Day: November 19, 2025

  • Wike’s Handlers Need to Return to the Drawing Board: Why the Minister’s Communications Strategy Is Failing

    Wike’s Handlers Need to Return to the Drawing Board: Why the Minister’s Communications Strategy Is Failing

    Wike’s Handlers Need to Return to the Drawing Board: Why the Minister’s Communications Strategy Is Failing.

     

    By Musa Sunusi Ahmad

    When a political figure dominates headlines as consistently as Nyesom Wike, it is easy to assume their
    communications machinery is deliberate, coordinated, and airtight. Yet the opposite appears
    increasingly true. The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), known for his bold rhetoric and
    political unpredictability, is now surrounded by a communications ecosystem that often seems reactive,
    fragmented, and out of sync with both his style and his long-term intentions.

    In an era where public perception can shift overnight, Wike’s handlers face an urgent need to return to
    the drawing board and craft a communications strategy that is not only befitting of his political stature
    but also reflective of the complexities and contradictions that shape his leadership.

    A Communications Strategy That Has Lost Its Grip

    The first sign of strategic fatigue is the reliance on unrewarding media chats, spontaneous press
    engagements, and commentary that adds little value beyond sound bites. These occasional media
    interactions, once a hallmark of Wike’s direct style, have become platforms where messages are neither
    sharpened nor sustained.

    The danger of such tactics is simple: message dilution. Inconsistent and uncoordinated communication
    does more harm than silence, especially when it fuels confusion about intentions, policies, and goals.

    For a leader as influential and polarizing as Wike, this lack of communications structure creates narrative
    vacuums that critics, political opponents, and even allies are eager to fill.

    Handlers Who Don’t Know the Destination Cannot Shape the Journey

    A central problem seems to be that many of Wike's handlers simply do not understand his true
    intentions or ultimate political goal. Political communication requires clarity of purpose, but when aides
    and spokespeople speak without understanding the deeper vision, their messages become superficial,
    defensive, or contradictory.

    This disconnect is evident in:

    – Mixed messaging on FCT policies

    – Conflicting explanations on political alliances

    – Reactive responses to controversies instead of proactive framing

    A lack of narrative continuity between Wike’s past, present, and future political ambitions

    In professional communications, alignment is not optional, it is foundational. Without it, the handlers
    are left guessing, and the public is left confused.

    Scrapping Media Chats: A Necessary but Incomplete Step

    There has been talk in political circles about discontinuing the traditional Wike-style media chats. While
    this may reduce miscommunication, it does not solve the underlying problem.

    Scrapping media chats without replacing them with a structured communications architecture is like
    removing the engine from a car and hoping momentum alone will keep it moving.

    What Wike’s brand needs is not fewer engagements but smarter engagements:

    – Carefully curated interviews

    – Strategic op-eds

    – Narrative-driven public addresses

    – Data-backed policy briefings

    – Audience-specific messaging frameworks

    The goal isn’t to silence Wike, the goal is to manage the story.

    Rebuilding the Communications Machine: What Needs to Change

    To restore credibility and coherence, Wike’s communications team must undergo a strategic overhaul.
    This includes:

    1. A Unified Messaging Blueprint

    Clear pillars that define Wike’s identity, policy direction, and long-term political vision.
    Every spokesperson should speak from the same script, not the same sentences, but the same strategy.

    2. Proactive Agenda Setting

    Lead with announcements, not reactions.
    Shape the conversation before others shape it for him.

    3. Professionalization of the Comms Team

    Shift from loyalists to communications professionals equipped with political communication expertise,
    audience segmentation skills, and crisis communication experience.

    4. Internal Clarity Before External Messaging

    Wike himself must communicate his long-term intention, at least to his core strategists.
    When handlers know the destination, they can chart a coherent route.

    5. Replace Media Chats With Structured Communication Platforms

    Not less communication, better communication.

    A Leader With a Powerful Voice Needs a Powerful Strategy

    Nyesom Wike is a political force, energetic, influential, charismatic, and often unpredictable. These
    qualities can be strengths, but only when supported by a communications strategy strong enough to
    harness them.

    Right now, that foundation is shaky.

    To stay ahead of the political narrative and maintain credibility in the public eye, his handlers must
    return to the drawing board, rebuild the communications architecture, and adopt a strategy worthy of
    his stature.

    Because in modern politics, power is not only about what is done, but how it is communicated.

  • Kenya Clears Way for Rostam Aziz’s $130 Million Taifa Gas Terminal, Set to Become Africa’s Largest LPG Facility.

    Kenya Clears Way for Rostam Aziz’s $130 Million Taifa Gas Terminal, Set to Become Africa’s Largest LPG Facility.

    Kenya Clears Way for Rostam Aziz’s $130 Million Taifa Gas Terminal, Set to Become Africa’s Largest LPG Facility.

     

    Kenya has formally paved the way for the construction of Taifa Gas Investments’ $130 million LPG terminal in Mombasa, following a decisive ruling by the Environment and Land Court that dismissed a petition seeking to halt the project. The development marks a major boost for the country’s clean-energy ambitions and positions the facility as potentially the largest LPG terminal in Africa.

    The petition, filed by two residents from Likoni, challenged the project’s environmental approvals. However, the court upheld Taifa Gas’s preliminary objection, affirming that the company’s Environmental Impact Assessment licence had been lawfully issued and fully complied with Kenya’s environmental and constitutional requirements. With the case struck out, a previous restraining order automatically lapses, allowing construction to proceed.

    Taifa Gas founder Rostam Aziz welcomed the ruling, describing it as a strong validation of Kenya’s regulatory integrity and a boost for investor confidence. He said the 30,000-tonne terminal would play a transformative role in expanding clean-energy access, stabilising regional supply chains, and strengthening long-term energy security across East Africa.

    Aziz also highlighted the project’s community impact, noting that Taifa Gas is investing in social-economic programmes designed to uplift local communities, particularly by empowering women in the project’s surrounding areas.

    The court ruling also sets a significant legal precedent. Justice Stephen Kibunja underscored that environmental approvals issued by the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA) and upheld by the National Environment Tribunal (NET) cannot be subjected to repeated litigation by similar parties on the same grounds. The clarity, observers say, offers vital predictability for large-scale investors in the country.

    When completed, the LPG terminal is expected to play a central role in Kenya’s National Energy Policy (2018) and its clean-cooking strategy, which aims to increase household LPG penetration from 24% to 70% by 2028. With a 30,000-metric-tonne storage capacity, the facility is set to ease import constraints, enhance competition, stabilise prices, and ensure a reliable supply of LPG for domestic and industrial users.

    The project also aligns with broader regional goals under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the East African Community (EAC), strengthening cross-border energy cooperation between Kenya and Tanzania. Taifa Group, whose investments span energy, logistics, telecoms, mining, agriculture, and manufacturing sees the terminal as a cornerstone for long-term economic integration and cleaner energy adoption in the region.

    As construction resumes, the terminal is expected to generate jobs, support industrial growth, and reinforce Kenya’s emergence as a critical energy hub for East Africa.

     

  • China’s Premier Visits Zambia in Landmark Trip as Global Powers Compete for Investment Influence.

    China’s Premier Visits Zambia in Landmark Trip as Global Powers Compete for Investment Influence.

    China’s Premier Visits Zambia in Landmark Trip as Global Powers Compete for Investment Influence.

     

    China’s Premier Li Qiang has arrived in Zambia for a landmark state visit — the first trip by a Chinese premier to the country in nearly three decades — signalling Beijing’s renewed push to strengthen economic and strategic ties with the copper-rich nation.

    The visit comes as Zambia emerges from a prolonged debt crisis after restructuring about $13.4 billion in external obligations. China, which remains Zambia’s largest bilateral creditor with loans totaling $5.7 billion, is positioning the trip as a demonstration of its long-term commitment to Zambia’s economic recovery and development.

    Zambia is now shifting its focus from borrowing to attracting direct investment, especially in mining, infrastructure, industrial capacity, and clean energy. Chinese companies are expected to expand their footprint across these sectors, while Beijing aims to increase its exports of machinery, construction equipment, and other industrial goods to the Zambian market.

    Economic projections remain optimistic. The World Bank forecasts that Zambia’s economy could grow by 6.5% next year, one of the strongest outlooks in the region.

    Li’s visit also comes amid heightened scrutiny following an industrial incident earlier this year, when a Chinese-run copper operation spilled contaminated water into the Kafue River. The issue has drawn attention to environmental compliance and regulatory oversight in Zambia’s mining sector.

    China has also approved a significant upgrade of the historic TAZARA Railway, a key regional transport artery linking Zambia to Tanzania. The move is viewed as part of China’s broader strategic competition with Western-backed projects such as the Lobito Corridor, which is supported by the U.S. and European partners.

    According to China’s ambassador to Zambia, Han Jing, the visit is expected to result in “dozens of cooperation agreements,” covering areas such as industrial development, infrastructure, technology transfer, and social programmes. Beijing argues that its investment model is helping Zambia strengthen its economic resilience, expand value-added industries, and advance long-term development goals.

    Premier Li’s trip underscores Zambia’s increasingly pivotal role in the geopolitical competition for influence and investment across Africa, with both China and Western nations vying to position themselves as Lusaka’s most reliable development partner.

     

  • At a glance — why DRC matters.

    At a glance — why DRC matters.

    At a glance — why DRC matters

    The DRC holds the world’s dominant share of cobalt reserves and supplies the majority of global cobalt used in batteries; it’s also a top global producer of copper, and an important source of gold, tin (cassiterite), tantalum (coltan), tungsten and other strategic minerals.

    Main minerals & markets

    Cobalt used in lithium-ion batteries and specialty alloys. The DRC supplies the lion’s share of global cobalt (estimates commonly 70% of refined market share at times), making its policies and output critical for EV and electronics supply chains. Major buyers and processors are heavily concentrated in China.

    Copper  large industrial-scale mines (both foreign and state/joint ventures) produce copper that largely flows to global smelters and industrial buyers; copper is central to DRC export earnings.

    Gold, tin (cassiterite), tantalum (coltan), tungsten  often produced both by large companies and by artisanal and small-scale miners (ASM). Tin/tantalum/tungsten/gold (3TG) are the classic “conflict minerals” historically linked to insecurity in the eastern provinces.

    How minerals are produced and traded (formal vs. informal)

    Industrial mining: large-scale, licensed operations (often joint ventures with foreign companies) extract ore, which is sold/exported or processed locally if refineries exist. Foreign capital, particularly from Chinese firms — plays a major role in financing mines and infrastructure.

    Artisanal & small-scale mining (ASM): millions of Congolese depend on ASM for livelihoods. ASM is often informal, poorly regulated, and hard to trace, this creates major human-rights, child-labour and conflict-financing risks, plus difficulties for responsible sourcing. Recent efforts aim to formalize traceability of artisanal cobalt.

    Recent and high-impact policy moves (2024–2025)

    Export controls and quotas on cobalt: The Congolese authorities have used export suspensions and quotas on cobalt to try to stabilize prices and encourage local processing. In 2025 there were temporary export suspensions and later a quota regime introduced to control volumes and support prices. These measures directly affect global supply and prices because DRC supplies most cobalt.

    Moves to formalize artisanal cobalt: State and parastatal actors have begun traceability initiatives for artisanal cobalt (e.g., the first recorded shipments of traceable artisanal cobalt), aiming to improve ESG compliance and access to responsible buyers.

    Major commercial and geopolitical players

    China: Chinese mining firms and state-backed investments are deeply embedded in DRC mining (infrastructure-for-minerals deals, mine investments, and downstream processing). China is the biggest single market/processor for many DRC minerals.

    Global miners & traders: Multinationals (major miners, traders and refiners) operate mines, purchase concentrates, or source refined metal; they are affected by DRC export rules and by buyer due-diligence demands from Western OEMs and smelters.

    Supply-chain risks & governance challenges

    Conflict & financing of armed groups: Minerals from parts of eastern DRC have historically financed armed groups. International policy responses (e.g., regulatory due-diligence regimes and corporate sourcing policies) target this risk, but impacts on peace and local welfare are mixed.

    Illicit trade & smuggling: Porous borders, weak governance in certain regions, and complex trading networks create avenues for smuggling, often rerouting minerals through neighboring countries and complicating traceability.

    Human rights & labor risks: Child labor, hazardous working conditions, and lack of social protections are persistent problems in ASM operations. Traceability and formalization programs aim to tackle this but scale and enforcement are challenges.

    International regulation & corporate due diligence

    OECD Guidance: Companies sourcing from conflict-affected and high-risk areas are urged to follow the OECD due-diligence guidance for responsible mineral supply chains; this is the prevailing international standard for corporate traceability and risk-mitigation.

    U.S. Dodd-Frank (Section 1502) and disclosure rules: U.S. regulation has required, in different forms over time, traceability and disclosures for 3TG minerals from the DRC/adjoining countries and public reporting/ enforcement debates continue about their effectiveness. GAO and other reviews have questioned how much disclosure rules alone have improved peace and security.

    Economic impacts and revenue management.

    Revenue potential vs. capture: Minerals are a huge revenue potential for DRC but translating resource wealth into inclusive development is hampered by limited processing capacity, governance shortfalls, illicit trade and renegotiations over royalties/terms. Recent export policies (quotas, bans) are explicitly intended to capture more value domestically (e.g., by favoring local processing) and to stabilize export revenue.

    Recent trends you should know (2024–late-2025)

    Price and policy volatility: Oversupply and price drops in cobalt markets have driven government interventions (export suspensions/quotas) to support prices. Those interventions materially reshape global supply expectations.

    Traceability experiments scaling: The first significant batches of traceable artisanal cobalt were reported (2025), showing pilots that could unlock responsible buyers for ASM-sourced cobalt if scaled.

    Large Chinese investments continue: Chinese firms keep committing large capital (both for mines and associated infrastructure), shifting the investment and geopolitical balance of DRC mineral trade.

    Practical implications for different actors

    Buyers / OEMs: Need robust due-diligence (OECD framework), multi-tier traceability, and monitoring of regulatory changes (quotas, export bans) to manage supply risks.

    Investors / traders: Must model political risk (export controls, quota enforcement) and ESG liabilities tied to ASM and conflict-area sourcing.

    Policymakers / advocates: Should balance revenue capture and local processing goals with protecting ASM livelihoods and preventing unintended displacements or illicit markets. Traceability pilots show promise but need scale and safeguards.

     

  • International Men’s Day 2025: Celebrating Men and Boys Across Africa and the World.

    International Men’s Day 2025: Celebrating Men and Boys Across Africa and the World.

    International Men’s Day 2025: Celebrating Men and Boys Across Africa and the World.

     

    ABUJA, Nigeria – November 19, 2025 – PR TIMES AFRICA

    Today, November 19, the world marks International Men’s Day (IMD), a global occasion dedicated to recognizing the positive contributions men make to their families, communities, societies, and the world at large. The day also shines a spotlight on positive male role models and raises critical awareness about men’s physical, mental, and emotional well-being.

    This year’s global theme, “Celebrating Men and Boys”, underscores the importance of honoring the achievements and potential of men and boys while addressing the unique challenges they face in the 21st century.

    As African nations continue to champion gender equity and inclusive development, International Men’s Day serves as a timely reminder that supporting men’s health and positive masculinity is essential for stronger families and thriving communities across the continent.

     

    Historic Global Webcast

    To commemorate the day, the International Men’s Day coordination team invites everyone across Africa and beyond to participate in a landmark International Men’s Day Global Webcast.

    The live online event will feature prominent leaders, advocates, and change-makers from the global men’s movement. Speakers will share powerful real-life stories, practical insights, challenges faced by men and boys worldwide, and innovative solutions for building healthier, more supported male populations.

    Whether you are in Nairobi, Johannesburg, Accra, Lagos, Cairo, or any corner of the continent, this webcast offers a unique opportunity to listen, learn, and contribute to the conversation on positive masculinity and men’s well-being in Africa and globally.

     

     

     

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