Coup D'état: List of African nations under military rule

News Express |27th Nov 2025 | 184
Coup D'état: List of African nations under military rule

File photo of a junta leader




The recent takeover in Guinea-Bissau, where military officers announced that they had seized “total control” on November 26, 2025, deposed the president and suspended the electoral process, adds yet another case to this worrying trend.

As of November 2025, seven countries remain under military rule, each with its own path, justification, and political tension.

Business Insider Africa breaks down the countries still governed by military authorities and the circumstances that led to their situation.

1. Mali

Colonel Assimi Goita, now a general, emerged as the central figure of the junta.

In 2025, the military leadership made its boldest move yet. Political parties were dissolved, and a new law granted Goita a five-year renewable mandate without elections.

This effectively pushed Mali into open-ended military governance with no clear timetable for democratic restoration.

The political space has shrunk further, and several opposition figures have either been detained or exiled.

For many Malians, the promise of stability remains distant as the country continues to battle insurgency, economic strain, and an opaque political future.

2. Burkina Faso

Burkina Faso experienced two swift coups in 2022, first bringing Lt Col Paul Henri Damiba to power, then placing Captain Ibrahim Traore at the helm after accusing the previous leader of failing to tackle insecurity.

Traore has since consolidated power and framed his leadership as a patriotic mission to defend the country from jihadist violence.

In 2024, a new transition charter was adopted, extending military rule by another 60 months from July that year.

With this extension, Burkina Faso is set to remain under junta control for several years.

Civil liberties remain constrained, political activity is restricted, and critics continue to report on growing authoritarian tendencies within the ruling military council.

3. Niger

The takeover triggered strong sanctions and condemnation from African and global partners.

By March 2025, the junta adopted a transition charter that set a five-year timeline for returning to constitutional rule.

This move confirmed that Niger would not be heading back to elections soon. While the junta insists that its focus is on political stability and security, regional bodies argue that the prolonged transition undermines democratic gains.

Meanwhile, Niger continues to navigate strained international relations and a challenging economic environment.

4. Guinea (Guinea Conakry)

The junta initially committed to a structured transition, yet timelines have shifted repeatedly. In 2025, political uncertainty deepened.

The transitional government was dissolved, and Doumbouya announced intentions to run in future elections.

Opposition groups and international observers have expressed concern that the transition process is being manipulated to ensure the military retains control.

Despite pushback, the junta continues to hold firm, maintaining tight influence over Guinea’s political and security institutions.

5. Sudan

The military seized control in October 2021, derailing a fragile civilian-military power-sharing arrangement.

By April 2023, the country had descended into a brutal civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces under Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti.

With rival forces controlling different territories, Sudan has no functioning civilian government.

Each faction has set up its own administrative structures, further fragmenting state authority.

For civilians, the situation has become catastrophic. There are widespread reports of displacement, hunger, and human rights abuses.

Sudan’s military rule is therefore not a single junta but a fractured system in which armed groups operate de facto governments.

6. Madagascar

Colonel Michael Randrianirina announced that the armed forces were taking control and that he would assume the presidency.

The African Union suspended Madagascar in response, calling the change of government unconstitutional.

For now, the country is governed by a military-led transitional authority. Political parties and civil society groups have demanded negotiations to restore constitutional order, but the transition plan remains unclear and heavily contested.

7. Guinea-Bissau

They dissolved the ongoing electoral process, suspended key institutions, and closed national borders.

A self-declared high command has since taken over, controlling state media and administrative organs.

ECOWAS and the African Union have condemned the coup, yet the military remains in firm control.

With institutions suspended and political uncertainty deepening, Guinea-Bissau faces another period of instability in its long history of coups. (Business Insider Africa)




Comments

Post Comment

Thursday, November 27, 2025 1:27 PM
ADVERTISEMENT

Follow us on

GOCOP Accredited Member

GOCOP Accredited member
logo

NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. Published by Africa’s international award-winning journalist, Mr. Isaac Umunna, NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s first truly professional online daily newspaper. It is published from Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and media hub, and has a provision for occasional special print editions. Thanks to our vast network of sources and dedicated team of professional journalists and contributors spread across Nigeria and overseas, NEWS EXPRESS has become synonymous with newsbreaks and exclusive stories from around the world.

Contact

Adetoun Close, Off College Road, Ogba, Ikeja, Lagos State.
+234(0)8098020976, 07013416146, 08066020976
info@newsexpressngr.com

Find us on

Facebook
Twitter

Copyright NewsExpress Nigeria 2025