Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Africa Intelligence Brief - September 23, 2025


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Africa's regions saw significant developments across business, politics, and security. In North Africa, monetary policy steadied in Morocco as the central bank held rates and an industrial expansion advanced with a new armored-vehicle plant.

East Africa's agenda featured a potential aviation stoppage in Kenya after a seven-day strike notice, while Uganda's election season advanced as President Yoweri Museveni was cleared to run in 2026.

West Africa moved on two marquee decisions: Nigeria delivered its first policy-rate cut since 2020, and the Sahel's military-run states announced a coordinated withdrawal from the International Criminal Court.

Central Africa was in the UNGA spotlight as Congo's President Félix Tshisekedi reaffirmed that the DRC won't“auction” its minerals, keeping doors open to both U.S. and Chinese partners while pressing security concerns in the east.

In Southern Africa, South Africa and China unveiled new investment moves in mining and energy, and Zimbabwe lifted its 2025 growth forecast on stronger tobacco and gold output.
North Africa
Morocco Holds Key Rate at 2.25%
Bank Al-Maghrib kept its benchmark rate unchanged, citing subdued inflation and external risks while projecting steadier growth into 2026.

Why it matters: A prolonged low-inflation window supports real incomes and investment planning, even as drought, trade frictions, and global rates remain swing factors.


Tata Opens Armored-Vehicle Plant Near Casablanca
India's Tata Advanced Systems inaugurated a facility aligned with Morocco's defense-industry build-out and local supply-chain ambitions.

Why it matters: The plant deepens Morocco 's manufacturing base and signals growing defense-industrial diversification on the continent.
East Africa
Kenyan Aviation Workers Serve Strike Notice
The aviation workers' union issued a seven-day notice demanding changes at the airports authority, threatening disruptions at JKIA and other airports.

Why it matters: Any stoppage at East Africa's busiest gateway would ripple through tourism, cargo flows, and regional connectivity.
Museveni Cleared to Run in 2026
Uganda's Electoral Commission approved President Yoweri Museveni's candidacy, setting up another contest likely against a strong opposition field.

Why it matters: The ruling extends a long-running incumbency and raises scrutiny of electoral conditions, rights, and stability heading into 2026.
West Africa
Sahel Trio to Quit the ICC
Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger jointly announced their withdrawal from the International Criminal Court, sharpening their sovereignty push and legal break with The Hague.

Why it matters: The exit complicates accountability pathways for conflict-related abuses and signals further divergence from Western partners.
Nigeria Cuts Policy Rate to 27%
The Central Bank of Nigeria reduced the MPR by 50 bps, its first cut since 2020, citing continued disinflation and growth support.

Why it matters: Lower borrowing costs could ease debt-service pressure and support credit, but the naira, inflation path, and capital flows remain key constraints.
Ghana Deports 11 West Africans Amid Rights Concerns
Authorities deported a group of West Africans previously transferred from the U.S., drawing scrutiny from rights advocates over refoulement risks.

Why it matters: The case spotlights migration governance, due-process standards, and cross-border coordination in the sub-region.
Central Africa
DRC Reaffirms Strategic Minerals Stance at UNGA
President Tshisekedi said Congo will not“auction” its resources, welcoming partnerships with both the U.S. and China while pressing for an end to support for M23.

Why it matters: Policy clarity on minerals shapes EV-supply-chain bets and the tenor of great-power competition in Central Africa.
Southern Africa
South Africa–China Investment Push
At a bilateral forum, Beijing and Pretoria flagged new capital for mining and energy and discussed expanded zero-tariff access.

Why it matters: Fresh Chinese investment offers buffers amid tariff headwinds and persistent domestic power constraints.
Zimbabwe Lifts 2025 Growth Forecast to 6.6%
Harare raised its outlook on strong tobacco and gold output, alongside progress on energy refurbishment and market-access deals.

Why it matters: A stronger baseline could bolster fiscal space and external perceptions, though currency stability and drought risk remain key variables.

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