Europe’s obsession with border walls and deportations misses the mark. Every day, African migrants risk death to reach its shores not because of Europe’s allure, but because their own leaders have abandoned them. Nigeria’s Boko Haram and bandit crises have killed tens of thousands and displaced over 2 million. Sudan’s civil war has uprooted 14 million 30% of its population. Eritrea’s dictatorship has driven nearly a third of its people abroad, with 683,000 registered refugees. These aren’t migrations; they’re escapes from failed states. Instead of vilifying the vulnerable, the world must target the tyrants and kleptocrats who’ve turned Africa into a pressure cooker.
The Real Culprits: Failed Governance
Take Nigeria. Decades of corruption under leaders like Olusegun Obasanjo, Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari, and now Bola Tinubu have gutted the country. Education and health budgets are slashed, leaving schools empty and clinics barren while malaria and violence claim lives. Over 7.8 million Nigerians need urgent aid; millions more flee. The EU sees thousands of Nigerian asylum claims yearly 23% are repeat applications because home offers nothing but despair.
Sudan’s collapse is even bleaker. Generals Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed “Hemedti” Dagalo, who seized power in 2021, preside over a slaughter that’s displaced 14 million and killed tens of thousands. Their “government” is a sham Education Minister Ahmed Mudawi Musa Mohamed and Health Minister Moaz Omer Bakhit Al-Awad can’t function amid war and famine. Yet Europe fixates on closing migration routes instead of sanctioning these warlords.
Eritrea’s Isaias Afwerki rules through terror. Indefinite military service and crushed dissent have made 683,000 Eritreans 2% of the population refugees. One in three Eritreans lives abroad. His regime prioritizes secret police over schools, yet the West punishes fleeing youth rather than the dictator.
Cameroon, under 90-year-old Paul Biya, is crumbling. The Anglophone conflict and Boko Haram have displaced 2.1 million and shuttered hundreds of schools. Ministers like Victor Arrey-Nkongho Mengot (Education) and Confiance Balungeloi Ebune (Health) oversee a broken system, while elites in Yaoundé ignore the suffering.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Félix Tshisekedi’s promises of change have drowned in eastern wars. Over 6.7 million are displaced 8% of the population while militias and corrupt officials thrive. Ministers like Tony Mwaba Kazadi (Education) and Samuel-Roger Kamba Mulamba (Health) manage chaos, not progress. Desperate Congolese seek asylum in Europe and beyond.
Migration Myths and Realities
Only a fraction of Africa’s 1.4 billion people migrate abroad. OECD data shows 440,000 Africans reached Europe annually from 2000–2005; by 2020, 11 million African-born lived there. In 2023, EU+ states saw 1.1 million asylum applications, including from Nigeria and Sudan but this isn’t a “flood.” Most are visa holders or repeat claimants. The real issue isn’t numbers; it’s the crises driving them.
Hold Leaders Accountable
The West has tools sanctions, asset freezes, visa bans used against Russian oligarchs. Why not African despots? The U.S. Global Magnitsky Act and EU’s Human Rights sanctions regime can target Tinubu, Afwerki, Biya, Burhan, Hemedti, and Tshisekedi’s allies. The EU sends €202 million in aid to Cameroon yet lets Biya travel freely hypocrisy at its finest.
What Must Happen Now
1. Sanctions: Freeze assets and ban travel for corrupt leaders like Tinubu, Afwerki, and Sudan’s generals.
2. Conditional Aid: The UN’s António Guterres and EU’s Ursula von der Leyen must tie aid to measurable reforms in education and health. The IMF and World Bank should follow suit.
3. G7/G20 Pressure: Leaders like Trump, Starmer, Scholz, and Macron must demand accountability at summits. The African Union, under Egypt’s Sisi, should condemn abuses.
4. UN Advocacy: UNHCR and IOM must call out Nigeria, Sudan, Eritrea, Cameroon, and DRC’s leaders publicly. Name them. Shame them.
Blaming migrants while coddling dictators is moral cowardice. If Tinubu or Biya want global perks trade, travel, investment they must build livable societies. Until then, sanctions should bite. Only hope at home will stop the boats. Humanity, and strategy, demand it.