India and Africa share one of the most multi-layered relationships in contemporary international politics — built on centuries of trade, shared colonial history, the solidarity of the Non-Aligned Movement, and now a convergence of strategic interests in a rapidly changing multipolar world. With 54 African nations, the continent represents a third of the UN General Assembly's membership and is home to the world's fastest-growing populations.

Historical Foundations

Ancient and medieval ties: Indian traders had active commerce along the East African (Swahili) coast — goods, spices, and textiles moved between Indian ports and Mombasa, Zanzibar, and Kilwa for over a millennium.

Colonial era: Indian indentured labour was transported to South Africa, Mauritius, Fiji, and East Africa under British colonialism. Mahatma Gandhi spent 21 years in South Africa (1893–1914), where he developed the philosophy of Satyagraha in response to racial discrimination against Indians.

Post-independence solidarity: India and African nations found common cause in anti-colonialism and non-alignment. The Bandung Conference (1955) — where Nehru, Nkrumah (Ghana), Nasser (Egypt), and others met — laid the foundation for Afro-Asian solidarity and the Non-Aligned Movement (formally established 1961, Belgrade).

India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS)

The IAFS is India's flagship institutional mechanism for structured engagement with Africa, modelled partly on China's FOCAC (Forum on China-Africa Cooperation) but with emphasis on South-South partnership rather than resource extraction.

SummitYearVenueKey Outcomes
IAFS-I2008New DelhiDelhi Declaration; established IAFS as a platform; capacity-building commitments
IAFS-II2011Addis Ababa, EthiopiaEnhanced trade and investment focus; pan-African connectivity
IAFS-III2015New DelhiLargest: 41 heads of state attended; $10 billion Lines of Credit + $600 million grant assistance (including $100 million India-Africa Development Fund, $10 million India-Africa Health Fund); 50,000 scholarships for African students
IAFS-IVPendingDelayed from 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic; yet to be scheduled

Significance of IAFS-III (2015): The attendance of 41 African heads of state made it the largest gathering of foreign leaders ever hosted by India. Prime Minister Modi announced "10 guiding principles" for the relationship and positioned India as a development partner committed to Africa's own Agenda 2063.

African Union's Permanent G20 Membership (2023)

One of India's most consequential diplomatic achievements during its G20 Presidency (December 2022 – November 2023) was securing permanent membership of the African Union (AU) in the G20 — announced at the New Delhi Summit in September 2023.

Significance:

  • The AU represents all 55 African member states (the world's largest regional organisation by membership)
  • Previously, only South Africa represented Africa in the G20 as an individual country
  • India's advocacy for AU membership strengthened its credentials as a voice for the Global South
  • This shifts G20 from a "rich nations' club" toward greater representation of developing nations
  • Africa's combined GDP (~$3 trillion), demographic weight (1.4+ billion people), and critical mineral resources make this geopolitically significant

Economic Relations

Trade

India-Africa bilateral trade reached approximately $100 billion in FY 2022-23, making Africa India's fourth-largest trading partner. In FY 2023-24, India's exports to Africa were approximately $38 billion, with some moderation from the previous year's peak.

DirectionKey Items
India's exports to AfricaPharmaceuticals (~25% of Africa's medicine needs come from India), refined petroleum products, engineering goods, rice, textiles, chemicals
India's imports from AfricaCrude oil (Nigeria, Angola, Algeria — accounting for ~61% of India's imports from Africa), gold (South Africa), pulses (Tanzania, Mozambique), cashew nuts, natural gas

The African Union is India's fourth-largest trading partner overall, after the USA, China, and UAE. Nigeria is India's largest single African trading partner (~21% of India-Africa trade).

Critical Minerals: Strategic Interest

Africa holds extraordinary reserves of minerals essential for the global energy transition and technology manufacturing:

MineralCountryImportance
CobaltDemocratic Republic of Congo (~70% of global supply)Electric vehicle batteries
LithiumZimbabwe, DRC, NamibiaEV batteries, energy storage
Platinum Group MetalsSouth AfricaFuel cells, catalytic converters
CopperZambia, DRCElectric vehicles, grid infrastructure
ManganeseSouth Africa, GabonSteel production, battery anodes

India's Critical Mineral Mission and the drive to localise EV supply chains make Africa a strategic priority. India-Africa engagement on critical minerals is becoming increasingly important as both China and Western nations aggressively court African nations for supply agreements.

Development Cooperation

ITEC (Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation)

ITEC, established in 1964, is one of India's oldest bilateral development programmes. It provides:

  • Short-term training courses in India for African officials, military personnel, and professionals
  • Civilian and defence training
  • Deputation of Indian experts to African countries
  • Project assistance

ITEC has trained thousands of African professionals in fields ranging from IT to agriculture, diplomacy, and public administration — building long-term people-to-people ties and goodwill.

Lines of Credit (LoCs)

India's EXIM Bank of India extends concessional loans (Lines of Credit) to African governments for development projects — railways, roads, power plants, irrigation. Since 2008, India has committed over $7.4 billion in LoCs to Africa (pre-IAFS-III figure), with the 2015 commitment adding another $10 billion.

Digital and e-Connectivity

Pan-African e-Network Project (2009–2017): Linked 48 African countries to Indian expertise in telemedicine and tele-education via satellite and fibre optic connectivity. Indian medical colleges and engineering institutions provided remote consultations and courses to African institutions.

e-VidyaBharati and e-ArogyaBharati (2019–present): Successor to the Pan-African e-Network; provides tele-education and telemedicine services to Africa under a revamped, more modern technology platform — 4,500 scholarships for African students to study in India.

International Solar Alliance (ISA)

Founded by India and France in 2015 (Paris COP21), the ISA headquartered in Gurugram has 119 member countries including most African nations. It mobilises financing for solar energy projects — directly relevant to Africa's energy access gap (600+ million Africans without reliable electricity). India's ISA leadership strengthens its soft power on the continent.

Security Cooperation

AreaDetails
Counter-piracyIndian Navy patrols the Gulf of Aden and western Indian Ocean, protecting African maritime trade routes; Operation Sankalp and other deployments
UN PeacekeepingIndia is one of the largest troop-contributing countries to UN peacekeeping missions; major deployments in African conflicts (DRC, South Sudan, Mali)
Counter-terrorismInformation sharing; capacity building with East African nations
Defence exportsIndia promoting defence exports to African nations under "Make in India" push

Diaspora: Bridge Between Continents

CountryIndian Diaspora PopulationNotes
South Africa~1.3 million (Persons of Indian Origin)Largest in Africa; descendants of indentured labourers; strong economic presence
Kenya~100,000Long-established merchant community
Tanzania~100,000Historical ties since Omani-East Africa trade era
Uganda~30,000–50,000Expelled by Idi Amin in 1972; many returned
Mauritius~900,000 (68% of population)India has special treaty relationship; Indian PM visits frequently

The Indian diaspora acts as a bridge — facilitating business connections, cultural ties, and political goodwill.

Challenges and Competition

China's Expanding Footprint

China's engagement with Africa dwarfs India's in scale:

  • China-Africa trade: ~$280 billion annually (vs India's ~$100 billion)
  • China has built roads, railways, ports, and stadiums across Africa under its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)
  • However, China's debt diplomacy concerns (Zambia defaulted on Chinese debt in 2020; others at risk) have created space for India to offer alternative, grant-heavy partnerships

India differentiates itself by emphasising:

  • Capacity building over infrastructure loans
  • South-South equality rather than donor-recipient asymmetry
  • Technology transfer and pharmaceuticals access (affordable generics)

Other Challenges

ChallengeDetail
Scale gap vs ChinaIndia's LoCs and grants are smaller; private sector investment limited
Racism incidentsHigh-profile attacks on African students in India hurt soft power
Visa barriersAfrican visitors face difficulties getting Indian visas
IAFS-IV delayPost-2015 summit momentum lost; no Summit held for 10+ years
African agencyAfrica is increasingly asserting its own terms (AfCFTA — African Continental Free Trade Area); India must adapt to this new African confidence

Recent Developments (2024–2026)

African Union Becomes Permanent G20 Member — India's Legacy from 2023 Presidency

The African Union (AU) became a permanent member of the G20 at the New Delhi Summit in September 2023 under India's presidency — the most significant recent development in India-Africa multilateral engagement. This elevated the AU to the same status as the EU in the G20 framework, giving all 55 African nations collective representation. India championed AU inclusion as a key deliverable of its presidency, strengthening India-Africa ties and India's standing as an advocate for the Global South.

UPSC angle: AU's G20 membership — achieved at India's G20 Presidency, September 2023 New Delhi Summit — is a high-frequency Prelims fact. Frame it in Mains as India's multilateral diplomacy success and its implications for India-Africa partnership.

PM Modi's Nigeria Visit — First Africa Trip of Third Term (November 2024)

PM Modi visited Nigeria in November 2024 — his first Africa visit since his re-election in May 2024. The visit yielded defence cooperation agreements and a renewed commitment to India-Africa bilateral engagement. Nigeria is Africa's most populous country and largest economy, and India's largest trade partner on the continent.

The 4th India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS-IV) — postponed since 2020 due to COVID-19 — has not been held as of early 2026. Its convening is overdue, and its postponement has been criticised as a gap in India's Africa engagement strategy. India has continued bilateral engagement through high-level visits, Lines of Credit, and ITEC partnerships as substitutes for the multilateral summit format.

UPSC angle: Know the IAFS chronology: IAFS-I (2008, New Delhi), IAFS-II (2011, Addis Ababa), IAFS-III (2015, New Delhi — 41 heads of state, USD 10 billion LoC, USD 600 million grant). The pending IAFS-IV is an important gap in India's Africa policy.

India-Africa Trade and Investment (2024)

India-Africa trade reached approximately USD 100 billion in 2023–24 (bilateral trade), with India being one of Africa's top trading and investment partners. India's development partnership model — emphasising capacity building, technology transfer, and Lines of Credit (rather than debt-heavy infrastructure grants like China's BRI) — has gained traction across the continent. Specific recent developments include India's Investment Fund for Africa (IFA) scaling up, ITEC training slots expanded to over 12,000 annually, and the TEAM-9 initiative (Technology and Economic Advancement with 9 West African nations) being revitalised.

UPSC angle: India's "development partnership" model vs. China's BRI is a standard comparative question. Key distinctions: India prioritises capacity building and concessional loans vs. China's large infrastructure grants with strategic conditionalities.

Critical Minerals Partnership — Africa's Growing Strategic Importance

India's critical minerals strategy (for green energy transition, electronics manufacturing, defence) is increasingly focused on Africa. The continent holds approximately 30% of the world's mineral reserves, including cobalt, lithium, manganese, platinum, and rare earth elements critical for EV batteries and solar panels. India signed MoUs with multiple African countries in 2024 for critical mineral exploration and supply chain development. South Africa, Zimbabwe, DRC (cobalt), and Zambia (copper) are priority partners.

UPSC angle: Critical minerals and Africa's role in India's green transition supply chain is an emerging GS-III + GS-II intersection topic. India's Critical Minerals List (2023 — 30 minerals) and Africa strategy connect directly.


Exam Strategy

For Prelims:

  • IAFS-I: 2008 New Delhi; IAFS-II: 2011 Addis Ababa; IAFS-III: 2015 New Delhi (41 heads of state, $10 bn LoC, $600 mn grant)
  • AU's permanent G20 membership: India's G20 Presidency, New Delhi Summit September 2023
  • Pan-African e-Network: 48 countries; replaced by e-VidyaBharati and e-ArogyaBharati
  • ITEC: established 1964; India's bilateral technical cooperation programme
  • ISA: founded 2015 (COP21), India and France, HQ Gurugram

For Mains (GS2):

  • India vs China in Africa: qualitative vs quantitative approach; India's comparative advantages (democracy, South-South solidarity, pharma, IT, capacity building)
  • IAFS as a structured engagement framework: achievements and shortcomings
  • Critical minerals diplomacy: why Africa matters to India's energy transition
  • AU in G20: India's role and implications for Global South representation

Previous Year Questions (PYQs)

Prelims

  1. With reference to 'India-Africa Forum Summit', which of the following statement is/are correct? The third Summit was held in 2015 in New Delhi. (UPSC 2016)
  2. 'ITEC' (Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation) is a programme of which ministry? — Ministry of External Affairs
  3. The International Solar Alliance (ISA) was proposed at which UN climate conference? — COP21, Paris, 2015
  4. Which country was granted permanent G20 membership at the New Delhi Summit in 2023? — African Union (AU)

Mains

  1. "India's engagement with Africa has deepened in recent years, but structural gaps remain." Critically examine India-Africa relations with reference to trade, development cooperation, and strategic interests. (GS2, 250 words)
  2. Compare and contrast India's and China's approach to Africa. What are India's competitive advantages? (GS2, 150 words)
  3. Discuss the significance of the African Union's inclusion in the G20 for global governance and India's foreign policy. (GS2, 150 words)
  4. Examine the role of India's diaspora in strengthening India-Africa relations. (GS2, 150 words)