Daily Dispatch

Putin’s summit signals Russia’s return to Africa

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President Vladimir Putin will host dozens of African leaders next week as Russia seeks to reassert its influence on the continent and beyond.

The heads of 35 African countries are expected for the first Africa-Russia Summit in the Black Sea resort of Sochi next Wednesday and Thursday.

For Putin, the summit is a chance to revive Soviet-era relationsh­ips and build new alliances, bolstering Moscow’s global clout in the face of confrontat­ion with the West.

“Russia has always been present in Africa – this is a very important continent,” Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said ahead of the summit.

“Russia has things to offer in terms of mutually beneficial cooperatio­n to African countries.” Though never a colonial power in Africa, Moscow was a crucial player on the continent in the Soviet era, backing independen­ce movements and training a generation of African leaders.

The leaders of former Soviet client states like Angola and Ethiopia will be at the forum, but so will others from where Moscow’s engagement has been traditiona­lly low, like Nigeria and Ghana. Egyptian President and African Union chairman Abdel Fattah al-Sisi will co-chair.

“This forum signals Russia’s decisive pivot towards Africa,” said Yevgeny Korendyaso­v, an expert at Moscow’s Institute for African Studies and former ambassador in Burkina Faso and Mali.

Russia’s ties with Africa declined with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and in recent years China has emerged as a key foreign power.

But Putin’s Kremlin – emboldened by its growing presence in the Middle East and the success of its military interventi­on in Syria – is trying to play catch-up.

Russian companies have invested in oil and gas in Egypt and Nigeria, in diamonds in Angola and in metals in Guinea and South Africa.

Moscow has also used a combinatio­n of arms exports, security expertise and support for local government­s to deepen both its political and its economic presence.

“With varying degrees of success, Moscow is attempting to mobilise its Cold War-era connection­s and convert its old ideologica­l links into business,” said Arnaud Dubien, the head of the Franco-Russian Observator­y.

The Central African Republic – whose president FaustinArc­hange Touadera will attend the summit – has been one of

Moscow is trying to mobilise its connection­s and convert its old ideologica­l links into business

the most prominent examples. Moscow has delivered weapons along with contractor­s to train soldiers in the former French colony. It has flaunted its growing presence in the country, with Russian military contractor­s patrolling the streets of the capital Bangui, and a Russian, Valery Zakharov, serving as security advisor to Touadera.

Moscow has struck military agreements with other African countries and thousands of private Russian security contractor­s – many of them with experience fighting in eastern Ukraine and Syria – are reported to be working on the continent, including mercenarie­s from the Wagner Group believed to be controlled by Putin ally Evgeny Prigozhin.

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