Windsor Star

The price of Africa's rich diversity is war

- GWYNNE DYER Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist based in London, England.

“We could see an all-out war between all the tribes and that is really the doomsday scenario,” the head of an internatio­nal non-government organizati­on working in Sudan recently told the Al Jazeera news agency.

Doomsday is a strong word, but the fighting in Sudan is probably killing more people a day than are dying in the wars in either Ukraine or the Gaza Strip. An estimated nine million people have fled their homes in Sudan since the war began more than a year ago, and severe hunger is setting in there on a Gaza-like scale.

So, why has the world heard so little about it?

News has to be about events that people care about, and that is largely a function of distance: the farther away it is, the less important it seems.

But there's another factor at work in the relative silence about Sudan: news needs to be new. That is, it needs to be different from the normal, the usual, the past.

Unfortunat­ely, war in Africa is none of the above.

There are 54 countries in Africa. There are also 50 countries in Europe, but apart from the Balkans wars of the 1990s and the current war in Ukraine there have been no major wars in the region since 1945.

Africa is very different. In addition to the big war in Sudan right now, the internal war in Ethiopia between Amhara and Tigray states is starting up again. Major Islamist insurgenci­es are underway in Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso and Chad, in each case controllin­g large chunks of the country's territory.

Internal — essentiall­y tribal — wars continue in the new country of South Sudan and in various parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The English-speaking minority is in revolt in Cameroon, the Islamist al-shabab group still holds most of southern Somalia (the north has broken away), and there are Islamist rebels in northern Mozambique.

Eleven countries out of 54, containing more than a quarter of Africa's population, are at war, and mostly they are at war with themselves.

Why is Africa like this? Maybe it's because there are at least 75 African languages with more than a million speakers each, and probably another hundred with at least a quarter-million. Moreover, only a dozen have more than 20 million speakers.

Language is the biggest element in cultural and political identity, so Africa is by far the richest continent in terms of ethnicitie­s and identities.

In Europe, only eight languages now account for 80 per cent of the continent's population. Just two languages, Mandarin and Hindi/ Urdu, will enable you to speak to almost half of Asia's population. This homogeniza­tion, accomplish­ed mostly by force, did eventually produce long periods of peace over large areas, like the Roman empire or the Ming Dynasty in China.

Africa did not take the same road. Iron-working began in Africa at about the same time as in Europe, India and China, but big empires did not follow. African empires did exist, but they came and went relatively fast and never controlled a large part of the continent.

That's why Africa retains so much of its original diversity in language and culture. This is not a post-colonial problem. Small but frequent wars were the price Africans paid for that rich diversity all through their history, and they are still paying it today.

Since modern communicat­ions technologi­es now make it almost impossible to suppress all those languages and cultures, the only possible solution is to integrate them into broader shared identities.

The work has begun, but it will take at least another generation. Meanwhile, lots of wars, mostly internal ones.

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