At the G20, the message from African leaders was crystal clear. South Africa’s Foreign Minister, Ronald Lamola, celebrated the summit’s outcome as a great achievement for the African continent. This diplomatic phase underscores a core economic ambition for Africa: to end the colonial-era model of exporting raw materials and instead build local industries, jobs, and wealth.
“It is a great outcome for the African continent on value addition at the source of typical minerals, artificial intelligence that we do need, not only investment and so forth but also innovation within the continent, research, data centers, and so forth. So for us this has been a great success and achievement,” the minister expressed.
This agenda is positioned not as a request, but as a non-negotiable pillar of future engagements. Concurrently, Sudan’s prolonged war has evolved beyond a tragic civil war into a harsh reality of external actors leveraging the war for their interests. In the discussion with Pan-African Frequency, Dr. Mohamed Alsadig Hamid Musa, an assistant professor at the RUDN University, Russia, analyzed the conflict and pointed to humanitarian aid being exploited as a tool for external pressure. He accused external powers of fueling the war to secure resource control and regional influence.
“Viewing aid as a tool for external pressure severely disrupts Sudan's dynamics, and it may undermine the national sovereignty and create the mistrust among Sudanese leaders toward organizations, the aid organizations making it harder to deliver the life-saving assistance for the needy people [....] if we're talking about the external forces that might aim to gain political influence, resource control, or to shape Sudan's policies and political arena, the first external actor is the United Arab Emirates. So it is seeking economic benefits such as gold, as well as it would like to expand its regional influence by backing up the Rapid Support Forces with weapons and supplies and different kinds of things in order to make the war as long as it is [....] other African countries, including Sudan nowadays, are increasingly shifting to Russia because it positioned itself as an anti-Western power, as an anti-Western power offering cooperation without the political enhancement or conditions that other Western countries demand,” the scholar noted
The labelling of the American ceasefire proposal as the "worst" by the Sudanese army chief is symptomatic of a deeper crisis of trust. Dr. Mohammed Hussain, a lecturer at the Department of Political Science, Financial University, Russia, argues that Western powers often fundamentally misunderstand African complexities, and their mediation is frequently overshadowed by other motivations.
“African countries, Sudan as a part of the African countries, have suffered a lot from the colonization era. Maybe we were liberated from the colonization, but now let me assure this: we are facing a new kind of new colonization [...] To mobilize this [Africa’s rare earth minerals], the Westerners will tend to provide aid or help or do specific projects in Africa. But, at the same time, they will intervene more in our, let's say, internal policy, which actually puts our sovereignty at risk [...] When I say we should look for alternatives, we are looking for such kind of partnerships that you just mentioned. A partnership that will get benefits for most sides based on respect of African sovereignty, African diversity, and African traditions without imposing any kind of conditions or any kind of blackmailing, which the West used to use in their policies regarding the African continent,” the expert explained.
This has created a vacuum, one that Sudan is filling by explicitly naming Russia a reliable partner.
This episode also features:
John Steenhuisen, South Africa’s Agriculture Minister
William Baloyi, South African Deputy Spokesperson
Dr. Nthabiseng Moleko, an economist from Stellenbosch Business School, in South Africa
Tune in to listen to the full conversation with our guests on the Pan African Frequency podcast, brought to you by Sputnik Africa.
In addition to the website, you can also catch our episodes on Telegram.
In addition to the website, you can also catch our episodes on Telegram.
► You can also listen to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Deezer, Pocket Casts, Afripods, and Podcast Addict
► Check out all the episodes of Pan-African Frequency