The following analysis is part of Global Guardian's 2025 Global Risk Assessment and Geostrategic Stress Index (GSI), a predictive model that shows what countries are most likely to undergo a polycrisis in the next five years driven by geostrategic concerns. For more information, download and explore the 2025 Global Risk Map.
On 14 May 2024, five Cameroonian gendarmes were killed in an attack by English-speaking separatists in the country’s southwest province. Cameroon is an ethnically and religiously diverse country ruled by President Paul Biya since 1982. It has ongoing armed conflicts in its extreme north province with Boko Haram affiliates and in the northwest province with English-speaking Ambazonian separatists. Most of the country’s population is concentrated in these two conflict zones. Jihadist insurgencies like the one in northern Cameroon are also present in its neighboring states Chad, Niger, and Nigeria. In 2025, Cameroon will hold presidential elections that will test Paul Biya’s control. With no clear successor, Cameroon will likely face a succession crisis regardless of the election outcome.
Cameroon sits on the crossroads between central and west Africa, making it a critical membrane for the transmission of political and economic dynamics from one region to the other. Cameroon was established as a German colony but was split between the UK and France following WWI.
In the 1960s, British and French Cameroons voted to unify into the federal republic of Cameroon. Biya has since reformed the state into a unitary government with power concentrated in the French-speaking portion. This and other “francization” efforts on the part of the government have led to an increasingly tense conflict with English-speaking Cameroonians, the more militant of whom have formed the Ambazonian separatist movement.
The Ambazonian separatist movement seeks independence for the anglophone portion of Cameroon. It pursues this end through armed attacks on government security forces and police as well as through a litany of measures directed at the civilian population. These include an educational boycott enforced through the murder, kidnapping, and assault of students and teachers, as well as the destruction of education infrastructure. Another simmering conflict is taking place in northern Cameroon, where a predominantly Muslim population is caught in the crossfire of a region-wide struggle against Jihadist insurgency, principally driven in Cameroon by Boko Haram.
While Cameroon’s principal commodities — oil and aluminum — are strategic and highly traded commodities, Cameroon does not produce a significant proportion of the world’s supply of either of these goods. However, Cameroons geographical position makes it significant for logistics and the security of neighboring Nigeria’s vital oil industry. The Gulf of Guinea is one of the prime global piracy hot spots. Any serious breakdown in the Cameroonian state would likely change the calculus of would-be pirates in the region with the potential to disrupt Nigerian oil exports substantially.
Global Guardian's annual Risk Map displays country-specific security risk levels based on a series of indicators including crime, health, natural disasters, infrastructure, political stability, civil unrest, and terrorism.
This year's addition, the Geostrategic Stress Index (GSI), attributes a low to extreme categorical risk rating that forecasts the likelihood of a local crisis taking on regional or global dimensions as countries navigate new cold war relations.
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