Macron announced that an additional 8,000 Algerian students would be admitted to study in France this year, joining 30,000 already in the country…reports Asian Lite News
Algeria and France have announced they would examine the complex and painful history of France’s colonial rule of the North African country while expanding cooperation with future joint projects.
“We want to build the future together,” said French President Emmanuel Macron at the start of a three-day visit to Algeria. The goal is to turn “a new page in our bilateral relations,” he said.
Macron hopes to announce joint industry, research, energy, sport and culture ventures. Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune also expressed hopes for a new chapter in relations and closer ties between the two, particularly in the areas of trade, technology and culture.
The two sides said they would work to set up a commission of historians from both countries. These academics would go through various archives to dig up the truth about the colonial era, said Macron.
The goal is not to brush aside the joint history of the two countries, but that history shouldn’t stand in the future’s way, Macron said.
Lingering questions about the colonial era routinely complicate ties between Algeria and France.
Algerians fought from 1954 to 1962 to end French control, which began in 1830. Hundreds of thousands died and many topics related to the war were long taboo in France. Macron has been making efforts to build bridges.
France also hopes to boost the amount of gas it imports from Algeria as Russian cuts to energy supplies have left Paris facing shortages. Macron is joined by Catherine MacGregor, head of French power company Engie, on his trip. Italy signed a gas deal with Algeria in April.
The three-day visit that ended on Saturday came less than two months after Algeria marked six decades of independence following 132 years of French rule and a devastating eight-year war.
It also came as European powers scrambled to replace Russian energy imports – including with supplies from Algeria, Africa’s top gas exporter, which in turn is seeking to expand its clout in North Africa and the Sahel.
In their joint declaration, the two leaders said “France and Algeria have decided to open a new era … laying the foundation for a renewed partnership expressed through a concrete and constructive approach, focused on future projects and youth.”
At the signing ceremony, Tebboune addressed his guest in French, gushing over an “excellent, successful visit … which allowed for a rapprochement which would not have been possible without the personality of President Macron himself.”
Ties between Paris and Algiers have seen repeated crises over the years.
They had been particularly cool since last year when Macron questioned Algeria’s existence as a nation before the French occupation and accused the government of fomenting “hatred towards France”.
Tebboune withdrew his country’s ambassador in response and banned French military aircraft from its airspace.
Normal diplomatic relations have since resumed, along with overflights to French army bases in sub-Saharan Africa.
After promising to “build a new pact”, Macron was in the spiritual home of Rai music on Saturday, visiting a record shop made famous by French-Algerian singer DJ Snake’s recent hit of the same name, Disco Maghreb.
He also met athletes and artists and went for a somewhat chaotic walk in the streets where police struggled with onlookers trying to shake his hand or take photos.
On Friday evening, Macron had dinner with Algerian writer Kamel Daoud and other Oran personalities.
He had also met young entrepreneurs who questioned him on the difficulties of getting visas to France, the decline of the French language in its former colony and the contentious issues around the two countries’ painful past.
Macron announced that an additional 8,000 Algerian students would be admitted to study in France this year, joining 30,000 already in the country.
He also announced the creation of a joint commission of historians to examine the colonial period and the ruinous eight-year war that ended it.
But in France, both left and right-wing politicians were angered by the proposal.
Socialist party leader Olivier Faure noted that Macron had, in 2017, called French colonialism a “crime against humanity”, and then later questioned the existence of Algeria as a nation prior to the colonial period.
“The lightness with which he deals with the subject is an insult to wounded memories,” Faure tweeted.
Far-right leader Thomas Menage tweeted that Algeria should stop “using its past to avoid establishing true, friendly diplomatic relations”.