logo
Illicit Economy Fuels Armed Groups and Instability in East Africa

Illicit Economy Fuels Armed Groups and Instability in East Africa

Daily News Egypt10 hours ago
Armed groups across East Africa are increasingly funded by a vast illicit economy that includes illegal mining, trafficking, smuggling, and the trade of everyday goods. Experts warn this shadow economy is not only undermining regional governments but also fueling violence and prolonging conflicts.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, armed groups earn up to $1.3 billion annually from illegal mineral trade, sustaining operations and enabling regrouping after defeats. In Somalia, Al-Shabaab profits from taxing the charcoal trade, generating up to $10 million a year. The group also earns millions more from sugar smuggling into Kenya, and from controlling trade routes for fuel and food.
Human trafficking and narcotics have also become key revenue streams. Al-Shabaab and other groups tax or facilitate heroin shipments through East African ports, while armed actors in Libya and Darfur profit from smuggling networks. A joint INTERPOL report estimates seven major African armed groups generate up to $1.39 billion annually through such illicit activities.
The human cost is severe—linked to child labor, torture, sexual violence, and widespread rights abuses. These groups often act as de facto authorities in remote areas, collecting taxes and enforcing rule by force.
Regional experts and international bodies are calling for stronger cross-border cooperation to curb illicit trade, improve governance, and prevent the black economy from further destabilizing East Africa. Without decisive action, these underground networks will continue to empower violence and weaken fragile states.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Egypt, Burkina Faso FMs urge stronger anti-terror cooperation in Africa - Foreign Affairs
Egypt, Burkina Faso FMs urge stronger anti-terror cooperation in Africa - Foreign Affairs

Al-Ahram Weekly

time7 hours ago

  • Al-Ahram Weekly

Egypt, Burkina Faso FMs urge stronger anti-terror cooperation in Africa - Foreign Affairs

Egypt's Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty and his Burkinabe counterpart, Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré, on Tuesday underscored the need for enhanced bilateral cooperation to combat terrorism and organized crime, amid rising security challenges across Africa. During a meeting in Ouagadougou, the two ministers reviewed developments in the Sahel and West Africa, reaffirming their shared commitment to maintaining stability in the region. Abdelatty reiterated Egypt's full support for Burkina Faso's counter-terrorism efforts and respect for its sovereignty and territorial integrity. Both sides agreed to strengthen cooperation across political, economic, and development fields, including the launch of a political consultation mechanism for regular coordination and exchange of views on regional and international issues. As part of his visit, Abdelatty and Traoré jointly inaugurated the Egypt–Burkina Faso Business Forum, which brought together 30 business leaders and representatives from leading Egyptian companies. The two also discussed expanding bilateral coordination in international and regional forums. UNESCO candidacy backed Traoré announced Burkina Faso's official endorsement of Egyptian candidate Khaled Khaled El-Enany for the post of Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), citing his qualifications and vision as being aligned with African priorities and UNESCO's goals. He stressed the importance of having a prominent African figure at the helm of the organization. Abdelatty thanked Burkina Faso for its support, noting that El-Enany represents the aspirations of the entire continent. Ouagadougou marks the second stop in Abdelatty's five-nation West Africa tour, which also includes Nigeria, Niger, Mali, and Senegal. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:

Southern Syria's Power Vacuum: Will Israel Become the Unlikely Guardian?
Southern Syria's Power Vacuum: Will Israel Become the Unlikely Guardian?

Daily News Egypt

time10 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

Southern Syria's Power Vacuum: Will Israel Become the Unlikely Guardian?

As the smoke of Syria's civil war settles—only to rise again in new, unpredictable ways—an entirely different reality has taken hold south of Damascus. There, in the stretch of desert that spills toward the Jordanian frontier and the Golan Heights, no single power commands authority. Instead, a fractured mosaic of Druze fighters, Bedouin clans, jihadist remnants, and rifle-wielding militias carves out territories amid complete state collapse. This is not the Syria we once knew. The United Nations still labels its ruling factions 'terrorist,' yet even that designation obscures the daily drama unfolding on the ground: hundreds slaughtered, wounded, or displaced in clashes between Druze and Bedouin communities around Suwayda. Once, these confrontations were local disputes over pasturelands and water rights—now they have become existential battles, each side convinced its survival hangs in the balance. Since October 2023, the Assad regime has all but vanished from southern Syria. Its vaunted 'Fifth Corps'—propped up by Russian officers and staffed by recruited ex-ISIS fighters—has collapsed under its own contradictions. Bakeries and flour mills lie in ruins, military checkpoints have dissolved, and the 'Al-Sharaa Government' exists only on paper. With 88% of vital infrastructure destroyed and 2.1 million civilians deprived of basic needs, the humanitarian toll is staggering: children starving to death in their mothers' arms, hospitals gasping for medicine, and more than 5,200 wounded or displaced by the violence of competing armed factions. Into this vacuum steps Israel—unannounced but increasingly unavoidable. Tel Aviv has long professed an 'unofficial moral commitment' to Syria's Druze minority, who dwell perilously close to its border. Two months ago, Israeli commandos reportedly intervened directly to protect a Druze enclave under attack. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his defence minister have repeatedly declared that safeguarding Syria's Druze is 'a moral and social obligation' of the Jewish state. For many Druze trapped between collapsing authority and marauding militias, Israel's intervention is not a choice but a lifeline. 'If Damascus cannot protect us,' they ask, 'who else but Israel?' In a landscape where every actor is suspect, Tel Aviv paradoxically emerges as the only guarantor of stability—at least for those it chooses to defend. This is both an opportunity and a dilemma for Israel. As Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar recently put it, Israel seeks to 'extend the circle of peace to Syria and Lebanon,' even as it insists the Golan Heights remains unequivocally Israeli territory. The old agreements once negotiated with Damascus are buried beneath the rubble; 'what is past is dead,' in Sa'ar's words. A new order is rising—one defined not by treaties but by raw power and on-the-ground realities. Yet questions abound. Will Israel's ad hoc security role evolve into a formal arrangement with a Damascus government it never truly recognised? Can Tel Aviv balance its strategic interests with the moral imperative of protecting civilians? And who, ultimately, will guarantee any future accord when the only credible fighting force is tribal loyalty, not national unity? For now, southern Syria remains a test case—of Israel's willingness to police its borderlands, of the international community's readiness to step in where states have failed, and of the Druze community's faith in an unlikely protector. In this fragile interlude, every stray bullet and empty stomach serves as a reminder that, sometimes, peace begins when chaos seems interminable. But peace also demands vision: a durable force to uphold any agreement, clear security arrangements among neighbours, and, most critically, a commitment to human dignity that transcends sectarian lines. Until then, Israel's 'unspoken duty' in Syria's southern chaos may be the only semblance of order—or compassion—left in a land bereft of both. Dr. Hatem Sadek – Professor at Helwan University

Illicit Economy Fuels Armed Groups and Instability in East Africa
Illicit Economy Fuels Armed Groups and Instability in East Africa

Daily News Egypt

time10 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

Illicit Economy Fuels Armed Groups and Instability in East Africa

Armed groups across East Africa are increasingly funded by a vast illicit economy that includes illegal mining, trafficking, smuggling, and the trade of everyday goods. Experts warn this shadow economy is not only undermining regional governments but also fueling violence and prolonging conflicts. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, armed groups earn up to $1.3 billion annually from illegal mineral trade, sustaining operations and enabling regrouping after defeats. In Somalia, Al-Shabaab profits from taxing the charcoal trade, generating up to $10 million a year. The group also earns millions more from sugar smuggling into Kenya, and from controlling trade routes for fuel and food. Human trafficking and narcotics have also become key revenue streams. Al-Shabaab and other groups tax or facilitate heroin shipments through East African ports, while armed actors in Libya and Darfur profit from smuggling networks. A joint INTERPOL report estimates seven major African armed groups generate up to $1.39 billion annually through such illicit activities. The human cost is severe—linked to child labor, torture, sexual violence, and widespread rights abuses. These groups often act as de facto authorities in remote areas, collecting taxes and enforcing rule by force. Regional experts and international bodies are calling for stronger cross-border cooperation to curb illicit trade, improve governance, and prevent the black economy from further destabilizing East Africa. Without decisive action, these underground networks will continue to empower violence and weaken fragile states.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store