logo
France withdraws from Senegal, ending military presence in West Africa

France withdraws from Senegal, ending military presence in West Africa

Euronews2 days ago
The French military completed its withdrawal from Senegal on Thursday, the last West African country with a permanent troop presence, amid Paris' waning regional influence.
France has faced opposition from leaders of some of its former colonies in Africa over what they described as a demeaning and heavy-handed approach to the continent.
The French military handed over Camp Geille, its largest base in Senegal, along with a nearby air facility, to the Senegalese government during a ceremony in the capital Dakar.
General Pascal Ianni, head of the French forces in Africa, stated that the handover marked a new phase in military relations.
"It is part of France's decision to end permanent military bases in West and Central Africa, and responds to the Senegalese authorities' desire to no longer host permanent foreign forces on their territory," he said.
Senegal's military chief, General Mbaye Cissé, said the withdrawal supports the country's new defence strategy.
"Its primary goal is to affirm the autonomy of the Senegalese armed forces while contributing to peace in the subregion, in Africa, and globally," Cissé said.
The ceremony marked the completion of a three-month withdrawal of roughly 350 French troops from the West African country, which began in March.
France's military had been present in Senegal since it gained independence from France in 1960, under military cooperation agreements between the two countries.
The withdrawal followed a call by Senegal President Bassirou Diomaye Faye last year for all foreign troops to leave, citing Senegal's sovereignty as incompatible with hosting foreign bases.
"Senegal is an independent country, it is a sovereign country and sovereignty does not accommodate the presence of military bases in a sovereign country", he said last year, adding that Dakar would instead pursue a "renewed partnership" with Paris.
Senegal's new government has taken a hard-line stance against the presence of French troops as part of a larger regional backlash against what many see as the legacy of an oppressive colonial empire.
France has announced plans to sharply reduce its presence at all its bases in Africa, except in the eastern African country of Djibouti.
It said it would instead provide defence training or targeted military support, based on needs expressed by those countries.
France has suffered a series of setbacks in West Africa recently, including in Chad and the Ivory Coast, where it handed over its last military bases earlier this year.
They follow the ousting of French forces in recent years in Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, where military-led governments have turned to Russia instead for military support.
Around 350 French servicemen are still present in Gabon, where the army has turned its base into a camp shared with the central African nation.
Ivory Coast still hosts some 80 French servicemen who advise and train the country's military, and Djibouti is the last African country where France has a permanent military presence, with around 1,500 troops.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Petition against French law unbanning pesticide reaches threshold for Parliament debate
Petition against French law unbanning pesticide reaches threshold for Parliament debate

LeMonde

timean hour ago

  • LeMonde

Petition against French law unbanning pesticide reaches threshold for Parliament debate

A new law in France allowing the reintroduction of a banned pesticide has sparked a record-breaking petition opposing it, which on Saturday, July 19, had gathered more than 500,000 signatures. The so-called Duplomb law has stirred public anger for permitting a return of acetamiprid, a chemical known to be toxic to pollinators such as bees and to ecosystems. Acetamiprid has been banned in France since 2018, but remains legal within the European Union. The law was adopted on July 8 but has not yet come into effect. The legislation, named after the conservative lawmaker who proposed it, was presented in Parliament as a measure to "reduce constraints" on French farmers. But its move to bring back acetamiprid prompted a 23-year-old master's student, Eléonore Pattery, to launch a petition against it that quickly snowballed, gathering support from many people, including actors and several left-wing lawmakers. The Assemblée Nationale's official website showed it had accumulated more signatures than any other. At 6:00 pm Saturday, the counter had passed 550,000. Debate in Parliament Under French rules, if a petition reaches 500,000 verified signatures, the Assemblée Nationale may choose to hold a public debate limited to the content of the petition itself. Petitions do not in themselves trigger a review or repeal of the legislation but unprecedented public support may prompt renewed parliamentary discussion on the matter. The petition calls for the "immediate repeal" of the law and a "citizen-led consultation involving health, agricultural, environmental and legal stakeholders." Pattery, who describes herself as "a future environmental health professional," called the new law a "scientific, ethical, environmental and public health aberration. "It represents a frontal attack on public health, biodiversity, the coherence of climate policies, food security, and common sense," she said. In late June, before the law's passage, several thousand demonstrators – including farmers, environmental organisations and scientists – rallied across France calling for the bill to be withdrawn.

Paris brings back statues of pioneering women from 2024 Olympics ceremony
Paris brings back statues of pioneering women from 2024 Olympics ceremony

LeMonde

time10 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Paris brings back statues of pioneering women from 2024 Olympics ceremony

Paris on Friday, July 18, installed the first of 10 statues of pioneering French women displayed during the 2024 Olympics in a northern district of the capital. The first of them, a golden representation of the campaigning lawyer Gisèle Halimi, was set up in the capital's northern La Chapelle district on Friday. The 10 statues featured as part of the French capital's boundary-breaking opening ceremony for the Summer Games in July last year. They include Simone Veil, who spearheaded the legalisation of abortion in France, and the feminist writer Simone de Beauvoir. Halimi, a Tunisian-born French lawyer who died five years ago aged 93, earned national fame for her role in a 1972 trial defending a minor who had an abortion after a rape. She ensured not only that the young woman, Marie-Claire Chevalier, was acquitted but also helped swing public opinion on the issue of reproductive rights. She was one of the most prominent of 343 women who in 1971 signed an open letter saying that they had had abortions. Michèle Zaoui, an architect working for the city of Paris, said the plan was to keep the statues in the neighborhood for a least a few more years until the opening of the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. During artistic director Thomas Jolly's Olympics opening ceremony, the statues surged up from the waters of the Seine.

Paris dusts off statues of trailblazing women from 2024 Olympics
Paris dusts off statues of trailblazing women from 2024 Olympics

Local France

time11 hours ago

  • Local France

Paris dusts off statues of trailblazing women from 2024 Olympics

The 10 statues featured as part of the French capital's boundary-breaking opening ceremony for the Summer Games in July last year. They include Simone Veil, who spearheaded the legalisation of abortion in France, and the feminist writer Simone de Beauvoir. The first of them, a golden representation of the campaigning lawyer Gisele Halimi, was set up in the capital's northern La Chapelle district on Friday. Halimi, a Tunisian-born French lawyer who died five years ago aged 93, earned national fame for her role in a 1972 trial defending a minor who had an abortion after a rape. She ensured not only that the young woman, Marie-Claire Chevalier, was acquitted but also helped swing public opinion on the issue of reproductive rights. She was one of the most prominent of 343 women who in 1971 signed an open letter saying that they had had abortions. Advertisement Michele Zaoui, an architect working for the city of Paris, said the plan was to keep the statues in the neighbourhood for a least a few more years until the opening of the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. During artistic director Thomas Jolly's Olympics opening ceremony, the statues surged up from the waters of the Seine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store