Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Thursday, November 29, 2018
ADfB
The African Development Bank
(AfDB) says it has financed more than 100 projects worth more than US$2 billion
in Mozambique over the last 40 years and plans to invest more in the country, mainly
in the areas of energy, agriculture and infrastructure.
In a summary of its activities in
Mozambique that was released on Tuesday night, AfDB said it has, among other
projects, funded the construction of more than 800 kilometres of roads in
Mozambique over the past 10 years, secured safe drinking water for nearly two
million people, and helped more than 8,000 peasant families improve their
incomes.
It said it has also helped create
about 1,500 jobs through the Nacala rail project, in addition to financing the
construction of 1,350 kilometres of electricity transmission lines, which
allowed access to more than 822,000 people.According to this financial
institution up to December 2017 its total portfolio in Mozambique consisted of
20 loan operations, worth US$623 million.
The bank also says it will
implement a new strategy that will be based fundamentally on investment in infrastructure
and agriculture.AfDB representative Pietro Toigo
said the new strategy is expected to help catapult Mozambique, and the rest of
Africa, in the area of agriculture and infrastructure development.“It will be a strategy to boost
rural development in Mozambique, to create jobs and diversify the economy,” he
said.
Anardarko
Anadarko
Mozambique Area 1, LTDA, a wholly owned subsidiary of Anadarko Petroleum Corporation,
on behalf of the co-venturers in Mozambique’s Offshore Area 1, today announced
the selection of a consortium consisting of TechnipFMC and VanOord as the
preferred tenderer for the engineering, procurement, construction and
installation (EPCI) of the offshore subsea system for its Mozambique LNG
project.
“Selecting
the preferred tenderer for the EPCI contract for the offshore subsea system is
another major step for the Anadarko-led Mozambique LNG project in moving toward
an expected FID (Final Investment Decision) in the first half of 2019,” said
Mitch Ingram, Anadarko Executive Vice President, International, Deepwater and
Exploration.
“TechnipFMC
and VanOord bring additional proven experience to the project and further
demonstrate our continued commitment to advancing this important project toward
first cargoes. We congratulate them and look forward to working together toward
a safe and successful outcome for the people of Mozambique and our
partnership.”
Learn
more about Mozambique LNG at www.mzlng.com.
“Ahlu Sunna Wa-Jama” = "People of your age and the collective"
A
guard who works at the palace of the governor of the northern province of
Niassa, Francisca Tomas, died on Friday night in an ambush by armed men against
a truck near the Ruassa river, on the border between Niassa and the
neighbouring province of Cabo Delgado, according to a report in Tuesday’s issue
of the independent newssheet “Carta de Mocambique”.The paper’s sources link the
attack to the islamist insurgency under way in parts of Cabo Delgado since
October 2017. If this connection is true, then this is the furthest west the
terrorists have struck.The truck was carrying merchandise from Niassa to the
port of Pemba, on the Cabo Delgado coast. The vehicle was hit after it had
crossed the river and was heading towards the town of Balama.
This
is the nearest attack so far to Niassa. The administrator of the Niassa
district of Marrupa, Angelina Nguirazi, said she is concerned by the situation
because her district borders on Cabo Delgado. “Carta de Mocambique” says the
Niassa authorities are worried at the possibility that the Cabo Delgado
insurgency will spill over the provincial boundary.Certainly Francisca Tomas
herself believes that the islamists are recruiting youths in Niassa. The
paper’s sources say that in recent rallies in Majune and Mavago districts,
Tomas has warned that “young people from Niassa are dying in Cabo Delgado”.
To
discourage Niassa youth from embarking on such potentially lethal adventures,
campaigns of civil education to dissuade people from joining the terrorist group
are under way in Mecula and Marrupa districts.The insurgents are known in Cabo
Delgado as “Al Shabaab”, although there seems to be no direct connection with
the Somali terrorist group of that name. The group calls itself “Ahlu Sunna
Wa-Jama”. It makes standard jihadist demands for the imposition of Sharia and
for banning the sale of alcohol. Orthodox moslem groups in Cabo Delgado, and
elsewhere in the country, have denounced the group, denying that they are truly
moslems at all. (AIM)
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