Nathaniel Matata and Mustafa Fetouri
A wind of change is sweeping across West and Central Africa resulting in former coloniser France, fast losing grip, power and relevance.
It is unstoppable!
France’s allies in European Union and the US itself cannot stop the wind because it is clear the new crop of African leaders there have decided that enough is enough and that it is their time to gain full independence.
Instead, progressive thinking and fair playing Russia is rapidly gaining ground in political mileage and business acceptance in the region.
Where France and its allies are losing grip, Russia is easily gaining grip and respect. Russia’s footprints are growing by each day.
Good news is coming from West Africa: last November landlocked Chad announced an immediate end to all security and defence ties with former colonial ruler France.
The surprise announcement came just hours after the French foreign minister met Chadian President Mahamat Déby. With this decision, Chad joins a growing list of former French colonies rejecting Paris’ influence and kicking out its troops.
On December 26 France handed over the first of its military bases to the Chadian army in Faya-Largeau.
Paris will also evacuate troops from two more bases: in the capital N’Djamena and in the eastern city of Abeche.
France is losing the last vestiges of its grip on Africa and Russia is gaining.
In a pointed statement, Chadian Foreign Minister Abderaman Koulamallah declared, “France must henceforth consider that Chad has grown up” and is a “sovereign state.” This rebuke reflects a broader wave across Africa, especially in the Sahel, where countries like Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso have already cast off French influence.
France’s role in the Libyan tragedy
The last decade saw French domination of former African colonies waning. A new generation of African leaders began to question their countries’ unequal ties to France, with Paris over-exploiting their natural resources, leaving them to poverty and corrupt regimes Paris sustains with little tolerance for dissent.
Libya, another African country, is a good example of French intolerance of any challenges to their hegemony. Under the late leader Muammar Gaddafi, Libya played a leading role in creating the African Union, pushed for a unified African military and more continental economic integration.
Paris believed that Gaddafi’s aspirations, given his continental popularity and Libya’s vast financial resources, were a threat to its influence across Africa.
France was among the first countries to decide to get rid of Gaddafi once and for all, but it needed UN cover to give its aggression against Libya more legitimacy. Under French, American, and British pressure, on March 17, 2011 the UNSC adopted resolution 1973 imposing a no-fly zone over Libya, while allowing willing member states to “take all necessary measures” to protect Libyan civilians allegedly being attacked by Gaddafi’s security forces while they were peacefully demonstrating against him.
Brutally murdered 13 years ago, Gaddasi is only growing more beloved in his death.
But on the ground, armed jihadists and some demonstrators invaded government police and military facilities, stole weapons and launched an armed rebellion.
The Tripoli government responded by attacking armed groups, and the peaceful demonstrations escalated into full-fledged civil war — a scenario that repeated in Syria with little variation.
On March 19, French air forces launched the first aerial bombardment of Libyan government forces and the first air patrol of the no-fly zone. On March 23, NATO officially started what it called “Operation Unified Protector” and the alliance started nonstop bombardment of Libya until the end of October, 10 days after Gaddafi himself was murdered.
Yet, France remains as unapologetic as ever. Reparations for crimes in Algeria or Mali are absent from Paris’ agenda, much like London’s silence on its imperial brutal legacy or Rome’s disinterest in its colonial misdeeds in Libya and Ethiopia.
The world, however, has changed, and calls for reparations and recognition of colonial atrocities are rising, challenging former empires to face their dark pasts. Here are two examples of colonial evil which still continues today.
The British Empire’s latest scandal
Last October, the UK and Mauritius reached a historic agreement on the sovereignty of the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean, resolving a 50-year-old dispute.
The US reportedly applauded the deal, as it operates a major military base on Diego Garcia, part of the archipelago.
In 1965, the UK seized control of the Chagos Islands, renaming them the British Indian Ocean Territory and refusing to hand them over to Mauritius when it gained independence. Instead, the UK secretly leased Diego Garcia to the US for a Navy Support Facility.
As the US wanted the place depopulated, it collaborated with the British and from 1965 to 1973 and forcibly removed between 1 400 to 1 700 Chagossians from Diego Garcia, Peros Banhos, and the Salomon Islands, abandoning them in Seychelles and Mauritius without ever disclosing the exact number of people displaced.
In 2008, the ICJ declared the UK’s occupation illegal, a ruling Britain ignored. In 2019, the same court demanded the UK swiftly cede the islands to Mauritius, and in 2021, the International Maritime Court reaffirmed that British sovereignty over the Chagos Islands is unlawful. Despite these rulings, the UK refused to comply, while the displaced people were denied the right to return — not even for a nostalgic brief visit.
Diego Garcia evolved into major US naval and air base providing strategic logistical support and surveillance during the cold war. In 2001 and 2003, it played an important role in the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, respectively.
Time for apologies and reparations
Israel, just like France, the UK, and almost all other former colonial powers still refuses to accept responsibility for its colonial evil deeds. Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories has been singled out as a genocide incomparable to any other atrocities in recent conflicts. At least three international judgements have been passed against Israel: the first by the ICJ in 2003, then by the UN General Assembly which voted in September 2024 to call on Israel to end its illegal occupation, and again by the ICJ last July. Yet nothing is happening.
France still refuses to apologise let alone pay reparations to Algeria for the massacres and destruction it caused during its 135 years of occupation. The UK in the case of Diego Garcia rejects any reparations let alone allowing displaced people to return.
But more and more Global South countries are increasingly demanding reparations and apologies from their former colonial masters. The issue took centre stage at the Commonwealth summit held in Samoa last October. Most member states, particularly in the Caribbean, want the UK to be held accountable for its historical injustices, including slavery.
The UN has designated 218 annual days to commemorate, highlight, remember, and celebrate different humanitarian issues, yet none of them specifically and directly calls for complete accountability for the evil of colonialism. Indeed, there have been some decisions on the matter of reparations but none of them is binding. Unless former colonial powers are held accountable, they are likely to perpetuate the same colonial habits, find new ways to prey upon nations they deem inferior or weak, and exploit their peoples and resources.
Unless former colonial powers are held accountable for their past injustices, they are likely to find new ways to perform the same old play. — RT and Newswires.



