In what
meaningful way can any of the 14 CFA countries be said to be
independent? If this isn’t illegal and an international crime, then what
is? What is it going to take for this state of indentured servitude to
end?
How much have the CFA countries lost as a result of this 50-year (and counting) “agreement”?
Do French people know they’re living off the wealth of African
countries and have been doing so for over half a century? And if they
know, do they give a damn?
Siji Jabbar
Just before France conceded to
African demands for independence in the 1960s, it carefully organised
its former colonies (CFA countries) in a system of “compulsory
solidarity” which consisted of obliging the 14 African states to put 65
percent of their foreign currency reserves into the French Treasury, plus another 20 percent for financial liabilities.
This
means these 14 African countries only ever have access to 15 percent of
their own money! If they need more they have to borrow their own money
from the French at commercial rates.
And this has been the case since the 1960s. Believe it or not it gets worse.
France has the first right to buy or reject any natural resources found in the land of the Francophone countries.
So
even if the African countries can get better prices elsewhere, they
can’t sell to anybody until France says it doesn’t need the resources.
In the award of government contracts, French companies must be
considered first; only after that can these countries look elsewhere. It
doesn’t matter if the CFA countries can obtain better value for money
elsewhere.
Presidents of CFA countries that have tried to leave
the CFA zone have had political and financial pressure put on them by
successive French presidents.
Thus, these African states are
French taxpayers — taxed at a staggering rate — yet the citizens of
these countries aren’t French and don’t have access to the public goods
and services their money helps pay for. CFA zones are solicited to
provide private funding to French politicians during elections in
France.
The above is a summary of an article we came across in the
February issue of the New African (and from an interview given by
Professor Mamadou Koulibaly, Speaker of the Ivorian National Assembly,
Professor of Economics, and author of the book “The Servitude of the
Colonial Pact”), and we hope they won’t mind us sharing it with you
influx.
Currently, there is the awkward case in
Abidjan where, before the elections, former president Gbagbo’s
government wanted to build a third major bridge to link the central
business district (called Plateau) to the rest of the city, from which
it is separated by a lagoon.
By Colonial Pact tradition, the
contract must go to a French company, which incidentally has quoted an
astronomical price — to be paid in euros or US dollars.
Not happy,
Gbagbo’s government sought a second quote from the Chinese, who offered
to build the bridge at half the price quoted by the French company, and
— wait for this — payment would be in cocoa beans, of which Cote
d’Ivoire is the world’s largest producer.
But, unsurprisingly, the French said “non, you can’t do that”.
Overall
the Colonial Pact gives the French a dominant and privileged position
over Francophone Africa, but in Côte d’Ivoire, the jewel of the former
French possessions in Africa, the French are overly dominant.
Outside
parliament, almost all the major utilities — water, electricity,
telephone, transport, ports and major banks — are run by French
companies or French interests. The same story is found in commerce,
construction, and agriculture.
In short, the Colonial Pact has created a
legal mechanism under which France obtains a special place in the
political and economic life of its former colonies.?
In what
meaningful way can any of the 14 CFA countries be said to be
independent? If this isn’t illegal and an international crime, then what
is? What is it going to take for this state of indentured servitude to
end?
How much have the CFA countries lost as a result of this 50-year (and counting) “agreement”?
Do French people know they’re living off the wealth of African
countries and have been doing so for over half a century? And if they
know, do they give a damn? When will France start paying back money
they’ve sucked from these countries, not only directly from the interest
on cash reserves and loans these countries have had to take out, but
also on lost earnings from the natural resources the countries sold to
France below market rates as well as the lost earnings resulting from
awarding contracts to French companies when other contractors could have
done things for less?
Does any such “agreement” exist between
Britain and its former colonies, or did they really let go when they let
go? — This Is Africa.
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