Horn of Africa at “Dangerous Crossroads” as Conflicts Escalate, Warns Regional Leader
Nairobi, Kenya — The Horn of Africa is grappling with a deepening crisis as interconnected conflicts, geopolitical rivalries, and failing mediation efforts push the region toward instability, a top regional official warned this week.
Workneh Gebeyehu, Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), issued the stark alert during a high-level peace conference in Nairobi, describing the situation as a “dangerous crossroads” requiring urgent reforms to prevent further fragmentation.
A System of Conflict, Not Isolated Crises
Speaking at the IGAD Mediation Reflection Conference, Gebeyehu stressed that the region is no longer facing isolated disputes but a complex web of conflicts fueled by internal divisions and external interference.
“What we are witnessing is not a series of separate crises but an interconnected system of conflict,” he told diplomats, mediators, and regional leaders. “The lines between internal and external forces have blurred, making traditional peace efforts ineffective.”
The two-day summit, themed “Reimagining Mediation in a Fragmented World,” aimed to reassess peace strategies as wars in Sudan, Ethiopia, and Somalia grow more protracted and resistant to resolution.
Mediation “Under Strain” as Sudan War Exposes Failures
Gebeyehu warned that mediation efforts are buckling under the weight of competing global interests, fragmented war economies, and a lack of unified regional action.
“Mediation today is under strain,” he said. “Too often, it becomes reactive crisis management rather than a path to lasting peace.”
He pointed to Sudan’s devastating three-year war as a grim example. Despite multiple diplomatic initiatives, fighting continues unabated, raising doubts about the credibility of regional peacemaking.
“If mediation cannot make a difference in Sudan, its credibility everywhere is at risk,” Gebeyehu said.
Calls for Unified Action Amid Competing Peace Tracks
Ambassador Mohamed Belaiche, the African Union’s Special Representative for Sudan, echoed concerns about fractured peace initiatives, urging stronger coordination among regional and international actors.
“The real challenge is bridging parallel efforts that never intersect,” Belaiche said. He emphasized the need for Sudanese-led solutions, inclusive talks involving women and youth, and accountability for war crimes.
Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Musalia Mudavadi, stressed the importance of African-led solutions, calling for flexible mediation processes backed by reliable funding for IGAD’s peacebuilding work.
A Turning Point for the Horn
Delegates agreed that incremental responses are no longer sufficient. Gebeyehu urged leaders to treat the crisis as a decisive moment for the region.
“We cannot normalize permanent war,” he said. “What the Horn needs is not management but resolution—political courage and strategic clarity.”
With conflicts deepening and global powers jostling for influence, the summit’s message was clear: Without urgent reforms, the region risks sliding further into chaos.
— Reported by Nexio News
