
PHOTO: AFP
French President Emmanuel Macron will tour Africa this week to try to boost France’s flagging influence on the continent and convince young people eyeing Europe’s shores they have a future at home.
Macron’s first African tour, which begins Tuesday, does not include Nigeria but it takes him to Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast, two former French colonies that deposed strongmen leaders in recent years, as well as to Ghana.
It comes as Europe tries to find ways to stem the flow of migrants across the Mediterranean without leaving them to the mercy of traffickers in transit countries like Libya, where they face torture, rape, and — as a CNN report showed recently — being sold into slavery.
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
Macron will also be seeking international backing for a new, five-nation African counter-terrorism force, which France hopes to see eventually take over the fight against jihadist groups in the Sahel region.
Above all, his advisors say, he will stress that he wants a partnership of equals with Africa, based on education and entrepreneurship.
READ: Workers need “living wage” not minimum wage – NLC
France’s youngest ever president at 39 has been taking counsel from a group of young French business people of African origin about how to buff his country’s image on a continent where for decades it propped up ageing francophile autocrats.
– ‘Civilisational’ gaffe –
He is also on a mission to make amends for his controversial remarks this summer about Africa.

In a July speech diagnosing demographic, democratic and security challenges in Africa Macron said the continent had “civilisational” problems and listed women having “seven or eight children” as a challenge.
Burkina Faso’s new president Roch Marc Christian Kabore has called for a reset in relations, based on “equality, mutual interest and respect”.
Alain Antil, an Africa specialist at the French Institute for International Relations in Paris, said France appeared out-of-touch with the aspirations of ordinary Africans.
“In francophone West Africa the feeling is that France is in tune with the leaders but not with youth or civil society”,” he told AFP.
Since becoming president in May, Macron has paid two visits to Mali, home to a 4,000-strong French regional counter-terrorism force.
The first leg of his tour takes him to Burkina Faso, a country with a proud tradition of independence which ousted its president in a 2014 revolt after he tried to extend his 27-year hold on power.
Several Burkinabe organisations have called for protests during Macron’s visit over what they call the “looting” of resources by French companies and the continuing use by 14 West African countries of the CFA franc currency.
France is also viewed with some suspicion for having helped ousted leader Blaise Compaore avoid justice by fleeing to Ivory Coast and faces growing pressure to extradite his brother Francois, who was arrested last month in Paris.
Macron, who has a knack for disarming critics during face-to-face encounters, will deliver a speech Tuesday on his Africa policy to some 800 students in the capital Ouagadougou and take questions.
“The president aims to change the perception of France through young people,” his advisors said, acknowledging that Burkina Faso’s youth “do not necessarily have a good image of France”.
From there he will continue onto Ivory Coast’s commercial capital Abidjan for an African Union-European Union summit.