Emmanuel Macron's decisive win
in the French presidential election has not only spurred enthusiasm in Europe.
Across Africa, where France retains huge influence in its former colonies, his
election has been celebrated in the hope that it will usher in a radical change
in France's African policy. The BBC's Lamine Konkobo looks at what that change
might look like.
Africa's 'Ode to Joy' moment
It was a very powerful, if
subtle, symbol.
On Sunday evening, as
supporters of Emmanuel Macron gathered at the Louvre's Esplanade in central
Paris waiting for their champion to arrive and address them, the podium was
turned for about 15 minutes into a gigantic dance floor by one of Ivory Coast's
most famous bands.
Magic System took to the
stage, flooding the Parisian night with rhythms and dance moves not often heard
and seen in this part of town.
Mr Macron had originally taken
to the stage to the European anthem Ode to Joy for his victory speech but for
African audiences watching on television, this was their Ode to Joy moment.
It was a nod to Africa; a nod
that reflected the positive message of openness and universalism which has
underlined Macron's winning campaign.
It could also be seen as one
in the eye for defeated far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, who must have felt
repulsed by such a cultural invasion.
If the sight of Magic System
at the Louvre was refreshing for Africans, that is not why the French
presidential contest was closely watched across Africa.
Mr Macron is expected to
deliver on issues of far greater importance in respect of the continent.
Fighting Islamist militancy
Mr Macron has said little on
his African policy on the campaign trail, because Africa was not a decisive
topic that could give him the votes he needed to win.
However, from the little he
said about the continent, it appears that fighting Islamist militancy will be
prominent on his African agenda.
He was elected while France
was under a state of emergency following a series of Islamist attacks in recent
years, some of which were carried out by people with African links.
But while on the campaign
trail, he made it clear that he realised that France was not the only country
affected:
"Africa is struggling
more and more with terrorism," he told Jeune Afrique.
"We saw it in Bamako
[Mali], in Ouagadougou [Burkina Faso] and in Grand Bassam [Ivory Cost]."
Islamist militants targeted
hotels in all these places last year, killing many people, including foreign
tourists.
"Everyone should get
involved in the fight against terrorism," he said.
France has deployed about
4,000 troops in the Sahel region of Africa as part of the anti-terrorism
Barkhane operation.
The president-elect has no
plan of withdrawing these troops in the foreseeable future.
On the military front,
France's policy in Africa under Mr Macron will be more of the same.
On aid, trade and development
There is a famous saying that
nations have no permanent friends but only permanent interests.
Mr Macron has been elected to
serve France's interests and he will do so in his relationship with Africa,
political analyst Serge Theophile Balima told the BBC.
"Macron is a neo-liberal
who believes in businesses and trade," Mr Balima says.
"He will do his utmost to
open Africa to a maximum of French businesses. That is obvious."
However, the new president
believes that partnership with the continent will be more beneficial if Africa
is strong.
As a candidate, he vowed to
lobby the G20 at its July summit in Germany to support economic development in
African countries.
In more clearer terms he has
pledged to channel to Africa most of France's foreign aid, which he intends to
increase to 0.7% of his country's GDP.
However, Mr Macron comes to
power at a time when a growing movement of economists and political leaders
have been pushing for a major reform they view as more empowering than aid.
One sign of France's continued
influence over its former colonies is the CFA franc, which is pegged to the
euro with the financial backing of the French treasury.
While some see it as a
guarantee of financial stability, others attack it as a colonial relic.
Critics say true economic
development for the 14 African countries can only be achieved if they shake off
the CFA currency.
Some argue that in exchange
for the "luxury" of the guarantee provided by the French treasury,
the African countries channel more money to France than they receive in aid.
Ms Le Pen said that if
elected, she would drop the link. While no previous French president has ever
expressed a willingness to let go of the CFA, Mr Macron says the decision to
move away from it is for African countries to take.
Breaking from antiquated politics
France's African policy has
come under attack from pro-democracy activists since the 1990 Baule conference,
at which former President Francois Mitterand issued a call for African
countries to embrace democracy, following the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Critics have consistently
railed against what they perceive as a form of hypocrisy.
They say France has repeatedly
used anti-democratic means on the continent to further dictatorships or
overthrow unfriendly governments if they serve French interests, while openly
extolling democratic values.
The system of personal
networks which backed these controversial practices is pejoratively referred to
as "Francafrique".
The times are long gone when a
French commando unit would fly parachutes in broad daylight into an African
capital to restore a deposed head of state.
But Francafrique is not
totally dead.
Mr Macron says he will finally
kill it off.
He says he will defend and
respect fundamental democratic principles everywhere in Africa, working with
the African Union and regional organisations.
But how will he deliver where
his predecessors failed to meet similar promises?
"I think he is in a
position to bring that end," analyst Mr Balima told the BBC.
"First of all, he is
young. He does not belong to the old generation. He has few friends in the
Mafiosi circles in Francophone Africa."
"When meeting African
heads of state, some will be embarrassed to speak to this man who could be
their son."
African leaders will no longer
benefit from the former era's complicity, Mr Balima says.
"A head of state in a
situation of bad governance... could not count on Macron to mobilise the French
army to quash a rebellion in a military barracks."
If Mr Macron delivers on that
promise, he would indeed turn a page that has been a source of much acrimony in
French-African relations.
Addressing wounds from the past
And how France should remember
its colonial legacy is closely related to the issue of whether it still pursues
a neo-colonial policy in Africa.
Right-leaning French political
leaders have long maintained that colonisation was not only about forced
labour, exploitation and mass graves but that colonised countries also
benefited.
In 2005, under President
Jacques Chirac, a provision enshrining that patriotic view in law was passed.
However, it was repealed a year later as a result of an outcry in France as
well as in some of its former colonies and overseas territories.
Nicholas Sarkozy, as a
candidate and later on as president, often complained about being tired of
endlessly apologising for his country's past transgressions.
Unlike those politicians on the
right, Mr Macron considers that recognising the wrongs France did in its past
interaction with African people is crucial in redefining the type of dialogue
necessary for the new relationship with the continent.
As a candidate on a visit to
Algeria, he stirred a controversy by branding as a crime against humanity
France's colonial war in Algeria.
While that statement was
condemned by Ms Le Pen and her supporters, it was well received across the
whole of French-speaking Africa.
Immigration
What was strikingly different
between Mr Macron and Ms Le Pen was how the two approached immigration.
Ms Le Pen's closed-border
proposition was that she "has love for the Africans but only if they are
at home in Africa", while Mr Macron has defended a policy of immigration
that should be defined by France's needs.
In other words, under
President Macron, there would be no reason to stop an African from coming to
France if they have skills that are useful to the country's economy.
Since the 1970s, waves of migrants
from North Africa and then former colonies south of the Sahara have found their
way into France, playing a role in various sectors of the country's economy.
Mr Macron does not say he will
make immigration from Africa easier. But nor will he obsess about tightening
immigration control to stem a real or supposed flow of migrants from Africa.
"That is part of the
dynamics of [his] liberalism," Mr Balima told the BBC.
The president-elect has said
he would encourage foreign students and those with useful skills to move to
France.
With Mr Macron's liberal
attitude to immigration, isn't there a fear that Africa might end up losing its
best talents?
Not really, says Mr Balima.
"There will always be enough manpower within Africa for the development of
Africa."
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