Did you know that many countries in
Africa pay a colonial tax to France up until this day? We are talking a minimum
of 50 years since “independence” all round.
But let’s be fair, the French have
form in this kind of thing, so let’s go a little further back in time to see
why it shouldn’t surprise anyone…
Prior to independence, St Dominique
– the country that is now #Haiti – was France’s most profitable colony, thanks
in no small part to its particularly brutal system of slavery.
In 1791 the time was right as France
was in revolution, so the slaves revolted, and in 1804, after defeating
Napoleon’s armies, founded the world’s first black republic.
Following Haiti’s independence,
former French slave-owners submitted details of their losses to the French
government, with line items for each of “their” slaves that had been “lost”
with Haitian independence.
In 1825, France, with warships at
the ready, demanded Haiti compensate France for its loss of men, colony, and
above all, profit. Faced with no help, the Haitians capitulated.
In exchange for French recognition
of Haiti as a sovereign republic, France demanded payment of 150 million francs
(modern equivalent of $22 billion).
Haiti’s government was also forced
to finance the debt through loans from a SINGLE French bank, which capitalised
on its monopoly by charging Haiti with exorbitant interest rates and
transaction fees.
Haiti paid that money for the next
140 years. Note that as of 1825, slavery was already illegal internationally,
and the emancipation proclamation happened in 1863.
Till today, France has refused to
refund the money stolen from Haiti, and has carried this attitude on to its
dealings with its former African colonies.
The late leader of #Guinea, Sekou
Toure, reached a decision in 1958 to get the French out of his country and
opted for full independence.
He told Charles de Gaulle, leader of
France: “We have told you bluntly, Mr President, what the demands of the people
are…
We have one prime and essential
need: our dignity. But there is no dignity without freedom … We prefer freedom
in poverty to opulence in slavery.”
De Gaulle was furious, and in that
fury, ordered a scorch earth policy for Guinea. All Frenchmen out of Guinea,
and told them to take EVERYTHING with them, and DESTROY what could not be taken
out of Guinea.
We are talking of schools,
hospitals, cars, medicines, agricultural equipment, even toilets. They went as
far as killing farm animals and burning or poisoning food stores.
The purpose of this action was to
send a clear message to all other colonies that the consequences for rejecting
France would be very high.
As a result of this, Sekou
Toure’s,”Nous preferons la liberte dans la pauvrete a l’opulence dans
l’esclavage” sounded hollow to other French colonies in Africa.
But they wanted “independence”,
whatever that would mean, so the leader of #Togo, Sylvanus Olympio found an
agreement that was acceptable to all sides in the talks.
He proposed to, and the French
agreed, to pay a debt to France for all the “benefits” that Togo had received
from France during the 46 years of French colonisation.
France, in that agreement, was to
estimate what this “colonial debt” cost, and the African country in question
would repay it as a “merci” for France bringing civilisation to them.
In Togo’s case, the amount estimated
by France was so huge that Olympio knew there was no way they could pay. After
independence, he attempted to replace the CFA with Togo’s own currency.
Three days after Togo started
printing its new currency, Olympio was killed in a coup led by Gnassingbe
Eyadema, who promptly installed Nicolas Grunitzky, a white boy as President.
Grunitzky’s first action was to take
Togo right back into the CFA zone. The same crap happened in #Mali, where
Modibo Keita wanted to take Mali out of the CFA zone and closer to #Russia.
He was promptly kicked out of office
in a coup led by Moussa Traore. Keita was lucky though, he slummed around in
prison from 1968 until he died in 1977.
In 1966, Jean Bokassa in the
#CentralAfricanRepublic conducted a coup against David Dacko. Dacko would
become president again in 1979 and be removed in another coup in 1981.
What was Dacko’s crime that he was
removed twice in coups? He wanted to take the CAR out of the CFA (East) zone.
He felt that being in CFA wasn’t helping CAR.
In #BurkinaFaso, Aboubacar Lamizana
removed Maurice Yameogo from office for similar reasons, as did Mathieu Kerekou
in #Benin who removed Hubert Maga.
As a matter of fact, only Felix
Houphouet-Boigny in the Ivory Coast did not attempt at any point to break away
from CFA. He was president from 1960 to 1993 in peace.
As a matter of fact,
Houphouet-Boigny aided coup plotters in #Ghana to remove Kwame Nkrumah, because
Nkrumah provided financial support to Guinea’s Sekou Toure (remember him?).
Houphouet-Boigny also aided coup
plotters in Benin to attempt to remove Kerekou in 1977, when Kerekou decided to
adopt socialist policies for Benin. That failed.
Houphouet-Boigny was also suspected
of (but never proven to) sponsoring the chaps who removed, and killed, Thomas
Sankara in Burkina Faso. Those chaps are still in power till today.
So, what was common to all of these
coup-plotters? Were they great economists? No they were not. As stated,
Kerekou, after five years in power became more socialist in outlook.
For me personally, in an African
context, socialism, (not communism!), is the way to go in order to lift the
large numbers we have in poverty out of it. More on that later.
The main thing that was common with
Eyadema, Bokassa, Lamizana, Kerekou, was that they all served France
militarily. To me, it is clear that they were taking orders.
Between 1963 and 2013, there were 67
coups in 26 African countries. 16 of those countries are Francophone, and the
coups always happened after a policy change.
So, what is this policy change that
happens that suddenly means that the leader of a Francophone African country
suddenly becomes “really bad” to his people?
This policy change, is the attempt
to get out of the pacte colonial, the treaty that France has with these countries
that ensures they remain slaves to France.
As we speak, 14 African countries,
are by this pacte colonial, obligated to put 85% of their foreign reserve into
the Banque de France, directly under the French Ministry of Finance!
In other words, that “colonial debt”
that Sylvanus Olympio agreed to in 1960 is still being paid. Those who obey, eg
Houphouet-Boigny, are made very rich. Those who rebel, are removed in a coup.
So how does this pacte colonial
work? The pacte colonial has 11 components which all of its signatories must
adhere to. And of course, they are in France’s favour:
First, they have to pay for the
benefits of France colonization, ergo, they pay for infrastructure built by
France during colonial times at a rate that France evaluated.
Second, their foreign currency
reserves are deposited in the Banque de France under a complex arrangement, and
without oversight from the client states.
Since 1961, France has held the
reserves of the following CFA (West) countries: Benin, Burkina Faso,
Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo.
Since 1961, France has held the
reserves of the following CFA (East) countries: Cameroon, Central African
Republic, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon.
As part of this arrangement, 65% of
the country’s foreign reserve is kept in a “savings account” by the French,
with no recourse to ask exactly how much is being held.
Another 20% of the foreign reserve
is paid back to France as, err, using a Nigerian bank euphemism, COT for the
“pain” of the French managing your money.
The countries in question can only
access the remaining 15% of their own foreign reserves in any given fiscal
year, and if they need more, they have to borrow, from France!
The third component of the pacte
colonial is that France has first right of refusal for any natural resource
found in that country.
This is the reason why Niger has to
sell all of its uranium, at a very cheap rate, to France. Note that 77% of
France’s electricity is nuclear. Where do you think the uranium comes from?
That’s the reason that French troops
are quick to get on the ground in any African conflict that threatens France’s
interests. It’s all about the money.
That’s the reason that the Ivory
Coast is claiming the oil that’s been found in Ghana’s territorial waters, the
oil will become, French.
The fourth part of the pacte
colonial is that ALL government contracts in those countries must be opened
first to French companies. If the French don’t want, then #China can come…
The fifth part of the pacte colonial
is that these countries are obliged to send France an annual report of all
their government activities. Or else, money won’t be released.
The sixth component of the pacte
colonial is that these countries are forced to use the CFA Franc as their
currency. EVEN ater France moved to the Euro.
As a matter of fact, it was the move
to the Euro that exposed the pacte colonial. Other European countries found out
just how fat France was feeding from its former African colonies.
#Sweden, #Norway and #Denmark have
on many occasions tried to get the pacte colonial ditched, all their attempts
have failed because France makes free money from it each years.
Former French president, Chirac
admitted as much when he said, in 2008, “Without Africa, France will slide down
into the rank of a third [world] power”.
The seventh part excludes the
teaching of other languages in their schools aside from French. “Wir sind eine
volke!” There’s no better way to keep a people mentally colonised.
Let’s put it this way, only 74
million people speak French as a first language. This policy limits access to
the cross-fertilisation of ideas.
The eighth pact is military: France
has the exclusive right to train these countries’ soldiers, and supply their
militaries.
This is a particularly crafty part
of it, because the troops are indoctrinated from conscript/recruit level, and
the moment a leader starts having ideas, you guessed it, there’s a coup.
Think about it, all of the most
recent coups in Africa (#SouthSudan wasn’t a coup, #Egypt doesn’t count), have
been in Francophone countries AFTER a deal was reached with China.
The ninth part of the pacte colonial
gives France the right to deply troops in these countries in order to defend
French interests. It also gives them bases in these countries.
The tenth component of the pacte
colonial forbids these countries from entering into military alliances without
French approval.
This particular component explains
why back in the 1990s, when ECOMOG was formed because of #Liberia’s civil war,
only #Senegal sent troops from Francophone West Africa.
The Senegalese troops, 1500 of them,
were withdrawn after six months because oga didn’t like it. Can’t have them
mixing with those corrupt Nigerian troops you see…
This also explains why #Nigeria has
had to seek French help in the #BokoHaram war. Truth is, our multinational
force wouldn’t have taken off without French approval.
Finally, these countries are obliged
by the pacte colonial to side with France in the event of a war anywhere it may
happen in the world.
If for example, France had gotten
involved in the #Iraq war, these chaps would have had to send troops on French
request. Can’t run away from it.
Sadly, I do not see this
psychopathic relationship being broken any time soon. There are only two
countries in Africa that have the potential to do it.
One of them, #SouthAfrica, is too
far away from any Francophone country for it to be of immediate concern to
them, and besides, they must deal with the SADC first.
The second, is Nigeria, and we are
right in the middle of it. But two things have dogged us: bad, short-sighted
leadership, and our own failing economy.
If our leadership, and I’m not just
talking the current leadership, has any foresight, then we ought to know how to
play the great power politics. But we don’t.
Second is that by our very size, we
are a natural magnet for these countries. But that won’t happen until we get
our act together in the real sense of the words.
Then, we need to genuinely fortify
our military. There is no way we can play great power politics without having a
strong military. Not possible.
Source news rescue.com written by Cheta Nwanze
What Can We Call This Please? African Countries Still Pay A Colonial Tax To France?
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Wednesday, March 26, 2014
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