
Africa accounted for a third of global democratic declines between 2019 and 2024, while also producing nearly a quarter of global improvements, a new report by an intergovernmental watchdog found.
The sharpest setbacks were linked to a wave of military takeovers in the Sahel and parts of central Africa, the Stockholm-based International IDEA said in its Global State of Democracy report. Just last week in Burkina Faso — which saw two coups in 2022, and which remains under military rule — junta leader Ibrahim Traoré told reporters that “people need to forget about democracy.” Mali and Guinea are also governed by military regimes following putsches in recent years. International IDEA said these disruptions weakened electoral credibility, dissolved parliaments, and curtailed judicial independence.
At the same time, the organization noted that Botswana, Mauritius, and South Africa saw gains in electoral administration, and civic participation remained comparatively strong across the continent.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
New COVID-19 variant 'Cicada' is spreading. What to know about BA.3.2. - 2
What's going around right now? COVID, flu, stomach bug on the rise - 3
This is Countdown, CNN’s newsletter covering NASA’s first time sending humans to deep space in over 50 years - 4
From Educational Loans to Obligation Free: Independence from the rat race Accomplished - 5
I decided to become a single mother by choice. I wasn't ready to stop dating.
Role reversal: Ukraine moves training home and exports the lessons abroad
The Latest: Fueling begins as NASA aims to send 1st crew to the moon in 53 years
Reporter's notebook: Inside the IDF’s ‘Hamas Village,’ and how Israel is rewriting urban warfare
Surprising links between autism, Alzheimer’s could change how we treat both
Germany to create restitution council to return colonia-era acquired cultural artefacts
Famous Restroom Beautifying Styles For 2024
Asia's migrant workers debate if Gulf jobs are worth deadly risk of Iran war
Medtronic has 'significant firepower' for multiple acquisitions, executives say
Bonk.fun’s April Fools Joke Targets Israel, Sparks Debate












