India builds deeper partnership with Namibia and Africa

Quarterly-SFG-Jan-to-March
SFG FRC 2026

Source: The post India builds deeper partnership with Namibia and Africa has been created, based on the article “In Namibia, India shows a new way to engage Africa” published in “The Hindu” on 18th August 2025. India builds deeper partnership with Namibia and Africa.

India builds deeper partnership with Namibia and Africa

UPSC Syllabus Topic: GS Paper 2- Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.

Context: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s July 2025 address to Namibia’s National Assembly highlighted India’s evolving engagement in Africa. His culturally nuanced remarks signalled a long-term, respectful partnership model, contrasting with the Wests conditional aid, sanctions, and migration-focused assistance.

Indias Adaptive Diplomatic Strategy

  1. Cultural Sensitivity in Diplomacy: Modi invoked the Welwitschia mirabilis, Namibia’s national plant, the Springbok, and quoted a Namibian poet. His use of Oshiwambo phrases earned applause, showing India’s effort to connect meaningfully with African identity.
  2. Three-Step Logic of Engagement: India’s approach follows three steps: anti-colonial solidarity, current pragmatic cooperation, and future-oriented knowledge ties. This method reflects alignment over instruction and a grounded, adaptive strategy.
  3. Coalition-Building Approach: India prioritises issue-based coalitions shaped by mutual interests. This builds trust and ensures African priorities drive the agenda.

Shared Historical Foundations

  1. Anti-Colonial Solidarity: India recalls hosting SWAPOs first diplomatic office during Namibia’s liberation struggle. It also highlights Lieutenant General Diwan Prem Chands leadership of UN peacekeeping forces during Namibia’s transition to independence.
  2. Symbolism as Commitment: These reminders reinforce India’s long-haul engagement. They contrast with the episodic presence of Western powers.
  3. History as Strategic Anchor: Historical solidarity builds credibility and positions India as a consistent, principled partner.

Present Cooperation and Development

  1. Trade and Development Footprint: Bilateral trade between India and Namibia is $800 million. Across Africa, India sustains a $12 billion development partnership.
  2. Capacity Building in Education and IT: India set up the India-Namibia Centre of Excellence in IT at the Namibia University of Science and Technology. It also funded the India Wingat Ongwediva campus with a $12 million grant.
  3. People-Centric Development: These initiatives leverage India’s strengths in digital education and respond to Namibia’s youthful, digitally ready population.

Future-Oriented Knowledge Diplomacy

  1. Digital Transformation with UPI: Namibia became the first African country to adopt Indias Unified Payments Interface (UPI). This marks a quiet revolution in tech diplomacy.
  2. Exporting Institutional Models: The UPI adoption is not only about digital tools but also about regulatory frameworks, institutional design, and user-centric architecture that India has tested at scale.
  3. Soft Power through Technology: This cooperation creates long-term, people-focused partnerships and enhances India’s soft power.

Challenges and Missed Chances

  1. Inconsistent Engagement: India’s Africa policy has seen long lapses. Modi’s visit to Namibia was the first by an Indian head of government in nearly three decades.
  2. Limited Outcomes: The visit resulted in only two MoUs on entrepreneurship and health, and Namibia’s accession to the Global Biofuels Alliance and the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure.
  3. Mineral Cooperation Gap: Despite Namibia’s role as a leading uranium producer, no strategic framework was concluded on minerals, resource access, or value addition. A major opportunity was missed.

Toward a Credible Global South Partner

  1. Namibias Strategic Importance: Namibia offers political stability, mineral wealth, and technological readiness. Its leadership echoes India’s calls for fairer global systems.
  2. Need for Follow-Through: The upcoming India-Africa Forum Summit could formalise cooperation. But India must match ambition with sustained institutional commitment.
  3. Credibility through Consistency: India’s role as a Global South leader will depend not on promises but on consistent, collaborative delivery.

Question for practice:

Discuss how India’s evolving engagement with Namibia reflects its broader approach to Africa.

Print Friendly and PDF
guest

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Blog
Academy
Community