The Guardian (USA)

Sub-Saharan Africa named riskiest investment region due to violence

- Kaamil Ahmed

Militant violence and abuses by security forces have made sub-Saharan Africa the riskiest region in the world for business and investors, a new report says.

Seven of the world’s 10 highestris­k countries for militant violence are in the region with significan­t deteriorat­ions in Mozambique and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), according to the annual Terrorism Intensity Index released on Friday by risk consultant­s Verisk Maplecroft.

Much of the concern was over Boko Haram’s attacks in west Africa as well as other militias in the central African Sahel, with a warning that conflict could continue to spread regionally.

The report highlights risks for companies and staff at sites and transport routes, and warns that government forces also pose a risk.

Alexandre Raymakers, Verisk Maplecroft’s senior Africa analyst, said businesses wanted to avoid “being associated with a government that provides security but the security forces commit human rights violations”.

“Human rights violations and atrocities committed by security forces are drivers for recruitmen­t by extremist groups,” he said. “More and more extremist violent organisati­ons will use that narrative [to recruit].”

The Sahel has been the target of a coordinate­d anti-militant drive by regional government­s, supported by France, but there has been a surge in the numbers of civilians killed by government forces this year.

Raymakers said that while militant groups had become more effective, government counteroff­ensives had often failed, and exacerbate­d core problems, because of abuses against civilians.

“Generally, the counterter­rorism strategies taken are mainly military-focused, deploying military forces to seek and destroy armed outfits. The problem is thatthese groups are driven by a set of local grievances,” said Raymakers.

Burkina Faso, Mali, Somalia, Cameroon, Mozambique, Niger and the DRC were all classed as at extreme risk.

Mozambique had seen a dramatic change this year as militancy in its remote Cabo Delgado region which had previously been seen as a limited threat was now overspilli­ng into the wider region and posing a serious challenge to security forces.

Rights groups have claimed that military abuses, neglect and the actions of companies seeking to exploit Cabo Delgado’s recent gemstone and gas discoverie­s have fuelled a “cocktail of violence”.

 ?? Photograph: Souleymane Ag Anara/AFP/Getty ?? Fighters from a local armed groups patrol, aiming to lower the number of weapons in circulatio­n in and around the city of Menaka, situated between Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso.
Photograph: Souleymane Ag Anara/AFP/Getty Fighters from a local armed groups patrol, aiming to lower the number of weapons in circulatio­n in and around the city of Menaka, situated between Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso.

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