In this edition: Africa-France summit unlocks $50B, Ramaphosa to contest impeachment inquiry in cour͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
thunderstorms Nairobi
sunny Pretoria
sunny Addis Ababa
rotating globe
May 13, 2026
semafor

Africa

Africa
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Today’s Edition
  1. Africa-France investment
  2. Ramaphosa to contest inquiry
  3. S. Africa’s new graft arrest
  4. US to confirm new Africa chief
  5. EV demand grows
  6. Airtel Africa revenues soar

A debut short story collection from Rwanda.

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First Word
Aid for minerals, Yinka Adegoke.

Few US-Africa policies have been more controversial than the pivot to aid-for-minerals under the Trump administration. But the strategy may not be as new as it appears.

In a recent speech about securing critical mineral supply chains, the US Development Finance Corporation chief pointed to the Marshall Plan — an American-led initiative to rebuild European economies post World War II. He suggested that Washington was granted “first priority” to Europe’s raw materials in exchange for capital investment.

The comments raised some eyebrows. Were they an attempt to “justify” the new US strategy in Africa, asked Katie Auth of the Energy for Growth Hub think tank in an incisive Substack post. Auth argued that while the Marshall Plan wasn’t primarily about minerals, it did eventually help the US win more access to them, and noted legislative provisions have long embedded expectations of US commercial advantage in aid and development arrangements, even as Washington remained the world’s largest provider of foreign assistance.

On that reading, the Trump-era approach may represent less a break with tradition than a more explicit, less diplomatic articulation of longstanding practice.

The shift under the Trump administration, however, is one of emphasis, according to Daniele Nyirandutiye, a former senior USAID official who is now partner at Washington-based Desmos Capital Partners: “The question is whether leading with mineral extraction, rather than investment and mutual benefit, produces the durable relationships that actually serve US long-term interests.”

African governments have good reason to be cautious, particularly where mineral access is framed alongside sensitive sectors like public health, and they are not passive actors: Just last week, Zambia said it had opposed a US attempt to tie health funding to access to critical minerals. As Zainab Usman of Columbia University notes, the continent’s nations now operate in a more competitive environment. “This time around, the global economy is much different, the US is still No. 1 but China is hot on its heels. African countries have some options now compared to previous eras.”

Agency might not guarantee good outcomes, but it does change the calculus for Washington as much as for the capitals on the other side of the table.

🟡 Tiisetso and I will be in Kigali this week setting up meetings with the business community. Email me if you’re going to be around.

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1

Africa-France summit unlocks $50B

A chart showing investment into Africa compared to other regions.

Nigerian industrialist Aliko Dangote’s promise of an East African oil refinery headlined nearly $50 billion in investment commitments announced at the inaugural Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi.

Dangote’s project is backed by the governments of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, according to Kenya’s President William Ruto, who framed the “$16 billion to $20 billion” refinery as a matter of geopolitical necessity given the backdrop of fuel price spikes caused by the Iran war.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who co-hosted the two-day summit with Ruto, meanwhile announced $27 billion in projects by major French and African companies across energy, artificial intelligence, agriculture, and logistics, part of a broader push to reframe France’s Africa ties around industrial partnership and private capital rather than aid and security.

— Yinka Adegoke

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2

Ramaphosa to contest impeachment inquiry

 
Tiisetso Motsoeneng
Tiisetso Motsoeneng
 
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa.
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa. Adriano Machado/Reuters.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa pledged to challenge a decision by the country’s top court reviving an impeachment inquiry against him, shifting the fight from a hostile parliament to the courts and easing pressure on the fragile coalition government.

His late-night televised announcement on Monday came days after South Africa’s Constitutional Court ordered lawmakers to restart scrutiny that was halted when they binned a report that found evidence of wrongdoing in Ramaphosa’s handling of the 2020 theft of foreign currency from his Phala Phala game farm.

Ramaphosa said he disagreed with the report’s reasoning, arguing that its findings were based on “hearsay” and that there was “no evidence” to show he violated the constitution or the law, vowing to challenge the report in court. Opposition parties, such as the Economic Freedom Fighters, accused him of seeking a long court battle to delay accountability and called for his resignation.

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3

South Africa arrests intelligence chief

Senior Crime Intelligence Officer Feroz Khan.
Senior Crime Intelligence Officer Feroz Khan. OJ Koloti/Gallo Images via Getty Images.

South Africa charged the head of police counter-intelligence with corruption and gold smuggling in a fresh blow to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s administration as it struggles to convince investors it can contain the risk of organized crime bleeding into the broader economy.

The arrest of Feroz Khan lands in the middle of a national inquiry into political interference and the criminal infiltration of South Africa’s security services. South African authorities have mounted a high-profile push to break protected networks widely thought to have become deeply embedded in the state.

Khan, a veteran official who once served on former South African President Nelson Mandela’s security detail, faces charges including corruption and the illegal possession of and dealing in precious metals. Prosecutors allege he and his co-accused facilitated a gold smuggling syndicate operating through South Africa’s O.R. Tambo International Airport.

Tiisetso Motsoeneng

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4

US poised to get new Africa policy chief

Frank Garcia, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs.
Frank Garcia, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs. Von Batten-Montague-York, LC/X.

The US Senate is poised to soon confirm Frank Garcia as Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, giving President Donald Trump a permanent Africa policy chief 16 months into his second term.

But the expected confirmation of the former Republican congressional aide and intelligence specialist will raise a more fundamental question: Whether Garcia or Massad Boulos — Trump’s in-law and the White House’s Senior Advisor for Arab and African Affairs — will actually drive Africa policy. Boulos has led Washington’s most high-profile diplomatic efforts on the continent, including interventions for the conflicts in Sudan and eastern DR Congo. A Senate aide told Semafor that during consultations, Garcia himself seemed uncertain about how the division of labor would work and hadn’t yet spoken to Boulos about it.

Adrian Elimian

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5

EV demand in Africa soars

A chart showing the cost of driving in Kenya per kilometer, by vehicle type.

Demand for electric vehicles in Africa is surging, as the energy crisis sparked by the war in Iran exposes the risks of overreliance on fuel imports on the continent. In 2025, African countries imported more than 44,000 electric vehicles from China, according to China’s commerce ministry, up from more than 19,000 in 2024. A third of last year’s fleet was destined for Ethiopia, which banned imports of gas- and diesel-fueled vehicles in 2024. Egypt, Morocco, and South Africa have also launched a major push toward EV use.

Bob Wesonga, policy and investments lead at the Africa E-Mobility Alliance, told The Associated Press that EVs had already eased pressure on fuel demand. “A private EV owner now spends roughly $4 a month on charging compared to about $27 previously spent on fuel,” he said. “This creates a buffer against global oil volatility.”

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6

Airtel Africa revenues soar

$6.4 billion.

The revenue earned by telecom group Airtel Africa in the year to March, marking a nearly 30% year-on-year increase. Airtel operates in 14 sub-Saharan African countries and experienced a 10% rise in its customer base in the same period, driven by double-digit percentage growth in both the number of its data and mobile-money subscribers.

African mobile network operators are increasingly diversifying their services away from voice and text features to benefit from growing internet access, especially for smartphone users. Airtel said data revenues — which rose by 35.2% within the period — have become the largest component of its revenues, and that customers now consume 8.9 gigabytes per month on average, up from 7 gigabytes a year ago. Sunil Taldar, Airtel Africa’s CEO, said the company has leaned on “new digital technologies and AI” to help it unlock growth opportunities. But he warned that increasing energy costs due to the Iran war would “likely lead to increased cost inflation.”

Alexander Onukwue

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Plug

The Africa Debate 2026 returns to Guildhall, London, on 3 June. Hosted by Invest Africa, this year’s theme—Redefining Partnership: Navigating a World in Transition—brings together African heads of state, including H.E. John Dramani Mahama, President of Ghana, as well as ministers and business leaders to debate the forces shaping the continent’s economic future. See the full speaker list, and secure your place.

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Continental Briefing

Business & Macro

🇿🇦 South African multinational MTN Group reported that its core earnings rose 27.9% to $1.67 billion in the first quarter.

🇧🇯 Smallholder farmers in Africa will receive new funding to strengthen food security as part of a $39 million grant from the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program, a World Bank-hosted multilateral financing platform.

🇿🇦 South African tech firm Prosus said that it hit its $7.3 billion target in e-commerce revenue for the 2026 financial year.

Climate & Energy

🇳🇬 🇲🇦 Nigeria and Morocco are due to sign an agreement in the fourth quarter of 2026 to advance a $25 billion Atlantic coast gas pipeline project, Nigeria’s foreign ministry said.

Geopolitics & Policy

🇿🇦 South Africa’s unemployment rate inched higher, hitting 32.7% in ‌the first quarter of 2026 up from 31.4% in the preceding quarter.

🇸🇳 Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye is personally conducting crisis talks with the IMF after months of tensions over previously unreported spending.

Tech & Deals

🇨🇬 Congo Brazzaville requested talks with the IMF on a new financing program, the country’s finance ministry said.

🇪🇹 The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the continent’s largest pharmaceutical company Aspen Pharmacare are in talks about boosting local drug manufacturing on the continent.

🇳🇬 Metro Africa Xpress, a Nigerian mobility financing startup focused on EVs, secured $8 million in debt funding from Triple Jump, a Netherlands-based impact investment manager.

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Outro
A Thread of Silent Echoes by Patrick Nzabonimpa.
Vine Leaves Press/Amazon.

A new short story collection brings together 14 stories set in Rwanda. In A Thread of Silent Echoes, Rwandan writer Patrick Nzabonimpa explores themes of heartbreak, betrayal, resilience, and survival. A working poet and journalist, Nzabonimpa “offers a layered meditation on identity, belonging, and the invisible threads connecting past and present,” noted Brittle Paper. The pressures of viral fame, greed, and unplanned pregnancy are among the subjects he examines in the book alongside the social realities of contemporary Rwanda. Last year Nzabonimpa published his comic book, Mutoni: The Innovator of Kiruku, which follows the journey of a teenage girl fascinated by science.

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Semafor Spotlight
What Asia fears more than a US-China showdown.

View: Asia-Pacific economies’ worst nightmare is a world in which Washington and Beijing cut bilateral deals and leave everyone else out in the cold. →

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