Yahoo – AFP,
28 May 2015
Abidjan (AFP) - Nigeria's outgoing agriculture minister Akinwumi Adesina won the vote Thursday to become the new president of the African Development Bank, official results showed.
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| The new president of the African Development Bank Akinwumi Adesina delivers a speech on May 28, 2015 in Abidjan following his election at the AfDB annual meetings (AFP Photo/Sia Kambou) |
Abidjan (AFP) - Nigeria's outgoing agriculture minister Akinwumi Adesina won the vote Thursday to become the new president of the African Development Bank, official results showed.
Adesina,
55, will succeed Rwandan Donald Kaberuka, chief for two consecutive terms since
2005, at a time when the institution is trying to diversify from its
traditional role as a development bank.
He was
elected with 58.10 percent after six rounds of voting, beating the finance
ministers of Chad and Cape Verde to the role.
A total of
80 AfDB shareholders -- 54 African states and 26 non-African countries -- took
part in the election in Abidjan, in which eight candidates were vying for the
presidency.
Adesina
inherits a financially sound institution, which was awarded a prestigious AAA
rating by US ratings agency Fitch in 2013 -- a year in which it lent a total of
$6.8 billion for 317 operations.
The
Nigerian was voted African of the year in 2013 by Forbes magazine for his
agricultural reforms, and he represents a country considered to be the new
economic powerhouse of Africa.
His
appointment breaks the unwritten rule that the top job should go to someone
from a small or medium-sized country -- Nigeria is the leading oil producer and
most populous country in the continent.
Despite
multiple conflicts, health crises such as Ebola, and staggering poverty, Africa
is today seen as "a new frontier in world economic growth", Amethis
investment fund founder Luc Rigouzzo told AFP ahead of the election.
Adesina
will now have the job of managing the continent's financial attractiveness --
without losing sight of the need to fight poverty and develop infrastructure.
Chad's
Finance Minister Bedoumra Kordje came second in the election with 31.62 percent
of votes, and third was Cape Verde's Finance Minister Cristina Duarte with
10.27 percent.
She would
have been the first woman and the first Portuguese speaker in the job.
The United
States -- the AfDB's second-biggest shareholder after Nigeria -- had a central
role in the vote, as did Japan and China. France had been hoping for a champion
of Francophone Africa.
After a
failed coup in Ivory Coast in 2002 that threw the country into crisis, the
bank's headquarters was relocated to Tunis in 2003. It returned last
year to the Ivorian economic capital.

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