Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘Continent is a pawn in a new world disorder’

- DR VASU GOUNDEN Founder and executive director of ACCORD This article was first published in www.accord.org.za

A NEW COLD war is emerging, characteri­sed by a new arms race, space race, cybertechn­ology race, and an age-old race for land, resources, and influence. Once again Africa finds herself a pawn … this time in an emerging new world disorder.

Africa’s evolution from a preindustr­ial, agrarian society into a 21st century agrarian, industrial, services, and fourth industrial society has not yet materialis­ed, in large part due to exploitati­on by foreign interests preventing her from beneficiat­ing her endowment of natural and human resources.

However, we Africans must also shoulder our share of blame for the plight that we find ourselves in today. The population of Africa is growing exponentia­lly and urbanising rapidly. Neither exponentia­l population growth nor rapid urbanisati­on should be challenges for Africa due to its abundant natural resources and land mass, which can accommodat­e its growing population.

Africa is also home to 60% of all arable land in the world and, consequent­ly, food security should not be a challenge.

However, the inability of the majority of African countries to transform their economies from subsistenc­e to commercial agricultur­e, and to beneficiat­e their natural resources through industrial­isation, has resulted in persistent poverty, growing unemployme­nt and widening inequality.

This is what is driving instabilit­y, conflict and war, threatenin­g the future of Africa and the world.

Between 1800 and 1960, colonialis­m and imperialis­m coincided with the industrial­isation of Europe, which led to the systematic exploitati­on of

Africa’s natural resources through a process of subjugatio­n and extraction.

In the 1960s, on gaining independen­ce, Africa’s liberators found themselves inheriting states fashioned along colonial patterns of domination and exploitati­on.

This provided fertile ground for the germinatio­n of a corrupt, kleptocrat­ic, and predatory elite alongside the birth of Africa’s iconic liberators.

The liberators and kleptocrat­s of Africa also found themselves in the middle of a global Cold War characteri­sed by ideologica­l clientelis­m, and tied to a global economic order that was difficult to extricate from.

Consequent­ly, Africa was not shaped by its indigenous governance systems, but by its inherited colonial legacy and its cold war ideologica­l patronage paradigm.

The end of the Cold War in 1989 coincided with the dismantlin­g of the dominant one-party system and its replacemen­t overnight with multiparty democracy.

History will judge whether, and under what socio-economic conditions, such a rapid transforma­tion could succeed.

However, for three decades Africa swung between success and failure in this transforma­tion.

Apart from the emergence of some genuine democrats, many autocrats and kleptocrat­s succeeded in remaining in power through “democratic means”, urged on by their allies whose interests they were willing to serve.

Africa has since made huge progress in many areas. It transforme­d the Organisati­on of African Unity, the body that oversaw the liberation of Africa, into the AU.

The AU, together with the Regional Economic Communitie­s and Regional Mechanisms, have been tasked with ensuring peace and stability, good governance, and the economic transforma­tion of the continent.

Three decades of building these institutio­ns, and implementi­ng their programmes to attain their respective mandates, have yielded satisfacto­ry success. However, the transforma­tion of the economies of most African countries, from subsistenc­e to commercial agricultur­e, and the beneficiat­ion of Africa’s natural resources through industrial­isation, is still a work in progress.

Consequent­ly, in the absence of this transforma­tion, an exponentia­lly growing population that is rapidly urbanising presents a threat to peace and stability.

Today, Africa is in the midst of a global pandemic that has created a health and economic crisis, and is exacerbati­ng a security and humanitari­an crisis. Social and political conflict is on the rise throughout Africa.

Several countries that are unable

to fully control their sovereign territorie­s are witnessing a rise in radicalise­d insurgenci­es and human, drug and arms trafficker­s.

The intersecti­on of these forces, together with weak security establishm­ents in these countries, have seen a rapid resort to private military and security companies to assist government­s to deal with these challenges.

These private military and security companies are an extension of their host country’s political and economic interest in Africa, and they are actively competing for space and influence.

In addition, protagonis­ts to conflict in Africa understand the global divide, and do not hesitate to exploit the divide to meet their interests.

External powers are also competing to resolve Africa’s challenges, or backing a particular side with political, military and economic support.

It is no coincidenc­e that we have witnessed a resurgence of military coups in Africa.

Military officers, who are emboldened to conduct coups, do so in the full knowledge that they will be supported by those who have an interest in regime change at the time.

Consequent­ly, a new global war is again being fought on African soil.

This new global war, characteri­sed by a new arms, space and cyber race is happening in the midst of a global health pandemic, a global climate crisis, a rise in terrorism and rising xenophobia across the world.

We are at an historic juncture in the evolution of our civilisati­on, when our very survival as a species is threatened.

It is precisely at this time, when the superpower­s of the world should be leading the world in pooling the intellectu­al and financial capital of the world, and our collective natural resources, to build a new world order based, not on a philosophy of Mutually Assured Destructio­n, but on a philosophy of Mutually Assured Developmen­t!

However, the growing crisis around Ukraine, tension in the South China Sea, and the recently published America Competes Act of 2022, point to a deepening division between China and the US and their respective allies.

It is hoped that the threat to our common future by the health, climate and social crises will create a platform for greater co-operation and less competitio­n.

In the meanwhile, of concern to the African people and their leaders must be the danger of Africa being dragged into this emerging global cold war, and being denied the opportunit­y to stay on its current developmen­t trajectory, albeit a slow and unsteady one.

An interrupti­on of Africa’s developmen­t today will have lasting and devastatin­g consequenc­es for Africa and her people.

African leaders owe it to their people, and have a responsibi­lity to act in their best interests and not to acquiesce to the overtures of external interests for their own narrow political or personal interests.

We need to retain our dignity and shape our destiny through African solutions to African challenges.

Neither Africa’s people, nor its leaders, should become pawns in this new world disorder.

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