Current:Home > ContactAfrica at a crossroads as more democracies fall to military coups, experts say -Golden Summit Finance
Africa at a crossroads as more democracies fall to military coups, experts say
View
Date:2025-04-20 05:37:02
LONDON -- In the wee hours of the morning, a group of men dressed in military uniform appear on state television and claim to have seized power from a president whose family has controlled the country for decades.
It's a scene that played out most recently in Gabon in August but has become all too familiar in this part of Africa, a vast region known as the "coup belt" with a continuous chain of military rulers stretching from coast to coast.
There have been at least a dozen coup d'états in West and Central Africa since 2020, with eight proving successful while the others failed or spiraled into conflict. The driving factors are complex and varied, but experts seemed to agree that Africa is at a crossroads of sorts. Will more democracies on the world's second-largest continent fall victim to military takeovers, or will they heed the deafening calls for better governance?
MORE: Gabon's coup leaders say ousted president is 'freed' and can travel on a medical trip
The coup in Gabon happened just hours after President Ali Bongo Ondimba won reelection for a third term in a vote that was criticized by international observers. The coup leaders immediately placed Bongo under house arrest for a week. He had become president of the oil-rich Central African nation in 2009 following the death of his father, who had ruled since 1967.
About a month earlier, a military junta in Niger ousted the West African country's democratically elected government. Before that, there were two successful coups in Burkina Faso, one in Guinea, one in Chad and two in Mali -- and those are just within the last three years. Gabon's marks the 100th successful coup in post-colonial Africa, according to Issaka K. Souaré, the author of a book on coups in West Africa and a lecturer at General Lansana Conté University at Sonfonia in Conakry, Guinea.
"This surely renders vulnerable most other governments to military coups, including military regimes born out of coups, as seen in Burkina Faso," Souaré told ABC News. "It could also lead some to improve their governance practices and where they thought of manipulating constitutions to stay in power, perhaps renounce such plans."
Just this week, Burkina Faso's military junta announced it had thwarted "a proven coup attempt."
MORE: Burkina Faso's junta says it thwarted military coup attempt
In 2021 after a military takeover in Sudan, which has since erupted into an ongoing power struggle between the two main factions of the military regime, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres assailed what he called "an epidemic of coup d'états." There is now growing concern of a "domino effect" as coups spread across West and Central Africa, according to Bamidele Olajide, a lecturer in political science at the University of Lagos in Lagos, Nigeria.
"Coups are generally contagious as a successful coup in a country emboldens would-be coup plotters in neighboring countries, especially where the social, economic and political situations are similar," Olajide told ABC News. "This has proven to be the case over history on the continent and the new spate of coups are not in any way different."
Military juntas often cite a number of reasons for intervening and overthrowing a regime, including political corruption and economic hardship. But the most relevant factor behind coups in sub-Saharan Africa historically is poor institutional performance, while the failure of elected governments to tackle jihadist violence in the Sahel region has been a key trigger for the takeovers in West and Central Africa since 2020, according to Carlos Garcia-Rivero, an associate professor in politics at the University of Valencia in Valencia, Spain, and a research fellow at Stellenbosch University's Centre for International and Comparative Politics in Stellenbosch, South Africa.
"When governments do not run countries as expected, citizens will welcome the military to intervene," Garcia-Rivero told ABC News. "The citizenry's response was to go on the street and welcome the military coup, which has spread the idea that it is legitimate to overcome a government when they do not perform as expected."
MORE: US orders partial departure of US embassy in Niger as political unrest escalates
That was seen most recently in Gabon and Niger, where throngs of people took to the streets of the respective capital cities to celebrate the coups. Pro-junta demonstrators also gathered outside the French embassies in Libreville and Niamey. Both Niger and Gabon have close ties to France, their former colonizer, as do Burkina Faso and Mali. Niger has also been a key ally to the United States and other Western nations in the fight against Islamist militants in the Sahel.
"Some developed nations have aided inept and corrupt leaders to stay in power, which is why recent coups have enjoyed the popular support," Olajide said. "For the United States and its allies, the stance of Africans against neocolonial tendencies and pressures is palpable."
"Future coups are likely to dwell more on anti-imperialist rhetoric and stance," he added. "The U.S. and its allies need to change their exploitative mode of engagement with Africa, because the renegade military personnel are using it to upend the democratic process on the continent."
In recent years, military juntas in West and Central Africa have "latched onto resentment against France ... as a tool for the justification of their coups and legitimation in power," according to Olajide.
"The people now see the military as a messiah," he said, "and only time will tell if they are indeed."
MORE: US expresses 'growing concern' for safety of Niger's president amid apparent coup
However, as Souaré noted, a report released this year by the United Nations Development Programme found that the apparent popular support for recent coups in Africa has been "transient" and does not mean a rejection of democracy, but rather a call for better democratic governance.
"People have taken to the streets to cheer for change in a context of deeply felt, expanding and yet frustrated democratic yearning," the UNDP report stated.
The African Union, ECOWAS and other regional blocs currently lack a "clear legal instrument" to deal with leaders on the continent who seek to change the constitution in order to stay in power for longer. This, in turn, has lead these organizations to lose credibility and trust in the eyes of the public, according to Souaré.
"As a consequence, where their threats helped to deter would-be coup-makers in the 2000s, which saw dwindling trends of coups until 2020, this is no longer the case," he said.
Nevertheless, Garcia-Rivero warned that "Gabon will not be the last" African country to fall into the hands of a military junta.
"I would keep an eye on Togo or Chad," he said. "And If I were [Zimbabwe's President Emmerson] Dambudzo Mnangagwa, I would keep an eye on my back."
veryGood! (719)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- James Biden, Joe Biden's brother, tells lawmakers the president had no involvement in family's business dealings
- Alabama seeks to perform second execution using nitrogen hypoxia
- Sean 'Diddy' Combs denies claims he gang raped 17-year-old girl
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Inter Miami vs. Real Salt Lake highlights: Messi doesn't score, but still shows off in win
- What Black women's hair taught me about agency, reinvention and finding joy
- The Daily Money: How the Capital One-Discover deal could impact consumers
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 'Boy Meets World' stars stood by convicted child molester. It's not uncommon, experts say.
Ranking
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- How demand and administrative costs are driving up the cost of college
- Venezuela pit mine collapse reportedly leaves dozens of people buried in mud
- Trump, GOP lag Biden and Democrats in fundraising as campaigns look to general election
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- HIV/AIDS activist Hydeia Broadbent, known for her inspirational talks as a young child, dies at 39
- Leaked document trove shows a Chinese hacking scheme focused on harassing dissidents
- Volkswagen to recall 261,000 cars to fix pump problem that can let fuel leak and increase fire risk
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Brothers resentenced to 60 years to life in 1995 slayings of parents, younger brother
Trump, GOP lag Biden and Democrats in fundraising as campaigns look to general election
LA ethics panel rejects proposed fine for ex-CBS exec Les Moonves over police probe interference
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Georgia has the nation’s only Medicaid work requirement. Mississippi could be next
Alabama looks to perform second execution of inmate with controversial nitrogen hypoxia
Biden weighs invoking executive authority to stage border crackdown ahead of 2024 election