Unions suggest two wage rises in 2017

Mozambique’s main trade union federation, the OTM (Mozambican Workers’ Organisation) has suggested that, if the country’s current financial situation prevails, then the minimum wage should be increased twice this year.
OTM General Secretary Alexandre Munguambe made this call public on 3 March, during a meeting of the Labour Consultative Commission (CCT), the tripartite negotiating forum between the government, the unions, and the employers’ organisations.
The standard practice has been for the CCT to agree on a set of minimum wages by sector, which the government then puts into law. The new wages take effect as from 1 April each year. But the OTM is now suggesting that in times of high inflation, wages should be adjusted more frequently.
“We recall that in the past when annual inflation reached two digits, the minimum wage was increased twice a year”, said Munguambe. “If the current situation continues, there is every reason to return to this practice”.
In 2016, inflation rose, largely because of the depreciation of the Mozambican currency, the metical. According to the National Statistics Institute (INE), based on the consumer price indices of the three largest cities (Maputo, Nampula and Beira), inflation for the year reached 25.27 per cent.
Munguambe stressed that workers’ living standards had tumbled. “2016 was characterised by politico-military instability, natural disasters, a financial crisis, depreciation of the metical and unsustainable foreign debts”, he said. “These factors raised the cost of living to unbearable levels, and worsened the poverty of the majority of Mozambicans”.
Labour Minister Vitoria Diogo, who chairs the CCT, gave a much rosier picture, claiming that 277,647 jobs were created in 2016. In addition, 106,749 citizens, mostly young, had attended professional training courses, thus increasing their chances of obtaining good jobs.

Source: AIM

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ENI selling stake in Rovuma Basin

The Italian energy company ENI has said it is “within weeks” of finalising a deal worth billions of dollars to sell a stake in its operations in the Rovuma Basin, off the coast of northern Mozambique, according to a report in the “Financial Times”.
ENI chief executive Claudio Descalzi told the paper that the transaction was “very close” but declined to comment on the identity of the buyer.
However, it is no secret that ENI has been in lengthy negotiations with the US company ExxonMobil, and last October the chairperson of Mozambique’s National Hydrocarbon Company (ENH), Omar Mitha, told the Maputo daily “Noticias” that ExxonMobil would become a partner of ENI in offshore area four of the Rovuma Basin.
Massimo Bonisoli, an analyst at the debt recovery company Equita, cited by the “Financial Times” estimated the sale of a 20 per cent stake in Area 4 could raise US$1.79 billion for ENI, with the potential for this to rise to as much as US$2.63 billion should the Italian group eventually hand over operational control to the buyer. This is of enormous interest to Mozambique, because of the huge amount of capital gains tax that would be paid on such a transaction.
ENI controls a 50 per cent indirect interest in Offshore Area Four owned through ENI-East Africa, which holds 70 per cent of the concession. The other 20 per cent held via ENI-East Africa belongs to the Chinese company CNPC. The other three partners, with ten per cent each, are Galp Energia of Portugal, Kogas, and Mozambique’s National Hydrocarbon Company (ENH).
Plans are advanced to set up a floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG) facility in Area Four above the Coral South gas field. So far, the consortium has invested about US$2.8 billion in Area Four, and it is estimated that the FLNG project will cost a further eight billion dollars.
Production of LNG is due to begin in 2022. However, the Final Investment Decision cannot take place until CNPC formerly commits itself to the investment (all the other partners have now approved their share of the investment).
An agreement has already been reached under which all the gas produced from the FLNG plant will be sold to the British company BP over a twenty year period.
The total gas discovered in Area Four is 85 trillion cubic feet. Neighbouring Area One, where the US company Anadarko is the operator, holds an estimated 75 trillion cubic feet of gas. Anadarko is planning to build an onshore LNG facility to produce 12 million tonnes of LNG a year. Later it hopes to raise production to 20 million tonnes a year. However, Anadarko is at least a year behind ENI in the race to deliver LNG to the market.

Source: AIM

posted from Bloggeroid

Three children drown in Beira floods

Three children have drowned in floods caused by torrential rains in the central city of Beira. 

The rain began on 26 February, coinciding with high tides, and swamped many low-lying areas. One of the child victims was a seven-month-old baby who drowned in his sleep. 

His parents, also asleep, did not realise that the flood waters had invaded their house.

A four-year-old boy died while he was playing in the muddy water. He is believed to have fallen into a hole and drowned. The third victim, a 12-year-old boy, drowned in a ditch as he was trying to make his way to school.

Homes were inundated in outlying neighbourhoods such as Munhava, Macarungo, Manga, Chota, Muchatazina and Vaz.


Speaking to reporters, the mayor of Beira, Daviz Simango, recalled that Beira has special characteristics that make it prone to flooding. Part of the city is below sea level, and the water table is very high. 

This made it crucial to maintain the city’s drainage system, and Simango reported that the new floodgates installed at the Chiveve River, inaugurated in January, performed well, as did the older floodgates in the Palmeiras neighbourhood.


Source AIM 

Five drown as Mussapa bursts its banks

Five people died and five others are missing, when they vehicle they were travelling in was swept away by the waters of the Mussapa River, in Sussundenga district, in the central province of Manica.
The tragedy happened on 27 February when the waters of the Mussapa burst their banks. The victims were travelling in a vehicle belonging to the Chimanimani National Reserve, which is an important conservation area in Manica. There were 21 people on board, 11 of whom survived. Five bodies were recovered and the other five are still missing: they are three workers of the Chimanimani reserve and two members of a local community.

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Two children die in Limpopo flood

limpopo river flood
Two children have died in the flooding in the Limpopo Valley, in the southern province of Gaza. The children lost their lives on 4 March when, along with seven adults, they were crossing the Limpopo River in a rowing boat, attempting to reach Chibuto district. According to district administrator Brigida Matavele, the boat overturned, and the two children drowned. All the adults were rescued.

The river inundated parts of Chokwe, Guija and Chibuto districts, although it did not reach the predicted height of 8.3 metres. This would have been 3.3 metres above flood alert level, and enough for the river to have swept over the top of the dyke built to protect Chokwe town. The maximum reported height of the Limpopo at Chokwe was 7.5 metres.

In Chokwe, 1,366 hectares of crops were flooded and 600 regarded as lost. In Guija, 906 hectares are flooded, and in Chibuto more than 300 hectares are said to be lost.

Visiting the Limpopo Valley at the weekend, Joao Machatine, the general director of the Mozambican relief agency, the National Disaster Management Institute (INGC), said that, when the waters retreat, it is crucial to take advantage of the humidity and replant.

“We shall work with our partners to reduce food aid and acquire seeds”, said Machatine. Chokwe needs 22 tonnes of seeds, Guija 40 tonnes and Chibuto 10 tonnes. Two-thirds of these requirements are for maize seeds and the rest for beans.

Source: AIM

posted from Bloggeroid

Dhlakama extends Renamo truce for two months

afonso dhlakama
Dhlakama extends Renamo truce for two months
Afonso Dhlakama, leader of the opposition party Renamo, on 3 March announced a further two-month extension of the truce his forces have been observing since late December. Speaking from a Renamo base in the central district of Gorongosa, Dhlakama declared “as from zero hours tomorrow, 4 March, a new truce takes effect, lasting until 4 May”.
Initially, the truce was only for a week, beginning on 27 December. Dhlakama announced the truce after phone conversations with President Filipe Nyusi. In early January the truce was extended by a further two months, to 4 March.

Dhlakama confirmed that he remains in regular phone contact with President Nyusi, and guaranteed that the peace talks “are on a good path”. He also announced that a new figure “of recognised merit” internationally will join the “contact group” announced by President Nyusi on 1 March. Dhlakama did not announce the name of this figure.
The “contact group” consists of seven ambassadors resident in Maputo, and its co-chairs are Swiss ambassador Mirko Manzani and US ambassador Dean Pittman. The statement from President Nyusi’s office announcing the creation of the contact group said it “will provide coordinated financial and technical assistance, and carry out other tasks as indicated in their terms of reference”.
This assistance is to the two working groups that President Nysui and Dhlakama have set up, one dealing with decentralisation and the other on military questions.

President Nyusi announced that he and Dhlakama had agreed that the two groups can begin working “because the Mozambican people are in a hurry to live definitively in peace”.

Source: AIM

posted from Bloggeroid

Education session on the right to information

Education session on the right to information

Tomás Vieira Mário's criticism stems from the fact that public servants, in his opinion, are the first to break the laws.

At the event held at the Eduardo Mondlane University's School of Communication and Arts in Maputo, Tomás Vieira Mário was the Executive Director of the Sekekekani Center for Communication Studies and Research.

At that institution, Viera Mário interacted with students about the Right to Information Law.

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