WINDHOEK: The leaders of Angola and Namibia have expressed the need for the two southern African countries to collaborate in various economic sectors. This is among the outcomes of President Nangolo Mbumba's bilateral talks with his Angolan counterpart, João Lourenço, when they met in Luanda on Tuesday. 'The two presidents underlined the need to strengthen cooperation in the areas of oil and gas, energy, agriculture, and water,' Press Secretary Alfredo Hengari said in a statement. He said that President Mbumba, who took his first bilateral visit to Angola, emphasised that Namibia had a lot to learn from Angola in the oil and gas sectors. To give effect to the Agreement on Cooperation in Petroleum and Natural Gas, Mbumba toured the Sonangol Integrated Logistics Services (SONILS). The hub was created in 1995 to provide logistical support and related services to the Angolan oil, gas, and energy sectors. As a result, Hengari said President Mbumba encouraged the leadership of SONILS to work with their Namibian partners based on a solid and transparent partnership for the benefit of both countries. Hengari said the two leaders also agreed to convene the Namibia-Angola Binational Commission in the coming months to scale up mutually beneficial cooperation between Namibia and Angola. Additionally, Mbumba and Lourenço also agreed to inaugurate the Cassinga Memorial in the coming months. Hengari also noted that President Mbumba thanked his Angolan counterpart for the extraordinary material and emotional support his government provided to the people of Namibia following the death of former President Hage Geingob. Mbumba also toured the Karam Group, a diversified company with steel, nails and pipe operations in Luanda and other parts of Angola. According to Hengari, the company expressed interest in setting up similar operations for the amount of N.dollars one billion, with a potential 350 employment opportunities. 'The management team of the company informed the president that they had secured land in Windhoek and we re hoping to reach a stage when they would commence operations in the near future,' he said. Source: The Namibia Press Agency The Ifriqiya submarine cable in the Ain Meriem area of Bizerte was put into service on Wednesday, in the presence of officials from the Ministry of Communication Technologies and representatives of the private mobile operator Ooredoo Tunisia. Ifriqiya, which has a capacity of 200 Gbt, is connected to the main route between Marseille in France and Abu Talaat in Egypt over a length of 950 km from the Bizerte connection point, offering a high capacity of around 3 TB/s (terabits per second). In a statement to TAP, Kamel Saadaoui, Chief of Staff of the Minister of Communication Technologies, said that this new project is part of the state's strategy and represents one of the priorities in the development of the basic infrastructure of telecommunications networks, as well as an ideal infrastructure for the launch of 5th generation (5G) services. Tunisia has chosen to diversify its operators given the high cost of this type of infrastructure and the need to overcome any problems that may arise, the same source no ted, pointing out that operators are being invited to invest in submarine cables as the country has identified a need for around 6 or 7 submarine cables. Ooredoo Tunisia CEO, Mansour Rachid El-Khater, stressed that the Ifriqiya project is one of the strategic projects launched by Ooredoo to connect the northern Tunisian coast from the city of Bizerte to the city of Marseille in France in record time. Ifryqia is one of the major projects in the digital strategy and an investment magnet for major companies operating in this field, thanks to its high data flow capacity and the quality of the services offered without any interruption problems. Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse
President of the Republic stresses need to break with usual methods of fighting monopolies and speculation
President Kais Saied stressed the need to “break with the usual methods that have