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Russia and Africa Summit |
The summit is the first major gathering of African leaders in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and will be held at Sochi’s Olympic Park, where Russia held the 2014 Winter Olympics.
According to Kremlin adviser Yuri Ushakov, all 54 African states are sending a representative, with 43 sending a head of state or government.
“Russia has things to offer in terms of... cooperation to African countries,” a spokesperson for Putin said this week. In particular, the summit will likely focus on “pragmatic economic cooperation, military-technical partnerships, and Russia’s quiet soft-power push”, according to the Brookings Institution, which suggests that Russia is attempting to counter the influence of the US and China in Africa.
To this end, Russia appears to have two goals in mind, according to experts. First off, Newsweek suggests that Russian attempts to woo the African continent make sense on paper because of its “massive economic and political potential”. Meanwhile, from a diplomatic perspective, Voice of America says that “as far as Kremlin officials are concerned the event will... demonstrate the country is no longer a defunct World power”.

Manpower and money
Africa, from an economic perspective, is an untapped goldmine. Newsweek reports that around 60% of the continent’s rapidly growing population is under the age of 25, offering a “vast pool of workers even if many are not yet highly skilled”. Furthermore, the magazine adds, the continent has “abundant natural resources and since 2000 its combined GDP has grown by 5.1% per year on average”.
However, Voice of America notes that since the end of the Soviet Union, which funded and supported numerous revolutionary leaders in Africa, Russia has done “relatively little on the African continent” and has “lacked the money and will to expand ties with Africa”.
Recently, things have changed. Moscow has pushed hard for greater political influence on a continent with “54 United Nations member states, sprawling mineral wealth” and fast-growing markets for numerous commidities, Reuters says.
As a result of this drive, Russia’s foreign ministry has reported a 350% increase in trade with African countries over the past ten years, says The Moscow Times. Russian firms are also helping to set up major infrastructural work such as Egypt’s first nuclear power station and Zimbabwe’s mining operations.Despite this surge, Moscow still “lags far behind competitors”, Reuters says. Russia says its trade with African countries rose to $20bn last year, but this is still less than half that of France and around ten times less than China.
Arms
Along with mineral wealth and a large potential labour force, Reuters notes that Africa also harbours something that Moscow will almost certainly be keeping a close eye on: “potentially lucrative markets for Russian-manufactured weapons”.This, unlike trade, is a sector in which Russia is no small player: Moscow is the second largest supplier of arms in the world and is already a major supplier to African nations.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Russian sales of weaponry to African countries more than doubled between 2012 and 2017 and currently comprises just under 40% of Africa’s arms imports. This puts them far ahead of both China and the US.
Despite already dominating the African weapons market, the Kremlin appears to be hoping that this week’s summit will lead to more arms sales, with Reuters reporting that Russia “plans to put on an arms fair at the summit, showing Russian-made weapons including its S-400 missile defence system, other air defence systems as well as non-military equipment”.
What does Russia want on the world stage?
The Daily Maverick, a newspaper based in South Africa, cites several analysts who claim that this new summit is Putin taking advantage of the “retreat from Africa of President Donald Trump’s US administration”, and is part of the so-called “Scramble for Africa”.This will see Moscow compete with other powers that already have similar institutionalised engagements with the African continent, including Japan, the European Union, France, China, India, Turkey, the Arab League and South Korea.
In an attempt to catch up, Putin on Monday hinted to African leaders that Moscow could “offer help without strings attached”, Reuters says, “unlike what he cast as the exploitative West”. We see how an array of Western countries are resorting to pressure, intimidation and blackmail of sovereign African governments,” Putin told the TASS news agency, suggesting that other superpowers were merely courting Africa to gain access to its natural resources.
But while its leaders may readily head to Russia for such economic opportunity, few of Africa’s leading pundits are buying Putin’s attempts to distance himself from exploitative practices. Kenyan paper The Standard claimed that this week’s summit is “in many ways borrowing from China’s playbook”.
“To expand its influence, Beijing in 2000 launched the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation and has poured tens of billions of dollars into the continent,” the paper adds. “Russia cannot match China’s economic might but, like Beijing, it is prepared to support African leaders with controversial rights records in exchange for access to the continent’s riches.”
Furthermore, Putin’s comments are somewhat undermined by Chinese President Xi Jinping’s decision to pledge $60bn in aid to African leaders during a major summit in Beijing last year, which he explicitly stated came with “no political strings attached”, said The Independent.
Video of the Summit Live

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