How France still controls Africa [Newsweek]

France still has some level of control over its former colonies, here’s how.

France and Britain were colonial overlords of Africa; while Britain colonised 22 African countries, France colonised 20. Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, and Gabon were some of France’s colonies.

France ruled these countries indirectly and assimilated them into their culture and lifestyle, and unfortunately, many of these countries never became fully independent since they signed a colonial pact before their independence.

Here’s how France still controls many parts of Africa:

African countries that were French colonies must adopt French as their official language and the language for their education system, which is governed by France’s foreign minister. This means their local indigenous languages are pushed to the back burner.

14 former French colonies in Africa pay a colonial tax to France. These countries pay for infrastructure that was built by France during colonialism. The size of this debt fluctuates based on the country paying it and the growth of its infrastructure.

France has control over their former colonies’ national reserves since they are required to deposit their monetary reserves with France’s central bank.

14 African countries have retained their national reserves since 1961, with more than 80% put in “operations accounts” managed by the French Treasury.

The countries do not know the quantity of foreign reserves kept by the French Treasury. France today maintains approximately $500 billion in African countries’ money in its treasury, with barely 15% accessible to African countries. They even have to pay interest to withdraw more than 15%.

France has the first right to use and buy natural resources discovered in its territory and to purchase them from former colonies. These colonies cannot choose to sell their natural resources to other countries before France.

The government of its colonies gives precedence to French interests and firms. French companies must be considered, and only then can Africans do business with other international companies. As a result, France owns all significant economic assets in colonies like Côte d’Ivoire, including water, power, telephone, transportation, ports, and major banks.

France also claims exclusive rights to offer military equipment and training to African military commanders via a system of scholarships, grants, and “defence agreements” related to the Colonial Pact. France has the legal authority to intervene militarily in African countries and to station soldiers on their bases indefinitely.

The former French colonies are obligated to use the colonial currency FCFA, commonly known as the CFA franc, which not only depletes the wealth of African nations but also contributes an astounding $500 billion annually to the French treasury.

One response to “7 ways France still controls its former African colonies”

  1. They were not independent: they were not sovereign. Indeed. Sankara of BurkinaFaso was eliminated because he attempted the upgrade-ment of his constituency to sovereignty, or something very close. Similar thing nearly happened to D. Laurent Gbagbo of Ivory-Side. . . . .

    Plus, most african cultural ethnies do not want sovereign independence: their elite only want to ocupy compradorial positions. . . . .
    Were north Nigeria a separate unit of polity, it’d not differ from Republique du Niger. . . . .
    I know of 3 peoples of negroid Africa who’d probably make sovereign enclaves on the continent: the Bamileke of region de Bamenda (Cameroun), the Igbo of Biafra region (Nigeria), and some ethnies in Rwanda and in Ghana.
    There may be others.

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