Colonialism in the Central African Republic

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At the turn of the 20th century, the region now known as the Central African Republic experienced drastic geopolitical changes and foundational shifts within local communities. Specifically, the introduction of French imperial rule to the region dubbed “Oubangui-Chari[1] led to unforeseen consequences and complications which still impact the Central African Republic today.

Background

By the end of the nineteenth century; the majority of major European powers sought to expand their dominion into Africa. France in particular saw this as an opportunity to “[link] France’s territorial conquests in Africa along a west-east axis”,[2] thereby limiting Britain's influence in the region. However, a French expedition across the continent in 1896 was met with significant British resistance and pushed back to the French settlement Bangui;[3] accordingly, the French government ultimately resigned itself to controlling the territories around the Chad Basin. In the eyes of French officials at the time, the region of Oubangui-Chari maintained little economic significance. According to historian Thomas O’Toole, the Oubangui-Chari simply acted as “a back door to Lake Chad and the Nile”[4] for trade.

Goals of France

Although France displayed limited interest in the Oubangui-Chari region, the colony was seen as a capital producing region. However, the primary goal of France within Africa was to compete effectively with other regional economies. Even the then-capital, Bangui, was initially founded as a trading outpost “to counterbalance the post the Belgians had established across the river at Zongo”.[5]

In Making Sense of Africa, historians Tatiana Crayannis and Louisa Lombard explain how France utilized Oubangui-Chari within their economic system. Having centralized political power and economic enterprises around the novel French Equatorial administration within Brazzaville,[6] France relegated the Oubangui-Chari region into an extremely inefficient economy. Unlike other African colonies, companies operating within the region “represented barely 1 [percent] of the overall capital invested in the French empire, and only 0.1 per cent of the total French foreign investment in 1905”.[7] Furthermore, the government treated the region as a “cul-de-sac”[8] meaning that money would flow into the equatorial region, circle around to the coast in the forms of natural resources and goods, and head back to France.

Altogether, the actions of the French government within the Oubangui-Chari throughout the early 20th century exemplify the lack of local and practical knowledge held by the French at the time.  This essence of applicable knowledge, also known as metis, is central to James C. Scott’s Seeing like a State. In it, Scott explains how the ability for a state to successfully interact with a colony must be through the benevolent transfer and dissemination of information between parties. Utilizing Scott’s “seamanship[9] model as a template, the French government should have realized that their political and economic composition did not relate to the rural and agricultural communities of the Oubangui-Chari. Instead of collaborative work, however, the French government focused on scientific colonialism, eugenics, and capitalist economics to justify viewing African communities as inferior Europeans; her 2016 work, Africa as a Living Laboratory: Empire, Development and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge, 1870-1950, scholar Helen Tilley scrutinizes how the French state, overall, applied archaic and racially biased studies in their African colonies.[10]

Systemic issues

Contemporary CAR

References

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