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France-africa Summit - Let’s Dream A Little!
By Robert Ménard
and Léonard Vincent
To stoke the dying fires of his presidential term, Jacques Chirac
is receiving most of Africa’s heads of state for the 24th
France-Africa summit in Cannes on 15-16 February. This ceremonial
event will be one of the last appearances on the world stage of
a president who has been deeply committed to Africa. For two days,
Chirac will host leaders who decide the fate of a continent buffeted
by intractable wars and savage globalization. So, let’s dream
a little.
This event inspires African democrats with hope, especially the
44 journalists who are currently in prison in Africa for practicing
their trade, as President Chirac is bound to not let slip this chance
to leave the Elysée Palace with panache. In the name of republican
values, he will undoubtedly plead their cause with those who are
responsible for their imprisonment, and with whom he will be sharing
the same table for two days.
How could we doubt this? Sure, Chirac never lost his temper with
the Tunisian regime in the past, although it is characterized by
corruption and nepotism. But this time he will not miss the opportunity
to defend the journalists, intellectuals and human rights activists
who are silenced, beaten up and imprisoned by President Zine el-Abidine
Ben Ali and his police. Chirac, we can be sure, will use different
words to address the Tunisian leader this time. He will tell him
that Tunisia’s methods, its spying and its brutal arrests,
just make things worse. This time he will see free speech as a basic
right on which France cannot compromise, like the right to food
and health.
In the same way, Chirac is bound to take Ethiopian Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi to task. He will tell him how France condemns the fact
that a score of newspaper editors have been held for 18 months on
charges of trying to overthrow the government, when all they did
was support the opposition. He will, of course, single out the case
of Serkalem Fassil, a young woman journalist who gave birth to a
baby boy in her cell last June. The French president will demand
their release.
Chirac will reserve special treatment for Issaias Afeworki, the
president of the young republic of Eritrea, whose former ambassador
to France has just received the Legion of Honour award. Its 314
prisons have held hundreds of political prisoners since September
2001, including some 15 journalists. They were arrested as the world
was looking elsewhere, at the World Trade Centre in New York. France
will demand to know how it is that at least four of them have reportedly
died as a result of the unbelievably cruel conditions in these Eritrean
gulags. Refusing to shake the hand of this East African Ceausescu,
Chirac will loudly insist that this ferocious regime’s behavior
must be punished.
The arrival of Yahya Jammeh, the former army sergeant who staged
a coup to become Gambia’s president, will prompt Chirac to
ask publicly about the activities of his intelligence agency. Chirac
will press him about the still unpunished murder of leading journalist
Deyda Hydara in December 2004, in which there are strong reasons
for suspecting the security services. After all, Hydara was a keen
French-speaker, and the correspondent not only of Reporters Without
Borders but also Agence France-Presse. Good reasons for the French
president to get involved.
His friend Blaise Compaoré, the president of Burkina Faso,
will of course be told what a dim view France takes of the denial
of justice, which the family of L’Indépendant editor
Norbert Zongo has had to endure since his murder in 1998. At his
last meeting with Africa’s most powerful and cultured men,
Chirac will tell Compaoré that France can no longer remain
silent while he covers up for his brother François, who is
suspected of being involved in the murder of Zongo and three companions.
We could continue to list the achievements of some of the presidents
that France has invited to savor the pleasures of the Côte
d’Azur. We could also have mentioned Franco-Canadian journalist
Guy-André Kieffer, who was kidnapped Abidjan in 2004 after
falling into a trap set by an associate of President Laurent Gbagbo.
But the certainty of seeing Jacques Chirac pound his fist on the
table, demand explanations, reaffirm universal values and defend
democrats has persuaded us not to go on. We will read the press
reports with impatience. The French president will surely not disappoint
us. •
February 16, 2007
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