Chad deplored Monday “contemptuous attitude” of French President Emmanuel Macron who considered that African leaders had “forgot to say thank you” to France in the fight against terrorism in the Sahel, comments also condemned by Senegal.
The Chadian government has expressed its “deep concern following the comments recently made by the President of the French Republic, Emmanuel Macron, which reflect a contemptuous attitude towards Africa and Africans”indicates a press release from Chadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abderaman Koulamallah read on state television Monday evening.
At the end of November, Chad broke the military agreements which linked it to the former colonial power.
Mr. Koulamallah recalls “that he has no problem with France” but also that “French leaders must learn to respect the African people”.
Senegalese Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko during a press conference on September 26, 2024 in Dakar / SEYLLOU / AFP/Archives
Senegalese Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko, for his part, contested on Monday that the announced withdrawal of French soldiers from his country would have given rise to negotiations between Paris and Dakar and virulently disagreed with comments by President Emmanuel Macron on the French military engagement in Africa.
Mr. Sonko described on social networks as “totally wrong” the assertion that the announced departure of hundreds of French soldiers would follow a proposal from France which would have given the countries concerned by a reorganization of the French military presence the first opportunity to announce such withdrawals.
France had « raison » to intervene militarily in the Sahel “against terrorism since 2013”but African leaders have “forgot to say thank you”President Macron declared on Monday, believing that“none of them” would not manage a sovereign country without this intervention.
“It doesn’t matter, it will come with time”quipped the French president, who was speaking at the annual meeting of French ambassadors.
In his press release, Abderaman Koulamallah particularly highlights the “determining role” of Africa and Chad in the liberation of France during the two world wars that “France has never truly recognized” as well as “the sacrifices made by African soldiers”.
“In 60 years of presence (…) the French contribution has often been limited to its own strategic interests, without any real lasting impact on the development of the Chadian people”he criticized.
“True independence”
“The Chadian people aspire to full sovereignty, true independence, and the construction of a strong and autonomous state” added Mr. Koulamallah.
Chad had announced by surprise on November 28 that it was ending the military agreement between Paris and N’Djamena, marking the end of sixty years of military cooperation since the end of French colonization.
Withdrawal operations by the French army began in December.
Anti-France demonstration in N’djamena, December 6, 2024 in Chad / Denis SASSOU GUEIPEUR / AFP
Chad was France’s last foothold in the Sahel, with around a thousand soldiers stationed, mainly at Camp Kossei in the Chadian capital N’Djamena.
French troops and fighter planes have been stationed in Chad almost continuously since independence in 1960, used to educate and train the Chadian military.
The former colonial power had more than 5,000 soldiers in the Sahel as part of the anti-jihadist operation Barkhane, stopped at the end of November 2022.
Between 2022 and 2023, four former French colonies, Niger, Mali, the Central African Republic and Burkina Faso, have ordered Paris to withdraw its army from their territories, where it was historically established, and have moved closer to Moscow.
Archive photo of a French army Mirage 2000 taking off from the N’Djamena base (Chad) on December 22, 2018 / Ludovic MARIN / AFP/Archives
Last month, a few hours apart, Senegal and Chad in turn announced the departure of French soldiers from their soil and formalized a “reorganization”. In January, Ivory Coast also announced that the French military base at Port-Bouet near Abidjan would be handed over to the country.
According to Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno, in power since 2021, these agreements were “completely obsolete”face “to the political and geostrategic realities of our time”.
Last May, three years of transition ended in N’Djamena, with the election of Mahamat Idriss Déby, brought to power by a military junta after the death of his father Idriss Déby, killed by rebels at the front in 2021.
Threatened by rebel offensives, Déby senior was able to count on the support of the French army to repel them in 2008 and then in 2019.