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Economic hardship looms over Ghana as country readies for polls

When the Ghanaian opposition leader Nana Akufo-Addo won the presidential election on his third attempt in 2016, many saw it as a turning point. The first person to unseat an incumbent, his historic win captured his compatriots’ frustration. Alleged corruption had ballooned under his predecessor, John Mahama: in one instance, Mahama accepted a $100,000 (£79,000) car from a foreign contractor that his spokesperson said was put into a pool of presidential vehicles; in another, judges were captured on video collecting bribes to dispense justice. Power outages nicknamed “dumsor” kept hospitals unlit for hours, and celebrities carried lanterns in the streets in protest. The cedi depreciated by 200% within a decade of its redenomination to equal the dollar and the country sought a bailout from the International Monetary Fund to stabilise the economy. Akufo-Addo was seen as a messiah, an image reinforced by his eloquence. “I am promising you that, within 18 months of a new government of the NPP [New Patriotic party], under my leadership, the face of our country, Ghana, is going to change,” he said in a November 2016 speech on the campaign trail. “We are going to get out of stagnation and backwardness, and move our country on to the path of progress and prosperity.” As his eight-year presidency comes to an end, the country has largely been safe despite rising conflict in its northern neighbour, Burkina Faso. Two oilfields were discovered in 2019, boosting government revenues and allowing it to spend more on social programmes. Salaries for teachers and medical personnel were increased, a departure from the prior administration’s stance. And there was a controversial purge that stabilised the banking sector. Still, many critics say he and vice-president Mahamudu Bawumia – the ruling party’s candidate in the 7 December presidential election – steered the country into hardship, especially in their second term. To win, Bawumia will have to get past Mahama, who is contesting for a third time. In the past three years, the cedi was one of the world’s worst-performing currencies and public debt was 72.3% of Ghana’s GDP as of December 2023. Despite being one of the world’s leading gold and cocoa producers, Ghana returned to the International Monetary Fund [IMF] for another bailout in 2022, unable to meet its debt obligations. That same year, one lawmaker called Bawumia an “economic Maguire” in parliament, a reference to the then-underperforming British defender. Electricity blackouts have made a comeback and illegal mining, once a peripheral phenomenon, has spread across 14 of the country’s 16 regions, experts say. Allegations of corruption and nepotism are still around: more than a dozen relatives of the president or ruling party officials were appointed to his cabinet and to head government agencies. And under Akufo-Addo, an acclaimed human rights lawyer, dozens of activists were arrested at separate protests against illegal mining, poor governance and a draconian anti-LGBTQ bill. ‘A deep hole’ Even the government’s accomplishments have come under fire. Since 2017, thousands if not millions of schoolchildren have benefited from the flagship free senior high school policy and free meals for those in lower cadres. But a 2023 Afrobarometer report shows that, while young Ghanaians are indeed more educated than generations before them, they are also more unemployed. The ruling party secretary Haruna Mohammed defended the government, saying it had provided more than 2.3 million jobs and “uncountable” indirect jobs, before giving an awkward analogy about why there was still unemployment. “[It’s] just like you saying that you want to make sure that the [voter] register does not have dead people,” he said. “People will die even before the elections. You cannot say that, even on the day of elections, you will not have dead people on the register because people will still die after cleaning the register. So you cannot say that you are going to do away with unemployment issues.” After a call by the president for members of the Black diaspora to visit Ghana and settle there, beginning from 2019, thousands of people flocked in. The government says it made millions in revenue but local people say the action, though well-intentioned, triggered inflation, particularly in the real estate and hospitality sectors. When the Covid-19 pandemic hit, Akufo-Addo handled the situation impressively: he gave regular televised addresses while his administration enforced quarantines and lockdowns; a trust fund was set up as well as a $209m (£165m) relief fund. But then senior government officials misappropriated funds for health workers; a tax instituted to cushion government coffers at the time is still being collected four years on, on everything from food to toiletries. “It is not surprising that the Covid tax is still there, because it’s filling a deep hole within the government’s revenue framework,” said Priscilla Baffour, a senior lecturer in economics at the University of Ghana. “And so I’m sure managers of the economy are keeping it there because, if they take it out … how can they make up for the shortfall?” Chasing legacy With only days to what is a close election, the incumbent will hand over to either his loyal deputy or to his great rival. In Ghanaian political history, elections have often been decided by a runoff after every eight years, usually in favour of the party in opposition. A Bawumia presidency would also be the first time a Muslim has become head of state in the west African nation, where more than 75% are Christians, since the return to multiparty democracy in 1992. Joshua Zaato, a policy analyst and senior lecturer at the University of Ghana’s political science department, said: “Mahama is the only president who can say he didn’t do two terms so, to him, it’s personal. “He doesn’t want history to treat him as an afterthought. But [the president] also wants to be the one who has helped make the first Muslim president … and handed over to his vice-president. “Economists can always talk about [the economy] but his ultimate objective should be to also hand over stable, secure, safe democracy because that would be the final act of his legacy … it is that act that has elevated former [president] Jerry John Rawlings to statesmanship now,” he added, referring to the former strongman who led Ghana into a multiparty democracy. The economy began rebounding this year, with a 6.9% growth in the second quarter, but some experts remain cautious. “Whoever becomes the next president has their work cut out for them,” said Baffour. “In terms of the path that we are on, we are seeing great signs of recovery in the economy … [but] this is also on the back of an IMF programme. When Ghana is under an IMF programme, the evidence is there, the country does well … [but] when we exit the programme, then the fiscal indiscipline comes in and the cycle continues.” In the streets, people say the growth is yet to trickle down to them. “Business is not good at all,” said Francisca Abbey, a 27-year-old trader at Makola market who is not voting on Saturday. “This corn dough has been on the stands for three days now, yet no one has approached me to buy. I can only blame the bad economy for this slow business. Compared with 2016 … I used to run out of dough before midday.” Additional reporting by Caleb Ahinakwah in Accra

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Man jailed for life for murder of university student that horrified Italy

Filippo Turetta has been sentenced to life in jail for the murder of Giulia Cecchettin, a university student whose brutal killing cast a grim spotlight on femicide in Italy. Cecchettin, 22, was stabbed more than 70 times before her body was wrapped in black plastic bags and dumped in a ditch close to a lake north of Venice in November last year. Her murder triggered protests across the country. Turetta, Cecchettin’s ex-boyfriend, was arrested in Germany on 19 November 2023, the day after her body was found. He told Venice’s assise court in October that he had planned to kidnap and kill Cecchettin after she refused to get back together with him. Judges also ordered Turetta to pay a total €760,000 in compensation to the Cecchettin family. Prosecutor Andrea Petroni called for a life sentence, saying that Turetta had acted with “particular brutality”. Turetta’s lawyer, Giovanni Caruso, had argued that the life sentence was excessive, saying his client was “not Pablo Escobar”, the notorious Colombian drug baron. Cecchettin, a biomedical engineering student, disappeared on 11 November 2023 after going to a shopping mall in Marghera, accompanied by Turetta, to buy a dress for her upcoming graduation. During the week-long police search, a roadside surveillance image emerged of Turetta hitting Cecchettin, who could be seen trying to escape before being forced back into the car. Commenting on the verdict, her father, Gino, told reporters that “justice has been done according to the laws in force”. He added, however, that “as a society, we have all lost”. He said last week that his daughter’s memory had been further “humiliated” by the Turetta comparison with Escobar. Caruso on Tuesday shook hands with her father, reportedly telling him: “I understand. It’s my job, it’s not easy.” Andrea Camerotto, Cecchettin’s uncle, told reporters: “I am not for forgiveness; I will never forgive [the person] who killed my niece and I will never forgive those who harm women.” Cecchettin’s relationship with Turetta lasted about a year before she ended it in August 2023. Her sister, Elena, told the Guardian last week that the “control and manipulation” had started early on, with a fit of jealousy after Giulia said she was going to meet a male friend she had known from high school. He had never previously been physically violent, she added, but as with many femicide cases, Turetta could not accept that the relationship had ended. A foundation was set up last month in Cecchettin’s memory. Since Cecchettin, 106 women in Italy have been killed by a man. In the vast majority of cases the suspect was either a current or former partner.

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Hamas and Fatah agree to create committee to run postwar Gaza Strip

Hamas and Fatah – the two main Palestinian factions which have been at odds for almost two decades – have agreed in talks in Cairo to create a committee that will jointly run the postwar Gaza Strip. While Israel had refused to countenance a “day after” governing scenario involving Hamas or the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority (PA) in the West Bank, the move nonetheless signifies fresh willingness from Hamas to give up its rule of Gaza and could help advance internationally mediated ceasefire talks. In talks brokered by Egypt, the two sides agreed on a committee of 10 to 15 politically independent technocrats, most of them from Gaza, who will administer education, health, the economy and aid and reconstruction with the help of international actors, negotiators said on Tuesday. It would also jointly administer the Palestinian side of the Rafah border crossing into Egypt – the only way in and out of the territory not connected to Israel. The Fatah delegation must seek final approval from the PA president, Mahmoud Abbas, on its return to the West Bank, the Associated Press reported. Who would sit on the committee had not been finalised. There was no immediate comment from Israeli officials on the agreement. Hamas, an Islamist movement, and Fatah, which is secular, have been at loggerheads since a brief civil war that led to Hamas’s takeover of the Gaza Strip in 2007. Many reconciliation initiatives over the years since have failed. The military wings of both parties are considered terrorist organisations by many western countries, but the Palestinian Authority cooperates with Israel on security issues, a measure that has helped make it deeply unpopular with the Palestinian public. Abbas, 89, was elected to a four-year-term in 2006 but has served as president ever since. Last month, he appointed an interim successor for the first time, but his pick – Rawhi Fattouh, the low-profile president of the Palestinian National Council – was widely interpreted as an effort to prevent a power struggle inside Fatah, keeping power concentrated within Abbas’s inner circle when, or if, he steps down. Attempts at brokering a lasting ceasefire and the return of Israeli hostages held in Gaza, led by Egypt, Qatar and the US, have stalled repeatedly since the war broke out after Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023. The Biden administration, seeking to build on the implementation last week of a fragile truce between Israel and the Lebanese group Hezbollah, said it has renewed efforts at a ceasefire in the Palestinian territory. So far there has been no indication that either side has changed its terms for a deal. Hamas says that any agreement must mean a final end to the war, and Israeli troops must withdraw. Israel says the conflict will end only when the remaining 100 or so hostages have been returned and Hamas is completely destroyed, and insists Israeli troops must remain in the strip. Joe Biden has called for a revitalised Palestinian Authority to govern the West Bank and Gaza as a prelude to eventual statehood, while president-elect Donald Trump is likely to support plans by elements of Israel’s far-right government to annex parts of the territories.

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Syrian insurgents advance on Hama city after capturing Aleppo

Syrian insurgents fighting forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have launched attacks in the central province of Hama, threatening to cut off government troops from a key route linking the capital, Damascus, with rebel-held Aleppo. The army was engaging in “violent confrontations” with armed groups in Hama, the Syrian state news agency Sana reported. Insurgents said they were positioned about 6 miles from Hama city, the country’s fourth largest city, and that their forces had captured the towns of Maardis and Soran just north of the city. Separately, a longtime independent war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said on Tuesday morning that rebel factions in the province had managed to seize several towns in the last few hours. “Syrian and Russian air forces carried out dozens of strikes on the area,” said the Britain-based monitor, which has a network of sources inside Syria. After their lightning assault on Aleppo over the past few days, militants led by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) have advanced south towards Hama. The city sits on a critical road linking Aleppo in the north with major central locations such as Homs city, the coastal ports of Latakia and Tartous, and Damascus in the south. Hama was a bastion of opposition to the Assad government when pro-democracy protests first erupted during the Arab spring in 2011. A bloody response by security forces to peaceful marches across the country led the opposition to arm itself, and a years-long civil war ensued. Since retaking Aleppo in 2016, Assad has regained a tight grip over the country, although he has never fully retaken all of Syria’s borders. The sudden insurgent victory in Aleppo is the most serious challenge to the dictator’s control in years. Rebel groups backed by Turkey have also engaged in the fight. Several hundred miles to the east of Aleppo, fighters from a US-backed, Kurdish-led coalition battled government forces early on Tuesday, opening a new front for Assad’s military. The fighting by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) was reported in villages across the Euphrates River from the regional capital, Deir ez-Zur. The UN high commissioner for human rights, Volker Türk, voiced concern on Tuesday about the escalation of hostilities in north-west Syria. Medics have reported intensive aerial attacks by Syrian and Russian jets. Türk’s office said it had documented “a number of extremely concerning incidents resulting in multiple civilian casualties, including a high number of women and children,” from attacks by HTS and pro-government forces. The UN says nearly 50,000 people have been displaced by the fighting that has killed hundreds, mostly fighters, since the end of November. Russia, along with Iran, is a key backer of Assad and entered the Syrian civil war nearly a decade ago in support of his regime. Meanwhile, HTS, a former al-Qaida affiliate, is fighting alongside rebel groups backed by Turkey. The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who is a main backer of groups opposed to Assad, said on Tuesday that the advance by militants showed that the Syrian president needed to hold talks with the opposition. The rout of Syrian army forces from Aleppo and reports that their defensive lines have crumbled has undermined Assad’s already fractured control of the country. While his forces still control Hama, the city has a long history of dissent against dynastic, authoritarian rule. Assad’s late father, Hafez, repressed an anti-government uprising there in 1982. On Tuesday an AFP journalist in the northern Hama countryside saw dozens of Syrian army tanks and military vehicles abandoned by the side of the road leading to Hama. Assad has remained a pariah figure in the west although there have been recent attempts to reopen diplomatic channels. The US state department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a briefing on Monday that Assad was “a brutal dictator with blood on his hands, the blood of innocent civilians,” and that Washington’s stance on his rule had not changed. Reuters, the Associated Press and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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Le Pen claims no-confidence motion only way to protect French public from ‘dangerous’ budget – as it happened

France’s centre-right prime minister, Michel Barnier, has told parliament that he will push the government’s proposed social security budget through without a vote. It means the government will face a vote of confidence from opposition parties, reported to take place tomorrow afternoon. The far-left France Unbowed (LFI) opposition party said it would bring a no-confidence motion after Barnier. Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (RN), which has demanded changes in the 2025 budget, said it would back the move. Le Pen, who has been embroiled in a high-profile embezzlement trial, said that backing a no-confidence motion is the only constitutional way to protect the French public from a “dangerous, unjust and punitive budget”. She added that a motion of censure “is not a coalition or a political agreement”. If Barnier loses the vote, he will probably stay in power in a caretaker capacity while the country’s president, Emmanuel Macron, tries to find a replacement, but there is a range of other possibilities. The French President is in Saudi Arabia on a diplomatic visit. We are pausing this blog now, but will restart it at 7pm (GMT) when Barnier is expected to address the media. In the meantime, you can read all of our coverage about France here.

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Middle East crisis: Israel will not differentiate between Lebanon and Hezbollah if ceasefire collapses, defence minister Katz says – as it happened

It is 5pm in Beirut, Tel Aviv and Gaza City, and 6pm in Damascus Israel’s defense minister Israel Katz has threatened that if the ceasefire in Lebanon collapses, Israel’s forces “will no longer” differentiate “between Lebanon and Hezbollah”. Katz, who was visiting the north of Israel, threatened “if we return to war we will act strongly, we will go deeper, and the most important thing they need to know, that there will be no longer be an exemption for the state of Lebanon” Lebanon’s National News Agency has reported that caretaker prime minister Najib Mikati has held a series of diplomatic meetings today in which he “stressed … the priority of stabilising the situation for the return of the displaced to their towns and regions and expanding the army’s deployment in the south” Israel’s military has reiterated its order prohibiting Lebanese civilians from returning to their homes in dozens of villages in the south of Lebanon In Syria insurgents fighting forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have launched attacks in the central province of Hama, threatening to cut off government troops from a key route linking the capital, Damascus, with rebel-held Aleppo. The army was engaging in “violent confrontations” with armed groups in Hama, the Syrian state news agency, Sana, reported Health services are no longer functioning in the Syrian city of Idlib after a series of airstrikes on key hospitals damaged intensive care units and specialised services, doctors said. At least two intensive care patients have died because of power and oxygen shortages caused by the airstrikes, according to the rescue group White Helmets, and hospitals have had to evacuate patients or move them into basements Palestinian news agency Wafa reports that Israeli security forces have raided the Turkish governmental hospital in Tubas in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Pictures sent over the news wires from the scene appear to show Israeli troops detaining Palestinians. Wafa claimed the Israeli forces “arrested a number of citizens, including a doctor” The Hamas-led health authority in Gaza has issued new casualty figures for the conflict, stating that in the last 24 hours, 36 people have been killed and 96 injured in Israeli attacks. It claims the total death toll in Gaza since 7 October 2023 now stands at 44,502 Palestinians killed and 105,454 injured