Countries

  • China has launched a truck assembly plant in Tanzania.
  • At the same time, President Samia has ordered long-stalled coal and iron mines to be revived.
  • Over 1000 persons to be relocated to establish coal and iron mines .

Tanzania has inaugurated a new truck assembly plant to be run by a Chinese company as the country pushes its industrialization agenda. This truck assembly plant has raised talks of power and metal ore supply for companies, and two key mines have resurfaced, the Mchuchuma coal and Liganga iron ore mines.

Known as the Saturn Corporation Limited Company, the truck assembly plant has this May been inaugurated by the country’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

Located in Kigamboni District of the coastal commercial port city of Dar es Salaam, the plant is run by China’s SinoTruk International. The company is renowned for trucks, tippers, tankers and spare parts under the premier brand

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  • The need to tackle youth unemployment in Kenya has intensified over the years.
  • Technical vocational training (TVET) is one of the most significant tools in combating poverty and bridging skills gaps.
  • Despite the vast opportunities and possibilities, vocational training still faces significant challenges.

In a rapidly changing global job market, the importance of vocational training has never been more evident. Vocational training prepares individuals with practical skills and knowledge for securing meaningful employment.  The need to tackle youth unemployment in Kenya has intensified over the years.

The significance of vocational training lies in its ability to address the global skills gap, where employers often struggle to find candidates with the practical abilities required for specific jobs. It empowers individuals to secure stable employment and is critical in economic development and reducing unemployment.

The importance of technical and vocational education in the broader concept of global development cannot be overstated. The …

  • Estimates show that family planning in Kenya prevented 2.4 million pregnancies in 2023.
  • The 2023 report shows significant achievements in family planning across the globe, even in the face of stagnant funding.
  • The contraceptives were procured by UNFPA with more than KES57 Million (£348,000) funding from the UK.

Efforts to make family planning more accessible to women in Kenya received a boost with the handover of 450,000 doses of Subcutaneous Depot Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (DMPA-SC), a self-injectable contraceptive that simplifies and enhances the accessibility of family planning.

The contraceptives were procured by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) with more than $378,151 (KES57 Million) funding from the UK Government, and will be distributed by the Ministry of Health to health facilities across the country.

DMPA-SC is a user-friendly injectable contraceptive that can be administered by trained individuals, including community health workers and women themselves, thereby expanding access to family planning …

  • Following a slow recovery from the debilitating impact of COVID-19, Africa’s economic growth declined to an estimated 3.8 per cent in 2022 and later deteriorated to 3.3 per cent in 2023.
  • Africa is not immune to economic shocks and has recently faced a multi-crisis situation.
  • African countries have posted more than 5 per cent output expansions in 2024.

Africas economic outlook

Before COVID-19, Africa experienced 20 years of solid growth and made tangible economic and social progress. However, the COVID crisis brought this progress to an abrupt halt, and many countries, which are under increasingly tight budget constraints, struggled to invest in essential sectors amidst recovering from the aftermath of the health crisis.

Following a slow recovery from the debilitating impact of COVID-19, Africa’s economic growth declined to an estimated 3.8 per cent in 2022 and later deteriorated to 3.3 per cent in 2023.

However, according to a recent UN …

  • Kenya’s business conditions weakened slightly in March despite easing inflation.
  • Kenyan firms reduced their purchases of inputs in line with weaker sales.
  • Most businesses remain optimistic about their workforce size and revenue growth in the year’s second quarter (April-June).

The latest Stanbic Bank Kenya Purchasing Managers’ Index indicates that Kenya’s business conditions weakened slightly in March despite easing inflation.

The deterioration in operating conditions was witnessed across the private sector as order book volumes and output levels contracted. The downturn contrasted with February, which saw an improvement in the private sector for the first time in six months.

Despite the decline, the survey data provided some positive signals for Kenyan businesses. Staffing and inventories showed further growth, indicating potential expansion opportunities.

Additionally, input cost inflation slowed to its lowest level in over three years amid a recovery in the shilling against the US dollar and other major currencies, including those …

  • Three decades later, the Rwanda genocide elicits several unanswered questions about the events leading up to, during, and after the killings.
  • Who was responsible for shooting down President Juvenal Habyarimana’s plane?
  • Nine years after the closure of the ICTR tribunal, high-profile fugitives remain at large, and many survivors continue to seek justice.

It is that time of the year again, April 7, when the world marks a somber remembrance of the Rwanda genocide. This year, as we observe the 30th anniversary of the genocide that ripped through the heart of this small East African country, the world is yet to come to terms with some hard questions.

In just 100 days, from April to July 1994, an estimated 800,000 people were brutally massacred, targeted primarily for being Tutsi or moderate Hutu.

Despite the passage of three decades, the Rwanda genocide remains a subject of intense scrutiny and reflection, not only …

  • International arrivals increased from 1.48 million in 2022 to 1.95 million as the sector turned around from lows of 569,848 at the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.
  • Last year’s strong performance saw the country record the highest earnings in tourism receipts, which went up to $2.7 billion, up from $2 billion.
  • The US remained the single largest market source even as Africa accounted for the lion’s share of total arrivals during the year, with the East African region remaining key. 

Kenya’s tourist arrivals grew 31.5 per cent last year, official government data indicates, as the tourism sector recovered to pre-pandemic levels not only in the country but globally.

International arrivals increased from 1.48 million in 2022 to 1.95 million as the sector turned around from lows of 569,848 at the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.

Last year’s strong performance saw the country record the highest earnings …

  • Kenya is keen on extending its pipeline to Malaba (Kenya-Uganda border), with Uganda expected to construct a link line to Kampala.
  • According to the Shippers Council of Eastern Africa (SCEA), Mombasa used to command up to 70% of transit business, but this has decreased to 60 per cent.
  • Uganda imports an average of 2.5 billion litres of petroleum annually, valued at about $2 billion, with KPC handling at least 90 per cent of the volumes.

Kenya is courting Uganda in a fresh bid to retain and possibly increase petroleum exports amid increased competition from neighbouring Tanzania. In recent months, East Africa’s economic powerhouse has come under pressure from Tanzania, which is eyeing to tap more transit markets for imports and exports into the hinterland through the Dar es Salaam Port.

In the latest developments, Tanzania has offered to license Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC) to import petroleum products through Dar …

  • Kenyan doctors have rejected a $18.3 million (KES2.4 billion) offer to return to work.
  • The top demands of over 7,000 medics include immediate hiring of trainee doctors, adequate medical insurance coverage for doctors and their dependents, and fixing delays in pay.
  • The labour boycott also calls for paying doctors working in public hospitals as part of their higher degree courses.

In a move that further throws Kenya’s healthcare system into a spin, public hospital doctors under the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists, and Dentists Union (KPMDU) lobby have rejected a $18.3 million (KES2.4 billion) offer to leave the streets and go back to work.

The latest twist underlines the deepening rift between healthcare professionals and Kenyan officials amid a strike that has now stretched into its third week since March 15.

Representing over 7,000 members, KMPDU initiated the strike to address several critical issues, including the demand for the payment of …

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