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Uranium: a Case-Study in Franco-African Relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

France continues to wield considerable power and influence in Africa three decades after her former colonies achieved their independence. Based on a variety of socio-economic, political, and cultural interests, many of her actions in Africa are essentially neo-colonial in so far as they are designed to perpetuate the prevailing pattern of dominance.1 Yet, France also suffers from an almost excessive dependence on African sources for the supply of cheap minerals essential to her economy and national defence.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

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References

1 See Martin, Guy, ‘The Historical, Economic, and Political Bases on France's African Policy’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), 23, 2, 06 1985, pp. 189208,CrossRefGoogle Scholar and ‘France and Africa’, in Aldrich, Robert and Connell, John (eds.), France in World Politics (London and New York, 1989), pp. 101–25.Google Scholar

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7 ibid. pp. 195–6.

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14 O.E.C.D., Statistical Update, 1988, pp. 9–10. Four French companies are major shareholders of Canada's rich Cluff Lake deposits in Saskatchewan through Amok Ltd., namely, Compagnie française de Mokta (37%), C.E.A. (30%), Péchiney-Ugine-Kuhlmann (25%), and COGEMA (8%). In addition, the French firm known as MINATOME completely owns the Ben Lomond Australian uranium deposits in Queensland. Owen, loc. cit. pp. 10 and 15.

15 O.E.C.D., Uranium, 1988, p. 89.

16 Yachir, Enjeux miniers en Afrique, p. 36.

17 O.E.C.D., Uranium: resources, production and demand, 1988, p. 93.

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34 O.E.C.D., Uranium, 1986, pp. 199–201.

35 Comozof, La Zone franc, 1986, p. 359, and ibid. 1987, pp. 387–8.

36 O.E.C.D., Uranium, 1986, pp. 201–2.

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42 Owen, loc. cit. pp. 17–18.

43 O.E.C.D., Uranium, 1988, pp. 124–8.

44 ibid. pp. 125–6.

45 Comozof, La Zone franc, 1986, p. 359, and 1987, p. 352.

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53 O.E.C.D., Geographical Distribution, p. 70.

54 Chipman, French Military Policy and African Security, pp. 24–5 and 50.

55 O.E.C.D., Uranium, 1986, pp. 155–7.

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61 Cf. Chipman's conclusion in French Power in Africa, p. 163, that ‘political relations with countries such as Niger and Gabon are maintained in part to ensure the continued supply of uranium to France’.