India-Africa Forum Summit: Reviving Decades of Solidarity and Partnership

The Fourth India-Africa Forum Summit in New Delhi from May 28-31 revives India's flagship engagement with Africa after 11 years, elevating the continent to the center of India's global strategy. The summit will produce new initiatives in trade, health, defence, education, digital infrastructure, and critical minerals. India's engagement is built on decades of solidarity, from anti-colonial struggles to the Non-Aligned Movement, and focuses on local priorities without colonial baggage. For African nations, the summit offers a trusted partner that respects sovereignty and delivers practical solutions for long-term success.

Key Points: India-Africa Summit: Solidarity & Strategic Ties

  • Summit marks revival of flagship engagement after 11 years
  • Focus on trade, health, defence, education, digital infrastructure
  • Africa projected to have one-quarter of world population by 2050
  • India's historic solidarity from anti-colonial struggles to Non-Aligned Movement
3 min read

India's engagement with Africa built on decades of solidarity

Fourth India-Africa Forum Summit in New Delhi from May 28-31 revives ties after 11 years, focusing on trade, health, and digital infrastructure.

"India's engagement with Africa is not a recent geopolitical calculation. It is built on decades of solidarity. - Rishi Suri, Global Order"

New Delhi, May 13

The Fourth India-Africa Forum Summit set to be held in New Delhi from May 28-31 marks the revival of India's flagship engagement with Africa after11 years. The summit demonstrates India's determination to elevate Africa to the centre of its global strategy, a report has detailed.

As New Delhi prepares to host leaders from the African continent, one message is becoming clear that if Africa wants to have a partner that understands its challenges, respects its sovereignty, and invests in its long-term success, few nations are better positioned than India.

"The Fourth India-Africa Forum Summit is expected to produce new initiatives in trade, health, defence, education, digital infrastructure, and critical minerals. After more than a decade since the previous summit in 2015, it signals India's determination to elevate Africa to the center of its global strategy," Rishi Suri wrote in Global Order.

"For African nations, the summit offers access to a trusted partner that respects sovereignty and delivers practical solutions. For India, it represents an opportunity to deepen ties with one of the most dynamic regions of the twenty-first century," the author further stated.

The timing of the summit could not be more significant. Africa is projected to account for one-quarter of the world's population by 2050. The African continent has reserves of critical minerals, some of the world's fastest-growing economies and an increasingly youthful and entrepreneurial population. At the same time, African nations want to develop partnership with nations who offer genuine collaboration instead of dependency, capacity building instead of coercion, and respect instead of lectures.

"India's engagement with Africa is not a recent geopolitical calculation. It is built on decades of solidarity. From the anti-colonial struggles of the twentieth century to the Non-Aligned Movement, India and African nations have often stood together in pursuit of sovereignty and development. Mahatma Gandhi refined his philosophy of nonviolent resistance in South Africa. Jawaharlal Nehru supported African liberation movements, and India consistently backed the struggle against apartheid," the Global Order report stated.

"These historic bonds created a reservoir of goodwill that continues to shape relations today. Unlike many external powers, India does not carry the burden of a colonial past in Africa. It is seen as a fellow developing nation that has faced similar challenges and achieved progress through democratic governance, institution building, and technological innovation," it added.

India focuses on local priorities instead of applying one-size-fits-all solutions. In the past 20 years, India has extended billions of dollars in concessional lines of credit, developed power plants, rural electrification networks, water systems, and educational institutions in African continent. Thousands of African students study in Indian universities every year. The Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme has trained thousands of African professionals in several sectors, including information technology and public administration.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I'm glad to see this summit is happening after so long. India needs to be more proactive in Africa, especially with China's aggressive investments there. But we must ensure that our engagement is sustainable and not just about extracting resources. Let's build real partnerships that benefit both sides. 👍
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James A
Been following Indo-African relations for years. The line about not having a colonial past is key—India's approach really is different. But I worry about the 11-year gap. China didn't wait that long. Hope this summit delivers concrete outcomes, not just photo ops.
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Sarah B
It's beautiful how Gandhi's legacy in South Africa still echoes in our foreign policy. India supporting anti-apartheid wasn't just diplomacy—it was personal. My grandfather was in the freedom movement and he always spoke about Africa as our brother continent.
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Vikram M
Good to see our focus on critical minerals. With the world scrambling for lithium and cobalt, we need to secure our supply chains. But please, let's not repeat the mistakes of others—no resource extraction without local processing and jobs for Africans. Win-win only.
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Ravi K
As someone who works in international development, I've seen the difference between Indian and Western aid. Indian projects are more practical—like building a solar plant instead of conducting endless workshops. But we need to improve monitoring to ensure quality. Overall, a very positive step! 😊

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