Operation Serengeti 2.0, an INTERPOL-led international operation, resulted in the arrest of 1,209 cybercriminals across Africa. The operation targeted cross-border cybercrime gangs involved in ransomware, online scams, and business email compromise (BEC).
The operation, conducted from June to August 2025, involved law enforcement from 18 African countries and the UK. Authorities seized $97.4 million and dismantled 11,432 malicious infrastructures linked to attacks on 88,000 victims worldwide.
Following this, Operation Sentinel, conducted between October 27 and November 27, 2025, led to the arrest of 574 individuals and the recovery of $3 million linked to business email compromise, extortion, and ransomware incidents. The operation took down more than 6,000 malicious links and decrypted six distinct ransomware variants. The cybercrime cases investigated are connected to more than $21 million in financial losses.
Most recently, Operation Red Card 2.0, conducted between December 8, 2025, and January 30, 2026, resulted in the arrest of 651 suspects and the recovery of over $4.3 million. The operation targeted investment fraud, mobile money scams, and fake loan applications, identifying 1,247 victims and seizing 2,341 devices and 1,442 malicious websites, domains, and servers. The operation involved law enforcement agencies from 16 African countries: Angola, Benin, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Chad, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
The operations were supported by data from private sector partners, including Cybercrime Atlas, Fortinet, Group-IB, Kaspersky, The Shadowserver Foundation, Team Cymru, Trend Micro, TRM Labs, and Uppsala Security.
Cybercrime now accounts for 30% of all reported crime in Western and Eastern Africa and is increasing rapidly elsewhere on the continent. Interpol's 2025 Africa Cyberthreat Assessment Report noted that two-thirds of African member countries claim cyber-related offenses now account for a 'medium-to-high' (i.e., 10-30% or 30%+) share of all crimes. Interpol director of cybercrime, Neal Jetton, warned that the scale and sophistication of cyber-attacks across Africa are accelerating, especially against critical sectors like finance and energy.