New Delhi, Dec 28 (IANS) India is building a commercially-based relationship with Africa on a sufficient scale without mortgaging its sovereignty, according to a report.
The country also collaborates with Africa in the health sector. Additionally, India also contributes to UN peacekeeping in Africa.
“Some actors translate this into dependencies based on scale or force. India distinguishes itself from others and advances its interests most effectively when its African partners maintain agency. This is not soft power versus hard power, but capability versus dependence power. Africa is not one arena, but multiple arenas shaped by chokepoints. “Along the rim of the Indian Ocean, from Djibouti down the Swahili coast to Mozambique and into Madagascar and Mauritius, Africa is connected to India through sea lanes that transport energy, food and energy trade,” strategic analyst Shay Gul wrote in a report for Eurasia Times.
India-Africa relations are social and diplomatic. More than three million people of Indian descent live across the continent, providing labor routes, merchant networks, and migration legacies. When India supported the African Union’s participation in the G20, it emphasized that representation is power and Africa is not a guest in global governance.
The Eurasia Times report states, “India-Africa trade fluctuates between $80 billion and $100 billion annually, India’s cumulative investment approaches $75 billion, and Africa has become one of India’s most important economic partners. The pattern is more than a decimal point: India has built significant commercial relationships without mortgaging its sovereignty. India’s restraint is not a weakness; it allows African countries to say yes. You lose the ability to say “no”. ”
“India’s development finance is often misunderstood because it bears no resemblance to Beijing’s grand packages or heavily conditioned Western programs. Its backbone is concessional finance and project financing, with nearly 200 credits in more than 40 African states to finance rail, power transmission, automotive, agricultural and industrial capacity. The scope is widening. This is not charity. It connects African demand with Indian execution capabilities and builds a commercial ecosystem without relying on a single vendor for capital. So are the weaknesses: Decentralized projects demand relentless follow-through, and delays quietly erode trust.
India is focusing on day-to-day systems, such as introducing UPI and RuPay infrastructure in Mauritius and signing digital payment agreements with countries such as Namibia and Togo. Those who develop the infrastructure of everyday economic life have more impact on lasting sovereignty than those who sell drones. Mauritius illustrates the nature of India’s partnership, where influence develops without a parallel state. There are no military bases, no port or airport concessions, no foreign-branded institutions shaping its identity. Instead, India’s existence is threaded through everyday systems of governing sovereignty. India also collaborates with Africa in the medical field, as it supplies more than half of Africa’s generic drugs.
In a report for the Eurasian Times, Shay Gul said, “Security is where the comparisons become sharper. India has long contributed to UN peacekeeping in Africa. From counter-piracy operations off the coast of Somalia, to trilateral naval exercises with Mozambique and Tanzania, to Indian Ocean partners, India It has expanded its maritime role to include coastal radar cooperation with Mozambique and Tanzania, whose security footprint does not replace sovereignty but enhances national capabilities and maritime awareness. ”
“Training, maritime surveillance and joint exercises strengthen local control over coastal space, while keeping command, symbolism and legitimacy firmly at home. India’s lack of security architecture is the key. Even without formal recognition, Somaliland is already of practical importance. Trade flows through Berbera, and In the Gulf of Aden, India’s continued anti-piracy deployments are helping to secure the shipping lanes on which Somaliland’s coast depends. “This is not a diplomatic but a perceived but de facto link: cooperation through trade and maritime security, where sovereignty is contested but day-to-day operations are not,” the authors added.
–IANS
AKL/UK


