Following the official end of defence tie between France and Burkina Faso, the European powerhouse, is shifting its base to neighbouring West Africa, Ivory Coast.
French’s defence minister, Sebastien Lecornu, promised to increase support for Ivory Coast, as Paris adjusts its strategy in Africa.
France’s position in Africa has been a subject of discussion lately amidst recent anti-French agitations across the continent.
Burkina Faso had expelled French ambassadors and expelled French troops earlier in the year. French President, Emmanuel Macron had sought clarifications from military President Ibrahim Traore about reported demands for the departure of French troops from the country.
Lecornu, during an official visit to the Ivorian commercial capital Abidjan declined to comment on Burkina Faso’s decision even as he re-emphasised France’s commitment to engagement with security issues in West Africa, where the Islamist insurgency is spreading.
“We will strengthen cooperation with Ivory Coast in terms of training and equipment because it is an important country for us,” he told reporters.
Experts have hinted that the diplomatic brouhaha between the French and French colonies could be a gain for Ivory Coast and by extension, Chad, and the Republic of Benin.
Ivorian historian and defence analyst Arthur Banga said, “Ivory Coast and Niger can take the opportunity to position themselves as alternatives in order to be the new countries at the heart of the Western and French presence in the counter-terrorism fight.”
The wave of anti-French agitations in the West African sub-region has continued in recent times. Notably, French relations with Burkina Faso’s neighbour, Mali who is also caught up in a serious security crisis, expelled Olivier Salgado, the spokesman for the United Nations Mission in Mali (Minusma), for publishing “unacceptable information”