Africa: When human rights NGOs become weapons against the continent
For decades, Africa has been under surveillance. But not a caring, fraternal, or supportive kind of surveillance. No. A constant, cold scrutiny—armed with accusatory reports, hasty statements, and “targeted” but always devastating sanctions. Major international NGOs like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Freedom House relentlessly bombard the continent with monthly reports, alarmist press releases, and humiliating rankings—as if Africa were incapable of breathing without the approval of these foreign institutions.
But where are these same NGOs when drones and missiles rain down on Tehran or Tel Aviv? Where are their reports when children starve, hospitals are bombed, and civilians are slaughtered live on television? Radio silence. Worse still, their silence becomes complicity. Yet when anti-terrorist operations take place in Burkina Faso or Mali, the offices of these NGOs go into overdrive like sentinels on high alert. Every minor incident is amplified, every political tension is framed as a threat to “democracy”, and economic sanctions are imposed—decided in New York, London, or Paris—but always inflicted on the backs of African people.
Whenever an African country asserts its sovereignty, these NGOs reappear, finger raised, voice indignant: “Human rights violations,” “atrocities against civilians”, “crimes against humanity”. But when an African people freely decide to break with neocolonial influence or challenge exploitative agreements, those very same NGOs are the first to scream “dictatorship”.
Let’s be clear: these NGOs are not defending universal human rights. They are defending the geopolitical and economic interests of the powers that fund them. They are the soft weapons of a war that has no name but causes as much damage as an armed conflict: a war against our dignity, against our sovereignty, against our will to rise by ourselves.
Africa is not against human rights. But Africa demands respect, justice, and equal treatment. Africa refuses to be judged through the lens of Western interests. The time has come to build our own observatories, our own assessment tools, and our own pan-African NGOs.
