The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1
The EconomistJuly 21 st 2018 Middle East and Africa 35

1

2 gan does not intend to reverse the tide. He


has threatened to take the war against the
YPGinto otherparts ofSyria. Thisputs him
on a collision course with America which
teamed up with the Kurds against Islamic
State (IS) and still sees them as insurance
against an IS resurgence. (It denies their
links to the PKK.) Mr Erdogan is not per-
suaded. “We have told all our allies and
friends not to stand between us and terro-
rists”he said earlierthisyear. Theprospect
of an escalation is not far-fetched. Insur-
gents allied with Turkey have clashed with
American troops in eastern Syria.
Tensions between the two allies have
recentlyeased. UnderTurkishpressure the
Americans persuaded the YPG to with-
draw from Manbij which the Kurds cap-
tured from IS two years ago. Turkey and
Americaalsoagreedtoco-ordinate patrols.
But Turkeynowsays that unless YPGforces
east ofManbijdisarm itwillbe onlyamat-
ter of time before Turkey attacks the group.
“The plan is for the YPG to go without a
fight but if they want one we will give
them one” says one Turkish diplomat.
But Turkey may have bitten off more
thanit canchew. SecurityinAfrinis getting
worse. A double bombing in June killed
ninepeople. Reports ofinfightingand loot-
ing continue to surface. People in Afrin
chafed under YPG rule a local resident
says but the insurgents who followed are
worse. “The Turks must make these mon-
sters go home.” 7

I


N Arough-and-readychurchinIfo on the
northern fringe of Lagos Prophet Em-
manuel Akanni and Prophetess Foluke
Akanni do extraordinary things. During
moments of religious ecstasy Mr Akanni
receives visions that indicate which of his
congregants are strugglingto conceive chil-
dren. By holding a chicken’s egg over a
woman’s belly he claims to be able to spy
into her womb. Then he uses herbs and
prayers to effect a cure. “There is nothing
God cannotdo” adds Mrs Akanni.
The fertility rate in Nigeria is estimated
to be 5. 4 implyingthat theaverage woman
can expect to have that manychildren dur-
ing her life. Yet many Nigerians experience
infertility. Chelsea Polis of the Guttmacher
Institute a think-tank and her colleagues
estimate that 31 % ofNigerian couplesfailto
conceive a child after 12 months of unpro-
tected sex—a rate at least as high as in the
West. In a country where a woman’s
worth is defined largely in terms of her
ability to bear children there is a growth
market for fertility treatments ofall kinds.
When Richardson Ajayi created the
Bridge Clinic in 1999 in vitro fertilisation
(IVF) was still a novelty in Nigeria. He had
to fly in doctors and send blood samples
abroad for hormone analysis. Today the
technology is widespread and private IVF

Infertility in Nigeria

A bad place to be


barren


LAGOS
Ina countrywithlots ofbabies
infertilitytreatmentis booming

K


ING MOHAMMED VI of Morocco has
had a quiet year. The monarch who
has visited at least 14 African countries
since October 2016 scaled back his travels
after a heart operation in February. But he
still managed to play host to Mali’s prime
minister in March and visit Congo-Brazza-
ville in April. Last month he tookthe Nige-
rian president Muhammadu Buhari on a
motorcade tour of the capital Rabat flat-
teringhim with cheeringspectators.
Like their king Moroccan companies
are also lavishingattention on west Africa.
The African Development Bank estimates
that 85 % of Morocco’s outward foreign di-
rect investment ( FDI) goes to sub-Saharan
Africa. Trade lags behind but this too is
growing. Exports of Moroccan goods to
west Africa tripled from 2006 to 2016. The
king brings large trade delegations on his
marathon African tours usually signing a
raft of deals with his hosts.

Politically it is easier for Morocco to cul-
tivate allies across the Sahara than in its
own neighbourhood; regional integration
in the Maghreb is hampered bya long-run-
ningrivalrywith Algeria. Afterintense lob-
bying Morocco was readmitted to the Afri-
can Union ( AU) last year ending a 32 - year
absence. Morocco had stormed out in 1984
after the AU admitted as a member state
Western Sahara which Morocco says is
part of its territory. With the Economic
Community of West African States ( ECO-
WAS) considering Morocco for member-
ship the charm offensive continues. It has
donated 25 000 tonnes of fertiliser to
Guinea and trained 300 Malian imams.
Economically engagement with west
Africa lets Morocco diversify from its tradi-
tional focus on Europe says Issandr El Am-
rani of the International Crisis Group a
think-tankin Brussels. Even though Moroc-
co has emerged as a low-cost manufactur-
inghub forEuropean firms itsown compa-
nies struggle to compete in Europe. But
theycan thrive in west Africa.
Moroccan banking telephone and in-
surance companies have led the charge. In
2015 theymade up 88 % ofthe country’s FDI
in sub-Saharan Africa. Its three largest
banks have almost a third of the market
share in the eight countries that use the
west African CFA franc. Attijariwafa the
largest has 443 west African branches. Itis-
salat al-Maghreb the country’s largest tele-
coms company generated 43 % of its turn-
over last year from subsidiaries in the
region. Morocco also hopes to host the re-
gional headquarters of Western firms do-
ing business in Africa. It has established a
financial hub in its economic capital Casa-
blanca offering tax breaks as a lure. Mem-
bership of ECOWAS would extend its
reach. Goods exported from Morocco to
other ECOWAS members would be ex-
empt from the bloc’s common tariff.
But Morocco’s bid to join has exposed
the limits of its influence. All seemed well

lastJune when ECOWASagreed “in princi-
ple” to its accession. But west African busi-
nesses were less keen fearing Moroccan
competitors would crush them. Criticism
is loudest in Nigeria ECOWAS’s largest
economy. Many there fret that Morocco
would benefit from freer trade but wriggle
out of other rules like visa-free travel. Its
application now seems stalled. Recent
ECOWAS summits avoided the subject.
The kingdom still hopes to charm its
way in. During Mr Buhari’s recent visit to
Rabat he and the kingagreed to build a gas
pipeline from Nigeria to Morocco. But the
plan has no financing and its feasibility is
open to doubt.
For all the kingdom’s investment in
west Africa ordinary Moroccans aren’t yet
reapingthe benefits. Bankingand telecoms
investments abroad do not generate many
jobs back home. Meanwhile 43 % of the ur-
ban young are said to be unemployed and
the Rif region in the north is restive. Before
planning his next west African tour the
globe-trotting king may need to deal with
domesticconcerns. 7

Morocco’s new friends

Making eyes


across the Sahara


But some neighbours are resisting the
kingdom’s charm

The King and Buhari
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