The complex realities of modern West Africa cannot be fully understood without confronting the region’s layered and often painful history. In a powerful body of work for Index on Censorship, writer Adéwálé Májà-Pearce retraces historical and contemporary fault lines — from the slave ports of Benin to the conflict zones of the Sahel — offering a narrative that connects past injustices with present instability. His journey, later examined by Stephen Williams, provides a stark lens through which to interpret the region’s current trajectory.
From slave routes to modern fractures
Májà-Pearce’s journey begins along the West African coast, particularly in present-day Benin, where remnants of the transatlantic slave trade remain physically and psychologically embedded in the landscape. The slave cells, coastal forts, and departure points are not merely historical sites — they are enduring symbols of extraction, disruption, and displacement.
These early fractures, imposed by external powers, reshaped societies, economies, and governance structures across the region. The legacy is visible in weakened institutional continuity and patterns of inequality that persist across generations.
By grounding his narrative in these origins, Májà-Pearce frames West Africa’s contemporary challenges as part of a longer historical arc rather than isolated developments.
The Sahel: conflict, control, and continuity
Moving inland, the focus shifts to the Sahel, where fragile states, armed groups, and shifting alliances define the present landscape. From Mali to Niger and beyond, the rise of warlords, insurgent networks, and military juntas reflects a region struggling to establish stable governance.
Májà-Pearce draws parallels between historical exploitation and modern power vacuums. External intervention, resource competition, and institutional fragility have combined to create an environment where control is often contested rather than consolidated.
The Sahel’s instability is not simply a security issue — it is a manifestation of deeper structural imbalances rooted in history.
Censorship, narrative, and the battle for truth
A central theme in the work is the role of narrative — who controls it, and how it shapes perception. Through his collaboration with Index on Censorship, Májà-Pearce highlights the constraints on free expression across parts of the region, where journalists and writers often operate under pressure.
This struggle over narrative is critical. How a society understands its past influences how it responds to present challenges. Suppressed or distorted histories can hinder accountability and limit the scope for reform.
Williams’ reflection on the work underscores its urgency: without an honest engagement with history, policy responses risk addressing symptoms rather than causes.
Implications for Africa’s future trajectory
The broader implication of Májà-Pearce’s journey is that West Africa’s future cannot be decoupled from its past. Economic development, political stability, and social cohesion all depend on recognising and addressing historical legacies.
At the same time, the region is not defined solely by its challenges. Across West Africa, there are signs of resilience — from entrepreneurial growth to cultural dynamism — that suggest alternative pathways are possible.
Understanding the past, in this context, is not about assigning blame, but about informing strategy. For policymakers, investors, and civil society, the lesson is clear: sustainable progress requires a historically informed approach.
Májà-Pearce’s work ultimately serves as both a narrative and a framework — a reminder that the roots of today’s realities run deep, and that meaningful change begins with understanding where those roots lie.
Newshub Editorial in Africa – April 4, 2026
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