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    Home ยป Israel-Gaza war: Why is Africa divided on supporting Palestine?
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    Israel-Gaza war: Why is Africa divided on supporting Palestine?

    ianBy ianOctober 14, 2023No Comments9 Mins Read
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    Israel-Gaza war: Why is Africa divided on supporting Palestine?
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    Israel-Gaza war: Why is Africa divided on supporting Palestine?

    As reports of Hamas fighters attacking southern Israel last Saturday flooded phones and television sets around the world, Kenyan President William Ruto took to X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

    โ€œKenya joins the rest of the world in solidarity with the State of Israel and unequivocally condemns terrorism and attacks on innocent civilians in the country,โ€ he wrote. โ€œThere exists no justification whatsoever for terrorism, which constitutes a serious threat to international peace and security.โ€

    โ€œThe international community must mobilize to bring the perpetrators, organizers, financiers, sponsors, supporters, and enablers of these reprehensible criminal acts of terrorism to account and speedily bring them to justice.โ€

    It was an explicit endorsement of Israelโ€™s position and โ€“ some would argue โ€“ the response that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuโ€™s government has since unleashed on the Gaza Strip, with a bombing campaign that has killed more than 1,900 people. And it was a social media post that underscored Israelโ€™s growing influence in Africa.

    As the death toll from the war mounts, African governments are wading into heated debates surrounding the conflict โ€“ with the continent split, as different nations take opposing sides.

    Authorities in South Africa blamed the escalation on Israelโ€™s illegal occupation and desecration of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, as well as sacred Christian sites, in a statement on Sunday. A top official, Zane Dangor, told local news channel eNCA that Hamasโ€™s bloody attack, while not a solution, was unsurprising and that the conflict would not stop โ€œuntil the occupation endsโ€.

    Algeria declared โ€œfull solidarity with Palestineโ€ early on in the war. The African Union Commission under Moussa Mahamat Faki, while expressing concern over the violence, has blamed the โ€œdenial of the fundamental rights of the Palestiniansโ€ and called for a two-state solution.

    But Kenya, Zambia, Ghana, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo are among other African nations that have aligned with Israelโ€™s position.

    So why is a continent that suffered the worst ravages of colonialism and racism for centuries and that has historically, for the most part, supported Palestine, split now?

    The short answer: Africaโ€™s divisions highlight each governmentโ€™s attempt to compartmentalize their interests, experts say, and underline some countriesโ€™ strengthening ties with Israel. On the one hand, there are deep-rooted ties with the Palestinian movement; on the other, the offer of cutting-edge technology, military assistance, and aid from Israel. Which wins out could determine how Africa tilts if this conflict drags on โ€“ and in the future.

    A โ€˜historical and emotionalโ€™ relationship

    African countries shedding the pain of brutal colonial rule in the 1960s were cold to a newly formed Israel and were sympathetic to the struggle of Palestinians uprooted from their land and homes in 1948.

    Following the October War of 1973, the continental bloc, then the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) severed ties with Israel.

    Algeria has been a leading critic of Israel on the continent โ€“ even as its rival Moroccoโ€™s relations with Israel have blossomed after they agreed to normalize ties in 2020.

    Zine Labidine Ghebouli, a researcher with the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) traces some of Algeriaโ€™s sentiments to the 1988 Palestinian Declaration of Independence in Algiers and even further back to Algeriaโ€™s history under French colonialism.

    โ€œThe Algeria-Palestine relationship is very historic and emotional,โ€ Ghebouli told Al Jazeera, adding that Islam as a common religion solidifies those ties. โ€œWe were occupied by France, and this history of brutality is similar.

    โ€œOn my social media feed right now itโ€™s all about solidarity with Palestine at the moment.โ€

    But post-apartheid South Africa has perhaps been Palestineโ€™s most staunch supporter on the continent, with Nelson Mandela famously drawing parallels between the struggle of Black South Africans against white rule and of Palestinians against Israelโ€™s occupation. Many human rights groups have subsequently also made that comparison.

    In July 2022, South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor called on the United Nations to declare Israel an โ€œapartheid stateโ€. Amid Russiaโ€™s war on Ukraine, as Western pressure grew on South Africa and other nations in Africa and Asia to condemn Moscowโ€™s actions, Pandor pushed back, asking why Western capitals werenโ€™t willing to apply the same principles of international law when it came to Israelโ€™s occupation of Palestinian lands.

    Still, that vocal diplomatic support for Palestine masks a more complex relationship between African nations and Israel โ€“ one that has rapidly grown in recent years, reshaping the continentโ€™s approach to the Middle East.

    Israelโ€™s growing footprint

    After the 1973 war, only a handful of African nations retained relations with Israel, while most broke ties. Yet, today, that tide has turned dramatically: 44 of 54 African countries recognize Israelโ€™s statehood, and close to 30 have opened embassies or consulates in Tel Aviv.

    Israelโ€™s widely recognized prowess in agriculture has helped its cause โ€“ at a time when many African countries battle drought, floods, and extreme weather phenomena at increasing frequencies. A fifth of Africaโ€™s population is undernourished.

    โ€œIsraelโ€™s role as one of the worldโ€™s leaders in agricultural technologies is a very attractive incentive for African countries battling insecurity and for economies with arid and semi-arid lands,โ€ Tighisti Amare, deputy director of the Africa Programme at the London-based Chatham House think tank said.

    โ€œAs such, many African countries have chosen to exercise their agency and separate economic interests from political positions in international fora,โ€ she added.

    But itโ€™s not just agriculture. Trade and security interests too have made many African countries warm up to Israel, said Alhadji Bouba Nouhou, a lecturer at the University of Bordeaux.

    A key turning point came in 1978, with the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel.

    โ€œThings really started to change following the Camp David agreements,โ€ Nouhou told Al Jazeera. With a major Arab country signing a peace deal with Israel, many African nations decided it made little sense for them to stay away.

    That trend gained more momentum after the Oslo Accords of 1993 โ€“ a period that also marked the demise of the apartheid regime in South Africa, the end of the Cold War, and the promise of rapprochement between Israel and African nations. More recently, the normalization deals struck with Chad, Morocco, and Sudan represent major wins on the continent for Israel.

    South Africa, one of Israelโ€™s fiercest critics on the continent, is also its biggest trading partner in Africa โ€“ by far.

    In 2021, trade between Israel and Sub-Saharan African countries reached over $750m. Israel exports machinery, electronics, and chemicals to the continent. Of that, nearly two-thirds were traded with South Africa, followed by Nigeria, with which Israel traded goods worth $129m in 2021. South Africa also trades with Palestine, with Palestinian exports of olive oils and other edibles jumping 34 percent between 2009 and 2021.

    Yet, Israel also has strong ties with nations beyond trade.

    For decades, it has pumped millions of dollars in humanitarian aid into Ethiopia. Thousands of Ethiopian Jews have made their way to Israel.

    Mashav, Israelโ€™s international aid agency, has also flown in Kenyan students for training in agriculture and medicine and trained Senegalese entrepreneurs in management.

    Meanwhile, in Cameroon, Israeli forces are believed to be propping up longtime ruler Paul Biya by training the BIR, an elite fearsome army unit that answers directly to the president. Israeli media reports have suggested that the country is also training soldiers in multiple African nations.

    An Africa-Israel summit was scheduled to be held in 2017, although a crisis in the host country Togo led to it being called off. But earlier that year, Netanyahu, speaking to West African leaders at a meeting in Liberia, declared: โ€œIsrael is coming back to Africa, and Africa is coming back to Israel.โ€

    Despite all of these gains, however, Israel has also continued to face setbacks in Africa.

    Previous inroads bolstered Aleligne Admasu, Israelโ€™s ambassador to the African Union, to seek Observer Status for Israel in the bloc in 2021. Although the request was granted, Israelโ€™s status was suspended this February, after Algeria and South Africa protested the move. Palestine, on the other hand, has retained AU Observer Status since 2013.

    Two-faced governments?

    So are African governments two-faced about the Israel-Palestine conflict โ€“ trading with Israel and strengthening ties with it, while also, in some cases at least, speaking up for Palestine?

    Experts say that neither their seeming contradiction nor the divisions within Africa on the issue are surprising โ€“ and point to the recent split in positions after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

    โ€œWhen the war broke, while Russiaโ€™s invasion of a sovereign country was not condoned, a third of African countries chose to remain neutral in the UN vote condemning Russiaโ€™s invasion,โ€ Amare of Chatham House reminded.

    โ€œIt is not unusual for this to happen and expectations that African countries will have the same response to a crisis is generally misguided,โ€ she said.

    In another example, African countries, despite intensifying relations with Israel, voted overwhelmingly against the US decision to open an embassy in disputed Jerusalem in a UN emergency meeting back in 2017.

    And politics might soon seep into trade relations. While South Africa is the pillar of Israelโ€™s trade with the continent, there is growing pressure from civil society for Pretoria to take a clearer position in favor of Palestine, Muhammed Desai, director of the South African advocacy group Africa4Palestine, told Al Jazeera.

    โ€œLast year, South Africaโ€™s parliament passed a resolution to downgrade South Africaโ€™s diplomatic relations and embassy in Israel,โ€ Desai said.

    โ€œAs we speak, South Africa does not have an ambassador in Israel,โ€ he pointed out. โ€œAs civil society, we are advocating for our government to do more: All relations and trade with Israel should be boycotted, both at a public level but also by the private sector.โ€

    If Israelโ€™s deadly bombardment of Gaza continues and is followed by a land invasion, expect such calls to grow.

    Israel-Gaza war: Why is Africa divided on supporting Palestine?

    GAZA ISRAEL PALESTINE
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