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Selasa, 06 Maret 2018

Q-MHI Africa Weekly Brief ;

AWB 15

Hi, Q-MHI Africa readers!

EVERYDAY IS FOR THE THIEF

Hasil gambar untuk the impact of illegal financial flows in West Africa
There is so much written about the impact of corruption and illegal activity in Africa, it’s easy for one’s eyes to glaze over when yet another report on the topic lands in your inbox.
Yet, an OECD report looking into the impact of illegal financial flows in West Africa tries to provide some nuance to the issue by attempting to understand both the ongoing causes and the long-term and wider impact of IFFs on both the economies and ordinary people.
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The report goes with the UN Economic Commission for Africa’s estimate of $50 billion a year lost to IFFs a year for the entire continent, though that number is often disputed with ranges between $30 billion and $70 billion a year.
A currency trader performs a transaction on the streets of Harare in this Friday, Oct. 28, 2016 photo.Hasil gambar untuk the impact of illegal financial flows in West Africa
Criminal economies generate illicit flows which “undermine country capacities to finance their development,” according to the report. “West Africa arguably experiences the negative impacts of illicit flows most acutely.”
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IFFs are typically broken into three broad areas: corruption, such as theft and bribery by government officials; commerce, including tax evasion, mis-invoicing and money laundering through commercial transactions; and crime, everything from drug trafficking and smuggling to counterfeiting and terrorist financing.
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Of the many insights from the research, the disadvantage of a predominantly informal economy stood out. Depending on the country, informal enterprise in West Africa is estimated to be anywhere between 40% to 75% of GDP and employs some 50% to 80% of the available workforce.
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“It is often hard to draw the line at where livelihoods end and criminality begins,” say the authors. Of course, it’s not that informal transactions automatically equate to illicit activity, but it is less straightforward to decide who is involved in a licit versus illicit transaction. For example, the reliance on cash or absence of bank accounts makes it much easier for illicit dealings when there’s no electronic trail. The report goes as far as to link this to an increased risk of money laundering and terrorist financing.
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Ultimately, these countries will still need better leadership to have any chance of slowing, much less stopping, the type of illegal behavior for which impunity reigns at the highest levels. “Politics, governance and illicit activity are often interconnected, and public officials often wear multiple hats—as public officials but also as private individuals connected to local networks, and sometimes linked to criminal or illegal activity. Loose lines and affiliations cause the licit and illicit to become blurred.”
— Yinka Adegoke, Q-MHI Africa editor

STORIES FROM THIS WEEK

The Nissan Micra in local taxi colors in Ibadan"Ready?"Waiting.
Why is a 1990s Japanese mini car the taxi of choice in one of Nigeria’s biggest cities? In Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, the classic 1990s Nissan Micra is the preferred taxi of choice for as many as six passengers at a time despite its small size. Paul Adepoju and photographer Sunday Olaoye visited to find out why the small car is still the king of the road.

Cast member Chadwick Boseman poses at the premiere of "Black Panther" in Los Angeles, California, U.S., January 29, 2018.Marvel Studios' BLACK PANTHER..L to R: Okoye (Danai Gurira), Nakia (Lupita Nyong'o) and Ayo (Florence Kasumba)..Photo: Matt Kennedy..©Marvel Studios 2018
The political and economic dynamics of “Black Panther.” Besides breaking box office records, the superhero film was groundbreaking in drawing on the culture and style of various African ethnic groups.Wakanda may not have been real, but the Black Panther costume designer Ruth Carter and Hannah Beachler, the film’s production designer, both drew on very real tribes and cultures to represent the various peoples that form part of the nation of Wakanda.
In Black Panther, Wakanda is a kingdom made up of several different tribes, each with their own distinctive style. Carter and Beachler researched traditional culture and clothing which they drew from across different parts of the continent.
A group of men gather in front of a poster advertising the film "Black Panther" on its opening night of screenings at the AMC Magic Johnson Harlem 9 cinemas in Manhattan, New York, U.S., February 15, 2018.Black Panther GIF
An impromptu review by the Q-MHI Africa team noted Wakanda’s beauty and technological advances but also picked up on its familiar political and economic imperfections.The following conversation (which contains more than a few spoilers) took place in a Slack channel for Quartz Africa correspondents, Abdi Latif Dahir in Nairobi, Yomi Kazeem in Lagos and Lynsey Chutel in Johannesburg.
YouNeek characters s
The excitement around the movie is set to become a boon for Nigeria’s comic books and animation industry.The release of the Black Panther movie is also timely for these two companies. Comic Republic plans to release its first animated feature based on Guardian Prime, its flagship character, in two months. Vortex also plans to roll out an animated series on video on demand platforms and cable TV channels by the middle of the year.The acceptance of the very African features of Black Panther’s fictional origins is encouraging for local comic companies who can tap into local mythology, history and culture. For instance, Okupe’s successful sophomore novel Malika: Warrior Queen, is set in the 15th century based on the story of Nigeria’s Queen Amina.
Cast member Lupita Nyong'o poses for a portrait while promoting the movie "Black Panther" in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., January 30, 2018. Picture taken January 30, 2018. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni - RC1D5B0ECB70
Also, its star actress Lupita Nyong’o is quietly inking a string of strategic deals to become Hollywood’s next, and first African, super producer.The Oscar-winning Kenyan actress is using her platform in Hollywood to tell African stories. Not only is she bringing in a new dimension to on-screen representation, Nyong’o also gets to create the kind of roles she’d like to play.

People queue to use the automated teller machine (ATM) in front of First bank along a road in Apapa district in Lagos
The battle for mobile money, interoperability and financial inclusion in Africa. Despite a long-stated ambition to go cashless, Nigeria stays primarily cash-based. Many find it hard to get their own cash have to rely on pop-up stores to withdraw money at an exorbitant fee.
A Zimbabwean man speaks on his phone outside a branch of mobile service provider Econet Wireless in central Harare
In Zimbabwe, where there’s a long-running liquidity problem, the new government is pushing for interoperability in the mobile sector to encourage digital payment.The idea of interoperability in simple terms is to enable a mobile money customer on one network’s proprietary system to send or receive money from another customer on a different network. Regulators typically want this to help boost competition, drive financial inclusion and encourage consumer usage. Network operators are less keen due to the short to medium costs as well as the fact it it reduces the need for customers to own multiple phone services to move money around.
Pedestrians walk past a mobile phone care centre operated by Kenyan's telecom operator Safaricom in the central business district of Kenya's capital Nairobi, May 11, 2016.
Yet in Kenya, where Safaricom owns the world-leading mobile money platform M-Pesa, a debate is brewing over whether its dominance hurts competition.This change of direction underlies the controversy surrounding Safaricom’s market share, and the smaller operators’ insistence that its dominance is essentially anti-competitive. It also part of a broader public debate that revolves around whether Safaricom needs extra regulation, and if its deep-entrenchment in Kenya’s economy could have far-reaching consequences in the event of a system-wide collapse or compromise. For the regulators, the vexing concern has been about creating a market that would attract sustainable investment, facilitate the growth of smaller operators, and ultimately give consumers more choice through competitive and high-quality services.

Foreign tourists in safari riverboats observe elephants along the Chobe river bank near Botswana's northern border where Zimbabwe, Zambia and Namibia meet, March 4, 2005.Elephants like these in the Chobe National Park are developing survival mechanisms in response threats.
How African elephants migrate to safety across borders and tell each other how to get there. Poaching, urbanization, and the pressures of conflict have increasingly put the lives of the world’s largest land mammals in danger. But as Kanika Saigal documents, elephants are developing a sophisticated system of sounds, gestures, and chemical secretions to help each other survive.
Two men pose with smartphones in front of a screen showing the Telegram logos in this picture illustration taken in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina November 18, 2015. The mobile messaging service Telegram, created by the exiled founder of Russia's most popular social network site, has emerged as an important new promotional and recruitment platform for Islamic State. The service, set up two years ago, has caught on in many corners of the globe as an ultra-secure way to quickly upload and share videos, texts and voice messages. It counts 60 million active users around the world. Picture taken November 18.
Telegram rules in Ethiopia while rest of Africa is dominated by WhatsApp. Though a recent survey showed WhatsApp is Africa’s favorite messaging app, Ethiopia stood apart. Telegram, which has a smaller global user, is dominant in Africa’s second most populated country. Here’s why it’s so popular there.
Teenagers coding at the Apps & Girls offices in Dar es Salaam.Brainstorming session
Coding is helping close the gender gap in Tanzania’s tech industry. An almost equal number of men and women enroll for science and technology courses in Tanzania, yet twice as many men are hired in those fields as women. From Dar es Salaam, Abdi Latif Dahir reports on how female-focused coding programs are springing up to help address this issue.

CHART OF THE WEEK

Software developers work on computer sytems at the Information Technology Developers Entrepreneurship Accelerator (iDEA) hub in the Yaba district in Lagos June 25, 2015. At first glance, Yaba is like many other parts of Nigeria's sprawling commercial capital: a cacophony of car horns and shouting street vendors, mingling with exhaust fumes and the occasional stench of sewage. But in between the run-down buildings in this seemingly inauspicious part of Lagos, a city of around 21 million, tech start-ups are taking root and creating a buzz that is drawing international venture capitalists and more established digital firms. Picture taken June 25, 2015.   - RTX1M6M2
Venture funding for African startups increased by over 50% in 2017. With their global appeal to investors increasing, capital funding for African startups recorded 53% year-on-year growth, according to Partech Ventures. As Yomi Kazeem explains, growth was led by fintech startups as well as the off-grid energy and insurance sectors.

OTHER THINGS WE LIKED

The brutal world of sheep fighting in Algeria. In Algeria, sheep are groomed to battle by smashing heads and bludgeoning each other into submission. In The GuardianHannah Rae Armstrong explains how the game is linked to younger men’s search for purpose and to release repressed frustrations about joblessness and a lack of education.
A chef’s goal to restore a forgotten West African grain. During the French colonization of Senegal, the country started importing broken rice from Vietnam, undermining the place of the fonio grain in households. In the New York Times ($), Tejal Rao writes about how Senegalese-American chef Peter Thiam wants to restore the grain’s place in local cuisine.
American and French soldiers attend a daily briefing with the Nigerien military commander in charge of the fight against Boko Haram (not pictured) at a Nigerien military base in Diffa, Niger, March 26, 2015.Agadez_6.04.2017-1518803396Police officers stand guard during an official ceremony in Agadez, Niger, January 15, 2018.
The desert drone base that risks destabilizing Niger. The United States is building a drone military base in the Niger city of Agadez for $110 million. In conversations with locals, politicians and lawmakers for The InterceptJoe Penneydelves into questions about the legality of the base and what it means for foreign military involvement in West Africa.

Q-MHI Africa 

Minggu, 04 Maret 2018

MHI RESOLUTE READS

MRRREAL NEWS PRESIDENT TRUMP DOESN’T WANT YOU TO MISS

White House Counsel reveals the secret of Trump’s judicial selection process

Don McGahn talks about the Citizens United decision at the Cato Institute in 2013. (YouTube screenshot/Cato Institute)
– The Daily Caller
White House Counsel Don McGahn joined the Conservative Political Action Conference this week, where he detailed President Donald J. Trump’s judicial selection process. McGahn noted that selecting judges has been an integral part of the President’s deregulatory agenda, and that the President is “particularly keen on nominees who will police federal agencies.”

7 times Trump has been tougher on Russia than Obama

Putin Trump
– The Washington Free Beacon
Elizabeth Harrington at The Washington Free Beacon details 7 ways in which President Trump has been tougher on Russia than President Obama. Her list includes missile defense, arming Ukraine, closing Russian diplomatic facilities, and disavowing the Iran Deal.

U.S. Treasury official says era of congratulating China is over

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– Bloomberg
Andrew Mayeda reports that a senior U.S. Treasury official says America wants to see China “back up its professed support for open trade” instead of “perpetuating a system that worked for their benefit but ended up costing jobs in most of the rest of the world.”

White House says US could reach 3 percent growth rate

– The Associated Press
The Council of Economic Advisers released its annual economic report this week, which predicts average annual growth of 2.2 percent through 2028. The report also notes that if there is a “full implementation of the Administration’s agenda,” the U.S. economy would likely reach a growth rate of 3 percent through the next decade.

Bernie blames Hillary for allowing Russian interference

– Politico
Politico documents Democratic infighting on the question of Russia. “The real question to be asked is what was the Clinton campaign [doing about Russian interference]? They had more information about this than we did,” Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) asked on Wednesday.

Don’t forget small businesses. We’re booming under Trump tax cuts, too

GTY 881043460 A POL USA DC
– USA Today
In an op-ed, Gary Rabine writes about the tremendous effects of the President’s tax cuts on small businesses. He notes that his company alone is “green-lighting two start-ups, doubling research and development, hiring more people and giving larger raises and bonuses.”

Ivanka Trump to meet South Korea’s Moon on Olympics trip: official

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– Reuters
Ivanka Trump is headed to South Korea to lead the U.S. delegation to the closing ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics. She will reaffirm the U.S.-South Korea alliance and cheer on the great American athletes who represent our country on the world stage.

Black and Decker expansion to bring 400 jobs to Baltimore County

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– WMAR Baltimore
On Tuesday, the company Stanley Black and Decker announced its plans to expand operations in Maryland. The company plans to hire for 400 positions across electrical and electromechanical engineering, digital and brand marketing, industrial design, finance and human resources.
MHI RESOLUTE LOGO MEDIA HUKUM INDONESIA

WHITE HOUSE REPORT

WHR 1To : <redaksi@mediahukumindonesia.com>Date : Thu, 22 Feb 2018 23:36:01 +0700   Subject : Hearing every voice
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Hearing every voice 


President Donald J. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos sat down yesterday afternoon with a large group of students, teachers, and community leaders to discuss how America must improve safety at schools across the country.
The meeting drew numerous participants from the Parkland, Florida, community. For much of the afternoon, students led the discussion. Fifteen-year-old Justin Gruber reminded attendees that 19 years ago, one of America’s most high-profile mass school shootings happened at Columbine High School. “I was born into a world where I never got to experience safety and peace,” he said.
That needs to change. President Trump has pledged more than just action—he has committed his Administration to finding real, workable solutions to end the violence. “It’s not going to be talk like it has been in the past,” the President told students and families yesterday. “It’s been going on too long. . . . We’re going to get it done.”
That starts with making sure that every voice is heard.

‘One of the towering figures of the last 100 years’ 

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The Reverend Billy Graham, one of the most influential spiritual leaders in modern American history, passed away yesterday at his home in Montreat, North Carolina. He was 99.
The President and First Lady felt Graham’s passing as a personal loss. “Melania and I were privileged to get to know Reverend Graham and his extraordinary family over the last several years,” President Trump said in a statement. “We are deeply grateful for their love and support.”
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Billy Graham changed America for the better. “In the wake of the September 11th attacks in 2001, America turned to Billy Graham at the National Cathedral, who told us, ‘God can be trusted, even when life seems at its darkest,’” President Trump’s statement said. “We are thinking of him today, finally at home in Heaven.”

The Moon, Mars, and worlds beyond 

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Last fall, President Trump told the Nation that to win the next frontier, America would once again look to send human beings to the Moon—and beyond.
Yesterday, Vice President Pence led the second meeting of the National Space Council at the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida. The Space Council had “laid dormant for nearly a quarter-century” before President Trump revived it last year, Vice President Pence noted during his remarks.
“The record is clear: Under President Donald Trump, America is leading in space once again,” the Vice President said.
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That leadership is continuing forward on several fronts. Vice President Pence will deliver four recommendations to President Trump to reform the commercial space regulatory environment, including transforming the launch and re-entry licensing regime.
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Photo of the Day

President Donald J. Trump hosts a listening session with high school students and teachers | February 21, 2018 (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)

POTUS TODAY

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This morning, President Trump and Vice President Pence will meet with state and local officials about school safety.
The Vice President is also delivering remarks at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

White House Press Briefing ( 2/22/18 ):

THE WHITE HOUSE US-WhiteHouse-Logo.svg MHILOGO MEDIA HUKUM INDONESIA

Sabtu, 03 Maret 2018

WEST WING MHI Daily

WWMD

U.S. companies growing increasingly upbeat about world economy

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“American business confidence in the world economy has surged, adding to an uptick in overall optimism as U.S. tax cuts and looser regulation improve the outlook for domestic growth, according to a new study,” Vince Golle reports for Bloomberg. “The survey also showed 89 percent were confident in the U.S. economy’s prospects this year, up from 80 percent in 2017 and 39 percent in 2016. Some 70 percent said the reduction in tax rates would benefit their companies,” Golle notes.

Soaring economic optimism could torpedo Dems' 'blue wave' midterms
“Bad news for Democrats: House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) tax bill ‘crumbs’ are feeding a monster rally in optimism across the country,” Liz Peek writes in The Hill. “Approval of the GOP tax cuts climbs steadily higher, fueling faster growth and increasing investment and undermining Democrats’ chances of a ‘blue wave’ in November,” Peek explains.

“President Donald Trump awarded 12 Americans the Medal of Valor Tuesday, including six heroes who responded to the 2015 San Bernardino shooting,” CNN reports. Allie Malloy writes that the President “heralded the recipients for their service and sacrifice before awarding them the medal, the highest possible decoration for bravery by public safety officers.”

President Trump's plans represent the gold standard in pro-immigrant policy
JuanPablo Andrade writes in The Hill that “after years and years of a failed immigration system, the president has finally introduced common sense immigration reform.” Andrade notes that “since the president’s first day in the White House, Democrats in Congress have tried to undermine him in every way they can. The Democrats have always portrayed themselves as siding with immigrants, but in actuality, it’s the White House and the Republicans who have been working hard to come up with the most sensible solutions.”

In RealClearPolitics, David Farr and Jay Timmons write that “the past year has been transformational” for American manufacturers. “We hear it every day from manufacturers of all types, from large iconic brands in big cities to family-owned businesses in small towns: We’ve never been this optimistic about the future.”
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