Category: Analysis
The Perversion of Thought in the USA
| June 13, 2016 | 9:10 pm | Analysis, class struggle, LGBT, political struggle | Comments closed

by James Thompson

People of conscience around the world have been horrified by the mass murders committed in Orlando, Florida over the weekend. Many people have questioned how such a horrific event could occur.

News reports have indicated that a lone gunman born in the United States of Afghan dissent slaughtered 49 innocent people at a nightclub and gravely wounded 5 people while wounding at least 53 others.

Some may maintain that the gunman was deranged. This cannot be argued. However, let’s examine the facts as we know them. A working class gunman of Afghan dissent slaughtered 49 mostly Latino and African-American people in a nightclub that serves primarily LGBT clients.

The perversion of thinking lies in the fact that once again the bourgeoisie have pulled a fast one on the working class. In this case, one working class gunman took the lives of at least 49 working-class people.

As the bourgeoisie squeals with glee over this split in which one sector of the working class brutally assaulted another sector of the working class, the bourgeois media pontificates and attempts to exploit this tragedy to further the interests of the bourgeoisie.

This unending splitting of the working class only serves the interests of the bourgeoisie. Until all sectors of the working class are able to recognize their brothers and sisters in other sectors of the working class and thereby unify in the struggle against the bourgeoisie, these tragedies will continue.

The splitting of the working class perpetuates the perversion of thinking among working class people. The splitting renders the working class powerless against the cancerous bourgeoisie. Unity is the only answer to the oppression of the working class by the bourgeoisie.

Africa/Global: Migrants’ Rights Roundup
| May 26, 2016 | 9:29 pm | Africa, Analysis, political struggle | Comments closed

AfricaFocus Bulletin
May 26, 2016 (160526)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor’s Note

At the World Humanitarian Summit (https://www.worldhumanitariansummit.org/) in Istanbul on May 23-24,
the informal consensus was that the system of humanitarian response
to today’s crises is “broken.” The calls to “leave no one behind”
highlighted the particular vulnerability of the displaced. But it is
clear that such non-binding resolutions will only be implemented by
extensive mobilization on many fronts, including both those most
affected and their allies.

For a version of this Bulletin in html format, more suitable for
printing, go to http://www.africafocus.org/docs16/migr1605.php, and
click on “format for print or mobile.”

To share this on Facebook, click on
https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=
http://www.africafocus.org/docs16/migr1605.php

Each issue of AfricaFocus requires selection from a wide array of
sources. Normally this is for reposting of excerpts from a small
number of sources, with a few additional links to additional
resources. Sometimes, as for this Bulletin, that choice is just
overwhelming, and I have opted for a roundup of links or very short
excerpts, to include a much wider set of sources that have been
called to my intention.

I hope this will serve as a resource for readers who can pick and
choose what to followup. I particularly urge readers to view the
multimedia resources highlighted at the beginning, and to pass them
on to others who may be interested, by email and through social
media links.

This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains a roundup of links on migration
issues, particularly related to protection of rights of refugees,
other international migrants, and internally displaced people.
Although it is far from comprehensive, the range of sources included
show increasing recognition, in Africa and globally, that migration
and forced migration creating extreme vulnerability is a complex
phenomenon, closely linked to other economic, social, and political
and to fundamental human rights of all people.

In addition to the wide range of sources below, previous AfricaFocus
Bulletins on migration are available at
http://www.africafocus.org/migrexp.php

++++++++++++++++++++++end editor’s note+++++++++++++++++

Multimedia Perspectives on Migration

Rosebell Kagumire at World Economic Forum for Africa, Kigali, May
13, 2016
http://wef.ch/1rG1lhL

20 minute video. Good questions from audience & good thoughtful
nuanced answers about African ?#?migration? from this leading
Ugandan journalist, who formerly worked at International
Organization for Migration in Geneva. Migration is not just to
Europe but also within Africa and with Middle East and Asia as well.
Fortunately most of the time with questions and actions. Goes far
beyond the stereotypes.

“New York Immigrant Advocates Launch Black Immigrant Engagement
Initiative,” May 11, 2016

15 minutes interview on BRIC TV, the first 24/7 television channel
created by, for, and about Brooklyn. Hadiyah Harrison, Project
Manager at the New York Immigration Coalition, and Carl Lipscombe,
Policy & Legal Manager at Black Alliance for Just Immigration
(BAJI).

[For additional recent articles from BAJI, visit
http://blackalliance.org/category/blog/

Op-ed by Opal Tometi of BAJI in Time magazine
Black Lives Matter Co-Founder: The Immigration Challenge No One Is Talking About

Grassroots call to decriminalize the U.S. immigration system, #Fix96
on-line petition -  http://tinyurl.com/h2lfbyx]

Laeila Adjovi, “The Town of Women,” BBC, 2 December 2015
http://tinyurl.com/zwmc539 – photo essay on the town of Beguedo in
Burkina Faso and migration to Italy. For more on the photographer,
see http://laeila-adjovi.com/

Anne Paq, “Migrant domestic workers take to the streets in Beirut.
Demonstrators called for basic rights, including a minimum wage and
at least one day off per week.”, photo essay, Al Jazeera, 7 May 2016
http://tinyurl.com/j2vk7b3

New Blog and Facebook Page

AfricaMoves: A Pan African Migration Platform

http://www.africamoves.org/
On Facebook at http://tinyurl.com/h22qj3u

Organizations contributing to the establishment of Africa Moves
include: Priority Africa Network; Black Immigration Network;
PanAfrican Network in Defense of Migrants’ Rights; Consortium for
Refugees & Migrants in South Africa; Africa Speaks 4 Africa. Edited
by Nunu Kidane.

Kenya’s Refugees in Kenya & Beyond

Samar Al-Bulushi, “Kenya’s Refugee ‘Problem'”
Africa Is a Country, May 25, 2016

Kenya’s Refugee “Problem”

“Integrally tied to this pending humanitarian crisis is the global
architecture of counter-terrorism. The Kenyan government is but one
actor among many who produce, and profit from, the specter of
terrorist threat, which allows for the discursive slippage from
civilian, to potential Al-Shabaab sympathizer, to potential
terrorist.”

Chico Harlan, “For many Somali refugees, this industry offers hope
— then takes it away,” Washington Post, May 25, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/jdnq4a4

Feature article: “Though meatpacking plants have long relied on
labor by immigrants, particularly Hispanics, major companies have
moved to hire Somalis, who have the dual advantage for employers of
being legal and relatively cheap. In one slice of a changing low-
wage America, these are the new ideal workers.”
Lucy Hovil, “Why is the cost of hosting refugees falling on the
world’s poorest states?,” The Guardian, May 13, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/zs9wdeh

“The government of Kenya says it plans to close Dadaab, the world’s
largest refugee camp, which hosts approximately 330,000 people, as
well as shutting the Department of Refugee Affairs (DRA). The
announcement, on Friday 6 May, was no doubt a pre-election stunt of
Trump-like proportions that plays to an electorate’s fear of
generating instability and outsiders taking jobs, playing to the
same xenophobic narrative that has become commonplace in election
campaigns across the world. [but] As long as rich nations pay lip
service to meeting the needs of the world’s displaced, they cannot
blame Kenya for closing refugee camps like Dadaab”

Jina Moore, “Kenya Is Trying To Close The World’s Biggest Refugee
Camp And This Is Why,” Buzzfeed, May 13, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/huyof93

“Kenya says the camps are a security threat, but the move comes at a
time when refugees are big business. … When Europe began panicking
over its growing refugee population, Kenya took notice. A very
noticeable feature of that crisis is that Europe is willing to spend
cash — lots of cash — to end its refugee problems. … This is not
the first time Kenya has said it will close the camps. Last time it
issued this threat, it got $45 million more in U.S. aid.”

Amnesty International, “New ‘Refugees Welcome Index’ shows Kenyan
government out of touch with public on refugees,” 19 May 2016
http://tinyurl.com/jrdmc7v

“The new Refugees Welcome Index, based on a global survey of more
than 27,000 people carried out by the strategy consultancy
GlobeScan, found that 65% of Kenyans would personally welcome
refugees and that 62% thought their government had not yet done
everything in its power to help refugees. ‘This report, coming at a
time of heightened anti-refugee rhetoric from the Kenyan government,
shows that Kenyans are not as unaccepting as their government would
make the world believe,’ said Muthoni Wanyeki, Amnesty
International’s Regional Director for East Africa, the Horn and the
Great Lakes. ‘It shows that a majority of Kenyans would welcome
refugees into their country and that the government’s decision to
shut down Dadaab refugee camp is not backed by popular opinion.'”

Stephanie Schwartz, “Why Kenya’s threat to close its refugee camps
is even worse than you think,” Washington Post, May 11, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/z8vy8q7

“Many observers are already questioning whether Kenya will really
follow through on the closure, whether the camps really are a haven
for terrorists, and whether this action violates international law.

An equally important question is: Do these refugees have homes to
which they could return? Probably not. And the reasons aren’t just
that Somalia and South Sudan won’t magically become peaceful.

Why else can’t they return? Let me explain by telling you what I’ve
found among Burundian refugees in Tanzania.”

New International Reports

Amnesty International, “Refugees Welcome Index shows government
refugee policies out of touch with public opinion, 19 May 2016
http://tinyurl.com/hbp5nhy

“The vast majority of people (80%) would welcome refugees with open
arms, with many even prepared to take them into their own homes,
according to a global survey commissioned by Amnesty International.

The new Refugees Welcome Index, based on a global survey of more
than 27,000 people carried out by the internationally renowned
strategy consultancy GlobeScan, ranks 27 countries across all
continents based on people’s willingness to let refugees live in
their countries, towns, neighbourhoods and homes.

The survey shows people say they are willing to go to astonishing
lengths to make refugees welcome. It also shows how anti-refugee
political rhetoric is out of kilter with public opinion.”

Bronwen Manby, “Who Belongs? Statelessness and Nationality in West
Africa,” Migration Policy Institute, April 7, 2016
http://www.migrationpolicy.org – direct URL:
http://tinyurl.com/htzplps

[Full article contains extensive background and analysis. Brief
excerpt below by permission of Migration Policy Institute.]

“At least 10 million people around the world are stateless,
according to estimates from the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), but the real number may be much higher.
Statelessness severely limits a person’s human rights, including
access to basic services such as health care and education. Often
deemed to be illegally present in their country of birth and
residence–even if their parents were also born there–stateless
individuals may be unable to work in the formal economy, open a bank
account, or buy land. A person without identity documents, usually
dependent on nationality, is unable to cross international borders
through regular channels. …

Although those lacking documents are generally among the poorest and
most marginalized, an undocumented person who is a member of the
dominant ethnic or religious group and comes from a settled
community and stable family is far less likely to be refused when
applying for a nationality document. Those most at risk of
statelessness are members of social groups facing discrimination,
migrants (especially irregular migrants) and their descendants,
refugees, and children born out of wedlock, separated from their
parents, or vulnerable in other ways. They are left stateless not
only by discrimination in practice and weak administrative systems,
but also by laws that provide very limited rights based on birth in
the territory and that restrict transmission of nationality from
parent to child on the basis of gender or other grounds.

At the regional level, West Africa has moved furthest to address
statelessness, as a result of advocacy from UNHCR and the existing
policies and institutional frameworks of the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS). In February 2015, the 15 ECOWAS Member
States adopted the Abidjan Declaration on the Eradication of
Statelessness, agreeing “to prevent and reduce statelessness by
reforming constitutional, legislative and institutional regimes
related to nationality in order to include appropriate safeguards
against statelessness, in particular to ensure that every child
acquires a nationality at birth and that all foundlings are
considered nationals of the State in which they are found.” Of
course, the declaration is just that–a declaration–and does not
necessarily mean the promised action will take place. Nonetheless,
it is a remarkable recognition at the regional level that the
question of nationality in Africa needs to be addressed.

Based on a study commissioned by UNHCR and the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) and presented at the February 2015
Abidjan conference, this article explores the factors contributing
to statelessness in West Africa, including the region’s colonial and
migration history and nationality laws, as well as the social groups
particularly at risk. The article then examines the ECOWAS
framework, steps taken to implement the Abidjan Declaration, and the
way forward to eradicating statelessness in West Africa.”

Marie-Laurence Flahaux and Bruno Schoumaker, “Democratic Republic of
the Congo: A Migration History Marked by Crises and Restrictions,”
Migration Policy Institute, April 20, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/j58yztj

Article provides historical overview as well as analysis of current
situation.

“DR Congo has long had both economic and humanitarian migration
exchanges. African countries host the vast majority of Congolese
migrants and refugees, whose numbers have increased significantly
over the last four decades, particularly since the wars of the late
1990s and early 2000s. The lack of recent censuses in several
destination countries (such as Angola) makes it difficult to
precisely evaluate the distribution of Congolese migrants and
changing patterns. Data from the United Nations Population Division
nevertheless show significant changes over the last 25 years. In
1990, an estimated 300,000 Congolese migrants and refugees resided
in one of the nine neighboring countries (Angola, Burundi, Central
African Republic, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sudan [now South
Sudan], Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia), representing three-quarters
of all migrants from DR Congo worldwide (see Table 1). Their number
had more than doubled by 2000 (to approximately 700,000), and by
mid-2015, had risen to more than 1 million in the neighboring
countries (1.2 million for Africa as a whole; see Table 1).

While Belgium was the main Western destination of Congolese migrants
prior to the 1980s, destinations have increasingly diversified.
France has become the preferred end point since the late 1990s
(Figure 2), possibly as a result of greater ease getting visas and
of obtaining asylum, and better labor market opportunities. Recent
estimates indicate that France and Belgium together host more than
100,000 Congolese migrants, and that more than 50,000 others live
elsewhere in Europe (including Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, and
the United Kingdom; see Figure 2).

Outside Europe, the United States and Canada have also become
increasingly popular destinations since the 1990s (see Figure 2),
each now hosting nearly 30,000 Congolese immigrants. This growing
interest is also found among would-be migrants in surveys conducted
in Kinshasa. Congolese migration to the United States has taken off
since 2005, making the United States the second most popular
Congolese destination outside Africa.”

Additional recent international reports and sources

[Thanks to Evalyn Tennant, of Global Migration Policy Associates
(GMPA), for identifying these links and sharing them with me. As
with other global issues, the outcomes for Africa are closely
related to policies set at a global level. As the number of
refugees, migrants, and internally displaced people grows world-
wide, affecting countries in all regions, the global response is
more and more obviously falling short. The policy debates, both in
intergovernmental and non-governmental forums, are becoming more and
more intense.]

UN Summit Addressing Large Movements of Refugees and Migrants
Upcoming September 19, 2016
http://refugeesmigrants.un.org/high-level-meeting
http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocusRel.asp?infocusID=90

Official UN pages. Second link above has multimedia resources as
well as news.

Secretary General’s Report for the Summit: “In Safety and Dignity:
Addressing large movements of refugees and migrants”
http://refugeesmigrants.un.org/reports-and-documents

Report includes assessment of current issues facing refugees and
migrants and the countries hosting them, as well as calls for global
compacts, one on “Responsibility-Sharing for Refugees” and the other
for “Safe, Regular and Orderly Migration.”

Migrants in Countries in Crisis (MICIC), International Organization
for Migration (IOM)
http://micicinitiative.iom.int

Global Coalition Migration page on MICIC
http://gcmigration.org/micic/

Civil society coalition page related to MICIC, includes reports on
civil society consultations in West and Central Africa, North Africa
and Middle East, and Central and Southern Africa.

MICIC West and Central Africa regional consultation
http://tinyurl.com/zq6ejgw

MICIC North Africa and Middle East consultation
http://tinyurl.com/je4wzqz

MICIC East and Southern Africa consultation
http://tinyurl.com/hzlpltx

Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat for the Horn of Africa and
Yemen
http://www.regionalmms.org/index0b30.html?id=2.

Forced Migration Review
http://www.fmreview.org

This journal has a wealth of resources, including Africa-specific
resources. For example, the latest issue (
http://www.fmreview.org/solutions/contents.html) has articles
relating to Liberia, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Uganda, Somalia-Yemen
relations, Burundi, and Tanzania.

Joint Labour Migration Program for Africa
http://tinyurl.com/zsdjyxk

The African Union Commission (AUC), the ILO, the IOM and the UNECA
are implementing the Joint Labour Migration Program (JLMP) for
Africa formally adopted in January 2015 by African Heads of State
and Government as a comprehensive programme on
labour migration governance for the region.

Global Detention Project
http://www.globaldetentionproject.org

Includes special reports on detention of migrants and asylum seekers
in Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Gulf states, as well as in the
Americas. See http://tinyurl.com/z8rpb64 for reports.

Caritas Europa, “Migrants and Refugees Have Rights: Impact of EU
Policies on Accessing Protection,” February 2016
http://tinyurl.com/z6clnxj

Comprehensive 74-page report with background, policy analysis,
personal stories, photographs, and recommendations.

Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) GRID 2016: Global
Report on Internal Displacement, May 2016
http://www.internal-displacement.org/globalreport2016/

This is a fundamental report for understanding displacement,
whatever the cause. Brief excerpt from the foreword by Jan Egeland,
Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council:

“Much focus has been placed on the hundreds  of thousands of
refugees, asylum seekers and migrants who have put their lives at
risk to reach European shores. Their bravery and despair has drawn
much attention to the phenomenon of displacement. In reality though,
they represent only the tip of an iceberg.

There are now twice as many internally displaced people (IDPs) as
refugees worldwide. In some ways, the distinction between internal
and cross-border flight is unhelpful in a globalised world.

When displacement becomes inevitable, humanitarians attend to more
immediate needs, but they must work with the development sector if
sustainable solutions are to be achieved. There is a clear trend of
displacement becoming more protracted and more of a development
challenge.

To take some of these considerations into account, we are presenting
our estimates of internal displacement in 2015 in a radically new
way, with figures on people displaced by conflict, by violence and
by disasters in a single report.

The Global Report on Internal Displacement (GRID) aims to provide a
more holistic picture of the phenomenon, regardless of cause. … It
also discusses types of displacement that receive too little
attention, such as that associated with generalised criminal
violence, gradually-evolving crises such as drought, and development
projects.”

Additional articles of interest

African Film Festival (in Tarifa, Spain and Tangiers, Morocco)begins
today, May 26, and runs through June 4.
http://www.fcat.es/en/home-en-2/

Building links across the Mediterranean, this film festival is in
its 13th year.

Thomas Friedman, “Out of Africa,” New York Times, Apr 13,20,27, 2016
http://tinyurl.com/zzycjvq, http://tinyurl.com/hzjy6ck, and
http://tinyurl.com/gq8zx3m

Better than the usual from this New York Times columnist, reporting
from Niger and Senegal on African migration to Europe.

Overseas Development Institute (ODI) Briefing on “Fortress Europe,”
20 October 2015
https://www.odi.org/comment/9995-migration-policy-fortress-europe

Ugandan domestic workers in Saudi Arabia
http://allafrica.com/stories/201601280823.html

Detention centers in Libya
http://tinyurl.com/zl62eoe

Sudan crackdown on Eritrean migrants
http://tinyurl.com/hgsgtm3

*****************************************************

AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication
providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a
particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

AfricaFocus Bulletin can be reached at africafocus@igc.org. Please
write to this address to subscribe or unsubscribe to the bulletin,
or to suggest material for inclusion. For more information about
reposted material, please contact directly the original source
mentioned. For a full archive and other resources, see
http://www.africafocus.org

Mozambique: Debt Crisis & the Panama Papers
| May 13, 2016 | 8:49 pm | Africa, Analysis, political struggle | Comments closed

AfricaFocus Bulletin
May 13, 2016 (160513)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor’s Note

“The loans from the Swiss bank Credit Suisse to the Mozambican state
companies EMATUM and Proindicus involved a gross conflict of
interest, since the banker who organized the loans immediately
afterwards went to work for the Lebanese businessman Iskander Safa,
who owns the ship yard that built 24 tuna fishing vessels and six
patrol boats for EMATUM. … Together these three loans amounted to
over two billion dollars, and added 20 per cent to Mozambique’s
foreign debt, making it clearly unsustainable. … As more
information is becoming available, so it is becoming clear that the
guilty parties in this saga are not to be found only in Maputo.” –
Mozambique News Agency

For a version of this Bulletin in html format, more suitable for
printing, go to http://www.africafocus.org/docs16/moz1605.php, and
click on “format for print or mobile.”

To share this on Facebook, click on
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The debt crisis is most directly a crisis for the economic and
political future of Mozambique, where it comes together with the
resurgence of conflict between the opposition party and former
insurgent force Renamo, which has never fully disarmed. But it is
also a dramatic illustration of the transnational interconnections
between debt, corruption, and illicit financial flows. As such, it
is no surprise that a number of the international actors involved
turn up in the Panama Papers, including companies based in
Switzerland and Abu Dhabi and nationals of Lebanon, Britain, New
Zealand, and the United States.

This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains several recent articles on
different aspects of the debt crisis, including two from the
Mozambique News Agency (Agencia de Informaçao de Moçambique), one by
Joseph Hanlon, and one by University of Copenhagen economist Sam
Jones. As always, AfricaFocus selections are only a small selection,
and readers interested in more details and deeper analysis are
invited to dig deeper through the links provided.

See also, for additional detailed revelations, today’s new
Africa Confidential article at http://tinyurl.com/zong2oo

For regular English-language updates on this topic, see in
particular,

(1) Mozambique’s Secret Debt Triggers Economic Crisis
http://allafrica.com/view/group/main/main/id/00042683.html

(2) Mozambique News Reports & Clippings, 2016, Edited by Joseph
Hanlon http://tinyurl.com/hqcr8bu

(3) Mozambique News Agency AIM Reports
http://www.poptel.org.uk/mozambique-news

For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on Mozambique, see
http://www.africafocus.org/country/mozambique.php

For AfricaFocus coverage of illicit financial flows, debt, and
related issues, see http://www.africafocus.org/intro-iff.php

++++++++++++++++++++++end editor’s note+++++++++++++++++

Mozambique: Loans From Credit Suisse Involved Conflict of Interests

Agencia de Informacao de Mocambique (Maputo)

11 May 2016

http://allafrica.com/stories/201605120019.html

Maputo — The loans from the Swiss bank Credit Suisse to the
Mozambican state companies EMATUM and Proindicus involved a gross
conflict of interest, since the banker who organized the loans
immediately afterwards went to work for the Lebanese businessman
Iskander Safa, who owns the ship yard that built 24 tuna fishing
vessels and six patrol boats for EMATUM.

EMATUM in 2013 issued loan titles for 850 million dollars,
guaranteed by the Mozambican government, that were sold on the
European bond market by Credit Suisse, BNP Paribas and the Russian
bank VTB. Credit Suisse and VTB granted a loan to Proindicus, also
in 2013, and also guaranteed by the Mozambican government, for 622
million dollars. Much of this money was also supposed to be spent on
military vessels to protect oil and gas companies working in the
Rovuma Basin, off the coast of the northern province of Cabo
Delgado.

A third loan, for 535 million dollars, went to Mozambique Assets
Management (MAM), a company virtually nobody had heard of until last
month, and which was supposedly formed to provide repair and
maintenance services for shipping in the Mozambique Channel.

Together these three loans amounted to over two billion dollars, and
added 20 per cent to Mozambique’s foreign debt, making it clearly
unsustainable.

Although the bond issue in Europe ensured that EMATUM became well
known, the Proindicus and MAM loans were not disclosed either to the
Mozambican public or to the country’s partners. The result has been
a crisis in relations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
the group of 14 donors and financial agencies who provide direct
support for the Mozambican state budget. All are withholding further
financial support for the Mozambican government.

As more information is becoming available, so it is becoming clear
that the guilty parties in this saga are not to be found only in
Maputo. Indeed, the loans would likely never have happened without
what looks like massive corruption and conflict of interest at
Credit Suisse.

According to an investigation by the independent agency Zitamar
News, the banker at Credit Suisse who helped structure the EMATUM
and Proindicus loans was a New Zealand national named Andrew Pearse,
who went into business with Iskander Safa, immediately after the
loans had been arranged.

Safa is managing director and CEO of Abu Dhabi Mar, a shipbuilding
group based in the United Arab Emirates, which owns 100 per cent of
Constructions Mechaniques de Normandie (CMN), the shipyard in the
French port of Cherbourg where the EMATUM vessels were built. Abu
Dhabi Mar is owned by the Abu Dhabi royal family and by Safa’s
company Privinvest Shipbuilding.

Zitamar says that, once the loan arrangements had been finalized,
Pearse took up directorships in companies owned by Safa, and trading
under the name Palomar. For example, in September 2013 (much the
same time that the EMATUM loan was becoming public knowledge in
Mozambique). Pearse established “Palomar Natural Resources”, with an
American oil and gas executive named John Buggenhagen.

The next month he was appointed director of a Zurich-based financial
advisory company, Palomar Capital Advisers. He became chairperson of
this company in November, taking over from Christopher Langford, a
British lawyer, who is a director of several other Iskander Safa
companies, including Abu Dhabi Mar Europe and Abu Dhabi Mar UK.

Among its various activities Palomar Capital Advisers advises on
debt restructuring ­ including the Proindicus debt, which suggests
that Pearse still has ties, albeit indirectly, to Credit Suisse.

Pearse and Langford are also mentioned in the now notorious “Panama
Papers”, the mass of documents leaked from Panama based law firm
Mossack Fonseca. These documents show that they are directors and
shareholders of Palomar Holdings Ltd, registered in the tax haven of
the British Virgin Islands. Other shareholders include Safa’s
company Privinveste Shipbuilding, one of the owners of Abu Dhabi
Mar.

Zitamar has also seen the EMATUM accounts, which show that the vast
bulk of the 850 million dollars was speedily dispatched to Abu Dhabi
Mar in September and October 2013. Abu Dhabi Mat received 836.3
million dollars from EMATUM. The rest of the money – 13.7 million
dollars – apparently filled bankers’ pockets, being spent on bank
fees and commissions.

But these accounts are very suspicious. For when the French press
reported on EMATUM, it said that the 30 boats cost 200 million
euros, which is about 230 million dollars. But the amount paid by
EMATUM to Abu Dhabi Mat is well over three times that amount.

The Mozambican government did not query the figures given by the
French press. In December 2013, opposition deputies in the
Mozambican parliament, the Assembly of the Republic, citing the
figure of 200 million euros, asked the government what had happened
to the rest of the money.

Far from disputing the figure, the then Fisheries Minister Victor
Borges said the rest of the EMATUM money (about 620 million dollars)
had been spent on such items as training, satellite communications,
radars, on-shore installations, licences and the like.

In 2015, Finance Minister Adriano Maleiane schematically divided the
EMATUM loan into 350 million dollars for fishing assets, and 500
million for the defence component. But if the figures cited by
Zitamar are correct, then most of the 850 million dollars was spent
on fishing assets.

We do not have an exact breakdown of how much each boat cost ­ but
even if each of the six patrol boats cost three times as much as
each of the 24 fishing boats, the fishing assets would still cost
608 million dollars, and the defence assets 228 million.

An alternative explanation, of course, is that the EMATUM figures
given to Zitamar are fictitious, and much of the money was siphoned
off.

**********************************************

Mozambique: Mozambican Public Debt Now ‘Unsustainable’

Agencia de Informacao de Mocambique (Maputo)

3 May 2016

http://allafrica.com/stories/201605040005.html

Maputo — The Mozambican Debt Group (GMD), a civil society
organization that has been working on debt issues for many years,
has denied the government’s repeated claim that the country’s public
debt is still sustainable.

On Friday, according to a report in Tuesday’s issue of the
independent newssheet “Mediafax”, the GMD held a conference on the
debt, at which the main guest was Finance Minister Adriano Maleiane,
and, using the official figures, calculated that the debt was now
way over the sustainability levels.

The government had claimed that in 2015, the debt had reached  39.9
per cent of Gross Domestic Product. The limit of sustainability is
regarded as 40 per cent, and so Mozambique was just 0.1 per cent
away from this threshold.

But those figures were calculated before the revelations last month
that the previous government, led by President Armando Guebuza, had
not disclosed government guaranteed loans contracted by two state
companies – Proindicus (622 million dollars) and Mozambique Asset
Management (MAM – 535 million dollars).

The GMD pointed out that the government’s own figure for total
public debt, of 11.64 billion dollars, given by Prime Minister
Carlos Agostinho do Rosario at a press conference last Thursday,
meant that the debt now stood at 69 per cent of GDP. The foreign
debt is over nine billion dollars, and is equivalent to 53 per cent
of GDP.

This is a conservative estimate: the ratings agency Fitch last week
put the debt at 83 per cent of GDP, and warned that, if the
Mozambican currency, the metical, continues to depreciate, the ratio
could go to over 100 per cent of GDP later in the year.

The sustainability variables are clearly out of control, warned the
GMD. Its document to the conference, cited by the paper, said “74
per cent of the debts contracted since 2012 are not concessional.
The grant element (in foreign aid) has fallen from 80 per cent in
2005, to 52 per cent in 2012, and to less than 40 per cent in 2015.
The period of grace has also fallen – from an average of 10 years in
2005, to an average of six years in 2012, and to less than five
years in 2015”.

The GMD added that the period of maturity had shrunk dramatically –
from an average of 37 years in 2005, to an average of 22 years in
2012, and to less than 20 years in 2015.

The GMD warned that this unsustainable level of public debt would
have damaging effects, particularly on the poorest strata of the
population, because the weight of debt servicing in the budget will
lead to a substantial reduction in the amount of money available for
public investment.

The GMD asked if the current government has any intention of holding
anyone responsible for the undisclosed loans and the consequent
dramatic expansion in public debt. Maleiane replied that there are
strong legal provisions to punish those responsible, if it can be
shown that they acted illegally.

It was in the interest of the government, he added, to explain as
clearly as possible the question of the public debt and, if anyone
is found guilty, he will receive “exemplary punishment”. But for
this to happen it was important to allow the institutions of the
administration of justice to do their job.

It was these institutions that must decide whether any crime had
been committed and must then sentence the guilty parties. The
Attorney-General’s Office has already announced that it is
investigating Proindicus and MAM. A separate investigation began
last year into the Mozambique Tuna Company (EMATUM), which acquired
a government guaranteed loan of 850 million dollars in 2013.

**********************************************

Frelimo under pressure on debt: parliament, party elders, US, other
donors

Mozambique News reports & Clippings by Joseph Hanlon

319, 11 May 2016

[Received by email. Archive will be available soon at
http://tinyurl.com/hqcr8bu]

Two parliamentary commissions will quiz the government on the secret
debt. The parliamentary Standing Commission agreed Monday (9 May)
that the both Plan and Budget Commission and the Defence and Public
Order Commission would question the government. The parliament
session is scheduled to resume in June, but commissions meet during
recesses so the hearings could be soon. The secret debt was taken
without parliamentary approval (thus the Budget Commission) and is
said to be for patrol boats and others arms (thus the Defence
Commission). Renamo boycotted the Standing Committee session.

This is a total reversal of the position of Frelimo in parliament,
which last month rejected a debate on the debt. More than $2
billion in secret loans and bonds were taken on in 2103-14 by a
small group around the then President Armando Guebuza. Many MPs are
seen as aligned to Guebuza, and the reversal of position is an
indication of increasing pressure on Guebuza and Frelimo.

On Saturday the politically influential Veterans Association
(Associacao dos Combatentes da Luta de Libertacao Nacional, ACLLN)
said the government should investigate possible conflicts of
interest of the still secret individual investors in the three
companies whose debts were guaranteed by the state- Ematum,
ProIndicus and MAM. It also said that the state should only accept
the military part of the debt and not that of the three companies.
Last month the Frelimo Central Committee had demanded a public
explanation of the secret debt.

In a speech to the Mozambican Bar Association on 4 May, Rui Baltazar
said the country is going through “a profound political, economic
and social crisis.” In an obvious reference to the Guebuza
government, he said Mozambique has gone through “a prolonged period
of exercise of political power with an authoritarian nature and
great opacity.” He cited “deepening corruption, misuse of state
property, nepotism, [and] an assault on public goods that should be
exploited for the benefit of the people. … Politics seems to be
only about the conquest and preservation of power as a means to
have unauthorized access to resources, promoted by a premature and
dangerous euphoria based on energy El Dorados, encouraging
wastefulness and megalomania, with all the harmful consequences
that now we will have to face.”

AIM (6 May) calls Baltazar “a moral beacon for Mozambican society”.
An anti-fascist in the late colonial period, he was one of the few
lawyers who defended Mozambican nationalists. After independence he
became Justice Minister and then Finance Minister. Eventually he
became the first chair of the Constitutional Council.

Donors and lenders tighten the screws

The United States said on Monday that it “endorsed the recent
decision by the group of 14 countries (G14) providing general
budget support to suspend such assistance until they are provided
more clarifications and accountabilities.” It also said it was
“reviewing our aid, in particular any aid to the government.” The
US has never been a budget support donor, and provides its largest
support to the health sector. “Most of this assistance directly
benefits the people of Mozambique, and the United States does not
wish to reduce this assistance.” The US says it is the largest
bilateral donor to Mozambique.
http://portuguese.maputo.usembassy.gov/dividademocambique.html

Donors and lenders met with the government last week and laid down a
hard line. They stressed that it is for the government to present a
clear roadmap or preliminary action plan, built around three key
phrases: transparency, corrective measures and accountability. The
first two of these were emphasised by the US in its statement
Monday: “the government must now act quickly to publicly account in
a full and transparent way for these loans and how the funds were
used, as well as outlining a plan to mitigate its impact on the
economy of Mozambique.”

Transparency means providing a complete list of government
guaranteed debts – it is believed that there are more which have
not been revealed – and documenting in detail what the money has
been used for. With Ematum, donors were satisfied when the IMF
forced the loan onto the government books, without actually asking
for an accounting of how the money was used. But with two new
secret loans revealed, this is no longer enough, and donors are
demanding that government at least reveal in some detail what the
money was used for.

Corrective measures mean filling the financial hole (of which more
below), and a range of measures to make public enterprises more
accountable, make sure procurement follows the rules, and ensure
that there are more public and detailed evaluations of future
investments.

Accountability is more complex. Some donors and lenders want
forensic audits, which would identify corrupt payments and where
they money went. In past corruption cases, Mozambique has only
allowed one forensic audit and it was never allowed to be used (of
which more below). Some donors want Guebuza named, shamed and
prosecuted, while others realise this is unlikely. There are
rumours that some in Frelimo want to offer former Finance Minister
Manuel Chang as the scapegoat.

Some donors now argue that there has been such good will toward
Mozambique that the country has been allowed to get away with past
corruption scandals. One admitted: “donors have not wanted to
accept that this is not a success story. So much has been invested
that they do not want to lose face – or their own hopes.” But many
donor representatives feel personally offended – government
ministers and officials lied to them about low levels of military
spending and about investments. They say the Mozambique leadership
does not yet realise how serious has been the smashing of trust,
and how this will have in impact in their home capitals.

A full renewal of aid will be dependent on Mozambique having an IMF
programme. The previous one was based on misleading data from the
government, so the IMF will want to start from scratch, and this
could take more than a year. But the IMF will surely demand harsh
austerity measures and tight controls of both government spending
and the money supply. Investment will be frozen, wages might be
cut, and devaluation will continue, raising Maputo food prices
(which in the past has caused riots).

**********************************************

How Mozambique can contain its debt crisis and avoid long-term
damage

May 12, 2016

Sam Jones, Associate Professor in Development, Economics, University
of Copenhagen

http://theconversation.com – direct URL: http://tinyurl.com/z9ubo34

[Disclosure statement: Sam Jones works for the University of
Copenhagen, which provides technical assistance in economic research
and analysis to the Ministry of Economy & Finance in Mozambique. The
present article is written in his personal capacity only.]

[Note: original version at link above includes further links to
additional sources]

Mozambique’s return to the international limelight reads like a John
le Carré novel. The elements of a bestseller are all present:
growing internal instability, unexplored natural gas deposits,
international loans to purchase weapons disguised as lending to fund
tuna boats, and hidden public loan guarantees to private companies
owned by the secret services. And, of course, there are legions of
international bankers and diplomats wringing hands in late-night
meetings.

Unfortunately, this is not fiction. The debts are real and the costs
of these decisions will hang over Mozambique for decades. This
article provides a summary of what we know about Mozambique’s
external debt situation and proposes measures to contain the current
situation and avoid longer-term damage.

The scale of the debt burden

After weeks of rumour, some clarity about Mozambique’s external debt
position recently emerged following an emergency visit of the
government to the International Monetary Fund in Washington. [table
of rough estimates by author available as image in original article]

The country’s officially reported external debt stock at the end
2014 was more than US$6.5 billion, excluding $500 million taken on
to government accounts in 2014 associated with the infamous Ematum
deal for the tuna fleet.

Even before the current crisis this was a cause for concern.
Mozambique had been a major beneficiary of various debt relief
initiatives in the late 1990s and 2000s. At the beginning of this
century the country’s debt stock was about $1 billion. In 2010 the
same stock was $3.3 billion. By 2014 it had doubled.

Then there’s what is owed on the controversial “new” debts:

Ematum, for the controversial tuna fleet;

ProIndicus, which is aimed at providing security, especially for gas
and oil operations; and

Mozambique Asset Management, which was set up for maritime
maintenance and repairs.

Due to the heavy financial burden of the Ematum deal, originally due
in 2020, it was recently restructured. The repayment period was
extended from 2020 to 2023, increasing the annual interest rate from
6.305% to 10.5%, and switching to a “bullet” repayment. This means
that the full principal amount is only repaid at the end of the
period.

The two other loans, ProIndicus and Mozambique Asset Management, are
standard private loans and must be repaid in the next five years.

Together, the immediate annual costs of these three debts are
expected to be more than $300 million per year, double the total
external debt service costs in 2014.

Another point that has been neglected in the debate around these
three controversial loans is additional public debt taken on since
2014. According to government declarations, the external debt stock
stood at $9.89 billion in May 2016. Basic arithmetic means that,
even excluding the controversial loans, a further $1.4 billion of
public external debt has been incurred since 2014. This continues a
worrying trend of rapid indebtedness.

What it all adds up to

Putting all this together, annual debt service costs are likely to
be in the region of $500 million over the next few years, of which
more than $200 million are in interest costs alone. These costs
could be higher, depending on the structure of these other more
recent debts.

A total of $500 million is equivalent to about 33% of conventional
merchandise exports – excluding the contribution of mega-projects
such as aluminum and coal – or 25% of net international reserves.
This will create significant pressures on public finances.

Moreover, news that a set of major donors, including the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank, are reviewing their
lending to Mozambique means that access to hard currency will become
even more scarce in the short term. Further depreciation of the
currency is likely, which would only add to the local currency cost
of the debt burden.

What action can be taken

How can Mozambique contain this situation and avoid a downward
spiral?

There are no simple solutions. But calls by donors for full
transparency and accountability around the debt situation must be
taken more seriously. The government could start by opening its
books to a credible and thorough external audit of the external
debt, as well as of its relationships with private companies through
loan guarantees and private-public partnerships.

Admittedly, a legal investigation into the controversial loans has
begun. This is welcome but needs to be more than a pro forma
exercise and must be free from political interference.

Substantive actions in these two domains would go some way to
restoring donor confidence.

A further set of immediate actions should be to deal with the
companies associated with the controversial loans. Under current
circumstances, it is difficult to envisage any plausible scenario
under which these companies become viable. A sensible option is to
avoid further losses now.

One strategy here starts by recognising that some of the rights
owned by these companies are valuable, as are the existing assets of
Ematum. An international auction to these rights or to an exclusive
management contract would serve two purposes. First, it would raise
money to pay off the loans, thereby reducing their social costs.
Second, it would provide a transparent commercial valuation of the
businesses opening the way for renegotiation with creditors.

In my view, if the private lenders to ProIndicus and Mozambique
Asset Management were excessively optimistic in their valuation of
these businesses, they should bear some losses.

Temptations to be avoided

An unavoidable consequence of the current crisis will be some form
of austerity. Here the government needs to maintain a cool head and
avoid rash decisions that undermine long-term growth and fiscal
health. It will be tempting to seek a new round of loans from
abroad, perhaps from China where Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi
will be making an official visit in May.

Of course, some short-run relief would be handy. But there is a
major risk that this is not transparent and will incur new fiscal
liabilities or high long-run opportunity costs. Moreover, this
approach could alienate other donors and therefore jeopardise
critical sources of financing for social sectors.

The general point is that a more serious and rational approach to
public debt is needed, in which loan decisions based on vanity or
political preferences are avoided. Rather, rigorous analysis of
project viability and the profile of their net benefits is needed.
It would be helpful to enact in law stricter requirements and
transparency around all new debt issues and guarantees.

Another temptation is to hand out attractive tax breaks to foreign
companies to kick-start delayed natural resource investments. Again,
this might provide temporary relief but this would be the public
finance equivalent of selling the family silver to a pawn shop. It
is critical that the long-run public value of these assets is not
squandered due to poor policy decisions by a previous government.

Finally, it is essential that the government continues to invest in
the foundations for sustained growth. This means that public
investment in infrastructure, agricultural development and human
capital (education, health) should be the main priorities. So these
budgets need to be ring-fenced in some way. This is easier said than
done, especially given ongoing internal conflict. Solving this
political standoff is vital to get out of the current economic mess.

*****************************************************

AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication
providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a
particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

AfricaFocus Bulletin can be reached at africafocus@igc.org. Please
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Michael Parenti: “Globalization and Terrorism”
| April 24, 2016 | 9:14 pm | Analysis, Imperialism, political struggle | Comments closed

Africa/Global: Panama Papers Tip of Iceberg
| April 11, 2016 | 9:10 pm | Africa, Analysis, political struggle | Comments closed

AfricaFocus Bulletin
April 11, 2016 (160411)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor’s Note

“In other words, the leaks reveal just how the planet’s wealthiest
and most powerful citizens hide their money – trillions of it – in
offshore tax shelters like the British Virgin Islands or the
Seychelles with the help of law firms in swampy backwaters like
Panama. Over 11-million horribly incriminating documents, and this
is just one – if one of the more prominent – of the many law firms
specialising in this line of work.” – Daily Maverick, South Africa

For a version of this Bulletin in html format, more suitable for
printing, go to http://www.africafocus.org/docs16/pan1604.php, and
click on “format for print or mobile.”

To share this on Facebook, click on
https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=http://www.africafocus.org/docs16/pan1604.php

The system is world-wide, and the Panama Papers leaks unprecedented
in scale. The volume is such that it is daunting even to read a
fraction of the stories that are coming out, with their political
implications for Iceland, the UK, Russia, China, and multiple
African countries. While names from the United States are relatively
few to date, as the Panama law firm involved focused its client
outreach on Europe and Latin America, the scandal has still called
attention to similar practices which are even more advanced in the
United States itself. And the story is advancing at country level in
many places, with the involvement of many African investigative
journalists on the ground, working together in the African Network
of Centers for Investigative Reporting (ANCIR).

This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains two articles focused on
revelations related to the heads of state of South Africa and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, and a summary of Africa-related
stories (so far) from the ANCIR. Expect many more to come. The ANCIR
also has a special website for contributing new leaks anonymously to
investigative reporters at https://afrileaks.org/

For a wide range of previous background articles on this global
system of illicit financial flows and its implications for Africa,
visit http://www.africafocus.org/intro-iff.php

Among just a few of recent articles worth noting, an overview in The
Nation (http://tinyurl.com/hqdnovn) by Chuck Collins of
http://inequality.org, Uganda civil society coalition statement (
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/afritax/4xjUSb7Jo3M), and a
related but independent investigative report in the Rand Daily Mail
on Zuma, Putin, the Guptas and nuclear power plans (http://tinyurl.com/zh9ppym).

For more recent updates and advocacy, see, in addition to other
links included in this Bulletin,
http://www.taxjusticeafrica.net/en/home/,
https://financialtransparency.org/, and
https://thefactcoalition.org/

And, after a slow start because they were not among those included
in the investigative group, major newspapers such as The New York
Times and the Washington Post are also giving major attention to the
leaks and to their implications for the status of the United States
itself as one of the leading “tax havens” anchoring this global
system. See, for a few examples, http://tinyurl.com/zaadjup,
http://tinyurl.com/guw6ucv, http://tinyurl.com/ze767av, and
http://tinyurl.com/hyj8lwr

++++++++++++++++++++++end editor’s note+++++++++++++++++

“Panama Papers – How Zuma’s Family Is Implicated in the Greatest
Corruption Data Dump of All Time”

Richard Poplak, Daily Maverick, Apr 4, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/hu8y4hg

It’s early days. But when it comes to the so-called Panama Papers –
a 2.4 terabyte leak of documents from a Panama-based law firm called
Mossack Fonseca – it does appear that we’re dealing with a data leak
bigger than both Wikileaks and the Snowden files. Most important, it
regards something we have always known, but have struggled to prove:
the rich and celebrated hide their money in secret offshore tax
shelters. Welcome to one of the biggest stories of our time. And
while you’re settling in, try guessing which famous South African
family immediately pops up in the files?

Here’s a booming salvo from the vast global digi-mocracy we were
promised by the earliest of the internet’s Utopians: Clive Khulubuse
Zuma is a big fat scumbag. Oh, I’m aware that this was common
knowledge before some unbelievably heroic soul snagged 2.4 terabytes
of filth from the servers of a Panamanian law firm called Mossack
Fonseca. A resulting collaborative media project has mined the data
for recognisable names, and fancy-ass notables like Vladimir Putin,
Lionel Messi and the president of Iceland are now implicated in a
reverse alchemical process that has turned money into – fresh air!

In other words, the leaks reveal just how the planet’s wealthiest
and most powerful citizens hide their money – trillions of it – in
offshore tax shelters like the British Virgin Islands or the
Seychelles with the help of law firms in swampy backwaters like
Panama. Over 11-million horribly incriminating documents, and this
is just one – if one of the more prominent – of the many law firms
specialising in this line of work.

Which, in a round-about way, brings us once again to our thesis:
Clive Khulubuse Zuma is a big fat scumbag.

The following is yanked from a site called The Center for Public
Integrity, which serves as the landing page for much of the Panama
Papers data dump. And grok what bubbles up on the very first day –
the very first hour! – of the leak:

Clive Khulubuse Zuma is a nephew of South Africa’s President Jacob
Zuma. A mining magnate, Khulubuse Zuma has reportedly enjoyed a
lifestyle of cigars and up to 19 collectible cars. In June 2015, a
South African court found Zuma liable as chairman in the collapse of
a gold mining company that led to more than 5,000 job losses. In
court submissions, Zuma denied responsibility for the company’s
failure.

Zuma was authorised to represent Caprikat Limited, one of two
offshore companies that controversially acquired oil fields in the
Democratic Republic of Congo. In late summer 2010, as published
reports raised questions about the acquisition, British Virgin
Islands authorities ordered Mossack Fonseca to provide background
information on Zuma, which the law firm had not previously obtained.
That same year, Mossack Fonseca decided to end its relationship with
the companies. Zuma and representatives of the companies have
rejected allegations of wrongdoing and claimed the oil deals are
“quite attractive” to the DRC government.

To that last part: yeah, whatever. But what this document proves,
without any shadow of a doubt, is that Clive Khulubuse Zuma is a big
fat scumbag. More specifically, it reminds us that President’s
Zuma’s nephew was linked to Caprikat Limited, one of two companies
that successfully scammed what could amount to a R100-billion oil
fortune from the beleaguered people of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo.

What, you ask, does our blame-free, super-apologetic president have
to do with any of this?

Nothing. Except for the fact that in 2010, he paid a visit to DRC
President Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa, where they allegedly had a
discussion about these impressive oil fields, and nudge-nudge, wink-
wink, the corpulent Khulubuse would later come right.

Joseph Kabila has more than his fair share of fat scumbag friends,
but it does seem that Khulubuse Zuma served as one of the more
important. It’s a grim little instance of the kind of collusion that
goes on all the time – two powerful dudes meet, and billions of
dollars goes errant shortly thereafter.

As the Panama Papers now make achingly clear, this is how the world
works. The average South African citizen may be enraged with Zuma,
the Guptas, or the Zuptas, but we now have proof that they’re little
more than a pimple on the ass of an endless global corruption
network that has no overarching aim – no Illuminati-like pseudo
religious objective – other than fleecing as much dough as possible
for as long as possible. Everyone – the prime minister of freaking
Iceland included – is in on the game. The game being petty theft on
an unpetty scale.

In this it would be impossible, embarrassing even, for a Zuma to be
left out of the conversation.

The Panama Papers are one of the most significant leaks of all time,
and they are currently laying bare a legal-ish loophole that has
disappeared trillions of dollars from the global financial system.
There is much, much more to come in what promises to be the biggest
continuing news story of our epoch.

But only hours after the leak was made public, a Zuma pops up. And
he’s not alone. The world, we now know for sure, is full of them. DM

**************************************************************

“The entities behind dodgy Congo deal”

Craig McKune, Business Day Live, Apr 08 2016

http://tinyurl.com/z6j3tuk

[The amaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism (
http://amaBhungane.co.za), an independent non-profit, produced this
story.]

THE Panama Papers data leak has unmasked the people originally
behind a highly controversial Congolese oil deal that was fronted by
President Jacob Zuma’s nephew Khulubuse Zuma.

One is South African businessman Mark Willcox, although in 2010, he
told amaBhungane that he held no financial interest in the deal,
however remote. Willcox was then CEO of Tokyo Sexwale’s Mvelaphanda
Holdings, and Sexwale served in Zuma’s cabinet at the time.

The other is the family of controversial Israeli citizen and diamond
scion Dan Gertler, a personal friend of Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC) President Joseph Kabila. Gertler’s stake was made public in
2012, two years after the deal.

Hidden behind layers of offshore opacity, Willcox and Gertler’s
family were intended to be the original owners of Caprikat and
Foxwhelp, the mysterious British Virgin Islands (BVI) companies to
which Kabila handed highly sought-after oil rights in June 2010,
according to the leaked papers.

Willcox said this week he never accepted these shares. The evidence
appears to support this.

The papers indicate that Khulubuse Zuma held no formal stake,
despite his 2010 claim that he was the sole owner.

The political exposure of the deal to Kabila, Jacob Zuma, and
Sexwale raised concerns in 2010, but everyone involved denied that
the politicians played any role.

The Panama Papers do not shed any more light on this. But the high
level of ownership secrecy that they show — including the fact that
the Panamanian law firm that set up Caprikat and Foxwhelp was long
in the dark about the owners — may underscore concerns about
political exposure.

Through spokesman Vuyo Mkhize, Khulubuse Zuma declined to answer
questions, saying he had no obligation to declare his private
business interests publicly.

ON SUNDAY, journalists around the world began to publish a series of
exposés based on the Panama Papers, a trove of 1.5-million leaked
confidential documents, or 2.6 terabytes of data, from Panamanian
law firm Mossack Fonseca.

The cache was obtained by the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists and the German newspaper Süddeutsche
Zeitung and other media partners.

The documents name politicians, businesspeople, and celebrities
around the world, who have used bank accounts in offshore tax havens
and jurisdictions that offer a high degree of corporate anonymity.
In many cases, the suggestion is that these people used the offshore
financial system to avoid taxes or hide their wealth, but most deny
any wrongdoing.

Included in the documents is e-mailed correspondence among BVI
regulators, Mossack Fonseca, and Hassans, an international law firm
in Gibraltar that conducts business with Gertler’s group of
companies.

The correspondence was sparked when Foxwhelp and Caprikat hit the
news in June 2010. Kabila had just approved their production-sharing
agreement with the Congolese government for the two blocks in Lake
Albert, along the Congolese-Uganda border.

Until then, the blocks had been allocated to Irish oil major,
Tullow. But Kabila’s action had nullified this arrangement and
Tullow was furious.

It accused Congo of orchestrating a “smash-and-grab”, and questioned
the legitimacy of Caprikat and Foxwhelp, which had just been founded
and had no energy sector experience.

This week, Gertler’s Fleurette Group countered that “Tullow did not
have a valid contract with the DRC. (It) took Fleurette to court
over this issue and lost conclusively.”

Khulubuse Zuma emerged at the time as a spokesman for the two BVI
companies. He claimed to own them. AmaBhungane revealed at the time
that Khulubuse Zuma had signed the production-sharing agreement on
Caprikat’s behalf and that Jacob Zuma’s lawyer Michael Hulley had
signed for Foxwhelp.

Hulley did not respond to several messages seeking his comment.

The controversy deepened when it emerged that Willcox had travelled
to Kinshasa with Khulubuse Zuma and Hulley, and that the BVI
companies had used Mvelaphanda and Sexwale-linked addresses as their
legal domicilium.

Willcox said at the time that he had simply given Khulubuse Zuma
“strategic advice” on the deal, but strongly denied any personal
financial interest.

About two years later, one of Kabila’s cabinet ministers let slip
that Caprikat and Foxwhelp were actually Gertler’s companies.
Gertler did not challenge this, and now openly states that his
Fleurette Group owns 100% of Caprikat and Foxwhelp.

According to Fleurette Group, the oil blocks hold estimated reserves
of 3-billion barrels. Fleurette says it has spent $100m developing
the field.

But while the deal’s political exposure was downplayed, there was
panic among Mossack Fonseca’s staff in Panama and the BVI. E-mail
correspondence in the papers suggests that when Mossack Fonseca
registered Caprikat and Foxwhelp in March 2010, they did not know
that Willcox and Gertler were intended to be their ultimate
beneficial owners despite, “know your client” requirements.

And when they learned through news reports that Khulubuse Zuma, a
“politically exposed person”, had been granted power of attorney to
sign contracts, they considered this reason enough to resign as the
companies’ registering agent.

Having not received a proper explanation from Hassans, the Gibraltar
law firm representing Gertler, one senior staffer wrote to his
colleagues: “Perhaps we need to send a clear message that we will
not be a dump for dodgy companies.”

When a Hassans staffer wrote back, she sought to ease Mossack
Fonseca’s concerns: “I have contacted the lawyers here at Hassans
who deal with these companies from this end. They have clarified the
situation, which seems to be a case of bad press and sour grapes.”

That same month, Mossack Fonseca’s alarm bells rang over two more
BVI companies registered at Hassans’s request: Norseville Estates
and Burford Commercial. Apparently they had also failed to do any
due diligence on these and did not know who owned them.

The e-mails flowed back and forth, with apparently frantic Mossack
Fonseca staffers setting deadlines for Hassans that were usually not
met.

One e-mail suggested the reason for the panic: “It is necessary that
the client (Hassans) understands the urgency of this, as in the eyes
of the (financial regulator), this info should have been in our
offices in BVI…. We are in breach of the obligation to have the info
on BVI.”

After several days, Hassans wrote and explained the Foxwhelp and
Caprikat shareholding, but only up to a point. The letter described
a Cayman Islands investment fund, owned by Norseville and Burford in
Panama, whose true ownership was masked by a nominee shareholder,
and a chain of beneficial ownership reaching through foundations and
trusts in Liechtenstein, Gibraltar, and the BVI.

The letter did not disclose the identity of the real people behind
the web.

Having had enough, Mossack Fonseca’s Jennifer Mossack wrote to say
it was resigning from Foxwhelp, Caprikat, Norseville and Burford
“based on the lack of due diligence information provided by you. We
stand the possibility of being fined or our licence being revoked or
suspended for noncompliance with the relevant legislation in the
jurisdiction of BVI and Panama.”

It was only then that Hassans disclosed that Willcox and the family
of Gertler were behind the structure, with 10% and 90%,
respectively.

The news came as a relief to one senior Mossack Fonseca staffer: “If
these are really their clients, we are speaking about very high-
profile and worldwide-known entrepreneurs. The fact that they are
doing business in Africa makes their position difficult. We would
need to analyse further, but it is good to know that they are not
machine guns (sic) criminals.”

By this stage, however, the BVI’s Financial Investigations Agency
was asking questions, demanding all due diligence information,
particularly in respect of Khulubuse Zuma. A copy of his passport
and various bills were passed on.

But the agency still required the share register of the investment
fund that owned Foxwhelp and Caprikat. Nearly a year later, Mossack
Fonseca complained that this was never received.

According to one final e-mail before it dumped the four Gertler-
linked companies, Jennifer Mossack complained: “Hassans has proven
to be unco-operative, secretive, and dishonest with us as they hid
the identity of their client and are apparently assisting him with
his asset protection.”

Willcox says he has never heard of Mossack Fonseca, Norseville, or
Ranna Investments, an entity the documents indicate held his
intended stake.

His lawyer Rael Gootkin says: “It is possible that it could have
been part of Fleurette’s initial structuring to offer such a
shareholding to our client. This factually never materialised.”

He says Fleurette approached Willcox in 2010 “to find an industry
partner and/or a capital partner to develop the oil blocks”.

In response to questions this week, the Gibraltar firm says:
“Hassans fully complies with all local and international standards
regarding ownership disclosures and (know your client) practices.

“Details regarding ultimate beneficial ownership was made available
to Mossack Fonseca at all times.

“We understand that the only item of due diligence outstanding was
the register of members of the (investment fund), which, as
explained, could not be provided, as the fund had not been
launched.”

A Mossack Fonseca statement says: “Before we agree to work with a
client in any way, we conduct a thorough due-diligence process. We
follow both the letter and spirit of the law. Because we do, we have
not once in nearly 40 years of operation been charged with criminal
wrongdoing.”

A spokesperson for the Fleurette group says: “Businesses all over
the world use special-purpose vehicles in their corporate structures
for a variety of reasons. Fleurette uses companies incorporated
offshore to ensure tax efficiency.”

Khulubuse Zuma’s role remains a mystery. Fleurette says: “Mr Zuma
did have some early involvement as a signatory for the companies, at
a time when it was expected that he would have a greater role to
play; however, that role did not materialise.”

**************************************************************

#PanamaPapers

How The Elite Hide Their Wealth

https://panamapapers.investigativecenters.org/

[Excerpts from page as of April 11, 2016]

The Panama Papers: About this project

The Panama Papers is an unprecedented investigation that reveals the
offshore links of some of the globe’s most prominent figures.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ),
together with the German newspaper Suddeutsche Zeitung and more than
100 other media partners, including the African Network of Centers
for Investigative Reporting (ANCIR), spent a year sifting through
11.5 million leaked files to expose the offshore holdings of world
political leaders, links to global scandals, and details of the
hidden financial dealings of fraudsters, drug traffickers,
billionaires, celebrities, sports stars and more.

The trove of documents is likely the biggest leak of inside
information in history. It includes nearly 40 years of data from a
little-known but powerful law firm based in Panama. That firm,
Mossack Fonseca, has offices in more than 35 locations around the
globe, and is one of the world’s top creators of shell companies,
the corporate structures that can be used to hide ownership of
assets.

As ANCIR started researching, it discovered data disclosing 40 years
of service from Mossack Fonseca stretching from Uganda to Namibia to
Sierra Leone. The company’s questionable dealings is already well
known after being exposed by investigative journalists such as Ken
Silverstein.

ANCIR and its media partners’ investigations led to findings around
Uganda’s missing taxes from oil revenue; a mega-infrastructure deal
in Namibia connected to a FIFA-related entity; secrecy in
Steinmetz’s diamond empire; and hidden players in Angola’s Sovereign
Wealth Fund, to mention a few.

Further explosive stories from Zimbabwe, Kenya, South Africa and
Nigeria will follow this week.

But the data revealed something far more insidious than a
willingness to look past illegal activities.

It reflects a deliberate design on the part of companies like
Mossack Fonseca to commercialise the inherent weaknesses of national
and international legal and financial regimes by bulldozing the
substance, process and purpose of “due diligence”.

Thanks to these structures – banking secrecy, opaque shell entities,
use of nominees to conceal beneficial owners etc – each year, the
continent loses some $150 billion to illicit financial flows (PDF)

[for links to these stories, and more to be added, got to the ANCIR
website home page at https://panamapapers.investigativecenters.org/]

Namibia – Leaked documents show details about a well-publicised
mafia’s business connection between a convicted mafioso and Zacky
Nujoma, the youngest son of founding president Sam Nujoma.

Uganda – Leaked documents show the paper trail of the Heritage Oil
and Gas Ltd Company’s attempts at avoiding tax payment in Uganda,
writes Tabu Butagira.

Nigeria – Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, and his brother Sayyu
Dantata have been linked to shell companies in tax havens, writes
Joshua Olufemi and Emmanuel Mayah.

Kenya – Kenya’s Deputy Chief Justice Kalpana Rawal was a director
and a shareholder of four companies located in a known tax haven,
writes Jacqui Kubania

DRC – Despite international laws stipulating disclosure of the
origins of gold, a tranche of leaked documents points to unsavoury
behaviour by tax havens trading in commodities, writes Khadija
Sharife.

Botswana – The president of Botswana’s highest court, Ian Kirby, has
invested in seven offshore companies domiciled and registered in a
tax haven of the British Virgin Islands, writes Ntibinyane
Ntibinyane.

Namibia – The tender for the Walvis Bay port in Namibia is tied to a
Trinidad politician with links to Brazil’s ‘Car Wash’ scandal,
writes Shinovene Immanuel.

Sierra Leone – Dodgy dealings within the Steinmetz Group seems to
indicate undervaluing of diamonds, which is costing Sierra Leone tax
payments, reports Khadija Sharife and Silas Gbandia.

Zimbabwe – The leaks show an offshore company called HR Consultancy
had been created to pay salaries to Zimplats, which is largely owned
by South Africa’s Impala Platinum Mines. However, it denies any
knowledge of the HR Consultancy and its purpose, writes Ray Choto.

Guinea – Leaked documents pry open the corporate structure of
companies involved in a mining rights scandal in Guinea, writes
Khadija Sharife

Senegal – Homme d’affaires sénégalais a créé des sociétés offshore
grâce à l’entreprise Mossack Fonseca. Les documents citent également
l’architecte Pierre Goudiaby Atepa et Aliou Sow, l’entrepreneur du
Sahel Société des entreprises (CSE).

Tunisia – Une fuite de documents internes révèle la création de
sociétés offshore via Panama et expose comment le droit tunisien est
contourné pour éviter de payer des impôts sur les actifs à
l’étranger.

Mali – Les fuites révèlent que le milliardaire Seydou Kane , l’homme
d’affaires puissance Mali-Gabonaise, a créé deux sociétés offshore.
Il est également impliqué dans une affaire de blanchiment d’argent à
Paris.

Tunisia – En plein entre-deux-tours de l’élection presidentielle,
Mohsen Marzouk, alors directeur de campagne de Béji Caid Essebsi,
prend contact avec Mossack Fonseca, pour ouvrir une société
offshore.

Senegal – Le procès pour enrichissement illicite de Karim Wade, fils
de l’ancien président sénégalais Abdoulaye Wade, a connu son verdict
il y a un an. Il s’était terminé avec la condamnation par la Cour de
répression de l’enrichissement illicite (Crei) de M. Wade-fils et de
ses co-accusés à des peines de prison ferme.

*****************************************************

AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication
providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a
particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

AfricaFocus Bulletin can be reached at africafocus@igc.org. Please
write to this address to subscribe or unsubscribe to the bulletin,
or to suggest material for inclusion. For more information about
reposted material, please contact directly the original source
mentioned. For a full archive and other resources, see
http://www.africafocus.org

Angela Davis Talks Black Liberation, History and the Contemporary Vision

02/17/2016 01:31 pm ET | Updated Feb 18, 2016

2016-02-17-1455733480-6127135-angela.jpg

By: Sheryl Huggins Salomon

Fifty years after the founding of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, the agenda and style of the legendary Black revolutionary organization remains relevant in today’s public discourse. An end to “police brutality and the murder of Black people,” central to the Black Lives Matter movement, was laid out in the Black Panthers’ 10-Point Platform five decades ago. Both acclaim and condemnation erupted when their iconic black berets made an appearance recently in Beyonce’s half-time show performance during the Super Bowl.

It’s telling that America is still grappling with many of the same racial inequities and injustices that it did 50 years ago – and that Black pride remains a controversial topic. Not so to renowned scholar, activist and feminist icon and close associate of the Black Panthers Angela Y. Davis.

“If one looks at the 10-point program of the Black Panther Party, one sees that the very same issues that were raised in the aftermath of slavery are at the center of a program that was formulated in 1966,” said Davis, now a professor emeritus at University of California, Santa Cruz. “In 2008 when Barack Obama was elected, those issues had not been sufficiently addressed, certainly not yet solved, so therefore the election of one person to political office was not going to automatically reverse a history of a racist inspired economic oppression, which isn’t to say that it wasn’t important that we elected Barack Obama, but those struggles continue.”

While in Spain last week advocating for the release of imprisoned Basque separatist politician Arnaldo Otegi, Davis took a few moments with EBONY.com to discuss contemporary issues like Black Lives Matter, the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and details from her latest book, Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement (Haymarket Books, 2016), edited by human rights activist Frank Barat.

“I’ve been involved in the Palestine Solidarity movement for a very long time,” explained Davis. “When the Ferguson uprising happened a year and a half ago activists on the ground in occupied Palestine were the first to tweet support and advice to protesters in Ferguson. Out of that has come a very interesting, a very rich development of connections across the ocean. A delegation from Palestine visited Ferguson. Black Lives Matter and Ferguson activists, [as well as members of] Dream Defenders, Black Youth Project 100 made a trip to Palestine over about a year ago to express their solidarity.”

More highlights of what Davis said are in the Q&A below.

EBONY.COM: What’s the message of your new book?

Angela Davis: I am particularly interested in [having] activists associated with the Black freedom movement to realize that our struggles never would have achieved this universality that they have achieved without solidarity that has come from Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe and Australia. Our struggles are global, therefore, it is important for us to incorporate this global vision into our on the ground battles against police crimes and the prison industrial complex. Since I was very young I have been involved in organizations– the Communist Party, the Black Panther Party– that have had this global perspective.

EBONY.COM: As you note in your book, events in Ferguson after the police shooting of Michael Brown exposed the militarization of police forces. Where is this push toward militarization headed and how can it be stopped?

Davis: If one looks at the history of policing, especially over the last 15 years in the aftermath of 9/11, one can see the emphasis on the shifting of resources from the military to the police. This actually has a much longer history if one looks at the way in which the Vietnam War resulted in an impact on local police. The S.W.A.T. squads emerged as a result of using techniques and technology that were used by the Green Berets in the Vietnam War. The Los Angeles Police Department was the first to use such tactics against the Black Panther Party. We have also seen the emergence of privatized policing corporations. In the book, I refer to G4S (Group 4 Security), which is a private security corporation that has spread policing and prisons all over the world. It’s important not only to look at the ways in which these moments of inflicting terror have been taken up by police departments, but it’s also essential to look at the economic dimension by such processes. G4S, of course, is the third largest corporation in the world, and it is the largest employer on the continent of Africa. It is connected, historically, with the privatization of prisons in the U.S. and in other places.

I would like to point out that corporations such as G4S have already recognized what feminists call intersectionality. G4S spans from private policing to the transportation of immigrants to private prisons to the deportation of people from Mexico in the U.S. to the Mexican border, the deportation of Africans from Europe to countries in Africa. I think [G4S has] also taken up the question of sexual abuse of women and so they have these agencies that address women at risk and women who have suffered from sexual assault.

I mention this because there’s a lesson to us that the feminist notion of intersectionality is one that should be incorporated into our work as well. I like to talk about the intersectionality of struggles, and how important it is to link the struggle against gender violence with the struggle against state violence, police crimes, and crimes against women’s bodies.

EBONY.COM: You talk about how the foundations that have already been laid can enable today’s mass movements to be effective. However, many of today’s millennial-led activist groups actually reject traditional organization structures, so how can those foundations enable them to create effective change?

Davis: Young people are searching for forums through which they can express an urgent need for radical change. They are questioning the assumption that leadership has to be individual or that leadership has to be male. They are working with new collective models of leadership.

One has seen the rise of many women in leadership. Of course, there are the three women who created Black Lives Matter– Patrisse Cullors, Opal Tometi and Alicia Garza– who have raised many interesting questions about what it means to build leadership. In Black Youth Project 100 there is Charlene Carruthers who is a powerful spokesperson but she always makes it clear that she is a spokesperson for a collective. In the Dream Defenders, they are challenging hetero-patriarchal forms. They are questioning the impact of sexism and homophobia and all of these ideologies on their generation.

To people of my generation, their processes often seem unfamiliar, but of course, the Civil Rights Movement developed differently from movements before that. The movements of the 1930s that were led largely by Black communists (the history of which has been erased precisely because of anti-Communism) challenged the leadership that had come before it, so this is a process that happens. It’s very exciting to witness what may come of this current moment.

EBONY.COM: What do you think of Campaign Zero activist Deray McKesson running for mayor of Baltimore?

Davis: [The aforementioned groups] have had an impact on the way the national elections are conducted and evoked criticisms about how the candidates have not addressed questions of racism and the way in which the police continue to brutalize people and communities of color. Activism has to happen in all arenas including the electoral arena. It is not productive to assume that everything points in the direction of electoral politics. But certainly, it is important to have individuals who have progressive experiences or experience within radical movements to be elected.

EBONY.COM: Is there a particular candidate you’re supporting in this presidential election?

Davis: My approach has always been to emphasize independent, more radical politics, but I do think that it is important that Bernie Sanders has been raising issues that otherwise never would have been taken up within the context of the campaign between the two major parties.

It’s absolutely essential to raise the issues of decommodification of education and [the need for] free education. And of course, he is calling for tuition-free education at our public universities, which incidentally have a history of no tuition. [They] are now as privatized as the private universities. The history for the call for public education in relation to the Black freedom struggle holds important lessons. Former slaves called for free public education in the South, thus creating the context for poor, White students to get an education.

Of course, there is the healthcare question. I absolutely agree that we need free, single-payer healthcare. Then there are larger questions about the prison industrial complex that have not been sufficiently raised. We not only need to bring about an end to mass incarceration, we need to question the racism that is embedded in the whole history of punishment in this country.

Sheryl Huggins Salomon is a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based writer, editor and digital media consultant. Follow her on Twitter @sherylhugg

Read more at EBONY.com.

Too many tragedies
| March 7, 2016 | 8:07 pm | Analysis, Bernie Sanders, political struggle | Comments closed