FO° Exclusive: Unstable Africa Drives Refugees North

In 2024, an estimated 163 million Africans suffered from acute food insecurity, over 10% of the continent’s population. This figure is nearly triple that of five years ago. Many of these Africans are crossing the Mediterranean Sea to get to Europe.

Check out our comment feature!

[On December 31, 2024, we predicted seven developments for 2025 and boldly went where only fools, angels and astrologers dare to go. So, what can we expect in 2025? To borrow words from the military, a more volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous (VUCA) world. This is Part 6 of a seven-part series. You can read Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5 here.]

In 2024, militant Islamist violence in Africa reached a record high. Fatalities have nearly tripled since 2020 to approximately 11,000. This violence has displaced over 45 million people, a 14% increase over the 2023 figure. Last year marked the 13th consecutive year in which this figure has risen.

Russia has now emerged as a major player in Africa, displacing France in many countries. Moscow has conducted multiple disinformation campaigns and sent mercenaries to many conflict zones, such as Mali, Niger, Libya and Sudan.

Sudan’s conflict is Africa’s biggest crisis

The implosion of Sudan is the biggest crisis in Africa today. It has exacerbated the tensions in an already fragile region, worsening conflicts in neighboring states and increasing political instability. The internal conflicts in Libya, Chad, the Central African Republic, South Sudan and Ethiopia are now further complicated by Sudan’s instability.

Foreign powers, most notably the United Arab Emirates, Russia, Iran and Egypt, are inflaming Sudan’s conflict. They have deployed drones, munitions and mercenaries. They also patronize the smuggling of resources. This scramble for influence risks Sudan fragmenting into a collection of client states, sidelining civilian voices and popular sovereignty.

Climate change has increased African food insecurity

Over 11.5 million Sudanese have been internally displaced, and more 2.3 million have fled the country since the civil war began in April 2023. Food shortages are estimated to be killing hundreds of people daily. An estimated three million people are facing acute food insecurity.

Experts point out that droughts and floods are a key reason for increased conflict. Climate change means that places lack rain for longer periods or get too much rain in too short a time. This means the land is less productive, even as populations rise. This explosive combination has led people to fight over water, pastures and land.

In 2024, an estimated 163 million Africans suffered from acute food insecurity, over 10% of the continent’s population. This figure is nearly triple that of five years ago. Many of these Africans are crossing the Mediterranean Sea to get to Europe.

Lee Kuan Yew, the late Singaporean statesman, once warned that if Europe did not export prosperity south, Africa would export people north. That is exactly what is happening.

[Anton Schauble and Lee Thompson-Kolar edited this piece.]

The views expressed in this article/video are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

Comment

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted

FO Talks: Iran Won, the US and Israel Lost

June 11, 2026

FO Talks: Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Looks to Secure a Landslide Win in Ethiopia’s Election

June 07, 2026

FO Talks: Can Canada Learn from the Iran War and Develop a Self-Reliant Military Industry?

FO Exclusive: The $39 Trillion Trap — The Terrifying Reality of America’s Bond Market

June 05, 2026

FO Exclusive: How Beijing is Shaping the Global Order With the Trump and Putin Summits

June 04, 2026

FO Exclusive: Global Lightning Roundup of May 2026

June 03, 2026

FO Talks: Israeli and American Air Power Fail Iran Regime Change as Trump Threatens NATO

June 02, 2026

FO Talks: Work, Identity and the Job Crisis No One Wants to Fix

June 01, 2026

FO Talks: Trump, Iran and UAE — Kanwal Sibal Explains India’s Diplomatic Balancing Acts

May 31, 2026

FO Talks: Decoding Elections in India’s West Bengal, Assam, Tamil Nadu and Keralam

May 30, 2026

FO Talks: Decoding Donald Trump’s Visit to China and Xi Jinping’s Thucydides Trap Remark

May 29, 2026

FO Talks: Can Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Indonesia Mediate the Iran War?

FO Talks: The Stalled Tribunal — Is the ICC Afraid to Prosecute Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu?

May 22, 2026

FO Talks: Trump’s Iran Jolt — Why the US Is Threatening the UK Over the Falkland Islands

FO Talks: How QUAD Members Japan and Australia Are Now Maximizing Minilateral Cooperation

May 18, 2026

FO Talks: A Dangerous Divide — Why a Middle-Class Breakup Threatens American Democracy

May 17, 2026

FO Talks: Why the US Could Abandon the UK and Back Argentina in the Falkland Islands Dispute

FO Talks: Making Sense of US Policy Towards Cuba Under Obama, Biden and Trump

May 15, 2026

FO Talks: Inside Meta’s AI Surveillance: Tracking Keystrokes and Clicks to Replace You?

May 14, 2026

FO Talks: The Iran War Could Crash the Global Economy, Here’s How

May 13, 2026

 

Fair Observer, 461 Harbor Blvd, Belmont, CA 94002, USA