
Using Nigeria and South Africa as case studies, it compares the management of ethnic conflicts in both countries and shows the difficulties in managing deep-rooted and complex conflicts. This paper is meant as a contribution towards the ongoing search for new means of managing ethnic conflicts in Africa. Ted Gurr and Monty Marshall have written that most African conflicts are caused by the combination of poverty and weak states and institutions. If not checked, ethnic conflicts are contagious and can spread quickly across borders like cancer cells. The conflicts in these countries are mostly between ethnic groups, not between states. (Monty Marshall, 2003) This is partly due to ineffective conflict management. Alarmingly, most of these countries lack the political will to maintain previous peace agreements, and thus have fallen prey to continuous armed ethnic conflict. The countries of sub-Saharan Africa, including Sierra-Leone, Ivory Coast, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, are a volatile mix of insecurity, instability, corrupt political institutions and poverty. As regional powers, history has imposed on them the enormous task of finding solutions to some of the most pressing African concerns.Īfrican countries today face greater challenges to peace and stability than ever before.


Nigeria and South Africa could be likened to the Biblical Aaron and Moses, who were endowed with the responsibility to bring Africa out from the bondage of despair, decline and underdevelopment.
