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India–Africa Relations in 2025: Expanding Strategic and Developmental Engagement

From aid-based diplomacy to capacity-building partnerships

Deeksha Upadhyay 31 December 2025 15:37

 India–Africa Relations in 2025: Expanding Strategic and Developmental Engagement

By the end of 2025, India substantially deepened its engagement with African nations, moving beyond traditional aid-based diplomacy towards long-term capacity-building and strategic partnerships. This outreach was visible through expanded Lines of Credit (LoCs), enhanced defence cooperation, export of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) solutions, and strengthened health and development cooperation.

India’s focus areas included East Africa, the Horn of Africa, and Francophone West Africa, regions of growing strategic importance due to their maritime location, resource endowments, and geopolitical relevance.

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Key Pillars of Engagement

1. Development Finance & Infrastructure

  • Expansion of concessional Lines of Credit for projects in energy, transport, agriculture, and connectivity.
  • Emphasis on demand-driven projects, aligned with local development priorities.

2. Defence & Maritime Security Cooperation

  • Training of African defence personnel in Indian institutions.
  • Joint naval exercises, coastal surveillance support, and information sharing under the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) framework.
  • Supports stability in the Red Sea–Gulf of Aden–Western Indian Ocean corridor.

3. Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) Exports

  • Sharing India’s experience with Aadhaar-like digital identity systems, payment platforms, and governance tech.
  • Enables financial inclusion, welfare delivery, and state capacity-building in partner countries.

4. Health & Human Resource Cooperation

  • Supply of affordable generic medicines and vaccines.
  • Telemedicine, training of health workers, and public health partnerships.
  • Builds on India’s reputation as the “pharmacy of the Global South.”

Strategic Significance

  • Reinforces India’s leadership role in the Global South.
  • Offers African nations a non-extractive, non-coercive partnership model, distinct from debt-heavy alternatives.
  • Supports India’s interests in energy security, maritime safety, and multilateral cooperation.

Challenges

  • Implementation delays in LoC-funded projects.
  • Competition from other major powers, especially China and Gulf states.
  • Political instability and capacity constraints in some African partners.

Way Forward

  • Improve project execution and monitoring mechanisms.
  • Deepen people-to-people ties through education and skill partnerships.
  • Align Africa engagement with initiatives like SAGAR and India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC).

Conclusion

India–Africa relations in 2025 reflect a strategic shift towards mutual growth, institutional capacity-building, and strategic convergence. As Africa’s global importance rises, sustained, respectful, and responsive engagement will be key to consolidating India’s long-term partnership with the continent.

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