A Newly-published memoir by Robert Bourgi has shed light on the clandestine funding of French political campaigns by African leaders, revealing the murky connections that linked Paris to African capitals for decades. Bourgi, once a key figure in the Françafrique system, recalls how African leaders provided millions in cash to French politicians, including former President Jacques Chirac, to influence politics in France.
Secretive meetings for campaign funds
In January 1998, Bourgi was waiting in an antechamber at Gabonese President Omar Bongo’s seaside palace in Libreville to secure campaign funds for Jacques Chirac, then running for the French presidency. Unexpectedly, he found himself in the company of Roland Dumas, a former French foreign minister and ally of Chirac’s rival, President François Mitterrand. Both men were there for the same purpose—to solicit financial support from Bongo for their respective candidates.
According to Bourgi’s memoir, They Know That I Know It All – My Life in Françafrique, Dumas was given priority access, and upon emerging from his meeting with Bongo, told Bourgi: ‘Don’t worry, there’s still a bit left!’ This anecdote encapsulates the backroom deals and dependence on African money that underpinned French political campaigns during this era.
African cash and Françafrique’s legacy
Born in Senegal in 1945 to Lebanese parents, Robert Bourgi became a central figure in maintaining the Françafrique system—the unofficial network of influence that France used to control its former African colonies after independence. Bourgi took over from Jacques Foccart, the Gaullist architect of Françafrique, and was deeply involved in maintaining French influence through arrangements involving political, financial, and military connections.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Bourgi acted as an intermediary between French politicians and African leaders such as Gabon’s Omar Bongo, Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo-Brazzaville, and Burkina Faso’s Blaise Compaoré. During election years, he would facilitate the transfer of large sums of money from African capitals to Paris, with African heads of state often sending cash via emissaries.
Colourful cash transfers: djembe drums and sports bags
Bourgi’s memoir is filled with vivid anecdotes of how cash was smuggled into France. During the 2002 French presidential campaign, Bourgi recounts how an envoy from Burkina Faso’s leader, Blaise Compaoré, arrived in Paris with a large sum of money hidden inside djembe drums. Bourgi and the envoy took the drums to the Elysée Palace, where they were welcomed by Jacques Chirac. Upon opening the drums, a flood of small-denomination banknotes poured out, which prompted Chirac to jokingly remark, ‘Typical Blaise—sending us small bills.’
In another instance, Bourgi remembers a donation arriving in Puma sports bags. He concealed the cash using one of his daughter’s posters. This system of transporting cash was so commonplace that the term ‘cadeauter’ (from the French word cadeau, meaning gift) emerged to describe the practice.
Political denials and lack of accountability
When Bourgi first made his allegations public in 2011, they were swiftly denied by officials from Burkina Faso and other implicated countries. Chirac and his then chief of staff, Dominique de Villepin, also categorically denied involvement. A preliminary investigation was launched but later dropped, as the alleged payments were deemed to be too far in the past to prosecute.
Despite these denials, Bourgi’s memoir offers a detailed account of how French political campaigns relied on African cash, revealing an intricate web of dependency and influence. The revelations highlight the far-reaching consequences of Françafrique, exposing how African resources were funnelled into French politics, shaping power structures and policies that impacted both continents.
A legacy of influence and dependency
The Françafrique system, with Bourgi at its centre, fostered a dependency on African wealth to sustain French political power. This system ensured that African leaders retained influence in Paris while France maintained control over its former colonies. Bourgi’s memoir reveals the dark underbelly of this post-colonial relationship, characterised by clandestine cash deals and mutual interests.
Bourgi’s confessions bring to light the often-hidden financial dealings that tied African leaders to French political elites. The memoir serves as a reminder of how, for decades, African wealth was used not to uplift the continent, but to maintain a status quo of influence and power thousands of miles away in Europe.
Credit: Africabrifeing