The Failed States Index 2005: The Continental Divide

Seven of the 10 weakest states are in Africa. Several states, including Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Sierra Leone, have suffered large-scale civil wars. Sudan is in the midst of what some observers have termed a genocide. Is Africa doomed to remain the No. 1 manufacturer of failed states? A decade ago, ...

Seven of the 10 weakest states are in Africa. Several states, including Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Sierra Leone, have suffered large-scale civil wars. Sudan is in the midst of what some observers have termed a genocide. Is Africa doomed to remain the No. 1 manufacturer of failed states?

Seven of the 10 weakest states are in Africa. Several states, including Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Sierra Leone, have suffered large-scale civil wars. Sudan is in the midst of what some observers have termed a genocide. Is Africa doomed to remain the No. 1 manufacturer of failed states?

A decade ago, there was considerable hope that South Africa and Nigeria could help fill the continent’s governance gap. Today, that hope is much diminished. South African President Thabo Mbeki racks up frequent flyer miles trying to resolve many African crises, but his interventions have often lacked follow-up. South Africa has sent troops to join the peacekeeping missions in Congo and Darfur, but it lacks the resources — including soldiers free of HIV — to impose solutions.

The limits of South African diplomacy are particularly apparent in Zimbabwe, where strongman President Robert Mugabe has presided over his country’s downward spiral (it now ranks as the 15th most at-risk country). Mbeki has opted for what he calls "quiet diplomacy" toward Mugabe, but many observers believe that South Africa is propping up a dictator rather than preventing a looming political meltdown.

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, is itself a weak state (ranking 54th). Its current government is consumed by cleaning up corruption and mediating serious sectarian tension at home. Even if Nigeria can overcome its own challenges, it is in no position to export stability.

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