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Africa-France Summit: New partnerships and deals on the menu

On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron - and more than 30 African leaders - kicked off a conference in Kenya aimed at diversifying Paris’ partnerships?on Africa's continent and clinching?new investment?deals.

The?Africa Forward Summit? is the first event France has organized in an English-speaking country since 1970. It follows a number of setbacks that occurred in former colonial nations in West Africa, which have been moving to reduce French influence.

The convention began with a business meeting attended by Macron and Kenyan president William Ruto, at the University of Nairobi.

In addition to the more than 30 African Presidents, Vice-Presidents, and Prime Ministers who attended, there were executives from leading French firms like TotalEnergies or Orange, as well as Africa's richest industrialist, Aliko Dangote, a Nigerian.

On Sunday, during a visit to Kenya, Macron announced that the French shipping company CMA CGM would invest 823 million dollars to modernise an existing terminal in Mombasa.

KENYA WANT?SUMMIT RESULT DISCUSSED IN G7

Kenya is hoping to use the summit as a way to attract French investors who are looking to take advantage of the pan African?free trade zone (AfCFTA) which is currently being implemented across the continent.

Ruto wants to also advance the talks to make the global financial system more fair to heavily indebted African nations, a campaign that France has committed to supporting.

The Kenyan President will attend the G7 Summit next month at Evian-les-Bains on the invitation of France which is the rotating president.

Kenyan Foreign Ministry Musalia Mudavadi said: "We think it's good if the G7 can mainstream critical outcomes of this meeting as important agenda items."

France's closest African ties have always been in its former colonies, located in the west and the centre of Africa. However, there is a growing anti-French sentiment.

Since 2020, coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have brought military officers to power who expelled French soldiers and invited Russian mercenaries. France handed over its last major military base in Senegal in July last year after Senegalese president Bassirou Diomaye Faye declared that French bases were not compatible with the sovereignty of their country.

In a Sunday news conference, Macron played down the absence of certain leaders at the summit. He said that several West-African leaders, including Faye would be there, and France is still looking for connections with people in those countries.

He said, "We may disagree with certain governments...but never with people." $1 = 0.8506 Euros (Reporting and editing by Aaron Ross, Jacqueline Wong, and Gus Trompiz; Additional reporting in Paris by Gus Trompiz)

(source: Reuters)