海角大神

After sour years, is French influence on the rise in West Africa?

From the French intervention in Mali, to French special forces in Niger, to commercial interests and military bases in the region 鈥 Paris is flexing its muscles. Ivory Coast is the top relationship. 

French President Francois Hollande (l.) receives the Felix Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize from Director-General Irina Bokova at UNESCO in Paris June 5, 2013. President Hollande receives the prize for his contribution to peace and stability in Africa.

Etienne Laurent/REUTERS

June 6, 2013

When Jonathan Valette tells his French friends he鈥檚 from Ivory Coast, someone usually asks him if there are any elephants near his home. When he tells his fellow Ivorians about a shared French-Ivorian identity, they don鈥檛 quite know what to make of this white fellow.聽

But Mr. Valette is Ivorian, just like his father and before that his grandfather, a French immigrant who moved to the country for military service and ended up becoming a close associate of the country鈥檚 post-independence leader, F茅lix Houphou毛t-Boigny.

After over a decade abroad, Valette, who is also a French citizen, recently returned to the country鈥檚 main city Abidjan, which is still recovering from a brief war in 2011.

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鈥淚 had many, many countries [to work in] but I chose Ivory Coast because I鈥檓 Ivorian,鈥 Valette says.

Perhaps no former French colony has been so closely tied to its former colonial ruler as Ivory Coast. And that鈥檚 not something all Ivorians are comfortable with. The reign of Laurent Gbagbo, who was ousted in 2011 partly with French special forces help, saw a protracted and occasionally violent push against French influence in the country.

But after a decade of souring relations, Ivory Coast鈥檚 new President Alassane Ouattara is rekindling the country鈥檚 relationship with France, putting itself at the center of the European power鈥檚 African strategy once again.

Fran莽afrique policy

For France, West Africa remains as vital as it has聽always聽been. Ivory Coast relies on the region's natural resources and fears the Islamist terrorists that lurk in the Sahel on the region's northern flank.聽

French President Fran莽ois Hollande has continued much of what is known as the "Fran莽afrique" policy of his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy. That means Paris has pushed its nexus of interests directly into the business of its former African colonies, despite their independence.

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From the French intervention in Mali, to the special forces that respond to suicide bombings in Niger, to the military bases around west and central Africa 鈥撀爐he French are willing to openly flex their muscles in the former colonies.

At the center of this is Ivory Coast, its economy reinvigorated, its president friendly, and its streets mostly pacified.

Whether Ivorians cotton to France's newfound boldness is another question.

鈥淭he way that France sees Ivory Coast is as a country where it is losing influence and where it wants to keep influence,鈥 says Douglas Yates, a professor at the American University of Paris. 鈥淲hen Gbagbo took over, he harnessed an anti-French sentiment to build popularity.鈥

Le petit Paris

The echoes of 鈥渓e petit Paris,鈥 Abidjan鈥檚 moniker during the city鈥檚 salad days in the 1970s, can still be seen. There鈥檚 the baguette-toting commuters, the ubiquitous espresso machines in restaurants and cafes, the billboards for French businesses that greet commuters passing over the Charles de Gaulle Bridge, not to mention a shared language, and the influence of 14,000 French expatriates now residing in the country.

But most Ivorians are young, Mr. Yates says. They didn鈥檛 experience the booming economy and rapid development of Mr. Houphou毛t-Boigny鈥檚 time. In those days, some 60,000 French expatriates lived in the former colony. To the younger generation, France is something between a job-creating patron and a neocolonial bogeyman intent on keeping Ivory Coast in its pocket.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about their way of integrating. If the French come to do business, there won鈥檛 be any problem,鈥 says Dimitri Bakou, a bar owner in the posh Riviera district of Abidjan. 鈥淭he thing is, when they try to interfere in the politics of the country, there鈥檚 a problem.鈥

The events of 2004 galvanized opinion against the French, particularly in the country鈥檚 south, home to Gbagbo鈥檚 core supporters. When an Ivorian airstrike killed eight French troops during the country鈥檚 civil war, France retaliated by destroying the country鈥檚 entire air force.

What happened next is seared into the minds of French expatriates in the country: Mobs descending on French homes and businesses, forcing families to flee to their rooftops as French helicopters ferried them to a military base on the edge of town.

Meanwhile, shootouts between the French military and rioting Ivorians killed scores, deepening the disgust many Ivorians felt of the Europeans.

鈥淔rom the Ivorian perspective it probably was a turning point because that鈥檚 when French military presence and intervention became more present,鈥 says Penelope Chester, an analyst who studies Ivory Coast.

Ivorians tried to diversify

It was the start of a downward spiral for France and Gbagbo, and so the former president went looking for other investors 鈥撀燼nd mostly came up short, Yates said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not really a country that is like Angola, which China is going to give priority to,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l [the Chinese will] come in, there鈥檒l be commercial interests, but everyone recognizes that this is France鈥檚 Africa.鈥

And even Gbagbo wasn鈥檛 that successful in divesting the French from Ivory Coast. French logistics company Bollor茅 picked up a contract to manage Abidjan鈥檚 port during Gbagbo鈥檚 rule.

Bouygues, a prominent French firm, got a deal to manage the country鈥檚 electricity supply in 2005. And in 2010 鈥撀爓hen Gbagbo was still in power 鈥撀31 percent of its imports were still coming from France, according to data compiled by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

And now Gbagbo is gone, the result of a disputed presidential election in 2010, a rebel offensive the next year, and finally French firepower to hasten the rebels鈥 capture of Abidjan. With Ouattara safely in power, there鈥檚 a feeling among many expatriates that Ivory Coast is open for business again.

Himself a former International Monetary Fund official, President Ouattara has made overtures to European investors since taking power in 2011. France鈥檚 Hollande has been receptive. Ivory Coast received more than $400 million in aid from France in 2013, a rarity these days for France鈥檚 government.

Also, when French troops deployed to Mali early this year to stem an offensive by Islamists, French troops drove overland from Ivory Coast to reach the neighboring country.

鈥淭he French bet heavily on the side [of Ouattara] and they won,鈥 Yates says.

How much they won remains to be seen: Ouattara is up for reelection in the 2015 presidential election, and the country is still wracked by insecurity in the country鈥檚 west. And many Ivorians remain suspicious of Ouattara鈥檚 ascension, seeing him as a French-backed usurper, and Gbagbo as the rightful president.

For Mr. Valette, coming back to the city of his birth was a choice: He wanted to work in insurance, just like his father did. But for other Franco-Ivorians, the choice isn鈥檛 so easy.

鈥淪ome people have nowhere else to go,鈥 Mr. Valette said. 鈥淭heir home is Africa."