At a time when migration, democracy, and global power are dominating international debate, a new book is forcing an uncomfortable reckoning. The Hypocrisy of the West, the latest nonfiction work by veteran journalist Chris Anu, is rapidly gaining attention for its unflinching critique of Western foreign policy toward Africa—and the human consequences of its contradictions.
Now available in paperback and on Amazon Kindle, the book is not a casual polemic. It is a carefully argued, deeply researched examination of how Western governments preach democracy and accountability while routinely legitimizing authoritarian regimes across Africa. In doing so, Anu argues, they help produce the very crises—conflict, displacement, and migration—they later claim to be struggling to manage.
Written in clear, accessible prose, The Hypocrisy of the West blends history, political analysis, and contemporary case studies. Its central claim is provocative but meticulously defended: African migration is not primarily a failure of African societies, but a verdict on a global system that blocks meaningful political change while pretending to encourage it.
One of the book’s strongest sections focuses on Cameroon, where Anu dissects the roots of the Ambazonian conflict and the long-standing role of international recognition in entrenching power. He shows how elections widely viewed by citizens as fraudulent were nonetheless congratulated by Western capitals—sending a devastating message to voters that ballots matter less than “stability.” The result, he argues, is predictable: when peaceful change is foreclosed, people leave.
But the book does not stop at diagnosis. What sets The Hypocrisy of the West apart from many critiques is its insistence on solutions. Anu calls for non-recognition of stolen elections, targeted sanctions against political elites rather than populations, visa bans for authoritarian leaders, and performance-based engagement that rewards governance that actually delivers security and dignity to citizens.
In one of the book’s most striking contrasts, Anu highlights how long-serving rulers such as Paul Biya of Cameroon continue to enjoy international legitimacy and freedom of movement, while leaders who disrupt entrenched arrangements—such as Burkina Faso’s Ibrahim Traoré—are treated as pariahs despite visible popular support. The comparison underscores the book’s central theme: the West is less hostile to dictatorship than it is to unapproved change.
The tone is firm but not reckless. Anu does not absolve African leaders of responsibility, nor does he romanticize every challenge to the status quo. Instead, he argues for coherence: if democracy is to mean anything, it must be applied consistently. If Africans are told to fix their systems, the international order must stop protecting those who break them.
For readers interested in African politics, migration, international relations, or post-colonial power dynamics, The Hypocrisy of the West offers both insight and urgency. It is equally relevant to policymakers, scholars, journalists, and general readers who sense that the global conversation on Africa often avoids its own complicity.
Perhaps most importantly, the book reframes migration not as chaos or invasion, but as political speech—an exit chosen when voice is rendered meaningless. It is this reframing that gives the book its moral force.
In an era of easy slogans and selective outrage, The Hypocrisy of the West demands intellectual honesty. It is a book that challenges readers not just to look at Africa differently, but to look at the global order without comforting illusions.
For those willing to engage with difficult truths—and for anyone seeking to understand why the world is moving the way it is—this is a book worth reading.
The Hypocrisy of the West is available now in paperback and on Amazon Kindle.
