Issue No: 05/2024

Conflict & Resilience Monitor – 30 June 2024

The Conflict and Resilience Monitor offers monthly blog-size commentary and analysis on the latest conflict-related trends in Africa.

Photo Credit: EU/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie

We begin this month’s Monitor with an article from Tom Wuchte and Rehema Zaid who write about the nexus between terrorism and climate change on the African continent.  The article discusses how the link between terrorism and climate change is an understudied area of research.  However, according to the article linkages do exist between the effects of climate change and the risk of recruitment into violent extremist groups.  The second article this month also discusses climate change.  Giulia Caroli, Cedric de Coning, Gracsious Maviza, Joram Tarusarira, Henintsoa Onivola Minoarivelo and Nqobile Moyo have written about climate, peace, security and migration in Zimbabwe.  Their article comes off the back of a recently held workshop in Zimbabwe, where the impact of climate change on issues such as security and migration was discussed. Their article discusses the pathways of interaction between climate change impacts and peace and security dynamics and what some of the priorities for the addressing these impacts might be.

Moving on from climate change, our third article is from Paul Nantulya who has written about the recently concluded South African elections.  In particular the article discusses the performance of the African National Congress, where it lost votes and its decline in support over the years, as well as the performance of the other major political parties in the country in recent elections. The article also discusses the establishment of the government of national unity and ways forward for South Africa.

Finally, we end off this month’s monitor with an article from Ndzalama C. Mathebula who writes about the upsurge of coups in Central and West Africa.  The article looks at coups from the psychological perspective of those involved in the coups and the effects that this might have on the security of the state.  The article discusses how the seizing of power through a coup only serves to make the state more unstable, and could likely lead to further coups taking place, as coup leaders fear the possibility of themselves becoming the victims of another coup. 

Chief Editor: Conflict & Resilience Monitor​
Assistant Editor: Conflict & Resilience Monitor​
Photo Credit: Judy McCallum
Environment

Violent extremism, climate change and human security 

  • Thomas Wuchte
  • Rehema Zaid Obuyi

The topic de jour with nearly every conversation is about Climate Change. This is reminiscent of the early 2010s when social media empowered much of the violent extremist recruitment and then digital posts left law enforcement with evidence regarding the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and its brief kinetic advance to create a caliphate. Much effort was used to address responsible understanding of these complexities. Similar concerns carry over from the 2010s on how to address the climate change and security nexus. Against this backdrop, the interplay between terrorism, organised crime, and climate change—and specifically how they appear to be fuelling violent extremist engagement—warrants our full attention.

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Photo Credit: Johnson Siamachira/CIMMYT
Environment

Towards a common vision of climate, peace, security and migration in Zimbabwe

  • Giulia Caroli
  • Cedric de Coning
  • Gracsious Maviza
  • Joram Tarusarira
  • Henintsoa Onivola Minoarivelo
  • Nqobile Moyo

This year, Zimbabwe experienced its worst drought in decades, affecting more than 80 percent of its population and leading to a declaration of a state of national disaster by the President. With climate impacts becoming more frequent and pervasive, risks to social cohesion, resilience, stability, and peace are on the rise, reshaping the country’s security and development landscape and making it more complex. Critical questions thus arise concerning what can be done and who would be best positioned to drive responses. There are no fixed answers to this, but recent developments in the national climate change policy architecture can open a window of opportunity for integrating elements of conflict-sensitivity and peacebuilding. This approach cannot be pursued by the Ministry of Environment, Climate Change and Wildlife alone; instead, it requires multi-stakeholder collaboration where all the concerned humanitarian, development, and peace sector actors play a role based on their respective expertise, skills and mandates.

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Photo Credit: Flowcomm
Governance

South Africa enters uncharted territory

  • Paul Nantulya

Having earned only 40% of the vote in the most pivotal election since the dawn of South Africa’s democracy in 1994, a subdued African National Congress (ANC) scrambled to find partners to form a government. It was faced with the option of striking a deal with the Democratic Alliance (DA), of John Steenhuisen, which got 22% of the vote, or the parties that broke away from it, namely the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) of Julius Malema, which won 10%, and former President Jacob Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP), which received 15%.

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Photo Credit: Albert Gonzalez Farran/UNAMID
Governance

The security dilemma of coups in West and Central Africa

  • Ndzalama Cleopatra Mathebula

In recent years the African continent, particularly West and Central Africa, has been experiencing an upsurge of coups and undemocratic means of seizing power. Namely Mali in August 2020, Chad in April 2021, Guinea in September 2021, Burkina Faso in January 2022, Niger in July 2023 and Gabon in August 2023. The idiosyncrasies surrounding these coups have sparked debate in the academic arena, as researchers seek to understand the logic and drive behind the upsurge. The pattern of these coups suggests the possibility of a coup contagion, something Singh rebukes. Singh argues that there is no evidence of a contagious wave, but rather what is being witnessed is a contemporaneous effect of previously coup-prone states in West and Central Africa. Asadu argues that the popular support received by many of these coups indicate plagued political systems, stagnant economic growth, and deteriorated standards of living, but more significantly failing democracies and a collapsed rule of law in many of these African states. As these democracies fail to bring forth change, numerous African states have succumbed to the forceful removal of presidents and seizure of power. This piece seeks to focus on coup leaders and their military force, their psychological framing, cognitive bias, and how they choose to respond to what they perceive as a risk. In this regard, risk will be defined as the loss of sovereignty within the coup circle.

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