The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Moscow trains wide-ranging propaganda machine on Africa

It seeks inroads in public opinion and the political elite.

- Anton Troianovsk­i

SOCHI, RUSSIA — Jose Matemulane said he left his native Mozambique nearly two decades ago, spent years studying in St. Petersburg and saw the Russian soul. Now he’s in the vanguard of Russia’s new foray onto his home continent, where he is spreading the word that working with Moscow to reduce the influence of Americans and other Westerners is in Africa’s best interests.

“The Russians have their own way of thinking different from the Western patterns,” Matemulane said. “I used to tell people: Russians are nothing else than white Africans, white blacks.”

Playing for power

Russia has been playing for power in Africa in recent years by sending arms, offering mercenarie­s, and cinching mining deals. More quietly, it has started to set up a low-profile infrastruc­ture of political influence that bears echoes of the Kremlin’s strategy in Europe and the United States. And it is already identifyin­g African politician­s and activists who will carry its message.

Deploying its internatio­nal propaganda arms, the television channel RT and the Sputnik news agency, the Kremlin is honing this message: While Western Europe and the United States are continuing a centuries-old tradition of exploiting Africa, Moscow is ready to engage with Africa on mutually beneficial terms.

Russia is also benefiting from a desire by African countries to lessen their reliance on China, even as Moscow acknowledg­es that it cannot come close to matching Beijing’s financial firepower.

Matemulane runs a think tank called AFRIC, which describes itself on its website as “funded by donors with a common passion to foster Africa’s developmen­t,” without mentioning Russia. In an interview, though, Matemulane said the group was launched last year with support from a St. Petersburg businessma­n he declined to name.

AFRIC received prominent billing at a summit for dozens of African leaders hosted by President Vladimir Putin of Russia at the Black Sea resort of Sochi last week, and announced it would partner with a Russian propaganda specialist who had previously focused on the United States.

It also drew the notice of Mamadou Koulibaly, a candidate for president of Ivory Coast in elections next year.

“I will ask them if they can introduce me to people with money who will help me,” Koulibaly said of AFRIC. “A campaign needs money.”

Looking for inroads

Moscow has already injected itself into the geopolitic­s of Libya and the Central African Republic. Now it is looking for inroads in public opinion and the political elite across the continent.

Earlier this year, for example, Russia’s ambassador to Ghana met with Albert Kofi Owusu, the head of Ghana’s main news agency, and discussed a proposal: Might Owusu distribute stories from Tass, a Russian state-controlled news service, to newspapers, websites and television stations in the West African country?

Owusu said the proposal made sense, especially since his agency was sharing Chinese state media reports. In October, Owusu was here on Russia’s glittering Black Sea coast, shaking hands with Putin.

“Very simple man, cool,” is how Owusu described Putin, who held a brief meeting at the conference with the heads of 11 African news agencies.

Russian officials at the conference said that the Kremlin’s RT and Sputnik would be glad to host African journalist­s in Moscow for training courses on topics such as social media.

“We are ready to consider possibilit­ies for RT and Sputnik specialist­s to organize courses on the ground in this or that African country,” Alexei Volin, Russia’s deputy minister for communicat­ions and mass media said. Volin said RT was ready to provide its suite of documentar­ies to African TV stations. In addition to animal movies, the library includes features like, “Drift It Like Putin’s Driver” and “Coups R Us: American Regime Changes and Their Aftermaths.”

Prominent figures

Perhaps the most prominent figure in Russia’s Africa push is Yevgeny V. Prigozhin, the St. Petersburg businessma­n indicted by the United States for running the online “troll farm” that sought to sway the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, who is said to run a military contractor called Wagner that is involved in several African countries.

Another is Konstantin Malofeev, a nationalis­t banker under U.S. sanctions who has cultivated ties with farright politician­s in Europe and the United States, as well as pro-Russian separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

Prigozhin did not appear in public at the conference, but Malofeev had a stand right by the entrance showing off a new project: an agency promising to help African government­s gain access to financing as an alternativ­e to Western sources like the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Malofeev described the new organizati­on, called the Internatio­nal Agency for Sovereign Developmen­t, as an economic approach to the ideologica­l battle he’s been fighting for a long time: breaking the Western world order. But it was the first time he’s ever been involved with Africa, Malofeev said. Niger, Guinea and the Democratic Republic of Congo have already signed on to have the agency help them raise a total of $2.5 billion, he said.

Russia says the yearly volume of its trade with Africa has doubled to $20 billion over the last five years, but that still pales in comparison to Africa’s $300 billion in trade with the European Union and $60 billion with the United States in 2018.

In Africa, Russia is trumpeting itself as a protector of “traditiona­l values,” while also seeking to capitalize on Russia’s Cold War past, when the Soviet Union sought to ally itself with opponents of post-colonial influence on the continent.

Propaganda wars

Alexander Malkevich, a veteran of Russia’s propaganda wars, founded an English-language website called USAReally, which tells the story of a declining America caught in the throes of violence. Now, he says, he spends about onethird of his time on Africa. His Foundation for National Values Protection, with a website in English and French, argues that African countries are vulnerable to the same sort of Western meddling that Russian officials say undermined former Soviet republics like Georgia and Ukraine.

“The Western system is broken,” said Clifton Ellis, who is British and Jamaican, and moved to St. Petersburg recently, where he helps coordinate AFRIC’s activities. “We have to fight the narrative that because Russia is involved, it’s bad.”

AFRIC — Associatio­n for Free Research and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n — is building ties with African politician­s and commentato­rs while publishing articles that extol the benefits of cooperatin­g with Russia.

 ?? SERGEY PONOMAREV / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Workers are shown at the Russia Today studios in London. Russian officials said the Kremlin’s RT and Sputnik would be glad to host African journalist­s in Moscow for training on topics such as social media or go to Africa to train them.
SERGEY PONOMAREV / NEW YORK TIMES Workers are shown at the Russia Today studios in London. Russian officials said the Kremlin’s RT and Sputnik would be glad to host African journalist­s in Moscow for training on topics such as social media or go to Africa to train them.

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