France’s declining power in Africa faces its biggest problem in decades

In decades, France’s biggest threat to Africa has been that allies like Chad and Senegal are trying to redefine sovereignty and break with France.

  • Chad and Senegal say they will no longer work together with France on defense.
  • There will be fewer regular troops in France, and business ties will be strengthened.

Key partners are pulling away from Paris and trying to rethink their authority, which is the biggest threat to France’s long-standing power in Africa in decades.

This change comes as France is working on a new defense plan to lower the number of troops it keeps on the continent.

On its Independence Day, Chad, which was seen as France’s most steady and reliable partner in Africa, said it was stopping military cooperation to reaffirm its independence.

This was a double hit. At the same time, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, Senegal’s new president, said it was “obvious” that French troops would soon leave Senegalese land.

  • “The fact that the French have been here since the time of slavery doesn’t mean that it can’t be done differently,” Faye told Le Monde.

At the same time as this announcement, France was trying to regain some of its lost power. Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot visited Chad and Ethiopia, and President Emmanuel Macron acknowledged that the French Army killed up to 400 soldiers in West Africa in 1944.

  • A top expert at Verisk Maplecroft called Chad’s choice “the final nail in the coffin of France’s post-colonial military dominance in the whole Sahel region.”

Analysts say that Senegal and Chad’s choices are part of a larger shift in how the region interacts with France, where Paris’s military and political power keeps decreasing.

In the past few years, military-led governments have gotten rid of French troops in Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso, where locals became angry because of persistent Islamic terrorist insurgencies.

France wants to decrease its military influence but also increase its business position in English-speaking countries like Nigeria.

It is also looking into new ways to work together, like offering specialized training and short-term missions.

France’s main suspect in a rape gets the maximum 20-year sentence

A French rapist boss was sentenced to 20 years in prison, while hundreds faced conviction. The ten-year-abused wife became a feminist hero.

  • A ringleader in a huge French rape case gets up to 20 years in prison.
  • About 50 convicts, and the wife becomes a feminist voice.

In France, a shocking case involving dozens of men raping a woman over and over by her husband has come to an end. The head of the group was given the maximum 20-year prison term.

The 72-year-old Dominique Pelicot admitted that he drugged his wife Gisèle and let at least 50 men sexually abuse her at their home in Provence from 2011 to 2020, which is almost ten years.

Gisèle gave a moving statement during the three-month trial, which was one of the largest of its kind in French history.

She is now praised as a female hero for her bravery in coming out. Because the acts were so horrible, prosecutors wanted the toughest punishments.

  • 49 of the 50 co-defendants were charged with repeat rape or attempted rape.
  • One was charged with sexual assault and could spend up to four years in jail.
  • Dominique admitted that she put sedatives in Gisèle’s food and drink to make her unconscious.
  • He found the guys online and brought them to his house to beat his wife.

Dominique didn’t feel bad about what he did, even though he was old. He just told his family to “accept his apologies.”

The detailed proof he gathered, which included 20,000 photos and videos, was very helpful in naming the people who were accused of rape.

Prosecutors said that about 20 other people involved have not yet been named from the evidence. Gisèle’s brave choice to go public with her terrible story shocked people all over the world.

She spoke out strongly in court, “It’s not for us to feel ashamed; it’s for them.” This made her a voice for all rape survivors.

After ten years of hellish abuse at the hands of her husband and his evil friends, the landmark case and important penalties are a small step toward justice for Gisèle.

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