—As 4th India-Africa Forum Summit Gets Underway Shortly
India’s Ambassador near Monrovia, Ambassador Manoj Bihari Verma, says India and Liberia have significantly solidified their defense and strategic partnership, focusing on counter-terrorism, tactical training, and medical security infrastructure.
Addressing a Media Forum on the heels of the upcoming 4th India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS-IV), expected to be held in New Delhi, Ambassador Verma stated that the two countries were Building on long-standing bilateral ties, which the two nations have synchronized their security approaches to address evolving cross-border challenges, maritime piracy, and localized terrorism threats across West Africa.
Liberia maintains a zero-tolerance policy against terrorism and stands in complete solidarity with India’s regional and global anti-terror initiatives.
India allocates ongoing training slots for the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) under the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation (ITEC) framework. This covers operational training in specialized army and navy courses to build local capacity.
India has contributed $2 million to construct the critical Emergency Block, named the “Shanti Block,” at the 14 Military Hospital near Monrovia, directly strengthening Liberia’s sovereign military medical capabilities.
The report of India, Liberia defense cooperation comes amid reports that Guinean custom officers and troops remain deployed on Liberian soil amid an active, escalating diplomatic dispute. Despite several declarations of gradual pullbacks following regional peace talks earlier this year, current reports confirm that Guinean authorities have sustained their cross-border presence.
Sources tell the authoritative Independent Probe Newspaper that Guinean troops and customs officers continue to occupy targeted areas on the Liberian side of the border.
Last week, IPNEWS understands that the dispute re-escalated as the Speaker of Guinea’s National Transitional Council struck a combative tone at the ECOWAS Parliament, prompting allegations from Liberia that Guinea is actively “beating the war drum”.
Liberian President Joseph Boakai has officially bypassed standard regional frameworks to directly request the intervention of French President Emmanuel Macron. Liberia hopes to leverage France’s historical ties with Guinea to de-escalate the territorial standoff.
Root Causes of the Conflict
The border crisis, which primarily impacts the Sorlumba region in Foya District, Lofa County, stems from localized resource competition and border ambiguity:
The crisis ignited on March 2, 2026, when armed Guinean soldiers crossed the border at gunpoint to halt a Liberian company (BK Enterprise) from mining sand along the shared Makona River. Guinea claims total jurisdiction and mineral rights over the river.
Liberian security intelligence reports suggest that Guinean interest is fueled by the belief that a mountain situated on the Liberian side holds rich deposits of uranium or other rare earth elements.
Over the past months, Guinean forces have repeatedly crossed into Liberian territory, torn down the Liberian flag, and hoisted the Guinean flag before facing local community pushback.
Failed De-escalation Agreements
The ongoing presence of Guinean troops represents a violation of multiple high-level regional agreements signed earlier this year:
In March 2026, the heads of state from Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone met under the Mano River Union (MRU) framework. They signed a resolution to prioritize diplomacy and respect territorial integrity.
Guinean Army Chief Ibrahima Sory Bangoura ordered a phased, gradual withdrawal of troops from the borders of both Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Despite these diplomatic commitments, Guinea has not completed its pullback. The entrenched presence of foreign forces continues to block local Liberian farmers from accessing their agricultural land, resulting in community displacement and growing food security concerns along the Lofa County border belt. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
On the fight against drugs and other substances, India is Collaborating with the government of Liberia for internal security, through its Indian Embassy by funding capacity-building and technical programs for the Liberia Drug Enforcement Agency (LDEA) to combat transnational drug trafficking.
Liberia and India actively engage in broader regional security architectures, such as Africa-focused tactical training exercises and the annual India-Africa Defence Dialogue, ensuring stable maritime and continental environments.
The strengthening of defense ties is closely mirrored by reciprocal support in global governance forums. Liberia warmly backed India’s efforts to bring the African Union into the G20 as a permanent member. Concurrently, India has reaffirmed its commitment to supporting Liberia’s strategic agenda during its tenure as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.
On the heels of the 4th India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS-IV), expected to be held in New Delhi, Ambassador Manoj Bihari Verma, told Journalist that the forum offers Liberia and Africa key structural benefits centered on local ownership, non-predatory financial partnerships, and technological expansion under the theme “IA SPIRIT”.
Digital Transformation & Fintech
On Digital Public Infrastructure, Ambassador Verma emphasized that the digital partnership involves scaling up models like India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI) to expand financial inclusion and secure cashless systems across African nations.
He stated this partnership will further forge new commercial corridors to integrate tech ecosystems and accelerate local African tech startups.
On the E-Governance Expansion Platform, Ambassador Manoj Bihari Verma, stressed that direct access to proven Indian open-source data architectures to upgrade municipal systems and improve public sector transparencies will be harness.
Trade, Finance & Infrastructure
Ambassador Verma said accessing fresh financing from India’s structural portfolio, which has already extended over $10 billion in Lines of Credit across 41 African countries including
Duty-Free Market Entry encourages African entrepreneurs to leverage on the Duty-Free Tariff Preference (DFTP) scheme, giving 33 African Least Developed Countries (LDCs) zero-tariff access to 98.2% of India’s import lines.
On localized Manufacturing, Ambassador Verma, calls for transitioning away from pure commodity exports into joint ventures in heavy manufacturing, automotive assembly, and green energy fields.
Food Security & Critical Infrastructure
the Indian Diplomat stressed that Agricultural Mechanization remains critical to a prosperous Liberia by Importing scalable, cost-effective Indian irrigation technologies and smart-farming tools to optimize domestic crop yields.

