Author: Claire Wanja

  • Over 5,800 arrests, USD 293 million intercepted in global fraud bust

    Over 5,800 arrests, USD 293 million intercepted in global fraud bust

    A global anti-fraud operation involving 97 countries and territories has led to the arrest of 5,811 individuals and the interception of USD 293 million in illicit assets.

    Operation First Light 2026 (15 Jan 2026 – 30 April 2026), coordinated by INTERPOL, focused on combatting social engineering scams and associated money laundering activities.

    Social engineering is a broad term that refers to techniques that exploit a person’s trust to obtain money or confidential information. This type of fraud can include business email compromise, sextortion, as well as romance, impersonation or investment scams.

    After an initial period of intelligence collection and exchange, participating countries took part in more than three months of operational activities. This included pro-active action against high-value targets, raiding identified premises, blocking or freezing bank accounts and virtual wallets, requesting INTERPOL Notices and Diffusions and proactively utilizing INTERPOL’s Global Rapid Intervention of Payments (I-GRIP), a stop-payment mechanism that facilitates the swift blocking of illicit financial flows of both fiat and virtual assets.

    Over 142,000 victims globally were identified during Operation First Light 2026, highlighting the extent to which social engineering scams and fraud have escalated into a major transnational threat, affecting individuals, businesses and governments. Other significant results include:

    – 152,808 cases analyzed
    – 31,014 bank accounts blocked
    – 23,715 cases solved
    – 15,606 suspects identified
    – 99 Notices and Diffusions issued

    Tomonobu Kaya, Director of the INTERPOL Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption Centre, said:

    “Social engineering scams continue to pose a significant threat to our society. Criminal syndicates exploit human psychology to manipulate their targets, and no nation can stay safe unless all countries are equipped and committed to jointly fighting back. INTERPOL is dedicated to supporting member countries in building a comprehensive, coordinated strategy to tackle cyber-enabled financial crimes, organized criminal networks and the money laundering that fuels them.”

    From scam centres to money laundering: key cases reveal full spectrum of financial fraud

    • In Eswatini, police arrested 82 people and dismantled a criminal network running illegal online gambling, money laundering and elaborate impersonation scams. Authorities seized 240 electronic devices, foreign currency and a realistic replica of a Brazilian police station, complete with fake uniforms, signage and equipment. Posing as Brazil’s Federal Police via video call, the scammers deceived their targets into believing they were victims of a crime, tricking them into transferring funds for “safekeeping,” which were then stolen.

    Due to the scale and complexity of the digital evidence, an INTERPOL Operational Support Team was deployed at the request of authorities in Eswatini to provide forensic analysis of the seized devices.

    • In Thailand, police made two arrests and uncovered a money laundering scheme that funneled illicit funds from romance scams into various cryptocurrencies, utilizing cross-chain token swaps to obscure the financial trail. Investigations showed that the digital wallet of one of the suspects, aged 20, had processed more than USD 122.5 million in just 10 months.

    • Authorities in Singapore and Oman utilized I-GRIP to block a USD 6.6 million illicit transfer linked to a Business Email Compromise scam. In this case, a Singapore-based commodity trading firm was targeted by criminals impersonating a supplier.

    • Police in Macao, China carried out anti-fraud community outreach as part of Operation First Light 2026. During the initiative, police discovered that one of the public participants was actively being manipulated by a criminal syndicate.  Impersonating public officials, the perpetrators had convinced the victim to transfer money under the guise of a fraud investigation. Thanks to the public campaign, police were able to intervene before the victim sent close to USD 372,000 to the fraudsters.

    • Authorities in Palau deported 22 individuals for their role in two connected scam centres being conducted from hotels. The suspects utilized cryptocurrency and illegal gambling websites to target victims in foreign countries, operating a range of online fraud schemes.

  • Kenyan researcher Prof Kenneth Ngure appointed to WHO STI Advisory Group

    Kenyan researcher Prof Kenneth Ngure appointed to WHO STI Advisory Group

    A Kenyan scientist Prof. Kenneth Ngure has been appointed to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Technical Advisory Group on Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs).

    Prof. Ngure, an award-winning researcher from the Department of Environmental Health and Disease Control at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT), was selected through a competitive international selection process, with his appointment taking effect in June 2026 for a three-year term.

    The appointment places him among a select group of global experts contributing to the development of strategies and policies aimed at strengthening the prevention and control of sexually transmitted infections worldwide.

    Prof. Ngure is an internationally recognized researcher in HIV prevention, implementation science, sexual and reproductive health, and public health policy. He has led numerous multicountry research initiatives and serves in several global leadership positions, including president-elect of the International AIDS Society (IAS).

    Speaking after his appointment, Ngure described the role as both a personal honour and an opportunity to represent Kenya on the global stage.

    “I am deeply honored by this appointment and grateful to the World Health Organization for the opportunity. I look forward to working with colleagues from around the world to ensure that scientific evidence continues to inform policies that improve health outcomes, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. I am equally proud to represent JKUAT and Kenya on this important global platform,”he said.

    The WHO Technical Advisory Group on Sexually Transmitted Infections provides independent scientific and technical guidance to the global health agency on emerging STI challenges, prevention strategies, treatment guidelines and policy priorities.

    Its recommendations help shape international responses to infections such as syphilis, gonorrhoea, chlamydia and other sexually transmitted diseases, while supporting countries in strengthening health systems and expanding access to quality care.

  • African Ecofeminists demand justice in clean energy rush

    African Ecofeminists demand justice in clean energy rush

    African ecofeminists convening have called for a just, feminist and people-centred energy transition that protects communities, women’s rights and the environment.

    Convened in Harare, Zimbabwe by SHINE Collab under the theme “Building Ecofeminist Futures Beyond Extractivism and Transition Mineral Frontiers,” the gathering comes at a critical moment as Africa becomes increasingly central to the global demand for transition minerals – including lithium, cobalt, graphite, copper, nickel and rare earth elements – needed to power the clean energy economy.

    While recognising the importance of renewable energy in addressing the climate crisis, participants warned that the energy transition must not reproduce the same systems of exploitation, dispossession and environmental destruction that have historically characterised extractive industries across the continent.

    “A truly just energy transition cannot be achieved if it is built on the continued exploitation of African communities, ecosystems and women’s labour. Climate action must place justice, dignity, ecological integrity and community wellbeing at its centre,” said Dr Melania Chiponda, Executive Director of Shine Collab, a global feminist movement of CSOs, grassroots community-based organisations and faith-based groups.

    On the first day of the week-long convening, participants reflected on the realities of mining, climate governance, energy transition and women’s leadership in defending land, livelihoods and natural resources.

    Experiences shared from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Kenya and other African countries revealed a common pattern: environmental degradation, pollution, land dispossession, inadequate compensation, shrinking civic space and weak accountability – despite the immense wealth generated from mineral resources.

    According to Sibongile Ndlovu, Project Coordinator at EarthLife South Africa, climate change cuts across many issues. For African women, energy, water and food production are key.

    “Women have shown that the issues they face are similar, regardless of the country they come from. The problem however, is the approach leaders take to solving them. Their approach is not bottom up. Leaders are discussing without the participation of women and therefore decisions and policies do not capture women’s perspectives and lived experiences,” she said, adding that the ecofeminist convening in Harare demands that leaders should not base policy decisions only on science and economics but must begin considering grassroots women’s lived experiences.

    Further, women leaders described how communities continue to shoulder the environmental and social costs of mining while receiving little benefit from the revenues generated from their lands. Participants highlighted the urgent need for stronger legal protections, environmental accountability, community education and meaningful public participation in decisions affecting natural resources.

    The convening also critically examined the political economy of transition minerals and questioned the current trajectory of the global energy transition, cautioning that increasing demand for critical minerals should not become another chapter of resource exploitation under the banner of climate action.

    Participants stressed that renewable energy investments must uphold human rights, respect Indigenous and local knowledge systems, preserve biodiversity and ensure communities remain central to decision-making processes.

    Discussions explored key continental and global policy processes shaping Africa’s climate and energy future, including the African Union climate agenda, the Global Goal on Adaptation, Loss and Damage financing, the Gender Action Plan, Mission 300, the African Development Bank’s energy initiatives and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Critical Energy Transition Minerals.

    The convening further highlighted how climate and energy decisions continue to be dominated by governments, corporations and international institutions with limited participation from affected communities.

    Salina Sanou, a climate and gender specialist working at the intersection of climate and Indigenous women’s rights, called for women, Indigenous Peoples, youth and grassroots organisations to be recognised as equal partners in shaping policies that affect their lands, livelihoods and futures.

    Personal testimonies from activists across the continent underscored the resilience of African women confronting environmental degradation, gender inequality, child marriage, land dispossession, poverty and shrinking civic space. These stories reinforced the power of solidarity, legal empowerment, feminist leadership and intergenerational organising in advancing climate justice.

    The convening also celebrated African knowledge systems and cultural traditions of environmental stewardship. Traditional leaders welcomed participants by affirming the central role women have historically played in protecting land, water, biodiversity and community wellbeing, reinforcing the importance of Indigenous knowledge in building sustainable futures.

    In addition to critical dialogue, participants exchanged practical experiences on community-led renewable energy, climate resilience, food sovereignty, care-centred economies and women’s economic empowerment – demonstrating that viable alternatives to extractivist development already exist across the continent.

    Participants called for development pathways that transform unequal systems of power, uphold environmental justice, protect the rights of frontline communities and recognise women’s leadership as central to building resilient, equitable and sustainable societies.

  • Banned chemicals found in Kenyan children’s toys, kitchenware: study

    Banned chemicals found in Kenyan children’s toys, kitchenware: study

    A new investigative report has exposed a worrying reality for Kenyan consumers: everyday plastic items, from children’s toys to kitchen utensils sold on local shelves, contain hazardous and even banned chemicals.

    The report, titled “Unsafe by Design: Banned and Hazardous Chemicals in Plastic Consumer Products in Kenya,” reveals findings from laboratory testing of 55 common plastic products. The study, conducted by the Centre for Environmental Justice and Development (CEJAD), detected dangerous substances including banned flame retardants, bisphenols (such as BPA), and heavy metals in items like toys, infant feeding bottles, sport bottles, snack containers, microwave lids, kitchen utensils, and pencil cases.

    According to the report, these chemicals pose significant health risks, particularly to children, who are more vulnerable to their effects. For instance, bisphenols and phthalates are known endocrine disruptors, interfering with hormone systems and potentially leading to developmental and reproductive issues.

    Heavy metals like lead and cadmium can accumulate in the body, causing long-term damage to the nervous system and kidneys. The presence of banned flame retardants is equally concerning, as these substances have been linked to cancer and hormone disruption, persisting in both the human body and the environment.

    ” While children are highly vulnerable, women face unique health risks from plastic-associated chemicals. EDCs can interfere with the endocrine system at any life stage. Exposure is linked to the development of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and uterine leiomyomas (myomas) (Piazza &  Urbanetz, 2019). Furthermore, prenatal exposure can disrupt fetal cellular programming, leading to trans-generational health.” Said the report.

    “Heavy metals pose greater health risks to children than to adults, with exposure linked to intellectual disability, neurocognitive
    and behavioural disorders, respiratory disease, cancer, and cardiovascular conditions” they added.

    This investigation highlights critical gaps in Kenya’s consumer protection framework. Despite existing regulations, the presence of these substances in widely available products indicates weak enforcement and inadequate market surveillance. The report’s findings come at a crucial time, as Kenya has been a leader in East Africa on plastic bag bans but now faces the more complex challenge of managing chemical additives in plastics.

    “These findings demonstrate that Kenyan consumers, particularly children, are exposed to a toxic chemical cocktail through
    ordinary product use. In the absence of national chemical safety limits and systematic market surveillance, hazardous products
    reach consumers undetected. The Global Plastics Treaty must address hazardous additives with binding restrictions, enforceable limits for recycled plastics, and support for monitoring capacity in low- and middle-income countries. Toxic plastics cannot be made safe by recycling them,” read part of the report.

    The study’s authors are calling for immediate and decisive action with key recommendations including strengthening chemical safety regulations, implementing routine and rigorous market surveillance to ensure compliance, and enhancing monitoring of plastics throughout their lifecycle.

    “No single finding in this study is an isolated anomaly. Collectively, these findings confirm that consumers, especially children,
    are regularly exposed to a toxic chemical cocktail through the ordinary use of plastic products. This exposure is invisible: there is no warning label, no smell, no visible sign. In many cases, the chemicals are built into the plastic itself, often carried through recycling systems that turn discarded electronics into new consumer goods. Addressing this reality requires action at multiple levels simultaneously,” the reported noted.

    ” Stronger policy action is needed at the national and regional level. Kenya and other countries in the Global South need enforceable chemical safety standards for imported consumer products, mandatory testing at borders and markets, and regulation of informal e-waste recycling to prevent POPs-contaminated materials from re-entering consumer product streams. Regional cooperation on monitoring and enforcement would strengthen the capacity of individual countries to act” the report concluded.

    For Kenyan consumers, the report serves as a stark warning about the hidden dangers in everyday products. It underscores the urgent need for robust government action to protect public health and ensure that the products on our shelves are truly safe by design.

  • Kenya launches KSh1T National Agri-food Systems Investment plan

    Kenya launches KSh1T National Agri-food Systems Investment plan

    The Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development in Kenya, has launched a landmark KSh 1.081 trillion Kenya National Agri-food Systems Investment framework that will help guide the country in its agricultural transformation in the next five years, as part of the second phase of implementing the Agricultural Sector Transformation and Growth Strategy (ASTGS 2019-2029).

    The launch, which was presided over by Jonathan Mueke, Principal Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development on behalf of the Cabinet Secretary for Agriculture Mutahi Kagwe took place during the official opening of the Financing Agri Food Systems Sustainably (FINAS) Summit 2026 at KICC, Nairobi.

    The Investment Plan is aimed at building resilient food systems, modernizing agricultural value chains, expanding irrigation, strengthening food security, creating more than 2 million jobs within the period while increasing farmer incomes, and positioning Kenya as a competitive regional hub for sustainable agrifood investment.

    “I am equally proud that the 2026 FINAS Summit provides the platform for the official launch of the National Agri-food Systems Investment Plan (NASIP 2026–2030). At the heart of NASIP is a fully costed investment framework of KES 1.081 trillion over the next five years.” said PS Mueke.

    “This investment will be mobilized through a strategic partnership in which the Government of Kenya, together with County Governments, will contribute 35 percent. I am calling on the commitment of the County Governments, through the Council of Governors, to achieve this goal.  The private sector is expected to contribute 45 percent, and the Development and bilateral partners’ share is 20 percent of the total investment envelope.” added PS Mueke.

    The launch of NASIP 2026 – 2030 coincided with the call for the accelerated implementation of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Kampala Declaration during the opening ceremony. The summit comes at a pivotal moment as African countries begin implementing the 2026–2035 CAADP Kampala Strategy and Action Plan, which seeks to strengthen sustainable food production, agro-industrialisation, trade, investment, climate resilience, inclusivity and food systems governance across the continent.

    Held under the theme “Towards Sustainable Financial Architecture for Africa’s Food Systems,” the summit features high-level discussions on blended finance for agri-food systems, climate-smart investment pathways, innovative agri-finance solutions, and country case studies from Kenya, Nigeria, and Ethiopia, among others.

    FINAS Summit Director, Dr. Charity Mutegi noted that the summit champions moving from dialogue to delivery, rallying behind key stakeholders to advance the agri-food systems in Africa. She said: “In its third edition, FINAS 2026 has continued to advance sustainable finance as a lever for meaningful change in Africa, laying ground for the unveiling of a private-sector-led agriculture finance working group.”, Dr. Mutegi said.

    At FINAS 2026, delegates from across Africa will also explore practical tools such as the Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) Monitoring and Analysing Food and Agricultural Policies (MAFAP) expenditure reviews and the World Bank–IFAD Financial Flows to Food Systems (3FS) framework to help diagnose financing gaps and mobilise greater public and private investment.

    Speaking during the opening session, H.E. Ms. Caitríona Ingoldsby, Ambassador of Ireland to Kenya, underscored the importance of international partnerships in advancing Africa’s food systems transformation. She said: “Africa’s food systems transformation requires strong partnerships that bring together governments, development partners, the private sector and smallholder farming communities. Ireland remains committed to supporting inclusive and sustainable partnerships on improving Africa’s agri-food systems.” she said.

    Prof. Hamadi Iddi Boga, Vice President for Programme Delivery at AGRA, called on stakeholders to move from dialogue to implementation in achieving the ambitions of the Kampala Declaration. “Africa has no shortage of strategies or commitments. What is needed now is implementation at scale. We must move with urgency to translate the Kampala Declaration into practical investments, stronger institutions and measurable outcomes that improve the lives of farmers and strengthen food systems across the continent.” he said.

    Maren Kneller, Head of Development Cooperation at the German Embassy in Kenya, urged African governments and development partners to strengthen efforts to catalyse financing for sustainable agri-food systems. “Achieving sustainable and resilient food systems will require significantly greater investment from both the public and private sectors. Governments have an important role to play in creating enabling environments that reduce risk, attract capital and accelerate innovation across agricultural value chains.” she said.

    The Summit is also placing strong emphasis on demand-driven, climate-smart finance, recognising the need to align agricultural financing with climate adaptation and mitigation goals. Rashmi Pillai, CEO of FSD Kenya, underscored the importance of innovative financial models:

    “As a sector, we need inclusive finance for sustainable agri-food systems. These systems should work for MSMEs and small scale farmers to get a financial support which works for them. Together, let’s work towards building a system that truly works for Africa and let’s continue keeping farmers at the center of the conversations and the future we are creating.” said Rashmi Pillai, CEO, FSD Kenya.

    The Summit comes at a time when there is growing momentum around agri-food systems transformation across Africa. Governments are increasingly prioritizing agriculture through budget allocations and policy reforms, while private sector players and development finance institutions are expanding investments into sustainable agriculture and food systems.

  • Government finalizes deal to operationalize Isiolo Export Abattoir

    Government finalizes deal to operationalize Isiolo Export Abattoir

    The government has moved a step closer to operationalizing the Isiolo Export Abattoir.

    The state-of-the-art facility, which has attracted nearly KSh 1 billion in public investment, is now ready for operation and is expected to transform the livestock sector across northern Kenya. 

    Agriculture Principal Secretary Dr. Kipronoh Ronoh Paul and Isiolo County Governor Dr. Guyo Ibrahim Abdi on Wednesday held a high-level meeting with the aim of commissioning the project with significant changes to meet the required export guidelines.

    The meeting brought together county officials, livestock experts, and national leaders, including Presidential Advisor Dr. Augustine Cheruiyot and Ali Mohammed, who advises on climate change; their presence underscored the project’s national significance in positioning Isiolo as a hub for livestock trade and meat exports.

    With operationalization now being finalized, the abattoir is set to deliver a major boost to the region’s economy while strengthening Kenya’s footprint in the global meat export market. It aims to open new export markets, create jobs, and improve livelihoods for pastoralist communities.

  • CS Kagwe slams global tariff escalation, demands action

    CS Kagwe slams global tariff escalation, demands action

    Agriculture and Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe has called on African nations to confront what he described as the unfair global practice of tariff escalation, where developed markets allow raw agricultural commodities to enter at low or zero duty but impose significantly higher tariffs on the same products once they are processed.

    Speaking during the DialogueNext Forum convened by the World Food Prize Foundation, CS Kagwe told global agricultural leaders that the practice discourages industrialisation in producing countries, locks farmers into exporting cheap raw materials and shifts manufacturing jobs, wealth and investment to foreign economies.

    “It is difficult to explain to an African farmer why it is acceptable to export raw coffee but prohibitively expensive to export roasted coffee,”CS Kagwe said.

    The Cabinet Secretary argued that tariff escalation has for decades prevented Africa from climbing the global value chain, forcing countries that produce coffee, tea, cocoa, macadamia, cotton and hides to remain suppliers of raw materials while importing finished products manufactured from their own commodities at much higher prices.

    He urged African countries to adopt policies that encourage local processing before export, saying Kenya’s ban on raw in-shell macadamia exports demonstrates the direction the continent should take.

    According to CS Kagwe, the same value-addition philosophy should increasingly guide coffee and tea so that processing, branding and packaging are undertaken where the crops are grown.

    “Every stage of processing completed within Africa creates jobs, increases farmers’ incomes and strengthens rural economies,” he said.

    CS Kagwe argued that value addition is ultimately about creating opportunities for the next generation.

    “The son and daughter of the farmer should find employment in coffee roasting plants, tea packaging factories, macadamia processing industries, food manufacturing, logistics and agricultural technology—not feel compelled to abandon farming communities in search of jobs elsewhere.”

    He also criticised policies that tax agro-processing machinery and mechanisation equipment while governments simultaneously claim to support agricultural transformation.

    “We cannot claim to support value addition while taxing the machinery needed to establish agro-processing industries. We cannot encourage mechanisation while making agricultural equipment prohibitively expensive,” he said, warning that such contradictions undermine subsidies and discourage investment.

    The Cabinet Secretary further called for a new financing model for agriculture, saying banks and development finance institutions must move away from rigid commercial lending and adopt financing tailored to farming cycles through flexible repayments, grace periods, weather-indexed insurance and long-term affordable credit.

    He maintained that reforming global trade, expanding local value addition, removing barriers to agro-industrial investment and improving agricultural finance are essential if farming is to become profitable enough to attract young people.

    “If we truly believe in equitable global development, international trade rules must reward value addition—not punish it,” CS Kagwe said.

    The World Food Prize Foundation’s DialogueNext Forum is being held in Nairobi under the theme “Born to Feed the Future.”

    The high-level forum brought together agriculture ministers, policymakers, scientists, researchers, development partners, private sector leaders and farmer organisations from across Africa and beyond to deliberate on the future of food systems, agricultural innovation, trade and farmer prosperity.

    Among those in attendance were Madagascar’s Minister of Livestock Riana Nantenaina Randrianomenjanahary, Senegal’s Minister Delegate in charge of Livestock Ousmane Diagne, and Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, the 2017 World Food Prize Laureate and member of the World Food Prize Foundation Council of Advisors, alongside representatives from international agricultural and development institutions

  • Kenya hosts IGAD soil hub to boost food security

    Kenya hosts IGAD soil hub to boost food security

    In a major step toward transforming agricultural resilience across East Africa, Kenya has on Monday played host to the inaugural Steering and Technical Committees meeting of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Soil Health and Fertilizer Hub.

    The event held in Nairobi, brought together experts, policymakers, and partners from IGAD region to launch a coordinated regional response to critical challenges threatening soil fertility, food security, and sustainable farming.

    Evelyne Heyi, Assistant Director in Kenya’s State Department for Agriculture, who delivered the opening address on behalf of Dr. Caroline Kundu from the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization (KARLO), hailed the meeting as an essential continuation of Africa-wide efforts.

    “This gathering builds on decisive commitments made during the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Nairobi Summit and marks a significant milestone in operationalizing a regional platform dedicated to reversing land degradation, boosting fertilizer production and distribution, and enhancing food security in the IGAD region,” Heyi said.

    She outlined the Hub’s six key priority areas, from policy harmonization and capacity building to market improvements and inclusive partnerships, emphasizing Kenya’s leadership through its Agricultural Soil Management Policy and national action plan.

    Dr. Senait Regassa, Project Coordinator for the IGAD Food Systems Resilience Program, reinforced the Hub’s critical role in forging science-based, regionally coordinated solutions to improve soil health and sustainable fertilizer use.

    “Healthy soils are the foundation of food security and resilient livelihoods across our region,” Regassa said. “This Hub represents an essential investment not just for the present but for generations to come.”

    The meeting focused on adopting the Hub’s governance framework, developing a two-year action plan, and facilitating peer learning among member states. It aligns with the continent-wide Nairobi Declaration on Fertilizer and Soil Health, which sets ambitious targets for increasing fertilizer access, restoring degraded soils, and strengthening extension services for smallholder farmers.

    As East Africa grapples with climate variability and land degradation, the IGAD Soil Health and Fertilizer Hub aims to be a game-changer, catalyzing policy coherence, innovation, and partnerships that can drive sustainable agricultural productivity and secure food systems for the future.

    The success of this initiative will depend heavily on the collaboration and commitment of governments, researchers, farmers, and development partners alike.

    With the first Steering and Technical Committees meeting now complete, the Hub moves from vision to action, setting a promising path toward healthier soils and stronger livelihoods across the IGAD region.

  • Alan Greenspan, architect of the modern American economy, dies aged 100

    Alan Greenspan, architect of the modern American economy, dies aged 100

    Former US Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan has died aged 100, his wife has said.

    NBC News correspondent Andrea Mitchell said in a statement reported by her employer that her husband had died from complications of Parkinson’s Disease.

    Mitchell’s statement said Greenspan was “a giant of a man who helped shape the US economy for decades under presidents of both parties, but was always honest in acknowledging his mistakes”.

    For nearly 20 years, Alan Greenspan was charged with safeguarding the US economy and keeping the dollar sound.

    As chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1987-2006, a post described as the second most important after the presidency, he presided over the longest sustained period of US economic growth in a generation.

    Described as the “God in the machine” of American finance, Greenspan declined all requests for interviews during his time at the Fed.

    The media and the money markets hung on his few public statements, and a sign in his office said simply, “the buck starts here”.

    But critics argue that an over-reliance on easy credit fuelled the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s and caused the sub-prime mortgage crisis of 2008.

    The Fed said Greenspan’s policies and economic thinking “left a lasting mark on this institution, on the broader field of economics, and on the country”.

    In a statement on Monday, the central bank said: “He brought rigorous analytical discipline to monetary policymaking and helped establish the credibility that remains one of the Federal Reserve’s most important assets.”

    The Fed said his legacy lives on at the institution through the economist he mentored and inspired as chairman.

    Alan Greenspan was born in New York City on 6 March 1926. His mother, who worked in a furniture store, brought him up single-handed.

    Far from being a budding economist, the young Greenspan was a talented musician, who studied the clarinet at New York’s renowned Julliard School of Music.

    He played in a band with Stan Getz, the legendary jazz saxophonist, before touring the country with the Henry Jerome Band. This peripatetic lifestyle gave him a valuable practical insight into the workings of US business.

    And while his fellow musicians spent their evenings smoking marijuana, Alan Greenspan busied himself by swotting up on economics and doing the band’s accounts.

    At the age of 19, he enrolled as an economics student at New York University, where he became an apostle of the free market, and eventually found employment as an economic consultant and, later, as a member of the board at JP Morgan.

    Curbing inflation

    In 1952, Greenspan met the right-wing novelist and social philosopher Ayn Rand, whose views were to have a profound influence on him.

    She called him “the undertaker” because of his liking for dark, sombre suits.

    But the young economist came to support her belief that society functions most efficiently when people actively pursue their own self-interests, to the exclusion of the interests of society as a whole.

    In an article he wrote in 1966, he declared “the welfare state” as “nothing more than a mechanism by which governments confiscate the wealth of the productive members of a society”.

    Having successfully predicted the Eisenhower recession, Greenspan advised Richard Nixon during his successful presidential election campaign in 1968.

    He went on to become head of the Council of Economic Advisers.

    Greenspan later wrote that he found the president to be “sadly paranoid, misanthropic and cynical”, but the economist’s success at curbing inflation impressed Nixon’s successors.

    Gerald Ford asked Greenspan to continue at the Council of Economic Advisers and – in the early 1980s – Ronald Reagan chose him to lead an inquiry into the reform of the America’s state pension system.

    In August 1987, Reagan promoted him to chairman of the US Federal Reserve, and – for the next two decades – he became one of the most powerful men in the world.

    Golden era

    He was thrown in at the deep end.

    His astute handling of the October 1987 stock market crash, which saw more than 30% wiped off share prices, earned Greenspan many plaudits.

    His statement of confidence in the underlying economy calmed frayed nerves, and his facilitation of cheap credit helped keep the banks afloat.

    It was an approach used again and again, whenever the markets had a crisis. Later dubbed “quantitative easing”, such upheavals included the 1980s savings and loan crisis, the first Gulf War, the Mexican peso crisis and – shortly after he had retired – the global credit crisis in 2008.

    Greenspan was renominated as chairman of the Federal Reserve by George H.W. Bush, although the president later complained that a sluggish economic recovery had put paid to his chances of re-election.

    Surprisingly, Bill Clinton – a Democratic Party president – also asked the driest of monetarists to stay on in post. But his decision was rewarded as, under Greenspan’s direction, there followed a golden era of growth in the late 1990s.

    Greenspan later praised Clinton in his memoir for the president’s “consistent, disciplined focus on long-term economic growth” – while complaining that some Republican administrations simply lost control of public spending.

    Away from work, the rather grey-looking banker was a skilled and enthusiastic tennis player.

    An early marriage to a Canadian artist lasted less than a year, and Greenspan dated TV star Barbara Walters, before marrying NBC reporter Andrea Mitchell in 1997.

    The same year, the spectacular fall of the South East Asian “tiger economies” tested him again.

    By cutting US interest rates, he indicated his belief that the situation would recover and, in doing so, aided the world economy.

    Bubbles and crashes

    Much the same happened when many dot-com companies, overpriced by investors, failed to live up to their hype and folded in March 2000.

    The market, said Greenspan, had exhibited “irrational exuberance”.

    The Federal Reserve raised interest rates and then cut them rapidly after consumers vastly reduced their expenditure.

    But Greenspan was blamed for the low interest rate culture that had allowed the dot-com bubble to grow in the first place.

    The Nobel laureate Paul Krugman was one critic.

    “He didn’t raise interest rates to curb the market’s enthusiasm,” Krugman complained, “he waited until the bubble burst… then tried to clean up the mess afterwards.”

    After the 9/11 attacks on America, he slashed interest rates to help prop up the US economy and urged George W. Bush to remove Saddam Hussein, in case the Iraqi dictator caused chaos on the global energy markets.

    In 2006, Greenspan stood down as chairman of the Federal Reserve after an unprecedented five terms in office.

    A year later came a downturn in the US housing market that the Federal Reserve had failed to predict. The sub-prime mortgage crisis went on to bring down banks and trigger the worst global economic downturn since the Great Depression.

    Critics said Greenspan’s policy of low interest rates after 9/11 had fuelled a sharp rise in house prices and over-enthusiastic selling of mortgages by banks.

    It was also said that his aversion to the regulation of banks – and their practice of using complicated financial instruments like derivatives to insure their lending – made the problem worse.

    In October 2008, Greenspan admitted that he had put too much faith in the free-market and had given insufficient attention to the dangers of sub-prime lending.

    He said he’d believed that the financial industry could be relied upon to “self-regulate” because it would always be in its best interests to do so.

    In testimony to Congress, the former Federal Reserve chairman confessed that the banks had proved his free-market, anti-regulation views wrong.

    “I have found a flaw. I don’t know how significant or permanent it is. But I have been very distressed by that fact.”

    Alan Greenspan will be remembered as the man who – more than anyone else – shaped the modern US economy.

    For twenty years, a series of presidents and many ordinary Americans viewed him as a financial guru, and a talisman against bad times.

    In the course of his extraordinary career, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in Washington and an honorary knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II.

    He remained a sought after economic adviser and media pundit into his late 90s.

    He was no fan of President Trump’s first administration, describing his populist approach as a “shout of pain” that would do little to raise living standards.

    He also criticised Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, calling Brexit the “worst outcome”.

    Fast approaching the age of 100, he popped up on television warning that the Biden administration was raising interest rates too fast in 2023.

    He celebrated his centenary in March 2026.

    With his air of Olympian detachment, Greenspan will be remembered for his long stewardship of the US economy, during which GDP contracted only once.

    Although, for his critics, his reputation was dented by his philosophical antipathy to regulation, and two great market crashes.

  • Guinea bans exports of raw gold to boost local refining

    Guinea bans exports of raw gold to boost local refining

    Guinea has banned the export of unrefined gold in an effort to promote domestic processing of the precious metal.

    The policy – effective immediately – comes after Guinea’s President Mamadi Doumbouya met industrial and artisanal gold producers and buyers, and aims to boost the economy and create more jobs.

    “Guinea will now require its gold to be processed within its own borders. Raw gold will no longer leave Guinea,” he said, adding that other countries have been reaping the economic benefits of processing and trading their raw materials.

    Guinea is Africa’s sixth largest gold producer, according to the World Gold Council.

    Other African nations have taken similar steps to increase domestic processing and value addition in the mining sector in recent years.

    In Tanzania and Uganda, the export of unprocessed minerals and metals such as gold and copper is already banned, while Ghana is set to ban raw gold exports by 2030.

    Africa’s top lithium producer, Zimbabwe, has banned concentrate exports of the metal used to make batteries from 2027.

    Gold is one of Guinea’s main exports, shipping more than 22 tonnes of the metal in the first quarter of this year, according to the authorities.

    A new refinery is near completion in the capital, Conakry, where the country’s gold will be sent before processing and export. It has a reported capacity of 250 tonnes a year so should be able to handle the country’s current production.

    Foreign companies operating in the country have been warned that they risk losing their licenses and having their mining contracts terminated if they violate the directive.

    Guinea is also the world’s largest producer of bauxite, used to make aluminium.