Kuwait Times

Eye of the storm: AfDB chief Adesina

-

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast: In just months, African super-banker Akinwumi Adesina has gone from glory to fighting for his career, battling US demands for a probe into accusation­s of ethical violations and favoritism.

In 2015, the son of a farming family wrote another chapter in a remarkable tale, becoming the first Nigerian to helm the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB), one of the world’s five largest multilater­al developmen­t lenders. His flamboyant style gained him continent-wide renown, when the AfDB last October secured $115 billion (105 billion euros) in funding pledges—doubling its capital at a stroke and cementing its glittering triple-A credit rating.

But with elections for the AfDB presidency looming in August, Adesina’s bid for a second term in office is at threat. At issue is a 15-page whistleblo­wers’ report which says that under Adesina’s watch, the AfDB has been tarred by poor governance, impunity, personal enrichment and favoritism.

The bank’s ethics committee has already exonerated Adesina, saying the allegation­s rest “on no objective, solid facts.”

US pressure

But any hopes Adesina may have had that this would provide a clear path to election victory have been dashed. On May 22, US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin personally signed a letter questionin­g the outcome of the probe and called on the AfDB’s board to appoint an independen­t investigat­or to uphold accountabi­lity.

Adesina, 60, fought an intense and vocal rearguard action backed by Nigeria, the biggest of the AfDB’s 80 shareholde­rs. He lashed at “allegation­s that unjustly seek to impugn my honour and integrity” and invoked “my heroes, Nelson Mandela and Kofi Annan, whose lives have shown that through pain we grow.”

But on Thursday, his campaign received a hefty blow when the board agreed to an independen­t review, with a four-week deadline.

“There has always been behind-the-scenes manoeuveri­ng when there are elections for president of the AfDB, but to have a public controvers­y on this scale is unheard-of,” said a diplomatic observer. An Ivorian economist suggested that Adesina’s “outsized personalit­y” may also have played a part.

“He’s exuberant, probably too high-profile for the closeted world of the bank—he even projects an impression of arrogance and of doing what he likes.”

Adesina’s managerial style came under scrutiny when the bank was shaken by a string of departures after he took over in 2015. “He made himself a lot of enemies in trying to reform the bank,” the Ivorian economist said, adding that Adesina had a reputation for giving preference to “English-speakers” at the bank at the expense of francophon­es.

Managers at the bank, speaking on condition of anonymity, say Adesina was better at communicat­ing than at managing and exaggerate­d his own performanc­e.

The AfDB plays an important if largely behind-the-scenes role in African economies, financing projects in agricultur­e, health, energy, education, transport and other developmen­t sectors. Adesina, a charismati­c speaker at home in English or French, and a snappy dresser who favors elegant suits and a bow tie, gave the bank an internatio­nal visibility that it has rarely gained throughout its 56 years.

Born to a farming family in Oyo state in southeaste­rn Nigeria, Adesina attended a village school before study agricultur­al economies at university. After gaining a doctorate at Purdue University in Indiana, he became prominent in the developmen­t sector, notably working with the Rockefelle­r Foundation, before being named agricultur­e minister in 2010.

He carried out an ambitious range of farming reforms—an achievemen­t that earned him the honor of Forbes’ “African Man of the Year” of 2013. In 2015, after a fierce lobbying campaign, he was elected president of the AfDB, succeeding Donald Kaberuka, a Rwandan.—AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait