The Bad Natives Podcast.

How Hydroterrorism Is Fueling Violent Chaos in Africa

Season 2 Episode 10

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In this episode, we explore how water scarcity is fuelling extremist violence across the continent. From Djibo in Burkina Faso, where militants are cutting off towns from access to drinking water, to Lake Chad and the Nile basin, where climate stress meets state fragility, water is emerging as both a pressure point and a tool of control.

As France completes its military exit from the Sahel, a power vacuum is shifting alliances, emboldening insurgents, and exposing Africa's new frontlines—not just in battlefields, but around basic survival.

We dive into how jihadist groups are weaponising drought, how civilians are trapped in the crossfire of climate and conflict, and what this all means for the future of security, sovereignty, and resilience in a region already on edge.

This is not just a climate crisis. It’s a political one.
Welcome to Africa’s Water Wars.


Hydroterrorism, Water Wars, Sahel Crisis, Nile Dispute, War of Wells, GERD, Burkina Faso, Djibo, Lake Chad, French Military Withdrawal, ECOWAS, Mali Security, Ethiopia Kenya Conflict, FETÖ, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Muhammed Fethullah Gülen, Ahmed Abiy, Olusegun Obasanjo, Jacob Zuma, Eswatini, King Mswati, U.S. Deportations Africa.