Why Michel Rocard understood everything about Africa

2023-07-02 09:33:00

Reserved for subscribers

TRIBUTE. Disappeared on July 2, 2016, the former Prime Minister was a discreet but powerful analyst of the realities and challenges of the continent. Drawing.

By Malick Diawara July 21, 2000: Michel Rocard in Dakar in the company of the former Senegalese Prime Minister Moustapha Niasse (on the left) in a flour manufacturing unit for infants presented to them by the promoter Mr. Sow (on the right). © AFP PHOTO / SEYLLOU DIALLO Published on 07/04/2016 at 1:34 p.m. – Modified on 07/02/2023 at 11:33 a.m.

Reading time: 10 mins

Subscriber-only audio playback

Michel Rocard loved Africa, without display, with sincerity. Member of the European Parliament where he chaired the Development and Cooperation Committee from 1997 to 1999, Michel Rocard was familiar with all the agreements that bind Europe to the countries of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (ACP), from those of Yaoundé (1963) to those of Cotonou (2000) via the Lomé agreements (1975). A great opportunity to meet the men and women of the continent and to be informed of their needs. In the followingmath of his death, which occurred on July 2, 2016, it is not useless to return to his vision as well as to the analyzes he may have had on Africa, its internal political, economic and social issues, on its relations with the rest of the world. Two events crystallize…

I subscribe

1688293685
#Michel #Rocard #understood #Africa

Leave a Replay