The past 40 years in the Central African Republic (CAR) have been fitful. A UN peacekeeping, Minusca, has been around since 2014, holding a bandage to the country’s wounds. Among the 20 peacekeeping nations, three — Tanzania, Burundi and Rwanda — are East African. - @cobbo3
At the end of 2020 ahead of the elections, a rebel group the Coalition of Patriots for Change (CPC), the nth in a long chain, threatened President Faustin-Archange Touadera. He went ahead with the polls and won, and in mid-January 2021 they made a move to kick him out.
An encounter with the peacekeepers, and a bilateral battalion of the Rwandan army, which operates independently and came to Bangui after Toudera called for help as rebels were on the horizon, put paid to the insurgents’ ambitions.
CAR is a country that would confuse, and tempt, many Kenyans — a place with a lot of idle and cheap fertile land. It is 622,980SqKM compared to Kenya’s 580,367SqKm. Not too big a difference but the population of CAR is 4.8M and Kenya’s 51.4M — more than 10 times bigger.
Small populations living in vast lands are not a novelty in Africa. Botswana, for one, is 581,730 square kilometres with a miserly population of 2.4 million. However, nearly all of it is either semi-arid or desert.
The population of CAR is nearly the same as Nairobi County. To spice things up, 2.5M of them live in the capital Bangui. With most of the rest living in towns, most of the fertile land is just out there.
You drive around Bangui and learn quickly that most of the food comes from neighbouring Cameroon. The Central Africans are not famous for farming. Foreigners tend to sneer at them, calling them lazy.
It is an ahistorical view because, for reasons of colonial history and destabilising effect of insecurity, folks here don’t invest their energy and effort in farming. A farmer needs to be sure that if she plants her maize, she will be able to harvest and sell it.
If, however, they plant it and there is chaos, and flee, leaving rebels to feed off their crop, after one generation they will simply not farm anymore.
The result is that land is cheap. A diplomat and peacekeeping officer both told me that for $1,000 (Sh114,410) you can buy (I think they meant lease) up 150 acres in some parts of the country. It sounded too good to be true. Maybe 50 acres.
Whatever the case, East Africans — including quite a few Kenyans — have smelt the opportunities and reports in Bangui speak of dozens of them arriving in the country to sniff around, and some Rwandans are reported to already be farming.
East African airlines seem to have cornered this end of the market. In the cramped Bangui M’Poko International Airport, @KenyaAirways@FlyRwandAir @flyethiopian are the big boys and girls, bringing in what I predict could be a flood of East African go-getters and hustlers.
It is possible that a new wave of pan-African mingling might just provide the fresh juice CAR needs to rebuild. For now, it is blanketed by a colonial narrative. Former colonial and post-independence imperial power France is the evil empire, blamed for many of the country’s woes.
One of the most outrageous popularly held narratives is about David Dacko, who was the first president of the country from August 14, 1960 to January 1, 1966, when he was ousted in a coup.
He returned as its third president from September 21, 1979 to September 1, 1981, when he was ejected from power a second time by soldiers.
It is alleged that Dacko signed a deal with the French which provided that anything below five feet in CAR’s ground belongs to Paris.
The French are said to have exercised their option vigorously in this mineral-rich nation and, for 60 years, have carted off to France the rich pickings of CAR in secret planes to enrich themselves.
It was impossible to ascertain if any of this is true. What is clear is, it is widely believed. It seems some of it is espoused to explain away the bitter reason for CAR’s recent struggles and to reconcile the contradictions in which it feels trapped.
For example, CAR is overflowing with mangoes but the residents hardly eat them fresh. When the African peacekeepers arrived and they took to eating fresh mangoes, the locals laughed at them, thinking they were not sufficiently civilised.
The mangoes are, thus, obtained cheaply and exported, mostly to France, and returned as juice — which the Central Africans love, and pay good money for.
There is an optimistic view that the African face of CAR peacekeeping will help to solve a problem it wasn’t meant to.....
.....Seeing African armies, with big guns, driving around in menacing vehicles, keeping away rebels alleged to be backed by “imperialists”, might just give Central Africans the ability to believe there is, in Africa, a power far greater than the Big Bad European Man. Who knows?
East Africans flooding to Central African Republic where peace has been elusive for a while, both as peacekeepers and investors where land is dirt cheap and where mango juice is made from mangoes grown locally but processed in France... bit.ly/365W5xM by @cobbo3
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By yesterday afternoon, 2.22pm, the top trending re-tweet in Kenya was that of the social media bigwig @amerix, who had tweeted thus about the departed tycoon-farmer-and-politician Jackson Kibor of Uasin Gishu. - @NationAfrica
There is a reason @amerix, who has become (in)famous on social media for his perceived ‘anti-feminism,’ had capped the word ‘MAN’ throughout his tweet.
Jackson Kibor, 88, had become the unlikely male role model for many Kenyan men — from those half-to-quarter his age — so much so that he was a common social media meme, dispensing advice through implanted quotes (most on “how to deal with women”).
GoK will import 30 percent of cooking gas through the National Oil Corporation of Kenya in a move aimed at controlling the price of the commodity that has hit an all-time high. - @BD_Africa
The @NationalOilKE's quota is aimed at forcing cash-hungry private importers to lower the cost of LPG and ultimately retail prices following the review of regulations that reserve 30% of cooking gas imports to NOCK and carry out its role of influencing market prices.
.@NationalOilKE formed to stabilise and influence fuel prices, has largely been forced to follow the dictates of the market controlled by private players.
Revenues up 13.5% to Kes108.6B
Net interest income up 15.0% to Kes77.7B
Non funded income up by 9.9% to Kes30.9B
Costs up by 11.9% to Kes47.8B from Kes42.8B
PAT up 74% to Kes34.2B from Kes19.6B
Revenue up 13.5% to KShs.108.6B
Total Assets up 15.4% to Kes1.139T
Customer Loans up by 13.5% to Kes675.5B
Customer Deposits up 9.1% to Kes837.1B
NPLs up from 14.7% to 16.5%
Provisions reduced by 52% to close at Kes13.0B fro Kes27.2B
The two awards from Visa were issued to the Bank for leading in Visa acquired volumes, significantly growing its E-Commerce volumes, and leading in E-Commerce payment volumes.
.@KeEquityBank grew its acquiring business by double-digit to 53% percent YoY, which was attributed to the E-Commerce business, as its processed volume tripled compared to 2020.
Mzee Jackson Kibor, a prominent businessman-cum-politician from Uasin Gishu county, is dead. He passed away on Wednesday at an Eldoret hospital where he had been receiving treatment. - @NationAfrica
Confirming the news, Mzee Kibor’s family said he had been battling illness since late 2020 and had been using medical oxygen ever since.
In 2017, Mzee Kibor made headlines after an Eldoret court allowed him to divorce his third wife, only months after divorcing his second wife with whom they had been married for over 50 years. He married a fourth wife soon after. His wife died in the 90s.
The UN-backed @GlobalFund has revealed fresh rot at @Kemsa_Kenya after it found out that 908,000 mosquito nets, 1.1M condoms and tuberculosis drugs worth Sh10M had disappeared from its warehouse. - @BD_Africa
.@GlobalFund, which finances the fight against HIV/Aids, tuberculosis and malaria, has also raised the red flag over suspected fake suppliers demanding Sh1.66B from Kemsa.
The lost medicines are believed to have been stolen and resold on the black market and to private chemists, shining a spotlight once again on @Kemsa_Kenya over its graft record.