Africa is facing a new era of insecurity and instability, according to a recent report by Amani Africa accompanying the African Union summit. The nature of conflict on the continent has shifted, moving away from traditional power struggles toward prolonged, open-ended struggles.
The report highlights a confluence of factors contributing to this change, including the proliferation of armed groups, the economic incentives driving conflict, and increased geopolitical competition.
Contemporary conflicts in Africa are increasingly characterized as wars of permanence, sustained by political fragmentation, economic incentives, and geopolitical rivalry. Armed actors have diversified, including militias, paramilitaries, mercenary formations, and hybrid security forces. Authority is diffused, accountability diluted, and violence is often outsourced. Conflict has become economically rational, with smuggling, trafficking, illicit taxation, aid diversion, and control of trade routes sustaining armed groups and political elites. External actors are increasingly treating African conflict zones as arenas of strategic competition, prioritizing access to resources and strategic locations over commitments to peace.
With a significant number of elections scheduled for 2026, the report cautions that elections conducted without political settlement, security guarantees, institutional trust, and political inclusion risk redistributing conflict rather than resolving it. The African Union is urged to re-evaluate its election observation and certification practices to restore public trust in electoral processes.
Africa’s multilateral institutions are currently at their weakest, hindering collective action. Political capture, a lack of clear vision, inconsistency, underfunding, and external bypassing have eroded credibility and enforcement capacity. Peace initiatives are increasingly brokered outside African frameworks, often prioritizing short-term deals over long-term political settlements. This trend threatens the continent’s peace and security architecture.
Reversing these trends requires decisive collective action and a serious strategic reflection on Africa’s position in the emerging global order. The African Union institutional reform presents an opportunity to break from past failures and craft a common Pan-African strategy to resist fragmentation and reclaim agency.
Conflict prevention and resolution need revitalization, anchored on robust diplomacy for peace. Peacemaking, mediation, and peacebuilding should be the core mandate of African multilateral institutions, with ceasefires viewed as steps toward political settlement. Regional strategies are needed for conflicts of regional nature, and enforcement mechanisms must be strengthened.
War economies must be dismantled through coordinated regional and international action to disrupt conflict financing networks and trafficking routes. Peace initiatives should be principled, and civilians must be re-centered in peace processes, ensuring the inclusion of social forces, youth, women, and displaced populations. Elections must be subordinated to peace, with security guarantees, political inclusion, and consensus on the rules of the game as prerequisites.
Africa is approaching a critical juncture. If current trends continue, 2026 could mark the structural entrenchment of permanent war and a weakening of the continent’s collective voice. A future remains salvageable through serious reform, collective strategy, and a recommitment to peace and Pan-Africanism.
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