Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

French President Emmanuel Macron vowed to keep fighting extremism in West Africa.

French president in West Africa as his troops kill 33 jihadists

- By Alexis Adele and Sylvie Corbet

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — French President Emmanuel Macron vowed to boost the fight against Islamic extremism in West Africa as French troops killed 33 Islamic extremists in central Mali.

Saturday was the second day of Macron’s three-day trip to Ivory Coast and Niger that has been dominated by the growing threat posed by jihadist groups.

“We must remain determined and united to face that threat,” he said in a news conference in Abidjan. “We will continue the fight.”

Standing beside Macron, Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara announced a “historic” reform of the French-backed currency CFA Franc, establishe­d in 1945 and used by eight states in West and Central Africa.

The currency’s name will become the “eco” next year, and all French officials will withdraw from its decision-making bodies, Ouattara said. In addition, the obligation for member states to keep half their foreign reserves in France will end.

The currency will remain pegged to the euro, which guarantees its stability, Ouattara stressed.

Macron, who turned 42 on Saturday, welcomed the reform and praised the financial and economic empowermen­t of the region.

“I don’t belong to a generation that has known colonialis­m … so let’s break the ties!” he said, adding that the currency was considered by some, especially the African youth, as a post-colonial heritage.

Earlier that day, Macron announced that a French military operation killed 33 Islamic extremists in the Mopti region of central Mali on Saturday morning.

He tweeted he was “proud of our soldiers who protect us.” Two Malian gendarmes also were rescued in the operation, he said.

France has about 4,500 military personnel in West and Central

Africa, much of which was ruled by France during the colonial era. The French led a military operation in 2013 to dislodge Islamic extremists from power in several major towns across Mali’s north.

In the ensuing years, the militants have regrouped and pushed further into central Mali, where Saturday morning’s operation was carried out.

On Friday evening, Macron met with French military personnel stationed in Ivory Coast, which shares a long border with volatile Mali and Burkina Faso.

The visit included commandos who were involved in the operation in Mali last month during which 13 soldiers died in a helicopter collision.

Earlier Saturday, Macron and Ouattara highlighte­d a new training effort being launched. The Internatio­nal Academy to Fight Terrorism will be in charge of “training in Ivory Coast some specialize­d forces from across Africa,” Macron said.

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