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Ousmane Diagana

Ousmane Diagana

Vice President, Western and Central Africa

Ousmane Diagana, a Mauritanian national, is the Regional Vice President for Western and Central Africa. Appointed to this role in July 2020, Mr. Diagana manages the Bank relations with 22 countries and oversees a portfolio of projects worth more than $57 billion, and a wide range of analytical work and technical assistance.

Under his leadership, the Bank¡¯s operations in the region adopt a ¡®people-centered approach¡¯ focused on strengthening human capital and empowering women and youth, creating more and better jobs, promoting private sector development, supporting critical infrastructure and digital development, and strengthening climate resilience, agricultural productivity and food and water security.

Prior to this appointment, Mr. Diagana was the Vice President of Human Resources. In that role, he provided strategic leadership to the institution on talent development and oversaw all HR policies, programs, services to support the Bank Group¡¯s global workforce.

Mr. Diagana has also held positions as Country Director for C?te d¡¯Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Benin, Guinea, and Togo, Country Director for Mali, Niger, Chad, and Guinea, Country Manager for Niger, and Program Leader in Morocco. Mr. Diagana has extensive experience effectively leading diverse, multi-disciplinary teams to deliver innovative strategies and operations ¡ªincluding in fragile and conflict-affected countries. In 2009, Mr. Diagana received the Good Manager Award from the World Bank Group Staff Association in recognition of his leadership skills.

Ousmane Diagana joined the World Bank in 1992. He has degrees in economics, finance, and planning, as well as a certificate in education policies and analysis. Mr. Diagana speaks French, English, Arabic, Soninke, Fulani, and Wolof.


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    Today, more than ever, we must turn our attention to pastoralism across the Sahel and West Africa.
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  • To achieve universal access to electricity, the pace of electrification in West and Central Africa must triple by 2030.
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    Corruption harms the poor and vulnerable the most, increasing costs and reducing access to basic services, such as health, education, social programs, and even justice. It exacerbates inequality and reduces private sector investment to the detriment of markets, job opportunities, and economies.
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  • The transformation of Africa starts with our girls

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  • As crises multiply and the devastating conflict in Ukraine drags on, its global effects are being felt hard in the Sahel and West Africa, a region with more than 38 million people facing acute food insecurity. The war¡¯s impacts risk pushing an additional 7 to 10 million people in the region into food insecurity.
  • Ousmane Diagana, the West and Central Africa vice-president of the World Bank explains the Bretton Woods institution's positioning and priorities on the continent. In this long interview, he pushes back against the familiar critique of rigidity and economic orthodoxy.
  • The COVID-19 crisis has exacerbated wage and occupational inequalities between men and women. As we look towards the recovery from the devastating impact of the COVID pandemic, we must use this as an opportunity to rebuild societies that will provide women and men with equal opportunities in the working world.
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    The countries of the Sahel unite for universal access to quality education

    In accordance with the rule and spirit of each of our Sahelian countries, and the conviction that the prosperity of nations and social inclusion in our fragile environments are at stake, education for all has always been at the core of our development strategies
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    Three Paths to Accelerating Digital Access in West and Central Africa

    Just before the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic struck, just over half of the world¡¯s population approximately (51%) had access to the internet compared with just 30% in Western and Central Africa. With the strict lockdown implemented during the pandemic, many services were only available to people across the region through the internet.
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    Our goal is to help turn around fragile states

    Ousmane Diagana is the Vice-President of the World Bank for West and Central Africa. He oversees these two very different sub-regions each with its own sets of challenges and needs. Eleven of the 22 countries in West and Central Africa are classified as ¡®fragile state¡¯. His operational portfolio is around $50bn to help turn these countries around. What are his plans? Interview by Hichem Ben Ya?che and Nicolas Bouchet.
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    Prioritizing the Sahel region

    The WBG is providing a record financing to support the post COVID-19 recovery in the Sahel and to scale up successful initiatives

MEDIA INQUIRIES
Aby K. Toure
Washington, DC
akonate@worldbank.org

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