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Africa Asserts Bold Pivot From Aid to Equal Partnership

US President Donald Trump, European Council President Antonio Costa, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Kenya’s President William Ruto and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer attend a family photo session during the G7 summit in France on June 16, 2026.

Africa is done with the outdated “donor-recipient” model, Kenya’s President William Ruto underscored at the G7 Summit in France.The era of aid handouts, charity, or one-sided resource extraction is over, Ruto underscored at a session on fostering new partnerships, signaling the Global South’s rising determination to shape its own destiny.

The Kenyan leader highlighted how Africa has too often been viewed through a lens of need — its risks exaggerated and vast opportunities overlooked.Taking direct aim at the global financial architecture, Ruto highlighted a stark injustice:economic growth on the continent continues to be hampered by unfair access to financeAfrican nations face disproportionately high borrowing costs far exceeding peers despite solid fundamentalsan outdated risk perception stalls projects and defers growthmultilateral development banks’ resources fall short of the continent’s soaring ambitionsWith over $4 trillion in combined pension funds, insurance assets, bank holdings, and reserves, Africa is not waiting for external fixes. It is actively building independent financial institutions to mobilize its own capital and safeguard economic sovereignty.Ruto argued that Africa’s next growth phase depends on stronger risk-sharing mechanisms capable of attracting both local and international investment.To prove the point, he highlighted Kenya’s own track record: nearly $9 billion mobilized for affordable housing and another $1.5 billion for universal healthcare.

The Kenyan leader pointed to the African Trade & Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI) as a model capable of channeling such support effectively.WorldPutin Hails African Nations’ Economic Success, Notes Their Vital Role in World 24 May, 06:39 GMT

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