logo
'Africa wants investment, not aid': Ramaphosa urges Japan to back trade and industrial growth

'Africa wants investment, not aid': Ramaphosa urges Japan to back trade and industrial growth

IOL News4 hours ago
President Cyril Ramaphosa told the Tokyo conference in Japan to partner with Africa and South Africa and not deliver aid only.
Image: GCIS
President Cyril Ramaphosa has delivered a message at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD), calling on global partners—particularly Japan—to shift from aid-based engagement to investment-focused collaboration with Africa.
Speaking at the plenary session on the economy, Ramaphosa said Africa is ready to shape its future amid a rapidly evolving global landscape.
"Africa is not seeking aid. It is seeking partners. Partners that understand value co-creation, sustainable development, and mutual industrialisation," he said, drawing strong reactions from delegates attending the high-level summit.
Ramaphosa stressed that Africa, and South Africa in particular, is responding to global economic uncertainties, the transformation of trade patterns, and the rise of new industrial revolutions with bold reform and strategic intent.
He outlined how South Africa was modernising its economy to attract and sustain foreign investment.
'We have stabilised our energy supply and are modernising our infrastructure. We are opening ports and rail to private sector investment,' he said, noting that these reforms are aimed at supporting South Africa's re-industrialisation agenda centred on localisation, green energy, and regional integration.
Ramaphosa also highlighted South Africa's expanding manufacturing base, particularly in electric vehicles, green hydrogen, health products, and digital infrastructure.
These sectors, he said, offer opportunities for investors who are looking for sustainable and scalable partnerships.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) featured prominently in his speech.
Ramaphosa called it "central to our economic vision," and positioned South Africa as a gateway for Japanese and global firms to access the growing African market.
'We are actively working with the AfCFTA Secretariat to finalise value-chain protocols in automotive, agro-processing, pharmaceuticals and textiles,' Ramaphosa said.
He added that efforts are underway to harmonise rules of origin and upgrade border infrastructure to enable efficient trade.
In a thinly veiled reference to recent US tariff hikes on African goods, Ramaphosa warned of the dangers of over-reliance on single markets and underscored the importance of diversifying trade partnerships.
'We call on our Japanese counterparts to support tariff cooperation to ease market access for African goods,' he said.
He also reiterated South Africa's commitment to creating a conducive investment environment and called for partnerships in financing infrastructure, digital transformation, skills development, and youth innovation.
Through his remarks, Ramaphosa reaffirmed South Africa's long-standing push to promote investments over aid—a message he has consistently stressed in engagements with international partners.
'Let us work together not as donors and recipients, but as equal partners building a prosperous future,' he said.
[email protected]
IOL Politics
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nairobi slum pageant gives platform to voiceless
Nairobi slum pageant gives platform to voiceless

IOL News

time17 minutes ago

  • IOL News

Nairobi slum pageant gives platform to voiceless

Rozelda Kim (second right), 21, reacts after being named Miss Kibera 2025 on the main stage on church grounds in the Kibera informal settlement of Nairobi, last weekend. Mr. & Ms. Kibera annual pageant champions "bold voices, brilliant minds, and inspiring stories" emerging from Kibera, aiming to showcase youth leadership, resilience, and creativity in East Africa's largest urban informal settlement. A stone's throw from Kibera, Kenya's largest informal settlement, a young woman glides down a spotlit catwalk, her delicate white dress at odds with the fake blood splattered across it and the tape covering her lips reading: "Stop, silence, gender-based violence." The annual "Mr and Ms Kibera" pageant in Nairobi, gleefully attended by hundreds, is about more than just the contestants' looks -- it provides a much-needed platform for expression and protest. For many of those taking part, the cool August evening was a chance to voice support for youth-led demonstrations and freedom of speech or to condemn violence against women. Gender-based violence in the east African country has been labelled a "femicide" by activists, who have urged the government to act. Waves of anti-government demonstrations have also taken place -- the latest in June and July killing 65 people -- with rights groups alleging police brutality, a long-running issue in Kenya. At the pageant, one contestant's tank top simply read: "Stop killing us." Their speeches and protest acts are as key to their success in the contest as their appearance. Now in its 20th year, the pageant has offered scores of young people from the neighbourhood -- where many still lack clean water and regular electricity -- the chance to step out of a cycle of poverty, violence and crime. "Many people don't see anything positive coming from a slum," said founder Ben Ooko. "Yet, there are hidden gems in our community just waiting to be discovered." The pageant teaches participants how to express themselves in public and build self-confidence, he said. "We are looking at young people who are able to stand up and speak for the challenges of other young people," he added. Twenty years ago, Kepha Ngito became the first Mr Kibera. Thanks in part to a scholarship from the pageant, Ngito was able to move off the streets and is now a development consultant. Despite no longer living in Kibera, he still comes back to help young people stuck in what he calls an "environment of indignity". The pageant offers people a chance to demonstrate their potential, he said. "We want to show the world that we have our own definition of beauty and that definition is resilience," he said. Another former participant Pauline Akiniyi, 30, who took part in 2016, has gone on to open a women's shelter in Kibera. Towards the end of the evening, the winners are announced, with the crown going to 21-year-old Rozelda Kim. "It's not just a beauty pageant... It's a microphone to speak louder," she said. The nursing student will use her victory to help her community, changing perceptions about an often-maligned part of the capital. "Your social background doesn't define you," Kim said. | AFP

Parliamentary committees to engage Lamola, Motshekga on SANDF chief's remarks in Iran
Parliamentary committees to engage Lamola, Motshekga on SANDF chief's remarks in Iran

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Parliamentary committees to engage Lamola, Motshekga on SANDF chief's remarks in Iran

Mayibongwe Maqhina | Published 2 days ago The parliamentary Committees on Defence and International Relations and Cooperation plans to engage with Minister Angie Motshekga and Ronald Lamola over comments made by SANDF Chief, General Rudzani Maphwanya during his recent visit to Iran. This will be after President Cyril Ramaphosa has scheduled a meeting with Maphwanya. Maphwanya caused a storm last week when it emerged that during a visit to Tehran he pledged 'common goals' with Iran and claimed his trip carried 'a political message'. His trip, sanctioned by Motshekga, took place amid tensions between South and the US with President Donald Trump imposing a 30% tariff on South African goods. The Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Defence and Military Veterans, Dakota Legoete, and the Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on International Relations, Supra Mahumapelo, noted with concern Maphwanya's remarks during his visit to Iran. Legoete and Mahumapelo also noted with alarm that the Department of International Relations and Cooperation has publicly distanced itself from the General's comments while the Presidency described the visit as 'ill advised'. They said the committees will have a joint meeting to engage with Lamola and Motshekga on the issue. Legoete said it was evident that there was a worrying lack of coordination between defence diplomacy and South Africa's official foreign policy. 'This disjuncture exposes potential misalignment and cohesion in the country's approach to international relations,' he said. Legoete added that the Department of Defence should draw long-term lessons from these events and ensure thorough alignment, going forward. He further stressed that the committee awaits the outcome of engagements between Ramaphosa in his capacity as Commander-in-Chief of the SANDF, Motshekga and SANDF leadership. 'These engagements must demonstrate unity, strength and synergy in how South Africa conducts itself on the international stage.' Legoete reiterated the committee's stance that 'the SANDF must remain a professional and apolitical institution, focusing squarely on its constitutional mandate to safeguard the Republic, while steering away from statements in the political domain'. Last Thursday, the Presidency said Ramaphosa was unaware about the 'ill advised' visit by Maphwanywa to Iran. Ramaphosa's spokesperson Vincent Magwenya stated that Ramaphosa did not sanction Maphwanya's visit as Motshekga approved the travel. 'As much as the president is the appointing authority and the commander in chief, he does not get involved in supervising the general's travel. That process sits with the minister. So the President did not know.' Both the Department of International Relations and Cooperation and Defence have distanced themselves from Maphwanya's remarks, citing that Ramaphosa and Dirco were custodians of foreign policy. Magwenya said Ramaphosa will meet Maphwanya within the next week regarding his 'ill-advised' trip. 'I can't say when that meeting will happen, but there will be an engagement between the President and the general. So it's still early to say what the outcome of that engagement will be.' He would not comment on the possible consequence for the defence chief amid calls by the DA for him to be hauled before a court martial. [email protected]

Trevor Manuel calls for full government support for 2027 Cricket World Cup
Trevor Manuel calls for full government support for 2027 Cricket World Cup

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Trevor Manuel calls for full government support for 2027 Cricket World Cup

With much of the focus on boosting tourism and building the tournament's long-term legacy, full support will be required from government for the 2027 Cricket World Cup to succeed, according to local organising committee (LOC) chairperson Trevor Manuel. The Citizen reports that former minister of finance under three consecutive presidents, Manuel, was announced today as chairperson of a 15-member LOC board revealed for the quadrennial tournament. National co-operation crucial 'The success of the Cricket World Cup will largely be because national government can bring all three spheres of government into play. It's fundamentally important,' he said. Manuel stressed it was crucial to think beyond the tournament, with various public sector institutions needed to ensure visitors return to South Africa. 'The experience is what matters. The experience is what will be lasting and will bring people back to South Africa,' Manuel said. 'It can't just be a set of events in 2027. It needs to be an all-in effort, so I think we're going to depend very much on government to be able to deliver and work with us.' Government ready for the challenge Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie said the national government had committed to the tournament and would play its part. 'When it is necessary for South Africa to rise to the occasion, it never fails, so from government's side we are born ready for these types of events,' McKenzie said. World cup is 'an African project' Early independent studies suggested over 27 000 job opportunities would be created by the tournament and more than R15b would be contributed to the nation's GDP. With the tournament co-hosted by Zimbabwe and Namibia, Cricket South Africa board chairperson Pearl Maphoshe said it was a great opportunity to expose the sport to more people across southern Africa and beyond. 'This event is significant, not just for South Africa but for Africa as a whole… because it is more than a sporting event for us. It's a national project and indeed an African project that we embrace with a sense of responsibility,' Maphoshe said. 'It is an opportunity for us to showcase the very best of who we are as a country.' Tournament schedule A total of 44 matches will be played at eight stadiums around South Africa during the 2027 Cricket World Cup in October and November, while 10 games will be contested at venues in Bulawayo, Harare and Windhoek. 2027 Cricket World Cup LOC board of directors Trevor Manuel (independent chairperson), Johannes Adams (non-executive director), Yunus Bobat (non-executive director), Herman Bosman (non-executive director), Vuyani Jarana (non-executive director), Nomfanelo Magwentshu (non-executive director), Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka (non-executive director), Ravi Naidoo (non-executive director), Stavros Nicolaou (non-executive director), Philip October (non-executive director), Karrisha Pillay (non-executive director), Unathi Matthew Tshotwana (non-executive director), Pholetsi Moseki (ex-officio, CSA CEO), Tjaart van der Walt (ex-officio, CSA CFO), Refentse Shinners (ex-officio, CSA PAE) Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel. Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store