


By The Numbers
Coups in Africa
A recent rise in the overthrow of governments on the African continent prompts a closer look at the phenomenon.

The African continent saw a significant increase in coups in the last year-and-a-half, with military figures carrying out takeovers in Burkina Faso, Sudan, Guinea, Chad and Mali. After Sudan’s coup in October 2021, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres spoke of “an epidemic” of coups, including the events in Africa and a February 2021 coup in Myanmar. He described an “environment in which some military leaders feel they have total impunity” and “can do whatever they want because nothing will happen to them.”
Coups in Africa had been declining for much of the past two decades. In the 10 years before 2021, there had been on average less than one successful coup per year, according to U.S. researchers Jonathan Powell and Clayton Thyne at the University of Central Florida and the University of Kentucky, respectively, who consolidated their findings on their Arrested Dictatorship website.
The latest power grabs in Africa have raised concerns that the region could be backsliding from its progress toward greater democracy.
Coups per year in Africa
Select a coup to learn more.
Sources: Powell and Thyne; Cline Center University of Illinois; VOA research; 1950 - Jan. 25, 2022
Compared to the world
Of 486 attempted or successful coups carried out around the world since 1950, Africa has seen 214, the most of any region, with 106 of them successful, Powell and Thyne’s data show.
Region | Coup attempts | Successful | Failed |
---|---|---|---|
Africa | 214 | 106 | 108 |
Latin America | 146 | 70 | 76 |
East Asia | 49 | 27 | 22 |
Middle East | 44 | 21 | 23 |
Europe | 17 | 8 | 9 |
South Asia | 16 | 10 | 6 |
Global | 486 | 242 | 244 |
Powell told VOA this is because Africa tends to have many of the conditions that are normally associated with coups.
“Coups have become increasingly limited to the poorest countries in the world, and the recent wave of coups fits into that,” he said.
Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali and Chad all had less than $20 billion in GDP in 2020, according to a World Bank estimate, while Sudan had a GDP of just over $21 billion. By comparison, the United States’ GDP was worth $20 trillion in 2020, ranking it the highest in the world.
Countries experiencing ongoing terrorism campaigns and insurgency are also disproportionately more likely to see coups, according to Powell, as well as those nations whose leaders lack legitimacy in the eyes of their citizens or armed forces.
Powell said that while most of Africa no longer sees coups as a threat, the Sahel region, which includes Burkina Faso, Mali, Chad and Sudan, still experience many of the most common factors that lead to coups.
African nations
Out of 54 countries on the African continent, 45 have had at least one coup attempt since 1950, according to data collected by Powell and Thyne. Narrowing the focus to only those countries that have experienced a successful takeover, one in which perpetrators hold power for at least seven days, that number drops to 36, or two-thirds of nations on the continent.
What is a coup?
A coup is an “illegal and overt attempts by the military or other elites within the state apparatus to unseat the sitting executive,” Powell and Thyne wrote in a 2011 article published in the Journal of Peace Research. A successful coup, they determined, lasts at least one week.
According to this definition, the target of a coup must be a sitting executive, and the perpetrators must have formal ties to the national government. Movements that attempt to overthrow an entire government and which are led by those not connected to power, such as rebellions or mass protests, are not included.
While some definitions of coups limit the perpetrators to only military figures, Powell and Thyne said doing so would likely bias the data toward successful coups.
“The initial instigation of a coup attempt frequently involves civilian members of the government alone, with the military playing a later role in deciding whether the putsch will be successful,” the researchers wrote. They cite the example of a 1962 coup attempt led by Senegalese Prime Minister Mamadou Dia that failed because he was unable to gain the military’s support.
Coup perpetrators must also be “within the state apparatus,” which excludes takeovers largely directed by foreign governments. Powell and Thyne cite the example of the fall of Ugandan President Idi Amin in 1979 at the hands of the Tanzanian military, saying the action “does not constitute a coup because foreign powers were the primary actors.”
Countries with the most coups
Sudan tops the list as the African country with the most coups — attempted and successful — since 1950, with 17, Powell and Thyne’s data show. Of those takeover efforts, six were successful, including the most recent one in October. While Burkina Faso has had fewer total coups attempts in the same period, it has the highest number of successful coups, with eight, including January’s coup. In addition to the most recent putsch, coups were successfully carried out in Burkina Faso in 1966, 1974, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1987 and 2014. A coup was also attempted in 2015.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, had a long history of coups following independence in 1960, with eight coup attempts — six of them successful. Since 1999, the country has transferred power through democratic elections and helped usher in an era of greater stability in West Africa and the continent as a whole.
Coups per country since 1950
What factors lead to coups?
The African Union Peace and Security Council said in 2014 that unconstitutional changes of government often originate from “deficiencies in governance” along with “greed, selfishness, mismanagement of diversity, mismanagement of opportunity, marginalization, abuse of human rights, refusal to accept electoral defeat, manipulation of constitution[s], as well as unconstitutional review of constitution[s] to serve narrow interests and corruption.”
U.S. researchers Aaron Belkin and Evan Schofer have found that the strength of a country’s civil society, the legitimacy conferred on a government by its population, and a nation’s coup history are strong predictors of coups.
Powell told VOA that a recent coup can “signal a breakdown of politics-as-usual, a change in power dynamics that prompts future counter-coups” as a result of rivalries within the army. He said that some countries fall into what is known as a “coup trap” in which a large number of coups can occur in quick succession. An example is Mali, where four coup attempts took place in the past decade after the country did not experience any in the prior 20 years.

Assimi Goita
Mali’s 2020 coup leader Assimi Goita cited widespread popular dissatisfaction toward those in power when he seized control. However, when he carried out a coup less than a year later in May 2021, overthrowing a transitional government that he helped set up, he cited a Cabinet reshuffle that excluded two key military leaders. Goita claimed the move violated the terms of the new government. French President Emmaneul Macron called the action “a coup within a coup.”
In Guinea, coup leaders said concerns about corruption and a failing economy motivated their takeover in September 2021, as well as the fact that deposed President Alpha Conde had been serving a third term after changing the constitution to allow it.
Countries that are poorer and whose democracies are less stable have historically been more prone to takeovers. Fifteen of the 20 countries topping the 2021 Fragile States Index created by the Fund for Peace are in Africa. Of those, 12 have had at least one successful coup in their history. They include Somalia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, Chad, Sudan and Zimbabwe. Conversely, there have been no successful coups in richer African countries with strong institutions, such as South Africa and Botswana.
Coup success rate
Powell and Thyne’s research shows that coup attempts in the past decade have had a far higher success rate than those of previous decades. So, while coups are becoming less frequent, they are also becoming more effective.
Decade | Total coup attempts | Successful | Success rate |
---|
The greatest number of successful coups in Africa took place near the midpoint of the U.S.-Soviet Cold War rivalry stretching from 1946 to 1991. Coups were most prevalent in 1966, when seven took place. The next most-tumultuous year was 1980, when five were staged.
“During the Cold War in particular, there was effectively an unwritten rule saying if you controlled the capital, you were recognized as legitimate,” said Powell. Following that time, and especially since 2000, he said, the international community has been far less tolerant of coups. As a result, coup leaders are more likely to wait for circumstances in which the “status quo itself is terrible” or when they feel they can survive any negative responses to a coup, including sanctions.
Timeline of coups
Deposed leaders in Africa
1952
Jul 23, 1952
King Farouk I
1954
Feb 27, 1954
President Muhammad Naguib
1958
Nov 17, 1958
Prime Minister Abdalla Khalil
1960
Sep 14, 1960
Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba
1963
Jan 13, 1963
President Sylvanus Olympio
1963
Aug 15, 1963
President Fulbert Youlou
1963
Oct 28, 1963
President Hubert Maga
1965
Jun 19, 1965
President Ahmed Ben Bella
1965
Nov 25, 1965
President Joseph Kasavubu
1965
Nov 29, 1965
President Sourou-Migan Apithy
1965
Dec 22, 1965
President Tahirou Congacou
1966
Jan 1, 1966
President David Dacko
1966
Jan 3, 1966
President Maurice Yaméogo
1966
Jan 15, 1966
Prime Minister Abubakar Tafawa Balewa
1966
Feb 24, 1966
President Kwame Nkrumah
1966
Jul 8, 1966
King Mwambutsa IV
1966
Jul 29, 1966
Major General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi
1966
Nov 28, 1966
King Ntare V
1967
Jan 13, 1967
President Nicolas Grunitzky
1967
Mar 23, 1967
David Lansana
1967
Dec 17, 1967
President Christophe Soglo
1968
Apr 18, 1968
Andrew Juxon-Smith
1968
Sep 4, 1968
President Alphonse Massamba-Débat
1968
Nov 19, 1968
President Modibo Keïta
1969
May 25, 1969
Prime Minister Mohammed Ahmed Mahgoub
1969
Sep 1, 1969
King Idris I
1969
Oct 21, 1969
President Abdirashid Shermarke
1969
Dec 10, 1969
President Émile Derlin Zinsou
1971
Jan 25, 1971
President Milton Obote
1972
Jan 13, 1972
Prime Minister Kofi Abrefa Busia
1972
Oct 26, 1972
President Justin Ahomadégbé-Tomêtin
1973
Jul 5, 1973
President Grégoire Kayibanda
1974
Feb 8, 1974
Prime Minister Gerard Kango Ouedraogo
1974
Apr 15, 1974
President Hamani Diori
1974
Sep 12, 1974
Emperor Haile Selassie
1975
Apr 13, 1975
President François Tombalbaye
1975
Jul 29, 1975
Yakubu Gowon
1975
Aug 3, 1975
President Ahmed Abdallah
1976
Nov 1, 1976
President Michel Micombero
1977
Feb 3, 1977
Tafari Benti
1977
Jun 5, 1977
President James Mancham
1978
May 12, 1978
President Ali Soilih
1978
Jul 5, 1978
Ignatius Kutu Acheampong
1978
Jul 10, 1978
President Moktar Ould Daddah
1979
Jun 4, 1979
Fred Akuffo
1979
Aug 3, 1979
President Francisco Macías Nguema
1980
Jan 4, 1980
President Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Louly
1980
Apr 12, 1980
President William Tolbert
1980
May 11, 1980
President Godfrey Binaisa
1980
Nov 15, 1980
President Luís Cabral
1980
Nov 25, 1980
President Sangoulé Lamizana
1981
Sep 1, 1981
President David Dacko
1981
Dec 31, 1981
President Hilla Limann
1982
Nov 7, 1982
President Saye Zerbo
1983
Aug 4, 1983
President Jean-Baptiste Ouédraogo
1983
Aug 10, 1983
Queen Regent Dzeliwe
1983
Dec 31, 1983
President Shehu Shagari
1984
Apr 3, 1984
Prime Minister Louis Lansana Beavogui
1984
Dec 12, 1984
President Mohamed Khouna Ould Haidalla
1985
Apr 6, 1985
President Jaafar Nimeiri
1985
Jul 27, 1985
President Milton Obote
1985
Aug 27, 1985
Muhammadu Buhari
1986
Jan 20, 1986
Prime Minister Leabua Jonathan
1987
Sep 3, 1987
President Jean-Baptiste Bagaza
1987
Oct 15, 1987
President Thomas Sankara
1987
Nov 7, 1987
President Habib Bourguiba
1989
Jun 30, 1989
Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi
1989
Nov 26, 1989
President Ahmed Abdallah
1991
Mar 26, 1991
President Moussa Traoré
1991
Apr 30, 1991
Prime Minister Justin Lekhanya
1992
Jan 11, 1992
President Chadli Bendjedid
1992
Apr 30, 1992
President Joseph Saidu Momoh
1993
Nov 17, 1993
President Ernest Shonekan
1994
Apr 7, 1994
President Juvénal Habyarimana
1994
Jul 23, 1994
President Dawda Jawara
1994
Aug 17, 1994
Prime Minister Ntsu Mokhehle
1996
Jan 16, 1996
Valentine Strasser
1996
Jan 27, 1996
President Mahamane Ousmane
1996
Jul 25, 1996
President Sylvestre Ntibantunganya
1997
May 25, 1997
President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah
1999
Apr 9, 1999
President Ibrahim Bare Mainassar
1999
Apr 30, 1999
President Tadjidine Ben Said Massounde
1999
May 7, 1999
President João Bernardo Vieira
1999
Dec 24, 1999
President Henri Konan Bédié
2003
Mar 15, 2003
President Ange-Félix Patassé
2003
Jul 16, 2003
President Fradique de Menezes
2003
Sep 14, 2003
President Kumba Ialá
2005
Aug 3, 2005
President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya
2008
Aug 6, 2008
President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi
2009
Mar 17, 2009
President Marc Ravalomanana
2010
Feb 18, 2010
President Mamadou Tandja
2011
Feb 11, 2011
President Hosni Mubarak
2012
Mar 22, 2012
President Amadou Toumani Toure
2012
Apr 12, 2012
Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Junior
2013
Jul 3, 2013
President Mohamed Morsi
2014
Oct 30, 2014
Blaise Compaore
2017
Nov 15, 2017
President Robert Mugabe
2019
Apr 11, 2019
President Omar al-Bashir
2020
Aug 18, 2020
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita
2021
May 21, 2021
President Bah Ndaw
2021
Sep 5, 2021
President Alpha Conde
2021
Oct 25, 2021
Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok
2022
Jan 23, 2022
President Roch Marc Christian Kabore
A look ahead
In October, the U.N.’s Guterres cited three main reasons for the increase in coups in 2021: strong geopolitical divides between nations; the COVID-19 pandemic’s economic and social impact on countries; and, finally, the U.N. Security Council’s inability to take strong measures in response to coups. For instance, Russia and China, both veto-holding members of the council, in late 2021 blocked it from imposing fresh sanctions on Mali’s coup leaders after those leaders announced delays in elections that would return the West African country to civilian rule.
The COVID-19 pandemic not only negatively affected countries most prone to coups by straining already tight budgets and placing further restrictions on populations already skeptical of their government, it also impacted world powers, which often take actions to help prevent coups. As a result, the high number of overthrow attempts during the pandemic years could prove to be an anomaly when the stressors of COVID-19 ease.
Powell said that while it would be surprising to see such high levels of coups continuing, “I am certain the coming years will see coups in higher numbers than what we had become accustomed to.”
He added, “The underlying causes of coups are present and worsening. Until these domestic dynamics improve, or regional or global actors can provide a solution, there is no reason to think coups should go away.”
Reporting and writing by Megan Duzor
Illustrations and graphics by Brian Williamson
Editing by Amy Reifenrath, Sharon Shahid, Salem Solomon and Carol Guensburg