Cyril Ramaphosa recently vowed that Africa would never again be a “pawn” between east and west, recalling the proxy conflicts on the continent of the cold war era.
South Africa’s president is now looking to prevent a rerun of history by joining an ambitious delegation of the continent’s leaders seeking to mediate a European peace deal and end Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The group, which also includes leaders from Egypt, the Republic of Congo, Senegal, Zambia and Uganda, will hold talks on Friday with Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy before travelling to Russia to meet with Vladimir Putin.
The mission has been framed as deriving both its legitimacy and urgency from the impact that the war has had on global food and fertiliser prices. Although the African leaders have different stances on Russia’s invasion, all have sought to stress their neutrality in a war not of their making.
Macky Sall, Senegal’s president, said: “We don’t want to be aligned on this conflict. Very clearly, we want peace . . . that’s the African position.”
Ukraine has made significant efforts to woo Africa but is wary of any initiative that seeks to preserve Russia’s territorial gains under the guise of a ceasefire.
“We’re ready to explain the nature of the war and why, without a fair ending in which Russia bears severe legal penalties, the war will be endless,” said Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the Zelenskyy administration. “The indisputable basis of a peaceful settlement . . . is the complete withdrawal of Russian armed [forces],” he added.
The African leaders’ visit comes as Russia increasingly looks to countries in the “Global South” as a way out from sanctions imposed by the west and condemnation of the invasion. It has strong relationships with many African countries dating from the Soviet era and has sought to tap them to find backing for its stance.
Indeed Ramaphosa and his ruling African National Congress have come in for sharp international criticism for their close ties to the Kremlin. The South African president was forced to deny claims by the US ambassador last month that Pretoria had shipped weapons to Moscow.
Yuri Ushakov, Putin’s foreign policy adviser, this week said that the peace initiative was “extremely important” and that the African leaders would also likely discuss the faltering deal to export Ukraine’s grain. “African leaders want regular grain supplies to the continent. The Istanbul deal hasn’t managed to secure this,” Ushakov said.
He was referring to the Turkish-brokered agreement that Russia has repeatedly threatened to quit for the second time, having already briefly done so last autumn.
“The food security issue is very serious for Africa,” said Chidi Odinkalu of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in Massachusetts. “Whether African leaders have any significant leverage to exercise is quite another matter.”
The Kremlin has also invited African leaders for a summit with Putin in St Petersburg next month, the first since 43 heads of state travelled to Sochi for a previous instalment in 2019.
Alexander Gabuev, director of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, said the Kremlin would use such visits to push its claim that it was the one seeking to end the Ukraine war.
“Russia is more and more isolated, so Putin needs to show African countries that Russia’s ready to talk, and it’s only the US that’s stopping Moscow and Kyiv from getting to the table,” he said.
Ukraine’s Podolyak warned against attempts at sophistry. “Many are trying to invent new formulas of a ‘peaceful settlement’, but stubbornly don’t see where the beginning of the war lies and the keys to its end,” he said.
“Kyiv doesn’t need to be persuaded into peace, because we didn’t want and didn’t start this war.”