Escaping Africa, a new dawn for French policy?
Richard Dowden
Africa - except as an immigration
issue - is unlikely to feature prominently in the forthcoming French
Presidential election. But the continent remains a vital part of French
politics. From independence Africa was the buttress for France's claim to be a
global leader. French Africa policy was conducted by the presidency. Like a
parallel government, teams directly responsible to the president ran foreign, defence,
finance and aid ministries for Francophone Africa, separate from the normal
government ministries.
From the early days of independence
many people said that France had been a more successful decoloniser than
Britain because Francophone countries were more stable and prosperous. The fact
was that France had never left. Behind every minister's door would be a French
official paid for by France making sure that the minister knew what he was
supposed to be doing. And near every presidential palace would be a garrison of
French soldiers or legionaires in case a mob (or the country's own soldiers)
decided to cause trouble. The currencies of the former French colonies were
linked to and supported by the French franc and then the Euro. French companies
treated Africa's resources as their own and French presidents could summon
votes at the UN with a simple phone call.
This non decolonisation policy
worked well for France in the 1970s and 80s and countries like Cote d'Ivoire,
Benin and Congo Brazzaville looked far more stable and prosperous than their
Anglophone counterparts. But at the heart of the Franco-African deal was
corruption. President Giscard d'Estaing accepted diamonds from the 'Emperor' of
the Central African Empire, Jean Bedel Bokassa. President Mitterrand appointed
his son as the link person to Africa. In his office in rue d'Elysee which backs
onto the Elysee Palace, Jean-Christophe Mitterrand ran French Africa policy for
his father. In the corner of his high-ceilinged room, he had a safe from which
he dispensed gifts or stored those brought to him. But in 2000 he was
imprisoned for arms dealing and corruption and was in and out of court until
the sentence was confirmed in 2006.
When the Cold War ended and there
were the beginnings of democracy, France's hand-picked African presidents were
growing old and outrageously corrupt. Suddenly they found themselves forced to
allow opposition and hold elections. And in France there was growing unease
about the corruption created by the relationship - and the expense of
supporting increasingly unstable governments.
In 1994 a brave French magistrate,
Eva Joly, investigated Elf Aquitaine - France's flag-bearing oil company which
owned much of the oil in French West Africa. It was found to have a $200
million slush fund for its executives. The company was closed down and merged
with Total. In the same year Rwanda exploded and Paris went on supporting the
Habyarimana regime with military supplies long after the genocide was clear for
all to see. Not long afterwards Cote d'Ivoire, the jewel in the crown, began to
fall apart in bloodshed. The Franco-African relationship became a byword for
murderous dictatorships and sleaze.
What emerged from these scandals was
not just how France controlled parts of Africa, but how African presidents
controlled French politics, giving money to French political parties and their
leaders. When President Nicholas Sarkozy came to power he promised something
different but before long it was clear that he too was running a separate chain
of command on Africa though an informal advisor, Robert Bourgi, and his
secretary, Claude Gueant. Bourgi has admitted to handling money given by
African presidents to Jacques Chirac, the former president, Dominique de
Villepin and - extraordinarily - the far right racist Jean-Marie le Pen. All
deny the allegations, but they revealed that elements of the Africa connection
were still very much alive.
In Paris last week I spent time with
French officials who were anxious, very anxious, to say how much things had changed
and that French Africa policy was now run in an official, professional way and
the days of diplomacy through personal links were over. The safe has gone from
Jean-Christophe's office which is now occupied by a professional diplomat.
Interventions in Africa are now only
made with a UN Security Council Resolution - such as the mission in Cote
d'Ivoire which eventually captured Laurent Gbagbo. As much as possible France
wants a European Union African Union agreement on defence though regional
frameworks but it is still willing to train African armies through new
agreements.
France is also looking for partners
all over the continent - not exclusively francophone. And the old commercial
links? What about Total and oil? "We support Total when we can but we do
not assume that Total's interests are always French interests" an official
told me.
So who will win this battle? The
bureaucrats or the politicians? Once the election dust has settled - watch this
space.
Meeting Katumba Mwanke
The death of Augustin Katumba
Mwanke, 'advisor' to President Kabila in Congo, will cause a political
earthquake there. Katumba Mwanke was Kabila's fixer but also decided who got
the country's mining rights and whose concessions were cancelled. He was close
to Dan Gertler, an Isreali, who plays the same role in Angola. Mwanke died in a
plane crash at Bukavu last week. The circumstances were not thought to be
suspicious.
I remember trying to interview him
in Lubumbashi when he was governor of Katanga in about 1999. He pointedly kept
us waiting for nearly three hours. 'Us' was the Financial Times, The Economist
and an upmarket Dutch newspaper called NRC Handelsblad. When he finally
admitted us we received a lecture on the glories of Laurent Kabila's reign in
Congo and warned us not to take photographs of "naked market women".
As we left we were detained by his bodyguard just for good measure.
- Richard Dowden is
Director of the Royal African Society.
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