Togo First

Togo First

The Togolese municipality of Doufelgou 3, located southwest of Niamtougou in the north of the country, validated its Municipal Development Plan (PDC) last week.

With an estimated budget of 1.39 billion CFA francs, the PDC spans five years, going from 2023 to 2028. The 183-page document includes seven (7) major programs, 18 projects, and 122 activities. According to ATOP, the plan was validated on June 2, in Alloum, the municipality's chief district.

All stakeholders concerned by the PDC attended the validation meeting. Among them were the municipal council, heads of decentralized state services, NGO leaders, traditional chiefs, and community leaders.

On the occasion, Hassim Maliawaï, Regional Director of Planning for the Kara region, reminded the local authorities of their obligation to plan their development, per the country’s decentralization law.

For her part, Abla Yassim, the mayor of the Doufelgou 3 municipality, lauded the PDC’s validation, highlighting its importance regarding strategic planning in her municipality.

Ayi Renaud Dossavi

The European Union will invest 1.8 billion FCFA (€3 million) in a capacity-building project designed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The project is set to help Togo’s Ministry of Economy and Finance implement key reforms in public finance management. 

Known as the "Public Finance Management Strengthening" initiative, the project will be carried out over the period 2023-2026. It aims to strengthen practices in the areas of program budgeting, green public finance management, public investment, and budgetary risks, according to the IMF. 

The three-year initiative builds on the progress made under two previous projects, which supported Togolese authorities with reforms such as the introduction of gender-responsive budgeting, and program budgeting, in 2012-2016 and 2017-2022. An IMF mission is visiting Togo this week (from 5 to 8 June) for the launch of the project.

Ayi Renaud Dossavi

The Sheyi Emmanuel Adebayor Foundation (SEA Foundation) will help implement reforms and improve the courses offered at the University of Lomé. The two parties recently signed a partnership on June 5, 2023, in Lomé where the Ex-Footballer Adebayor himself inked the partnership on behalf of his foundation while the university was represented by UL President Dodzi Kokoroko.

Under the agreement, the former soccer player will finance the construction of an amphitheater that will bear his name and a stand on the newly built football field of the university. He will also provide support to university startups in the fields of innovation and technology.

The deal also extends to the UL's National Institute of Youth and Sports, where it is expected that Sheyi Adebayor will give classes. Moreover, the former Madrid Star should leverage his network to help UL students to get internships and job opportunities.

According to Dodzi Kokoroko, the partnership "will leave a strong impact on the student community as Shéyi Emmanuel Adébayor remains an icon, a model of success for Togolese youth."

Esaïe Edoh

Lomé is hosting a 4-day assessment meeting that could lead to the adoption of the ECOWAS Interconnected Management System for Goods in Transit (SIGMAT). Customs officers from eight West African countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo) are taking part in the meeting. 

The system is financially and technically backed by the World Bank. It is a solution that aims to make transit declaration easier among the ECOWAS States. If adopted, the tool will be tested in the eight countries represented at the ongoing meeting, and later expand to others in the region.

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"This meeting aims not only to evaluate the interconnection of the computer systems of the customs administrations, but also to examine the draft agreements and framework instructions to make SIGMAT effective on the corridors of the eight countries, and soon on all corridors of our sub-region," said Essien Kakra Kwawo, Commissioner of Customs and Indirect Rights of the Togolese Revenue Office (OTR).

Specifically, the SIGMAT will enable interconnected customs services to instantly share information on goods in transit. This should ensure transparency at all levels. According to customs actors, the mechanism is beneficial to both customs administrations and economic operators as it significantly cuts waiting times and delays at borders. 

Esaïe Edoh 

This year, the Togolese government plans to pre-finance the purchase of fertilizers for local farmers with over CFA800 million. The distribution campaign kicked off on Saturday, June 3, in Sada (Tchaoudjo Prefecture), setting the stage for the 2023-2024 agricultural campaign.

Lomé intends to provide the poorest farmers with NPK 15-15 and urea fertilizers through the Togo National Food Security Agency (ANSAT).

The move, a response to farmers' requests according to ANSAT, follows a successful pilot last year. At the time, the government released CFA500 million to pre-finance the purchase of over 1,388 tons of fertilizer. As in the previous campaign, the beneficiaries of this prefinancing can repay in kind, the value of the received fertilizers.

According to the General Director of ANSAT, Ouro-Koura Agadazi, this new operation aims to support producers and protect them against usurers. 

This operation paves the way for the official campaign for the sale of subsidized fertilizers.

Esaïe Edoh

Togolese authorities recently inaugurated a new slaughterhouse in Hemazo, in the Lacs prefecture. The inauguration ceremony took place on June 2, in the presence of Sandra Ablamba Johnson, the Minister and Secretary-General of the Presidency, Myriam Dossou d'Alméda, Minister of Base Development, and Aquéréburu Coffi Alexis, the Mayor of the Lacs 1 municipality. 

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According to Johnson, the slaughterhouse was promised by the Head of State. It will serve the Lacs, Yoto, Vo, Bas Mono prefectures, and border localities, including Grand Popo in Benin. Built under the Support Program for Vulnerable Populations (PAPV), the unit includes offices, a cold room, a slaughter room, a meat sales room, an animal treatment room, and sanitary facilities.

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The project’s beneficiaries expressed their gratitude during the inauguration ceremony. They believe the "jewels" will spur the growth of the region’s meat industry.

Besides Hemazo, new slaughterhouses are being built in Kpalimé, Sokodé, and Kara. These projects and others upcoming in Atakpamé, Niamtougou, and Dapaong, align with the government’s efforts to develop the meat industry.

Togo needs about $10 million per year to finance a project that supports people living with HIV (PLHIV) and tuberculosis (TB) patients.

The amount was disclosed in a study ordered by the Permanent Secretariat of the National Council for the Fight Against AIDS (CNLS). The study report was validated on Friday, June 2, in Lomé, during a workshop organized in collaboration with UNAIDS and the World Food Program (WFP).

The report evaluates the feasibility and cost of the project. "It will first be a resource mobilization document, an advocacy document that could be presented to traditional partners," said Damien Amoussou, president of the study’s steering committee.

Approximately 75% of TB patients and PLHIV are considered vulnerable. To integrate them into a national social protection system, just over $10 million each year would be needed to support them, stated Agossou K. Kokou, a National Consultant, presenting the study results.

For now, the project is expected to initially last three years and cost $30 million.

While the study primarily focused on the Maritime and Plateaux regions, considered to have the highest HIV prevalence, the initiative covers the entire territory. In these two regions alone, over 29,000 PLHIV have been identified out of an estimated total of 80,000 across the country.

In addition to traditional partners, actors in the fight against HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis plan to mobilize international support, including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. The Fund has already announced financing of CFA74 billion for the period 2023-2025.

Ayi Renaud Dossavi

Last Friday, Togo successfully raised CFA31 billion ($56 million) on the West African public securities market. Lomé raised the funds through a simultaneous issue of Treasury Bonds and Bills (BAT and OAT).

According to the Umoa-Titres agency, Togo secured CFA26 billion with the bills and the remaining CFA5 billion came through the bonds. The former will mature over 182 days and the latter over 3 and 5 years. 

Overall, submissions to the issue, according to the agency’s report, amounted to CFA41 billion, a coverage rate of 138.44%.

The report also indicates that of the 31 billion raised, 11 billion came from Togolese investors.

Since the year began, Togo has raised, including this recent operation, CFA264 billion on the regional market. That is about half of its annual target–CFA574 billion. 

Esaïe Edoh

Togo has reached a new step in its biometric ID system project. The country just trusted the project to Atos and IDEMIA, according to a statement issued by ANID-TOGO, the Togolese ID Agency, on June 1, 2023.

The two French firms will develop the biometric system inspired by the Modular Open Source Identity Platform (MOSIP). Concretely, they will design, build, test, and launch the national system. The system will feature iris, face, and fingerprint recognition technology.

"We are honored to be working with the Togolese government and its partners on this important project. The biometric e-ID solution will play a crucial role in Togo's digital transformation and national development. Atos is committed to providing a reliable and secure solution that meets the needs of both the government and citizens. We are proud to leverage our expertise in biometrics, cybersecurity, and digital transformation to support Togo's ambitions and contribute to a more inclusive and connected world," said Alpha Barry, CEO of Atos Africa.

The biometric ID project will provide all Togolese residents with a single ID number (SIN) which will ease their day-to-day transactions with public administration services, and facilitate the latter’s digitalization. The project is backed by the World Bank, through the WURI program. 

President Faure Gnassingbé recently announced a biometric census in line with the project. "There will be a third census to offer a biometric card to every Togolese so that we can be effective in our social protection policy." The Togolese leader was speaking in an interview with New World TV, on the sidelines of his country’s 63rd independence anniversary. 

"Having a unique, robust, and reliable identification system is a must in line with the government's 2020-2025 roadmap, on which the e-ID project is listed, in first place among the 42 priority projects and reforms," ANID- TOGO revealed.

Esaïe Edoh

The World Bank plans to increase its commitments to the agricultural sector in West and Central Africa by $1.5 billion by next year. This announcement was made by Ousmane Diagana, the institution's VP for West and Central Africa, during a high-level meeting that was recently held in Lomé.

"We are set to increase our investments in the sector, from over $4 billion of already approved and running IDA funds in West and Central Africa, to more than $5.5 billion by 2024," Diagna said during the meeting. 

These funds are expected to benefit ongoing initiatives, particularly in the Sahel, like the Food Systems Resilience Program (FSRP), initially funded at $570 million, and now poised to further boost its portfolio.

The Washington-based institution has pledged to support West African countries in implementing the Roadmap on Fertilizers and Soil Health. Funded projects will focus on the Roadmap's priority activities, including the development of soil fertility maps, strengthening research centers, providing advisory services to farmers, and setting up quality standards and controls.

Emphasis will also be put on reforms that will help boost private investments in local fertilizer production, integrated soil fertility management, and greenhouse gas emission reduction. The World Bank will also support mineral and organic fertilizer production, especially green fertilizers.

During the meeting, the World Bank and other regional financial institutions defined concrete objectives, such as tripling fertilizer consumption and doubling agricultural production by 2035, with a more regional and integrated approach to land management and soil health restoration in sight.

Ayi Renaud Dossavi

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