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Africa: Africa Should Not Expect Much From Donald Trump

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Washington, DC — Donald Trump is bad news for Africa. He was tough on Africa in his first term, and after nine months, his second term is shaping up to be much worse.
Trump’s “America First” policies of high tariffs and economic protectionism, restrictive immigration procedures, open hostility to international organizations and assault on development assistance agencies are at variance with African views and interest.
Trump’s policies are undermining relations with Africa, especially with important states like Nigeria and South Africa. His negative attitude toward Africa will have a long-term impact on Washington’s future engagement with the continent, and his regressive policies will expand opportunities for China and Russia to make greater economic and political inroads with African leaders.
As Washington pulls back, Turkey, India and the oil rich Gulf Arab states are also expanding their economic and political reach and influence.
The administration’s disinterest in the promotion of democracy, human rights and fair elections abroad will also embolden Africa’s authoritarian leaders and military rulers, accelerating democratic backsliding and weakening the continent’s fragile democratic institutions.
As the United States turns its back on Africa, Africa’s leaders are stepping up pan-African economic and political cooperation and building stronger ties with other transregional organizations like the BRICS, the G77 and the Organisation of Africa, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS). African leaders are also exerting greater pressure on global institutions to reform and include more African leadership and policy recommendations.
Trump’s First Term Damage
Trump has never taken Africa seriously. He didn’t travel to Africa during his first term, and he notoriously disparaged African countries, criticizing them in crude and vulgar language. He met in the White House with only two African presidents, and over four years he implemented a series of policies that had a profoundly negative impact on Africans.
Travel Restrictions
During his first week in office in 2017, President Trump signed the infamous Muslim Travel Ban, an Executive Order prohibiting citizens of seven predominantly Muslim states from coming into the United States. Three of those states were in Africa: LibyaSudan, and Somalia. The order was an early indication of the administration’s distain toward Africa, where Islam is the fastest growing religion and over half of the continent’s population is Muslim. Although U.S. courts forced the administration to restructure its travel ban, the revised travel restrictions were extended to thirteen countries, with Nigeria among those added to the list. The restrictions on Africa’s most populous country were especially punitive, cutting off the issuance of immigrant visas and prohibiting Nigerians from participating in the popular global immigrant visa lottery program.
Attack on Key UN Organizations
Trump’s visa ban was followed by an assault on several United Nations organizations with significant Africa programs. The administration pulled out of the Paris Climate Change Agreement in 2020 reversing a U.S. pledge of $3 billion to the Green Climate Fund, a third of which would have gone to Africa. According to the UN, Africa is impacted by climate change more than any other region of the world. The Climate Fund would have provided much needed financial assistance to help Africa address climate shocks and to transition from fossil fuels to renewables.
The first Trump administration also took aim at the World Health Organization (WHO), the largest international provider of health care services to Africa and a key partner in addressing the continent’s health challenges. Angered by the WHO’s position on the origins of the Covid virus, the administration pulled back its support for the WHO and set in motion the process to formally withdraw from the organization. In addition, the Trump administration pulled out of UNESCO and the UN Human Rights Council, criticizing both organizations for supporting programs and countries inimical to American interests. He also sought with mixed results to reduce U.S. contributions to the UN’s operating budget and to cut one billion dollars from the UN peacekeeping account. Although the animosity towards the UN had global implications, his policies probably hurt Africa more than any other region, given the continent’s dependence on the organization’s programs in health care, development, humanitarian assistance and peacekeeping.
Key Programs That Remained Under Trump One Are Now Under Threat
Many of the most important bilateral and multilateral U.S. programs with Africa survived during Trump’s first term, and some of his egregious policies were reversed by the Biden administration. But in the first nine months of his second term, the administration has taken a sledgehammer to virtually every major program directed toward Africa. And more are probably under threat.
Key programs that survived the first term are under threat – PEPFAR, Power Africa, Feed the Future, Prosper Africa ADF and YALI
Although backed in many cases by strong bipartisan Congressional support, the administration has eliminated:
In addition, a wide range of Africa-focused development programs administered and funded by USAID were eliminated with the administration’s shuttering of that organization in early February. And half of the grant programs run by the Millenium Challenge Corporation (MCC) and the U.S. Development Finance Corporation (DFC), both established under Republican administrations, have been hobbled by staff reductions and program closures.
MCC infrastructure projects in several African countries, including Senegal, Kenya, Zambia and Tanzania, have been cancelled. MCC and IFC were two of the most effective programs in countering China’s Belt and Road initiative in Africa.
The Next Four Years
In the weeks and months ahead, the administration will probably eliminate many of the remaining government programs that have generated goodwill and fostered positive relations with African nations.
The African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), the centerpiece of U.S.-Africa trade relations for over two decades, is in serious jeopardy. The legislation, which allowed duty free access for most African products, expired on September 30, 2025, but AGOA supporters hope it will be renewed for one year, and possibly updated and extended for much longer.
Unfortunately, however, the prospects for AGOA’s long term renewal and reform are not encouraging. AGOA is inconsistent with Trump’s views on tariffs and trade, and the administration has already slapped duties of ten per cent or more on products coming in from Africa. The loss of AGOA will have a crippling impact on imports from several African countries, including South Africa, KenyaLesotho and Mauritius.
South Africa, which is Africa’s largest recipient of AGOA benefits, has already come under heavy political criticism from the White House, and the administration has shown little interest in cooperating with South Africa on G20 transition issues.
The administration may well [[will probably]] reduce America’s diplomatic, consular and commercial services across the continent, closing several consulates and smaller embassies and consolidating visa issuances, requiring more African citizens to travel to neighboring countries for visa and consular services.
The State Department has already terminated all visa services in nine of Africa’s fifty four countries, including Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Burkina Faso, Equatorial Guinea, Libya, Niger, Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe. U.S. embassies in Africa are understaffed and the loss of positions at the State Department and administration budget cuts may well lead to the closure of some embassies in smaller countries.
In Washington, the survival of the State Department’s Bureau of African Affairs as an independent division, is under threat.  The Bureau has been without an Assistant Secretary since the beginning of the administration, and there has been reporting that the Bureau may be downsized or integrated into the Department’s Middle East Bureau. Downgrading has already taken place at the White House, where the Africa Desk at the National Security Council has been reduced in staff and merged into the Middle East and North Africa office.
On the economic side, as the administration continues to cut domestic budgets and foreign assistance, it could cut funding for the African Development Bank; stop further support and lending to the African Finance Corporation; and redirect some of the support to the World Bank and the IMF away from African projects and loans – in the same manner as it has withdrawn support from United Nations programs and activities.
In the military and political sphere, the administration is likely to recognize the Somaliland Republic and set up a small diplomatic mission in Hargeisa, a position long advocated by some individuals close to the administration. Such an action would run counter to the views of many in the African Union.
The administration may also downsize the Africa Command and re-integrate it into the European Command, where it was formerly lodged.  At the United Nations, the administration will step away from Biden era efforts at UN Security Council reform, which advocated for two permanent African seats on the Council.
The administration has already moved towards ending support for the promotion of democracy, human rights and women’s empowerment issues across the continent, cutting support for civil society and democracy groups and opening the door for more autocrats. The administration has also drawn back from criticizing questionable and abusive electoral practices in several African nations. In furtherance of its transactional diplomacy, the administration may turn a blind eye to illegal or questionable actions of authoritarian leaders in exchange for supporting American initiatives in the UN, the Middle East and Asia.
Africa will not get much love or attention in Trump’s Washington.
Dim Outlook for the Future
The administration will probably make some overtures to Africa; as it did in the first term. It will probably keep the Presidential Council on Doing Business in Africa, largely as a gesture to the American business community. But most of the administration’s overtures are likely to be largely performative or transactional – like Trump’s unfocused August White House meeting with the leaders of four small West African states or his efforts to pressure African governments to take some of America’s immigrant deportees.
He may also engage in some diplomatic initiatives like the work of his Special Envoy to end the long-running conflict in the Great Lakes region – pursuing what will prove to be a short sighted and flawed White House strategy to secure access to critical minerals in one of Africa’s most unstable and war-torn areas.
Sadly, however, none of these efforts will alter the downward spiral and negative trajectory of Trump’s Africa policies.  Over the next three and a half years, Africa will not get much love or attention in Trump’s Washington.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Africa: Land Is Africa's Best Hope for Climate Adaptation – It Must Be the Focus At COP30

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Agriculture, forestry and other land uses together account for about 62% of Africa’s greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, land degradation, deforestation and biodiversity loss are eroding Africa’s resilience.
But land – especially agriculture – has been on the margins of climate change initiatives. Even at the annual global climate change conference, land hasn’t featured much.
This is changing. In September 2025, Africa’s climate community met in Ethiopia, to agree on the continent’s climate priorities ahead of this year’s global climate conference, COP30. They agreed that land could be Africa’s most powerful tool in tackling climate change.
Much will depend on securing finance at COP30 for agroforestry, forest management and soil carbon restoration projects.
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Read more: Climate crisis is a daily reality for many African communities: how to try and protect them
I’ve been researching land for over 20 years. My research focuses on how to sustainably regenerate land, how community forest enterprises can combat deforestation, and how to rebuild forests as a way of combating climate change.
For this reason, I argue that COP30 must place land restoration and sustainable land management at the heart of the climate agenda. It should recognise that healthy soils, forests and ecosystems are not side issues to climate change. They are the very foundation of economic growth and making the world resilient to climate disasters.
Read more: Climate disasters are escalating: 6 ways South Africa’s G20 presidency can lead urgent action
This is especially critical for Africa, whose people and economies depend so heavily on the land. Agriculture alone, which is intrinsically tied to land, employs over two thirds of Africa’s labour force and typically accounts for 30%-40% of gross domestic product. Yet climate change disasters like prolonged droughts, rising temperatures and destructive floods are steadily eroding the land.
Millions of people in Africa could lose their farms, income, food, and future chances if COP30 does not recognise how land, nature, and climate change are all connected.
Why Africa must prioritise land and nature at COP30
Africa’s agriculture, the backbone of most economies on the continent, has been badly affected by more frequent droughts, floods and unpredictable rainfall. As a result, African countries sometimes lose an estimated 1%-2% of their gross domestic product in a year.
Over half of Africa’s population depends on crops that are fed only by rain. Therefore, extreme weather events hit the majority of Africans directly. At the same time, nearly half of the continent’s land area is degraded.
Read more: Indigenous knowledge systems can be useful tools in the G20’s climate change kit
This affects agricultural productivity and the livelihoods of around 500 million people.
Forest ecosystems such as the Congo Basin, the Guinean forests and Africa’s dryland forests are disappearing rapidly. This is already having devastating consequences for communities that rely on them for food, fuel and income.
Africa must negotiate climate finance with one voice
Adapting to climate change remains Africa’s most urgent priority. The good news is that African countries are already deploying land based actions (adaptation and using land to sequester carbon and reduce emissions) as a weapon against climate change. They are achieving this by expanding agroforestry, restoring wetlands and managing grasslands more sustainably.
This boosts soil health and increases the carbon stored in the ground. These projects are very useful in cutting greenhouse gas emissions, protecting livelihoods and building resilience.
The September 2025 second Africa Climate Summit made the continental emphasis on land official. Its Addis Ababa declaration placed land and nature-based solutions at the centre of Africa’s climate agenda. This was a step forward from Africa’s 2023 climate summit declaration, which made only passing references to land.
Read more: African countries shouldn’t have to borrow money to fix climate damage they never caused – economist
What’s needed now is for Africa to unite and focus on three key climate change areas:
What Africa needs to do at COP30
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Read more: African countries gear up for major push on climate innovation, climate financing and climate change laws
Peter Akong Minang, Director Africa, CIFOR-ICRAF, Center for International Forestry Research – World Agroforestry (CIFOR-ICRAF)
This article is republished from The Conversation Africa under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Africa: African Union Commission Welcomes and Congratulates the Republic of South Africa As G20 Chair and Host

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1. The African Union Commission (AUC) warmly expresses its support for the Republic of South Africa as G20 Chair and welcomes the country for hosting the G20 Summit in Africa for the first time. This milestone reflects South Africa’s growing role in global governance.
2. As the current Chair of the G20, South Africa has shown exceptional leadership in promoting the priorities of the Global South, advancing sustainable development, and strengthening inclusive global governance.
3. The Republic of South Africa is a vibrant democracy that upholds equality, human rights, and the rule of law. Its Constitution and policies reflect values aligned with the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
4. South Africa is a nation rich in diversity, home to people of many races, cultures, languages, and faiths living together in unity. This inclusivity is a source of national strength and global admiration.
5. The African Union encourages all international partners to engage with South Africa and the wider African continent on the basis of mutual respect, truth, and constructive cooperation, supporting Africa’s continued contribution to global peace, development, and prosperity.
Read the original article on African Union.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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Africa: Governance Failures, Not Just Guns, Driving W/Africa's Growing Crises – Experts Warn

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Abuja — Experts and peacebuilding stakeholders have raised the alarm that governance failures, weak state institutions, and exclusionary politics, not armed violence alone, are fuelling the wave of instability sweeping across West Africa.
They stressed that restoring lasting peace and security in the region will depend on inclusive governance, stronger regional collaboration, and community-driven solutions.
The warning came at the second edition of the West Africa Peace and Security Dialogue (WaPSED 2025), held in Abuja.
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The event was jointly organised by the Building Blocks for Peace (BBFORPEACE) Foundation, the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), the LAC-LAC Network of Niger Republic, the Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflicts (GPPAC) West Africa, and the Society for Peace and Practice.
Speaking at the opening session, Dr. Joseph Ochogwu, Director-General of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), said the region’s lingering challenges; from violent extremism and political instability to climate-induced conflicts, highlight the urgent need for inclusive dialogue and homegrown approaches.
“Sustainable peace in West Africa requires strong regional cooperation and locally driven strategies. We must strengthen our institutions, empower communities, and integrate peace education into national development frameworks,” Ochogwu said.
He urged participants to move beyond mere discussions and focus on practical strategies capable of transforming the region’s security and governance landscape.
Also speaking, Mr. Rafiu Adeniran Lawal, Executive Director of the Building Blocks for Peace Foundation and Regional Coordinator of GPPAC West Africa, said the dialogue was convened to explore solutions to the diverse threats undermining stability across the sub-region, ranging from banditry and insurgency to democratic decline and economic hardship.
“Across West Africa, we face persistent herder-farmer clashes, banditry, and insurgency which have disrupted livelihoods and deepened food insecurity.
“Beyond Nigeria, the resurgence of military takeovers in Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Guinea reflects a troubling democratic retreat and growing disillusionment with governance,” Lawal noted.
He explained that the 2025 Dialogue, themed ‘Reimagining Peace and Security in West Africa: Local Solutions, Regional Solidarity and Global Partnerships,’ was designed to promote community ownership of peace processes and strengthen collaboration among stakeholders.
“Our goal is to centre real actors and lived experiences. By harnessing local knowledge and regional solidarity, we can chart a new course that places people, not power, at the heart of peacebuilding,” he said.
Delivering the keynote address, Prof. Isaac Olawale Albert of the Institute for Peace and Strategic Studies and the TETFund Centre of Excellence in Security Management, University of Ibadan, said the region’s insecurity is deeply rooted in poor governance, weak leadership, and the failure of states to meet citizens’ expectations.
“The problem is not just a lack of weapons to fight insurgents; it is the weakness of our governance systems. Corruption, poor coordination, and elite competition over state resources have created governance vacuums that non-state actors now exploit,” Prof. Albert said.
He argued that lasting solutions require a balanced approach that combines local innovation, regional solidarity, and international support to tackle governance gaps, inequality, and institutional decay.
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“Peace and security cannot be sustained by governments alone. They must be co-owned by citizens, institutions, and regional partners who share a common vision for stability,” he warned.
Prof. Albert also called on governments to prioritise institution-building, promote accountability, and invest in effective local governance structures capable of addressing community-level grievances.
The dialogue brought together policymakers, security experts, civil society organisations, academics, ECOWAS representatives, and members of the diplomatic community.
Participants agreed that rebuilding trust between governments and citizens, strengthening democracy, and promoting transparent governance are essential for lasting peace in the region.
Read the original article on Vanguard.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.
AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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