SweetCrude Weekly Edition

IMF, South Sudan in pact for $112.7m emergency funds

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Nairobi -- The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, IMF, and South Sudan have reached a staff-level agreement for the release of about $112.7 million in emergency financing, the fund said.

"This emergency financing under the new Food Shock Window will help South Sudan address food insecurity, support social spending, and boost internatio­nal reserves," the IMF said in a statement, adding that its executive board will approve the financing in coming weeks.

In early-November, United Nations agencies said up to 7.8 million people in South Sudan, two-third of the population, may face severe food shortages during next year's April-to-July lean season due to floods, drought and conflict.

On Tuesday, last week, the IMF put the number of people experienci­ng severe food insecurity at an estimated 8.3 million.

"The combinatio­n of continued localised conflict, four consecutiv­e years of severe flooding, and the rising price of staple commoditie­s from Russia's war in Ukraine has increased the number of people experienci­ng severe food insecurity," it said.

South Sudan erupted into civil war shortly after getting

Accra -- Ghana has ordered all large-scale mining companies to sell 20% of their entire stock of refined gold at their refineries to the Bank of Ghana from January independen­ce from Sudan in 2011 and while a peace agreement signed four years ago is largely holding, the transition­al government has been slow to unify various military factions.

Bars of gold

1, 2023, Vice-President Mahamudu Bawumia said on Facebook.

The move is part of measures to operationa­lise a government plan to use gold

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