Dismantling Africa, one nation at a time

Dismantling Africa, one nation at a time

Something is going wrong in Africa. Nigeria and Ethiopia, the two most populous countries on the continent, are both stumbling towards disintegration. There are now 54 sovereign African countries, which really ought to be enough, but in a few years there could be 60.

Ethiopia is closer to the brink, so close that it could actually go over this month. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's attempt to force the northern state of Tigray into obedience began well in late 2019, when federal government troops occupied it against only minor resistance, but the Tigrayans were just biding their time.

Tigrayans did most of the fighting in the 16-year war to overthrow the brutal Communist tyranny known as the Derg. They dominated the less cruel and more competent regime that followed in 1991-2018. And they withdrew from the government when Mr Abiy tried to corral everyone into a non-ethnic, more or less democratic "Prosperity Party" in 2019.

The military occupation of Tigray didn't last. The Tigray Defence Force (TDF) came down from the hills last June and cleared federal troops out of the state practically overnight. Then it pushed south into the neighbouring state of Amhara along Highway One, which links Addis Ababa, Ethiopia's capital, with the only port accessible to the landlocked country, Djibouti.

In July the TDF stopped at Weldia, still in Amhara state and about 400 kilometres (248 miles) from Addis Ababa, to await the great Ethiopian counter attack -- which didn't start until about Oct 10. It takes time to organise tens of thousands of half-trained volunteers, which was about all Mr Abiy had left after the June-July debacle.

The battle raged for two weeks, with the attacks of Amhara militia and volunteers from elsewhere failing against the trained, experienced Tigrayan troops. About a week ago the Ethiopian troops broke and started fleeing south, although you probably didn't hear about that because Mr Abiy began bombing the Tigrayan capital, Mekelle, to distract your attention.

The TDF has already captured Dessie and is advancing on Kombolcha, which is halfway from Mekelle to Addis Ababa. Will the Tigrayans actually go for Addis itself? It's not impossible. They're arrogant enough, and they may be strong enough.

Besides, the TDF has made an alliance with the Oromo Liberation Front, which claims to represent the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia. The OLF already holds several towns just north of Addis and is contesting others. Ethiopia is definitely starting to look like former Yugoslavia just before the break-up.

Nigeria is not that close to the edge, but the signs are bad. The huge gap in income, education and simple literacy between the very poor Muslim north and the mostly Christian south is a major irritant. The desperate lack of jobs for the young is destabilising even the south, as last year's failed youth rebellion clearly demonstrated.

In the north-east, the jihadist Boko Haram has become the local authority in some places, collecting taxes and digging wells. In the north-west, banditry is out of control, with dozens or even hundreds of schoolchildren being kidnapped for ransom almost every week. The region is awash with arms, and one gang recently shot down a military jet.

In the "middle belt" of states, farmers and herders are often at war, and in the southeast Igbo secessionists are raising the call for an independent Biafra again. Along the coast piracy is flourishing, and the oil multinational Shell is offloading its onshore Nigerian oil assets in the face of insecurity, theft and sabotage.

"This is an exposure that doesn't fit with our risk appetite anymore," said Shell CEO Ben van Beurden, and most major investors feel the same way. Nigeria, like Ethiopia, is full of clever, ambitious young people with the education and skills to transform the country if only it was politically stable.

It would be a catastrophe if these two countries, containing a quarter of Africa's population, were to be Balkanised, but that may be coming. If the Serbs and the Croats can't live together happily, why should we expect the Igbo and the Hausa, or the Tigrayans and the Amharas, to do so?

The old Organisation of African Unity rule said the former colonial borders must never be changed, because otherwise there would be a generation of war and chaos. That's why for a long time there were 50 African states and no more, but recently the rule has begun to fray. Somaliland, Eritrea, South Sudan ... who's next?

Will the dam burst if Ethiopia breaks up into different countries? Nobody knows, but it would be preferable if we don't have to find out. Better the borders you know than the ones you don't.


Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries. His new book is 'The Shortest History of War'.

Gwynne Dyer

Independent journalist

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries. His new book is 'Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work)'.

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (29)