Private military contractors bolster Russian influence in Africa
Russia's geopolitical ambitions in Africa have in recent
years been backed by private military contractors, often described as belonging
to the "Wagner group" -- an entity with no known legal status.
Most recently, Western nations have condemned the alleged
arrival of Russian mercenaries in Mali's capital Bamako, a claim denied by the
junta that seized power in 2020.
As relations with France worsen, the military rulers may be
looking for ways to make up for shrinking numbers of European troops fighting
Mali's years-old jihadist insurgency.
"Mercs (mercenaries) working in Africa is an
established norm" thanks in part to decades of operations by contractors
from South Africa, said Jason Blazakis of the New York-based Soufan Group
think-tank.
"The Wagner folks are walking through a door that has
long been open to their ilk," he added.
No information is publicly available about the group's size
or finances.
But around Africa, the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) in Washington has found evidence since 2016 of
Russian soldiers of fortune in Sudan, South Sudan, Libya, the Central African
Republic (CAR), Madagascar and Mozambique.
Botswana, Burundi, Chad, the Comoros, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Congo-Brazzaville, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria and
Zimbabwe are also on the CSIS's list.
In Africa "there is a convergence of many states'
interests, including China's," Alexey Mukhin of the Moscow-based Centre
for Political Information told AFP.
"Every state has the right to defend its business
assets," he added.
'Hysteria'
Wagner does not officially exist, with no company
registration, tax returns or organisational chart to be found.
When the EU wanted to sanction the group in 2020, it
targeted Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, an ally of President Vladimir
Putin who is suspected of running Wagner.
It imposed further sanctions in December last year when
mercenaries' arrival in Mali appeared certain -- drawing accusations of
"hysteria" from Moscow.
Western experts say military contractors are embedded in
Russia's official forces like intelligence agencies and the army, providing
plausible deniability for Moscow.
Their deployment to African countries aims to "enable
Russia to... regain this sphere of influence" that fell away with the
collapse of the Soviet Union, said CSIS researcher Catrina Doxsee.
The mercenaries' presence has been growing even faster since
a 2019 Russia-Africa summit.
Moscow has been active "especially in what has
traditionally been France's zone of influence" in former colonies like CAR
and Mali, said Djallil Lounnas, a researcher at Morocco's Al Akhawayn
university.
While military contractors sometimes shepherd Russian arms
sales, the revenue "really pales compared with the profit they are able to
generate from mining concessions and access to natural resources", Doxsee
said.
That makes unstable countries with mineral or hydrocarbon
wealth prime customers -- such as in Syria where the mercenaries first became
known to the wider public.
No questions asked
Lounnas said that another advantage for clients is a lack of
friction over human rights and democracy that might come with Western partners.
"Russia has its interests. It doesn't ask
questions," he added.
Reports of violence and abuse on the ground suggest that
same latitude may extend to the mercenaries themselves.
In the CAR, the United Nations is probing an alleged
massacre during a joint operation by government forces and Wagner fighters.
One military source told AFP that more than 50 people died,
some in "summary executions".
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