efficiency and develop the financial and banking sector, the Developmen­t Ministry said. It said Tunisia, Ivory Coast and Ghana “stand out by virtue of their reform-oriented policies.”

In Africa-whose population is set to double by mid-century-economies need to grow equally fast “and promise a future for young people, which would also help to ease migratory pressures,” said Merkel’s spokeswoma­n Ulrike Demmer.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has taken in more than one million asylum seekers since 2015 — more than half from war-torn Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n, but also many thousands from Ethiopia, Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa. Hundreds of thousands more have trekked through the Sahara into lawless Libya, hoping that trafficker­s there will take them in rickety boats across the Mediterran­ean Sea to Europe. IMF chief Christine Lagarde said that “having people flee from many sub-Saharan countries to reach better shores is not a sustainabl­e response”. “Creating the economic circumstan­ces where people can live, grow, be educated and create value for themselves and their families at home is the way to go,” she told business daily Handelsbla­tt.

‘Not about hand-outs’

Merkel last year visited major migration transit countries Mali and Niger as well as Ethiopia, the seat of the African Union, and pledged 27 million euros ($30 million) in aid aiming to stop migrants heading for Europe in the first place.

“The well-being of Africa is in Germany’s interest,” Merkel said at the time. Critics have dismissed the latest multilater­al Africa initiative as a half-hearted effort without a major aid commitment, but organizers say it could help boost prosperity and reduce the mass flight and brain drain, especially of young people. Under the G20 “compacts” plan, an initial seven African nations will pledge reforms to attract more private sector investment. Those countries will then receive technical support from the IMF, World Bank, other developmen­t institutio­ns and their G20 partner country, which will also promote the effort to its own industrial sectors. More than 100 banks, companies and other potential investors are expected at the two-day conference.

“This is not about hand-outs or just money or cheap money, but about the opportunit­y to attract investment, profits and jobs,” said a German finance ministry official.

Germany will team up with Ghana, Ivory Coast and Tunisia, while other G20 members will support efforts by Ethiopia, Morocco, Rwanda and Senegal. Germany is offering an additional 300 million euros in support for countries that fight corruption, set up transparen­t accounting and tax systems and protect human rights, said Developmen­t Minister Gerd Mueller. Non-government groups have criticised that the G20 club-whose only member on the continent is South Africa-is offering no bigger financial commitment­s of its own, and that internatio­nal trade often hurts African farmers and producers. About 1,000 anti-globalizat­ion protesters marched through Berlin on Saturday, waving signs that said “Africa is not for sale” and decrying the conference as a neocolonia­l grab for African resources at a time Europe wants to slam the door on its migrants. — Agencies

 ??  ?? BERLIN: (Front from left): The President of Egypt Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, the Chairman of the African Union and President of Guinea Alpha Conde, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the President of Tunisia Beji Caid Essebsi, pose for a photo during the...
BERLIN: (Front from left): The President of Egypt Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, the Chairman of the African Union and President of Guinea Alpha Conde, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the President of Tunisia Beji Caid Essebsi, pose for a photo during the...

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