Saturday, 25 October 2008

Zuma Says Crisis May Force Less South Africa Spending


By Ken Fireman and Stewart Bailey

Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Jacob Zuma, who is slated to become South Africa's president next year, said the international financial crisis may force slower government spending in Africa's biggest economy.

Zuma, the leader of the ruling African National Congress, said in an interview in New York today that he plans no abrupt shift from ``financial discipline'' toward aggressive anti- poverty programs.

``It's already accepted that economic growth will be lower than expected'' because of the global crisis, Zuma said. ``It's a challenge that faces everyone. I'm sure that the private sector, the workers and everyone will understand there are economic problems.''

Given those difficulties, he said, the government will ``look at programs and priorities, realizing that there are constraints.''

Zuma, 66, also said if Barack Obama were to be elected to the U.S. presidency, it would show that ``America is ready for any of its citizens to lead it'' and would also give him hope that African issues ``are not going to be put on the back burner.''

Because of Obama's connection to the continent through his Kenyan father, Zuma said, Africans would have a perception that the Democratic nominee might ``not put Africa too much down in the agenda. That would be a natural kind of expectation. You should not blame us for it.''

In Line

In December, Zuma became president of the ANC, which has ruled since the end of the apartheid era in 1994. That puts him in line to become the country's president after parliamentary elections are held next year.

His rise to power was backed by the labor unions, communists and the ANC's youth wing, all of whom favor increased government spending, income grants for the poor and interest-rate policies that promote job creation.

In the interview, Zuma sought to allay concerns among investors that those forces and their policy goals would dominate his presidency. The FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index, the country's key stock index, fell to the lowest in almost three years today.

``They participate in the evolution of policy, but they do not determine which way policy must go,'' Zuma said of the communists and the unions. ANC conferences set policy, and ``that should be a comforting thing to investors. Even if it was not Zuma, it was anybody else, you should not worry about the ANC, and I think we have a track record.''

`Destination for Investment'

Zuma said the world should continue to regard his country as a ``destination for investment'' because of its democratic political system, transparent economic policies and proven record of fiscal discipline.

``If I was an investor, I would say, `Here is a maturing democracy which would make my benefits or profits not to be threatened,''' he said.

In a separate interview with Bloomberg Television that will be broadcast on the ``Money & Politics'' show at 9:45 p.m. tonight, Zuma said the financial crisis was a ``global problem.''

``Nobody can have a magic solution in one country,'' he said. ``It's a question of how the financial institutions and leaders of financial institutions in the world are able to work out some solutions. The question is, how do we all put our heads together, to keep our heads afloat.''

South Africa naval ship to visit Vietnam for first time


12:29' 25/10/2008 (GMT+7)

VietNamNet Bridge – A South Africa naval ship SAS Spioenkop will visit Ho Chi Minh City from October 31 to November 5, the South African Embassy in Hanoi said.

The visit to Vietnam is part of the 121m-long naval ship’s tour of the Asian territorial waters, including Singapore, China, Malaysia and India.

SAS Spioenkop’s visit to Vietnam is aimed at strengthening defence cooperation between South Africa and Vietnam, South African Ambassador to Vietnam Ratubatsi Super Moloi told reporters in Hanoi on October 24.

This is the historically significant visit and the first visit to Vietnam by an African naval ship, said the diplomat.

Over 500 expected for EAC Business Forum

BY FELLY KIMENYI

Saturday, 25th October 2008

NYARUGENGE - At least 500 business executives from across the globe are expected to attend the Commonwealth East African International Business Forum (EAIBF) planned for Kigali next week.

This was revealed yesterday by Francis Gatare, Deputy CEO, Business operations and Services of the Rwanda Development Board (RDB) in a press briefing that took place at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. According to the tentative programme, some East African Community (EAC) Heads-of-States are also expected.

“We expect between 150 and 200 from the broader international community, and 50-100 from the EAC member states excluding Rwanda. The rest will be local,” Gatare said.

He added that the high level forum will be a follow up of the East African Investment Conference that also took place in Kigali in June.

This forum, according to Gatare, is jointly organized by the Rwanda Investment and Export Promotion Agency (RIEPA), the EAC and the Commonwealth Business Council.

It will be held under the theme “Trade and Investment Opportunities: East Africa—one market, one destination” and international investors will have a chance to explore the opportunities of investing in the community.

Submarine cables to help bring Africa into global economy

October 24, 2008, 10:53 AM —

Some governments in East Africa are stockpiling business capacity in anticipation of the four submarine cables that are expected to bring unprecedented connectivity options and related business opportunities to the region, according to a study by IDC.

"For example, Kenya is already subsidizing communications costs for business process outsourcing providers and establishing a BPO zone," said Francis Hook, IDC East Africa regional manager. "This ensures that there will be a supply of labor in place once cheaper and more reliable broadband arrives."

Governments in the region hope to use the new capacity to transform their economies, and land infrastructure projects abound as governments lay cable to bring capacity in from the coast, an especially important project for landlocked nations, Hook noted.

Source

Thursday, 23 October 2008

Dow Jones Announces Partnership with Transparency International

Posted : Thu, 23 Oct 2008 08:01:25 GMT

LONDON and BERLIN, Oct. 23 DowJones-transparency


Dow Jones supports Transparency International's fight against corruption; Sponsors 13th International Anti-Corruption Conference, Oct. 30 - Nov. 2 in Athens, Greece



LONDON and BERLIN, Oct. 23 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Dow Jones has become an official global media partner to Transparency International for the next two years, the company announced today. As part of the agreement, Dow Jones will provide information resources to support Transparency International's research. Dow Jones will also support the organization's conferences and initiatives that provide a valuable forum for the private sector to share information in order to develop and implement more effective anti-corruption measures.

"Transparency International has been extraordinarily successful in highlighting the devastating consequences of bribery on ordinary people and the countries and industries most impacted by corruption. Increasing public awareness and greater understanding of the challenges associated with corruption is moving the focus toward enforcement of existing regulation and helping businesses manage the task of implementing effective processes and controls," said Clare Hart, President, Dow Jones Enterprise Media Group. "We welcome the opportunity to lend our products and support to assist Transparency in their mission."

Dow Jones will provide Transparency International's secretariat and approximately 90 national chapters with access to its leading global news and business information solutions, Dow Jones Factiva (www.factiva.com) and Dow Jones Watchlist (www.fis.dowjones.com/products/risk.html).

"Known for providing market-leading information services to businesses internationally and having strong connections with its clients, Dow Jones will be a valuable resource for both data gathering and media support in our global fight against corruption," said Cobus de Swardt, Managing Director at Transparency International.

"Since its inception in 1993, the organization has played a leading role in highlighting the damage caused by corruption and delivering important reference resources such as their global Corruption Perceptions Index. We look forward to helping the organization continue its success with its global initiatives," said Rupert de Ruig, Managing Director of Dow Jones Risk & Compliance.

Dow Jones will also sponsor the 13th International Anti-Corruption Conference, organized by Transparency International. The conference takes place Oct. 30 - Nov. 2 in Athens, Greece.

To learn more about Dow Jones Risk & Compliance, visit www.fis.dowjones.com/products/risk.html or contact Kim Gagliardi at (603) 864-8873 or kimberly.gagliardi@dowjones.com. For more information about Dow Jones Factiva products, visit www.factiva.com. For more information about the Dow Jones Enterprise Media Group, visit www.solutions.dowjones.com.

For information about Transparency International, visit www.transparency.org or contact Gypsy Guillen Kaiser at +49 30 3438 20662.



ABOUT DOW JONES

Dow Jones & Company (www.dowjones.com) is a News Corporation company (NYSE: NWS, NWS.A; ASX: NWS, NWSLV; www.newscorp.com). Dow Jones is a leading provider of global business news and information services. Its Consumer Media Group publishes The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, MarketWatch and the Far Eastern Economic Review. Its Enterprise Media Group includes Dow Jones Newswires, Dow Jones Factiva, Dow Jones Client Solutions, Dow Jones Indexes and Dow Jones Financial Information Services. Its Local Media Group operates community-based information franchises. Dow Jones owns 50% of SmartMoney and 33% of STOXX Ltd. and provides news content to radio stations in the U.S.



About Transparency International

Transparency International is the global civil society organization leading the fight against corruption. Through more than 90 chapters worldwide and an international secretariat in Berlin, Germany, TI raises awareness of the damaging effects of corruption and works with partners in government, business and civil society to develop and implement effective measures to tackle it.



SOURCE Dow Jones

New MasterCard Research Ranks 65 Cities in Emerging Markets Poised to Drive Long-Term Global Economic Growth

PURCHASE, N.Y., Oct 22, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- With global economic growth expected to be driven primarily by emerging economies at an unprecedented rate of 12 to 1 compared to rich-world economies (according to the International Monetary Fund), emerging markets are becoming increasingly important investment and business centers. Responding to this reality and providing guidance in today's economic environment is a new study from MasterCard Worldwide, the Worldwide Centers of Commerce(TM): Emerging Markets Index.
The Index provides valuable insights into the 65 leading cities driving growth within more than 30 emerging markets. Cities are generally considered to be leading indicators for national economies, making the study an important barometer of larger global economic trends and growth potential over time.
"Given the current economic climate, MasterCard is focused on providing valuable insights that assist our customers in identifying new market opportunities for the future. The Emerging Markets Index is key to that commitment," said Walt Macnee, President, Global Markets, MasterCard Worldwide. "By evaluating 65 emerging market cities and their increasingly important roles in global commerce, the Index offers companies a roadmap for where commerce is headed next."
The Index evaluates 65 cities on eight dimensions related to their business climate, political environment, economic growth, commercial connectivity, quality of life and other areas, and explores the compelling global and regional economic trends that distinguish these cities as future development hubs.
Some key findings from the study include:
-- China led the Emerging Markets Index ranking overall, with 15 of the top
30 cities. Shanghai and Beijing held the number one and two spots
respectively.
-- Budapest ranked third overall, helped by its heritage as one of the
first eastern European countries to initiate trading with the West
following the Cold War.
-- South Africa had more cities on the list than any nation outside of
Brazil, Russia, India and China (the BRIC nations), suggesting that
Africa may be entering an era of growth in the global market.
-- Latin American cities held two of the top ten spots, and five Brazilian
cities placed among the top 50.


"As the current financial environment shows, globalization is a part of today's economic reality -- capital, talent, technology and even intellectual property now move seamlessly across borders and nations," said Dr. Michael Goldberg, Program Director, MasterCard Worldwide Centers of Commerce. "Emerging market cities will play an increasingly important role in global commerce and may provide unique market opportunities for businesses in the face of changing economic times."
The Index, developed by a panel of nine independent experts in economics, sociology and urban studies, is part of the broader MasterCard Worldwide Centers of Commerce(TM) program -- a global initiative to examine the role of cities in performing critical functions that connect markets and commerce around the world.
The full report and ranking are available at www.mastercardworldwide.com/insights.
Key Findings
Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa
Chinese Cities Dominate the Index. With 15 cities ranked in the top 30 and four in the top ten including #1 Shanghai, #2 Beijing, #6 Guangzhou and #10 Shenzhen, China outshone all other countries in the Index. Chinese cities placed among the top ten within the Index in measures relating to their commercial climate, economic growth and business connectivity, and held all top ten spots in the area related to education and IT connectivity. China's national economy played a key role in its city rankings, as has the visionary leadership of Shanghai, an important global commercial center.
Outsourcing Engine India Second Only to China. Led by Mumbai, the number one city in a critical dimension related to financial markets, eight Indian cities appeared in the Index, more than any country other than China. Scoring well in measures related to security and risk and connectivity, this showing reflects the leadership of cities like Chennai, a global center for automotive and film production.
South Africa a Gateway to a Continent. With the most cities in the Index outside the BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China), South Africa's strong showing may reflect the ongoing opening of Africa to Western products, services and companies. It is clearly a place to watch carefully for new business opportunities.

Tanzania, Iran seek stronger relations

By Citizen Reporter

Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad has said his country is set to strengthen ties with Tanzania in agriculture and other economic activities.

"Iran's relations with Tanzania are very friendly, and historical�we welcome the expansion of ties with you," Tehran Times quoted Mr Ahmadinejad as telling Foreign minister Bernard Membe yesterday.
Mr Membe, on his part, called for stronger relations between Iran and Tanzania.

"Tanzania is determined to deepen its relations with Iran and would support the Islamic Republic in international forums," he said.
He said Iran's scientific developments showed that the sanctions against the country had been ineffective.

The sanctions had taught Iranians to stand on their own feet and Iran had defeated the supporters of sanctions through making progress, Mr Membe stated.

In a separate meeting with Mr Membe, Iranian Foreign minister Manuchehr Mottaki said Tanzania was an important target in Iran�s plan to develop ties with African states.

Mr Mottaki said time was ripe for closer ties between the two countries, adding that Iran had used its friendly relations with African states to help end conflicts in Africa.

Tehran has mediated peace talks between Chad and Sudan, Mr Mottaki explained. Mr Membe said Tanzania wanted to learn from Iran�s experience in industrial, agricultural, and health spheres.

Motlanthe seeks stronger voice for Africa at IMF

October 22, 2008, 21:15

President Kgalema Motlanthe says developing countries and Africa, in particular, should be allowed to take an active role in the governance of international financial institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Motlanthe has joined other African leaders in Uganda's capital, Kampala, where they are attending a summit of the continent's three trading economic blocs – the Southern African Development Community, Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa and East African Economic Community. The summit is aimed at strengthening economic and political integration on the continent.

Motlanthe has urged his fellow African leaders to agitate for a greater say in the global financial discourse. He also stressed the significance of social unity in Africa.

Zimbabwe: Corruption fears over £300m UN aid

Zimbabwe is set to receive almost $500 million (£307 million) of aid for its health system, with the money going through President Robert Mugabe's Reserve Bank, raising fears that his regime will benefit.


By Sebastien Berger in Johannesburg and Peta Thornycroft in Harare


The Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, administered by the United Nations and funded by Britain, America and other critics of the Harare regime, has agreed in principle to Zimbabwe’s request for help. Jon Liden, its communications director, confirmed that Zimbabwe had applied for almost $300 million to fight Aids, $58 million to combat tuberculosis, almost $60 million for malaria and $83 million for its health service in general. This application had cleared the most important hurdle by gaining approval from the “technical review panel”.

All that remains is for the Global Fund’s board to agree to release the funds at its meeting in New Delhi next month. Mr Mugabe’s regime has already described this as a “foregone conclusion”.

But Zimbabwean law states that all foreign exchange must be deposited with the Reserve Bank. Gideon Gono, its governor and one of Mr Mugabe’s closest allies, routinely delays releasing any funds.

The Reserve Bank held on to $600,000 for one aid programme for several months. A senior official with one donor organisation in Harare said that some funds had actually gone missing after arriving at the Reserve Bank.

“The next round of money is desperately needed in Zimbabwe, but no one will feel good about any going into the RBZ [Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe],” he said.

Dr Greg Powell, a human rights campaigner in Harare, said that large sums of donor money in foreign currency had been taken from the accounts of local aid agencies during this year’s bitterly contested presidential election, which is yet to be resolved as Mr Mugabe clings to power. “During the election period, foreign money from a number of NGOs [non-governmental organisations] disappeared from their bank accounts,” he said.

“They were told they could be paid out at the official rate of exchange in Zimbabwe dollars - at a very low rate of exchange at that time, or that they will get it back some time in the future.”

Event eyes ICT Innovation with Open Source & Mobile Content

By Brenda Zulu, IDG News Service, 10/22/08

The Ghana-India Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence in ICT is using its third annual Innovation Week, taking place in Accra, to educate African entrepreneurs on FOSS (free and open-source software), said Dorothy Gordon, the center's director.

The theme of this year's conference is "ICT INNOVATION with Open Source & Mobile Content."

"We are bringing together aspiring entrepreneurs, or those who are still in the early stages of their business careers, and bringing them to link in with successful FOSS entrepreneurs so that they learn about the business models and what it takes to make success happen," Gordon said.

Many people are confused by the term "free," which refers to freedom of use, modification, redistribution and publication, as opposed to the idea that there is no payment required, Gordon explained. Many IT entrepreneurs imagine that they could never make money if they use FOSS, she added.

"We should focus on gaining market share using business models such as those adopted by Firefox and other well-known open-source businesses," she said.

The main aim of Innovation Week, Gordon said, is to give IT innovators a platform on which to exhibit their products and ideas.

"The important thing is to publicize successful innovation and support those with the brain power to create and innovate to take their product or process successfully to market," she said.

"The 'I-Week' also showcases global innovation as an inspiration, all with a view to moving Africa from being in a situation where we consume technologies designed to provide solutions for other people's problems to a situation where we actually create and produce technologies designed for our own contexts and in response to our own markets," Gordon added.

The main players in this year's Innovation Week are the Advanced Information Technology Institute, the Free Software and Open Source Foundation for Africa, and Rancard, a mobile platform company.

The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.

NATO ships to escort food convoys for Somalia

New York - NATO ships have arrived off the Somali coast to begin escorting relief convoys for Somalia, which has lost critical food supplies from the World Food Programme (WFP) to pirates in the past year, the UN said Wednesday. WFP, backed by the Somali government, requested military vessel escorts to thwart future hijacking of cargo ships carrying food and medicine supplies for Somalia.

The UN Security Council earlier this month authorized use of force by UN members to fight the wave of piracy and armed robbery endangering cargo ships as well as luxury cruise ships plying the waters off Somalia.
The Netherlands announced Wednesday it will deploy the HMS De Ruyter naval ship at the request of Somalia's transitional government. The Dutch government has decided to provide escort to replace Canada, which was to withdraw its own vessels on Thursday.

WFP said NATO vessels have arrived in the area, but have not yet begun escorting duties. Talks were being held to agree on terms of collaboration from the two sides, WFP said.

It said it will start delivering emergency supplies of highly nutritional peanut-based food in the next six months to 64,000 Somali children suffering malnutrition.

Somali officials said in Mogadishu on Wednesday that security forces in the semi-autonomous Puntland region freed a hijacked Indian ship after a gun battle, capturing four pirates in the process.

"Our forces successfully concluded an operation to free the Indian dhow without any casualties," Ali Abdi Aware, state-minister for the northern breakaway region of Puntland, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

The ship and its crew were due to arrive in the port of Bosasso Wednesday morning, Aware said.

The Indian vessel was the 30th ship seized by pirates off the coast of Somalia this year, as gunmen look to cash in on increasingly large ransoms

Another ship, Ukraine's MV Faina and its cargo of 33 T-72 tanks and other military equipment bound for Kenya, is still being held by pirates.

Peace Corps returns to Liberia after long absence

DAKAR, Senegal - The Peace Corps will return to war-ravaged Liberia on Sunday for the first time since fighting erupted nearly two decades ago, its goal to help rebuild the West African nation's shattered education system.

Liberia, founded by freed American slaves in the 19th century, has struggled to turn itself around since the brutal war ended in 2003 and President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf took office two years later. The return of the Peace Corps, which pulled out shortly after rebels invaded the country in late 1989, is a sign of confidence in Sirleaf, a Harvard-edcuated economist and Africa's first elected female head of state.

"Sirleaf has done a tremendous job of bringing this country back from chaos and we want to be part of moving her country forward as rapidly as possible," Peace Corps director Ronald A. Tschetter told The Associated Press in an interview from Washington, D.C. "This is a huge step for us to go back."

Liberia's back-to-back wars, which lasted from 1989 to 2003, sparked vicious factional fighting that killed an estimated 250,000 and displaced millions. Charles Taylor, who launched the 1989 invasion, is now jailed in The Hague facing war crimes charges.

Tschetter said Sirleaf had been calling for the Peace Corps to return and urged it to focus on what she saw as the most crucial need: education.

Wednesday, 22 October 2008

Minister’s Altech appeal to be heard early next month – Icasa

Communication Minister Dr Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri's appeal against the August 29 Altech value-added network service (Vans) judgement would be heard in November, the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) said on Tuesday.

Icasa spokesperson Sekgoela Sekgoela confirmed that the appeal would be heard on November 5 and November 7.

The Minister announced in September that the government would appeal the High Court's judgement that Altech Autopage Cellular had the right to convert its Vans licence into an individual electronic communications network service (I-ECNS) licence.

This would allow Altech Autopage Cellular to develop and operate its own communications network.

At the time of lodging the appeal, Matsepe-Casaburri had stated that if Vans licensees were allowed to obtain I-ECNS licences under licence conversions, government's managed-liberalisation policy would be seriously undermined to the detriment of the industry.

However, the Minister's appeal had been widely criticised by other telecommunications providers and service providers, as well as political parties.

Meanwhile, the Minister had, on Friday, applied for an urgent interdict to prevent Icasa from issuing Altech with an I-ECNS licence.

Manuel defends inflation targeting, but opens door to Alliance positions

Finance Minister Trevor Manuel strongly defended government's inflation-targeting policy on Tuesday, saying it provided a vital anchor in the context of financial market turmoil.

His remarks, which were made together with the release of the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS), followed only days after the ruling African National Congress' alliance partners met at an economic-policy summit, during which inflation targeting came in for some heavy criticism.

In his address to the National Assembly, Manuel argued that the moderation of inflation "must remain a central policy objective, particularly as we seek to expand investment and job creation under conditions of heightened business uncertainty".

African cotton farmers granted US$ 4.5 million by the French Development Agency

Panafrica - Mali - France

The French Development Agency has granted US$ 4.5 million to the African Cotton Producers Association (APROCA) to support the development of the genetically-modified (GM) and organic cotton in West and Central Africa, a French diplomatic source has said. French Ambassador to Mali Michel Reveyrand de Menthon will sign the funding agreement Saturday, 18 October.
The project, costing US$ 11.8 million, seeks to have cotton producers from the zone and textile operators from the continent take advantage of the fair trade and the booming biological agriculture as well as maximizing their effects in terms of positive impact on the whole industry. It also seeks to promote African cotton on the global market and to serve as a tool to improve the sustainability and quality of the production.
It will further help devise a regional strategy in an attempt to strengthen and expand GM and organic cotton sub-industries according to the demand and ensure their leverage effect in promoting the Africa cotton and its competitiveness and professionalise farmers’ organisations. The project will also develop market shares for the GM and organic cotton from Africa in textile products on the northern markets to enable more African producers’ organisations improve their revenue generation. (Friday 17 October - 17:56)

Global village slowly going digital



2008-10-21 10:12:11
By Guardian Reporter

Computers are increasingly ubiquitous in the developing world as software and internet companies create operating systems, computing programmes, and web-based portals in hundreds of indigenous languages.


In Africa the digital divide remains vast, despite the growing numbers of computers in schools, businesses and homes; according to the International Telecommunication Union, only 5 percent of Africa`s estimated 800 million people accessed the internet in 2007, and desktops and laptops still require a basic degree of computer literacy, even in indigenous languages.

Computing technology in local and marginalised languages is another tool with which to address humanitarian issues, such as helping farmers and boosting regional food security efforts.

They also can be a boon to small business creation and economic development, as well as language preservation.

In KwaDukuza, on the northern coast of South Africa`s KwaZulu-Natal Province, rural farmers flood the local computer lab to use computers in Zulu, one of South Africa`s 11 official languages.

Visitors browse the internet using Google`s Zulu search engine, in which Ngizizwa Nginehlanhla replaces the tab ``I`m feeling lucky`` on the home page.

``A lot of rural farmers are coming all the way into town to access these computers and the internet,`` said Alan Govender, manager of a communications centre in KwaDukuza.

Polokwane airport to attract tourists , grow economy

Date: 22 Oct 2008

By Edwin Tshivhidzo, tel: (012) 314-2454

Polokwane - The new state-of-the art Polokwane International Airport is set to attract more foreign tourists and contribute to growing the province's economy during and well beyond the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

As a host city, Polokwane will benefit tremendously from the new international terminal when thousands of soccer fans from around the world stream into the province.

It is expected that the Polokwane Airport will service about 200 000 passengers per annum. It is also set to become the international gateway to Africa due to its position in southern Africa.

Opening the new building terminal, Limpopo MEC for Roads and Transport Justice Piitso said on Tuesday the airport would become one of the fastest growing in the region, servicing not just the country but the entire Southern African Development Community.

"We will be going all out to woo investors, both domestic and foreign so that they can come and join hands with us, the infrastructure that we are putting in place will be reason enough for those who want to join hands with us in our endeavour to grow the economy and create decent and sustainable jobs," said MEC Piitso.

Polokwane Mayor Thabo Makunyane, expressed delight at the new airport building saying this was a major milestone in preparing to host matches in 2010.

"We will now be able to welcome everybody to our province," he said.

Airport Board Chairperson Laduma Thebe said the new building had already boosted staff morale. The staff would be vital in ensuring the tourists felt welcome on their arrival.

Construction on the new building was started in 2001 and was finally completed this year.

Also speaking at the event, Director General from the National Department of Transport Mpumi Mpofu said the province should take full advantage of the airport, to strengthen its role in the economic growth of the province," she said.

Ms Mpumi expressed confidence that the airport will be able to meet demand as it grows and becomes busier.

Meanwhile, the construction of new stadium in Polokwane is well underway, it was reported at the event. - BuaNews

SA healthcare receives a huge cash injection

Tamar Kahn

Science and Health Editor

CAPE TOWN — Finance Minister Trevor Manuel has allocated extra money for the immediate crisis posed by SA’s HIV/AIDS epidemic while not forgetting the long-term challenge of improving health infrastructure and retaining skilled staff in the public sector, the medium-term budget policy statement shows.

An extra R300m is allocated to the HIV/AIDS conditional grants this year. The money provides for the increased cost of the new AZT-nevirapine regimen for preventing mother to child transmission of HIV, which replaces a regimen based solely on nevirapine.

Extra funds were also needed to accommodate more patients than had been anticipated on the government’s free treatment programme, said the treasury’s director for health policy Mark Bletcher.

More than 500000 HIV patients had started treatment since the programme’s inception in 2004, 200000 of them in the past year, he said. The budget for HIV/AIDS conditional grants has been revised up R932m over the medium term, taking the total to R12,4bn.

The budget increases the provincial equitable share by R1bn in 2008-09 to pay for higher than anticipated implementation of new occupation-specific wage dispensation for nurses. The 10,5% increase in salaries negotiated in the bargaining chamber was significantly higher than the 7,5% increase provinces had budgeted for this year, said Bletcher.

Public service to receive huge wage boost


Wyndham Hartley

Parliamentary Editor

CAPE TOWN — The higher than budgeted public service salary increases will cost the provinces R3bn this year and will add a huge R23,2bn to the salary bill over the next three years, the medium-term budget policy statement revealed yesterday.

Not only were the provinces affected by the higher than anticipated increases, but every government department — particularly those with large staff components such as defence and the South African Police Service (SAPS) — had to have its budget topped up in the additional appropriation to meet these increased personnel costs.

The policy statement said that “at the time of tabling their budgets, provinces were asked to provide for salary adjustments of 7,5% in 2008-09, but actual increases of 10,5% were awarded. An amount of R3bn is included in the 2008-09 adjustments budget and R23,2bn is proposed for the next three years for the carry-through costs of higher salary increases and to provide for additional personnel costs in education and health.”

Defence has been given an extra R202m to cover the higher salary costs this year, while the justice department has been allocated R119m and the SAPS a whopping R668m.

All in all, the current transfers to the provinces will increase this year to R7,6bn, bringing the total allocation to R245,6bn for the current financial year.

This will rise by a further 10,8% each year, bringing the total allocation to provinces in the form of “equitable share” to R333,8bn in 2011-12.

South Africa: International Health Care Company Improves Lives

Phillip Kurata

The South African division of Johnson & Johnson (J&J), the world’s largest health care company, played a leading role on the corporate front to topple the apartheid regime and plays a vigorous part now in efforts to defeat the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

J&J has been nominated for the Secretary of State's Corporate Citizenship Award for 2008 in recognition of its positive effect on the communities where it does business.

Roger Crawford, J&J's executive director for South Africa, said his company's commitment to the welfare of the community is borne out by its actions. He read aloud part of the third tenet of J&J's credo, "We are responsible to the communities in which we live and work.... We must encourage civic improvements."

"In the 1980s, when the anti-apartheid struggle was heating up, we felt that we had to take a stand on the side of social justice," Crawford said. Back then, he was a young J&J executive who believed that enlightened corporations could do more to end apartheid by staying engaged than by leaving the country.

J&J embraced the Sullivan principles for responsible business behavior in South Africa, which included ending segregation of the races in all eating, locker room and work facilities and equal and fair employment practices for all employees. Crawford befriended the author of the principles -- Reverend Leon Sullivan, an American Baptist minister and an outspoken critic of apartheid -- and was assigned to organize the international business community to apply the principles.

Manuel Says South Africa Mining at `Risk' From Crisis

By Nasreen Seria

Oct. 22 (Bloomberg) -- South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel said the country's mining industry is at ``risk'' because of the fallout from the global financial crisis.

``Demand is likely to fall and prices will be low,'' Manuel said in an interview with Johannesburg-based South African Broadcasting Corp. today.

The price of platinum, South Africa's biggest export, has plunged 58 percent in the past six months, dropping as low as $838.10 an ounce in London today. The slump in commodity prices has undermined the rand, which fell below 11 to the dollar for the first time since April 2002 today.

South Africa's mining output declined 6.2 percent and non- gold production fell 3.5 percent in August from a year ago, Pretoria-based Statistics South Africa said on Oct. 9. A drop in mining production may lower corporate profits and tax earnings next year, Manuel said in his mid-term budget yesterday. The government is forecasting a budget deficit of 1.6 percent of gross domestic product in the year beginning April 1, compared with a February forecast of a 0.6 percent surplus.

Resources groups lead in sustainability report

By: Esmarie Swanepoel

Published on 16th October 2008
JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) - Four of the five top rankings in Ernst & Young’s excellence in sustainability reporting survey, which was released on Thursday, went to companies in the resources sector.

Platinum producer Anglo Platinum, and synfuel producer Sasol shared this year’s top honours, followed by diversified miner BHP Billiton, gold producer Anglogold Ashanti, and financial service provider Standard Bank.

Ernst & Young associate director Jayne Mammatt said the tendency for resources to outperform other sectors was probably attributable to the fact that sustainability reporting evolved from environmental reporting.

“Resources companies are perceived as having a greater impact on the environment and, hence, focused efforts on this type of reporting long before other sectors. This could be a reflection of maturity, more than a reflection of the willingness to report,” she said.

$1,4bn South African energy coal projects heading for production – BHP Billiton


By:
Martin Creamer

Published on 22nd October 2008
Updated 42 minutes ago
The two combined-value $1,425-billion coal projects BHP Billiton was developing in South Africa were both "on schedule and within budget" for initial production in 2009 and 2010, the world’s largest diversified mining company said on Tuesday.

Releasing its quarterly report on exploration and development activities for the quarter ended September 30, BHP Billiton said that the $450-million Klipspruit energy-coal project was more than 50% complete and would begin producing in the second half of next year.

The far bigger $975-million Douglas-Middleburg Optimisation energy-coal project would then follow by mid-2010.

The company, headed by South African CEO Marius Kloppers, said that Klipspruit’s engineering was '’significantly advanced”, with civil works and plant erection “progressing well”.

New State mining company exempt from ‘application’ criteria only – DME


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By: Martin Creamer
Published on 21st October 2008

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) - The State mining company is exempt from the “application” criteria of South Africa’s minerals legislation only, and not from the legislation’s key “granting” criteria, says Department of Minerals and Energy (DME) DDG Jacinto Rocha.

Minerals and Energy Minister Buyelwa Sonjica has, in a Government Gazette notice, exempted the State-owned African Exploration Mining & Finance Corporation (AEMFC) – the vehicle for the development of the State mining company – from provisions dealing with applications for prospecting rights, mining rights and mining permits.

These provisions, South Africa’s Chamber of Mines (CoM) says in a media release, require applicants to submit environmental management programmes (EMPs), and to consult with interested and affected parties.

Rocha tells Mining Weekly Online that AEMFC will have to develop an EMP to fulfil the “granting” criteria, and will be required to consult with local communities in the process of developing that EMP.

Rocha adds that AEMFC will also have to comply with mine health and safety legislation, as well as with social and labour plans and black economic-empowerment requirements in the event of a mining right being granted.

AEMFC, he confirms, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the State-owned Central Energy Fund (CEF) and thus an organ of State.

South African Stocks Rise, Led by Anglo American, BHP Billiton


By Janice Kew

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- South Africa's main stock index rose for a third day, led by Anglo American Plc, the world's fourth- biggest diversified mining company, and BHP Billiton Ltd.

The FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index added 553.75, or 2.7 percent, to 21,267.01. The measure has dropped 36 percent from its May 22 record.

Ship unions accuse govt of apathy in hijack cases

22 Oct 2008, 0045 hrs IST, TNN
MUMBAI: While one more ship, an Indian cargo dhow with 13 crewmembers travelling from Somalia to Asia, was hijacked in the Gulf of Aden on Tuesday, I

ndian maritime unions declared a world-wide agitation against the governments inaction in ensuring a safe passage for seafarers in the pirate-infested area and release of the crew aboard hijacked Japanese vessel MT Stolt Valor.

A day after the agitation was launched, shipping minister TR Baalu got in touch with the unions to convene a special meeting to discuss the Japanese vessel. Under guidance from the National Union of Seafarers of India
(NUSI) and the Maritime Union of India (MUI), seafarers aboard four ships, including AB Tarapore, Desh Rakshak, Pratibha Tapi and Puneet that were scheduled to travel through the Gulf of Aden, have indefinitely postponed their departure. It would be postponed until maritime authorities furnish them with details about the action taken by the government, in MT Stolt Valor case, and also about whether it is safe for them to trade in the pirate-infested areas of Somalia.

Seafarers have already indicated that they are awaiting the response from maritime authorities failing which they will not be in a position to sail. This agitation will escalate further unless the government takes concrete steps, said general secretary of NUSI Abdulgani Y Serang.

Organic farming 'could feed Africa'

Traditional practices increase yield by 128 per cent in east Africa, says UN

By Daniel Howden in Nairobi
Wednesday, 22 October 2008

Organic farming offers Africa the best chance of breaking the cycle of poverty and malnutrition it has been locked in for decades, according to a major study from the United Nations to be presented today.

New evidence suggests that organic practices – derided by some as a Western lifestyle fad – are delivering sharp increases in yields, improvements in the soil and a boost in the income of Africa's small farmers who remain among the poorest people on earth. The head of the UN's Environment Programme, Achim Steiner, said the report "indicates that the potential contribution of organic farming to feeding the world maybe far higher than many had supposed".

The "green revolution" in agriculture in the 1960s – when the production of food caught and surpassed the needs of the global population for the first time – largely bypassed Africa. Whereas each person today has 25 per cent more food on average than they did in 1960, in Africa they have 10 per cent less.

Tapping into business opportunities at airports


Published: Wednesday, 22 Oct 2008

All over the world, airports are where people make good and regular income because they attract people. While many of the people in airports are there for travelling purposes, many come there for sight-seeing, while others come to assist travellers, who are either just going or coming from some places, which may be within or outside the country.

However, it has been discovered that not many are aware of the myriad of business opportunities available in the airport environment.

Airports in Nigeria have become increasingly lucrative following the entrance of new airlines and the development of new routes by existing and new carriers, which has in turn increased the numbers of travellers.

Recently, the Minister of Aviation, Mr. Felix Hyat, expressed the willingness to work with private organisations towards the development of the airports.