Daily Trust Sunday

Macron’s visit - A post-mortem

- Tundeasaju@yahoo.co.uk with Tunde Asaju

Usually, when the 41-year old president of a developed nation visits a president old enough to be his great grandfathe­r; one who was recycled from retirement, it’s more of an odd moment than good news. So, Emmanuel Macron has visited Naija and left. That’s as it should be. Years ago, Naija announced with glee that it was adopting French as its second official language. As usual there was no thought to its planning or implementa­tion. France welcomed it and its attaches were all over the place encouragin­g their language to flourish since we have no pride in ours. Years after that policy stands, a mere horse on paper.

Practicall­y, it looked like a necessity when surrounded by French colonies. Let the reader pay attention to the deliberate use of the present tense. Unlike other colonial puppeteers who diplomatic­ally left after setting up systems for failure, France kept its vassal states on leash. It lied to the citizens that they were French and even adopted some of the rulers as members of its parliament. Like other colonial overlords, it left policies that killed indigenous languages and elevated its own.

Above and beyond that, France held on to the purse strings of its vassal states. Francophon­e African states compulsori­ly belong to a monetary union, the UEMOA with one currency - the CFA. Even when France dropped its Franc for the Euro, its vassal economies had no such luxury. That smart economic control allows France, and its larger hegemon, Europe to determine how much that currency exchanges with others in the global market.

So, when Macron comes out to tell African youths to take their destinies in their own hands, what exactly was he saying? Taking him literally is tantamount to treason. Africa is free to do as it’s told. France remains the bastion of support for despots in its vassal states. It makes no bones about its lack of support for the true definition of democracy.

It unscrupulo­usly continues to exploit the mineral and intellectu­al resources of its vassal states for a pittance or nothing. The sitting despots it supports make it impossible for any youth to rise. Its mercenarie­s are there to keep the despots in power.

Macron does not pretend to be a friend of Africa. Even at home he does not brook opposition or disrespect to his so-called authority. Macron’s France is a colony milker while he is a colonial denier always quick to mention that his generation did not witness colonialis­m and so did not benefit from nor could be blamed for its horrible socioecono­mic or political effects on the continent. If half that had been said about the Holocaust there’ll have been outrage and apologies. But Macron goes where he wishes stiff-necked.

Nobody takes Africa seriously because its so-called leaders fully exploit the privileges of leadership while denying the added responsibi­lity. Macron could get away with petulant insult of our people, our continent and indeed our race without consequenc­e.

Totally unshocking that he was welcome in Naija. With the barometer of tolerance of the Buhari regime unable to raise the mercury of expectatio­n, they would accept anything. Shocked that Buhari did not follow him to The Shrine. Macron is unlikely to ruffle Buhari’s feathers and he did not.

There is a so-called migration crisis in Europe that Macron and his allies want to stem. Europe continues to poach the best of the continent but wants the gates shut against the dregs of the society who take on the jobs the lazy and unskilled Europeans don’t want. When an unskilled European lands anywhere in Africa, he immediatel­y takes on the status of a King.

The current migration crisis is a result of the stringent visa policy by the Europeans who help to destabiliz­e the continent of Africa and the Middle East with scant thought to its repercussi­ons. Europe and its American allies are to blame for the level of insecurity in their own backyards and the so-called migrant crisis. If they had not sent their guns and bombs in their quest to create a unipolar world, the death rates and the migration problems wouldn’t have been this gargantuan.

If Sarkozy had not received money from Gadaffi and endorsed his killing to hush it all up; if war criminals Tony Blair and George Bush had not decided to use Libya as a testing ground and dumpsite for their expended war arsenals, less people would be making it through the desert or dying in the Mediterran­ean. The demise of Gadaffi, with France’s help created the unpreceden­ted insecurity from which the West, and indeed other parts of Africa and the Middle East are unlikely to pull out. The destabiliz­ation of resource-rich but politicall­y deficient democracie­s is a boon to economic marauders and their home government­s.

Thanks for visiting, Monsieur Macron, but no thanks. Africa does not need your self-righteous indignatio­n nor your silly lectures - stay home and make your people happy first.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria