Close Menu
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Top stories
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Nollywood
  • More
    • Tech
    • Editorial
    • Health
    • World
    • Lifestyle
  • Africa
    • Kenya
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
Sports

Black Stars Return To Rhode Island After Panama Triumph

June 19, 2026

Watch Live: Ghana vs. Panama-FIFA World Cup 2026

June 17, 2026

Official Lineup: Asare benched in Ghana’s lineup for World Cup opener against Panama

June 17, 2026

Live: Opponent watch-England vs. Croatia-2026 FIFA World Cup – – Ghana Sports Page

June 17, 2026

You carry the hopes of Ghanaians – Administrator of the Ghana Sports Fund fires up Black Stars – 3News

June 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Ghanamma.com Monday, June 22
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookies Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Contact
  • Home
  • Latest News

    Beyond Membership Cards: The True Measure of Loyalty in Ghana’s Political Landscape

    June 22, 2026

    How Afrobeats’ Evolution Is Fueling a New Era of Creative Diversification in Nigeria’s Entertainment Industry

    June 22, 2026

    AmaliTech Strengthens Ghana’s Tech Talent Pipeline Through Strategic University Partnerships

    June 22, 2026

    Ghana’s First Cohort of 100 Women Educators Graduate from Groundbreaking Digital Technology Programme

    June 22, 2026

    Key Business Events to Watch: Afreximbank Annual Meetings, Nigeria-EU Economic Forum, and Major Financial Updates

    June 22, 2026
  • Top stories
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Nollywood
  • More
    • Tech
    • Editorial
    • Health
    • World
    • Lifestyle
  • Africa
    • Kenya
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
Ghanamma.com
Home»Kenya»Kenya hosts neocolonial delusion – The Mail & Guardian
Kenya

Kenya hosts neocolonial delusion – The Mail & Guardian

Ghana NewsBy Ghana NewsMay 21, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link
Africaday

Diplomatic danger: The summit was meant to showcase a future-makers
partnership. Instead, it exposed a future-fakers reality. Photo: Supplied

The recent Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi was marketed as the dawn of a “new model of partnership” between France and Africa. But for those watching closely, the summit was less about a leap forward and more about a stumbling backward into the paternalistic patterns of the past. 

The visit by French President Emmanuel Macron and the hosting by President William Ruto didn’t just fail to live up to the hype, it was a spectacular flop that exposed the deep-seated tension between African agency and Western entitlement.

The failure began with a misunderstanding of modern Africa. 

Macron arrived in Nairobi not as a partner seeking equal footing but as a headmaster looking for a captive audience. His outburst at the University of Nairobi, where he halted a youth session to lecture the crowd on respect and demand silence, was a mask-off moment. 

His supporters might call it leadership. It looked more like the conduct of a man who sees the continent through a colonial lens. A guest does not shout at his hosts. A leader of a country that colonised 20 West African states lacks the moral authority to lecture Kenyans on etiquette when they are participating in the rowdy, vibrant discourse that defines their democracy.

There is a reason Macron found himself in East Africa rather than West Africa. 

In the Sahel, nations such as Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea have begun asserting sovereignty by rejecting the Françafrique model that allowed France to maintain economic and political control for decades. 

His decision to use a Kenyan podium to call out these absent nations was cynical. It turned Nairobi into a venue for colonial brokering rather than Pan-African solidarity.

Why must Kenya become the safe harbour for a leader whose policies are being rejected by our brothers and sisters in the West? 

By hosting Macron as he disparages Sahel leaders working to secure their own resources from French extraction, Ruto risks positioning Kenya as a broker for the very interests pan-Africanists such as Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema have warned against. 

A true pan-African policy would demand compensation for colonial atrocities and the return of stolen artefacts before rolling out the red carpet for a lecture on innovation.

If Macron’s failure was one of character, Ruto’s was one of credibility. During the summit, the Kenyan presidency took theatre to a new level, weaving a narrative of progress disconnected from reality. 

To tell a visiting head of state and the Kenyan public that Kenya is manufacturing phones and computers in significant capacity is a bold departure from the truth.

Kenyans are right to ask where the factories are. 

Are they in the Industrial Area, in the villages of Murang’a or in Bungoma? 

The government might have made strides in digital infrastructure and fibre optics. But claiming the mantle of a global manufacturer of digital assets while citizens struggle with the cost of living is not visionary. It is fabrication. Comparing Kenyan tea to French wine might work as a dinner anecdote. Claiming a manufacturing boom that has not materialised insults the intelligence of Kenyan youth.

This is the diplomatic danger.

When Kenya hosts performances such as this one, without demanding historical accountability, it risks lending African legitimacy to a project many Africans have rejected. Hospitality then becomes confused with submission. Partnership becomes a photo opportunity for old hierarchies. Nairobi should not be used to soften France’s damaged image in West Africa while the grievances of the Sahel are treated as an inconvenience. 

That is not diplomacy. It is strategic laundering.

The online reaction to the visit — the memes and biting critiques from voices such as Victor M and Viking Blue — shows that the strategic management of power described by Willy Mutunga is no longer working as intended. Kenyans are not distracted by spectacle. They see through bilateral agreements that often operate as cover for extraction. They recognise when a guest has overstayed his welcome.

The summit was meant to showcase a future-makers partnership. Instead, it exposed a future-fakers reality. Kenya does not need a president who offers the country as a stage for neo-colonial tantrums.
 

It does not need one who manufactures economic miracles through rhetoric alone.

To break the cycle, Kenya must demand a foreign policy that places African solidarity above Western validation. It must demand an internal policy built on verifiable progress rather than red-wine analogies. 

Most importantly, Kenyans must refuse to be the subjects Macron seems to imagine. Respect is earned through mutual dignity and truth, not through trade deals signed under the shadow of a finger-wagging headmaster. 

The Africa Forward we need is one where Africa moves on its own terms, towards a future manufactured in reality, not speeches.

Gitobu Imanyara is a former member of the Kenyan and Pan-African parliaments, a human rights and pro-democracy lawyer and publisher. Follow him on X @GitobuImanyara

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link

Related Posts

KCB Bank and Inchcape Kenya Collaborate to Transform Kenya’s Agricultural Sector Through Mechanization

June 22, 2026

Violent Assault on Kenya’s All Saints’ Cathedral: Unidentified Gunmen Disrupt Budget Forum, Spark National Outrage

June 21, 2026

Kenya’s Ferdinand Omanyala Named Flagbearer for Commonwealth Games 2022: A New Era for Kenyan Athletics

June 21, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Technology

AmaliTech Strengthens Ghana’s Tech Talent Pipeline Through Strategic University Partnerships

June 22, 20260 Views

Ghana’s First Cohort of 100 Women Educators Graduate from Groundbreaking Digital Technology Programme

June 22, 20263 Views

Groundbreaking Achievement: 100 Women Educators Complete Transformative Digital Technology Programme in Ghana

June 21, 20260 Views

Groundbreaking Achievement: 100 Women Educators Complete Pioneering Digital Technology Programme in Ghana

June 20, 20261 Views

Technology cannot fix poor recordkeeping: PRAAD warns against ‘Automating Chaos’

June 19, 20260 Views
About Us
About Us

Ghanamma is an independent digital news platform delivering timely updates and reliable information across politics, business, technology, health, entertainment, sports, and world affairs, helping readers stay informed through trustworthy journalism and meaningful insights.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Top Stories

Rev. Stephen Yenusom Wengam Urges Pastors to Cultivate Positive Attitudes for Holistic Ministry Leadership

June 21, 2026

Beyond Diplomas: Why School Leaders Must Answer for Campus “Vanity Fairs” and the Ethics of Graduation Gifts

June 21, 2026

Ghana’s 2026 World Cup Ambitions: Asamoah Gyan’s Bold Prediction – Can Black Stars Defeat England?

June 20, 2026
World News

South Africa: ‘You’re invisible, you don’t exist’

January 2, 20260 Views

Court to rule on Malami, wife, son’s bail Jan 7

January 2, 20260 Views

Three feared killed as car crashes into stationary truck in Rivers

January 3, 20260 Views
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookies Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 ghanamma.com. Designed by ghanamma.com.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.