By Iyi-Ife Victor Adegbulugbe
The Sahel region of Africa has become one of the world’s most dangerous and unstable security zones. Stretching across states such as Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and parts of Nigeria, the region is now the epicentre of terrorism, military coups, insurgencies, and humanitarian collapse.
According to reports from various global security analysts, the crisis is no longer a localised conflict but a rapidly expanding regional emergency threatening the future stability of West Africa.
The Sahel is described as a “belt of collapsing authority,” where weak governments, poverty, climate pressure, and violent extremist groups have combined to create a near-permanent state of conflict. Over the last decade, jihadist organisations linked to both the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda have expanded their operations across the region, exploiting weak borders and fragile state institutions.
One of the major problems plaguing the region is the collapse of state authority in the central Sahel. Governments in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have struggled to maintain control over large rural territories. Military coups in all three countries between 2020 and 2023 reflected growing frustration within their armed forces and populations over the inability to stop insurgent violence.
It has been argued that these coups were not isolated political events but symptoms of deeper institutional failure. Civilian governments were increasingly seen as corrupt, ineffective, and dependent on foreign military assistance, especially from France, the former colonial power. Anti-French sentiment grew rapidly across the Sahel, with many citizens accusing Western governments of failing to improve security despite years of military operations.
The resentment contributed to the rise of military juntas that promised to defend national sovereignty and enforce tougher counterinsurgency strategies. In response to pressure from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger formed the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), signalling a major geopolitical shift in West Africa.
However, despite promises of stronger security policies, the violence has continued to spread. Armed groups linked to Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-MusIimin (JNIM) and Islamic State Sahel Province (SSP) have expanded their attacks into border regions and urban centres. There are a myriad of reasons why the insurgents are succeeding in their efforts; it’s because they exploit poor governance, local grievances, ethnic tensions, and economic desperation.
Climate change also plays a major role in the crisis. Desertification, shrinking farmland, and water shortages have intensified conflicts between farming and pastoral communities across the Sahel. Global security agencies explain that these local conflicts often become entry points for extremist groups, which present themselves as protectors or alternative authorities in neglected regions.
The effects of the Sahel crisis on West Africa have been severe, but no country faces greater long-term consequences than Nigeria. As the region’s largest economy and most populous nation, Nigeria sits directly on the frontline of Sahel instability. Nigeria’s northern states are deeply vulnerable to the spread of extremist violence from neighbouring Niger and the Lake Chad basin.
Groups such as Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) have already destabilised northeastern Nigeria for more than a decade. But the growing insecurity in the wider Sahel is creating new opportunities for these organisations to regroup, recruit fighters, and acquire weapons.
It has also been advised that weakened regional coordination is worsening the problem. Previously, countries around Lake Chad cooperated through joint military operations against extremist groups. However, political tensions following the coups in Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso have reduced regional trust and weakened intelligence-sharing mechanisms.
For Nigeria, this represents a serious strategic threat. The country already faces multiple overlapping security crises, including banditry in the northwest, separatist tensions in the southeast, farmer-herder conflicts in the Middle Belt, and jihadist insurgencies in the northeast. The expansion of Sahel insurgency risks connecting these separate crises into a broader regional security disaster.
One major concern is the flow of weapons across porous borders. Arms trafficking from Libya, Mali, and Niger has significantly increased the firepower available to criminal gangs and extremist organisations operating inside Nigeria. According to analysts, many bandit groups now possess military-grade weapons capable of overwhelming poorly equipped local security forces.
Another major impact is the humanitarian. Violence conducted across the Sahel region has displaced millions of people, creating migration pressures throughout West Africa. Nigeria has absorbed refugees from neighbouring states while simultaneously struggling with its own internally displaced populations. This places enormous pressure on already strained economic and social systems.
It has been noted that the economic consequences of the crisis will be catastrophic if they are not well managed. Insecurity has been known to disrupt agriculture, trade routes, and investment across West Africa. Northern Nigeria, which depends heavily on agriculture and regional commerce, has been particularly affected. Farmers are often unable to access their land due to fear of attacks or kidnappings, worsening food insecurity and inflation.
Recent reports indicate that hunger levels in Nigeria are reaching record highs due to insurgent attacks and instability. This economic collapse creates a dangerous cycle: poverty and unemployment make extremist recruitment easier, which in turn fuels more violence.
– Adegbulugbe, the author, is a graduate of Political Science and International Relations from Nile University, Abuja, with an interest in global politics and security.
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