Cover

Without France there’d be no Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger – Macron

September 1, 2023

By Adekunle Sulaimon

Without France’s military operations in the Sahel, “there would probably no longer be a Mali … Burkina Faso, and I’m not sure there would still be Niger”, French President Emmanuel Macron told French publication, Le Point.

Macron is referring to the former colonial power’s interventions in the mid-2000s, Operations Serval and Barkhane.

French troops were moved from Mali to Niger after its military leaders cut ties with the former colonial power.

He said the interventions were done “at the request of African states” and were “successful” as his policy is facing scrutiny in the face of losing the allyship of the last remaining ally, Niger, and increasing negative sentiment from Africans.

Related News

He went on to explain that while these operations reflect France’s “honour” and “responsibility”, France could no longer remain involved “when there is a coup d’état, and the priority of the new regimes is not to fight terrorism” even though this is “tragic for the states concerned”.

In the interview, Macron defended his administration’s policy in the Sahel as one of partnership rather than focusing on security.

France refuses to acknowledge coup leader General Abdurahman Tchiani’s announcement that all military deals between Niger and France are terminated, and more than a thousand French troops remain stationed at a military base there.(PUNCH)

Related Posts

Musk says cage fight with Zuckerberg will be in Italy

Social sector budgeting: UNICEF, S/East leaders brainstorm on way forward

Nigeria beat South Africa to reach AFCON final

Let’s protest responsibly

Subsidy: NLC shuns FG meeting, electricity workers back strike

Inside Tinubu’s Dramatic One Month In Office

Zelensky wants Ukrainian law to conform to EU rules

War looms in Nigeria’s backyard

FOREX CRISIS: Local insurance companies transfer more businesses offshore