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Macron Faces Protests During Africa Tour as Burkina Faso Cancels Military Pact

As French President Emmanuel Macron began his tour of Africa, he conveyed that France is not seeking to interfere in the region. However, the tour has reopened old colonial wounds, resulting in protests.

As he commenced a tour of four African nations to repair strained relationships, French President Emmanuel Macron stated on Thursday that France’s history of interfering in Africa was over. In certain former African colonies, there is a strong anti-French sentiment. Macron declared that France has no intentions of reverting to previous policies of intervening in African affairs. “Francafrique is a thing of the past,” Macron proclaimed during his address to the French community in Libreville, Gabon, alluding to France’s previous strategy of supporting autocratic rulers to safeguard its interests after decolonization.

“Francafrique” refers to the wave of decolonization in 1960 when France began propping up dictators in its former colonies in exchange for access to resources and military bases. 

Macron landed in Gabon on Wednesday, the first stop of the tour that will also take the president to Angola, Congo Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“What is Macron doing in Gabon? Is he coming for the forest or to back (President) Ali Bongo?” asked  a 39-year-old technician. “If Macron wants to support the Bongo family, we will rise up,” he said. “Gabon is an independent country. It is not France that appoints Gabonese presidents.”

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), angry protesters gathered in front of the French embassy in Kinshasa, spray-painting anti-French graffiti on its wall and chanting “Macron is a killer!”

They unfurled banners reading, “Macron is the godfather of DRC balkanization,” “Congolese say no to French policy,” and “Macron is an unwanted guest in DRC”. 

More than 3,000 French soldiers are deployed in Senegal, Ivory Coast, Gabon and Djibouti, according to official figures. 

Burkina Faso said it has scrapped a 1961 agreement on military assistance with France, only weeks after it told the French ambassador and troops to quit the country.

The Burkinabe foreign ministry advised the French government that the country was “renouncing the technical military assistance agreement reached in Paris on April 24 1961,” according to the correspondence, dated Tuesday.

The ministry said Burkina was giving one month’s notice for “the final departure of all French military personnel serving in Burkinabe military administrations.”

Burkina also gave France a month to pull out a special forces unit of 400 men that was based near the capital. The French flag was lowered on the base last month.

France withdrew the last of its troops from Mali last year, climaxing a break-up that was triggered by angry protests amid rise in Takfiri terrorism. 

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