René Journiac

French counsellor on African affairs (1921–1980) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

René Journiac (Saint-Martin-Vésubie, 11 May 1921 – Cameroon, 6 February 1980) was a French magistrate and high functionary. He served as a prominent counsellor on African affairs and as leader of the government's "African Department [fr]" during the presidency of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing.[3]

Preceded byJacques Foccart (as Secretary-General for African and Malagasy Affairs)
Succeeded byMartin Kirsch[1][2]
BornRené Antoine Georges Journiac
(1921-05-11)11 May 1921
Quick facts Head of African Department, President ...
René Journiac
Head of African Department
In office
1974–1980
PresidentValéry Giscard d'Estaing
Preceded byJacques Foccart (as Secretary-General for African and Malagasy Affairs)
Succeeded byMartin Kirsch[1][2]
Personal details
BornRené Antoine Georges Journiac
(1921-05-11)11 May 1921
Died6 February 1980(1980-02-06) (aged 58)
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Journiac first rose to power under Georges Pompidou as a right-hand man of Jacques Foccart and was seen as perpetuating the latter's approach of maintaining French influence in its former colonies through a web of personal relationships with African strongmen.[4] This led the French historian Pascal Geneste to quip that "what Foccart was to de Gaulle, Journiac is to Pompidou".[4]

After the election of Giscard in 1974, Journiac largely took over Foccart's functions in the Secretariat for African and Malagasy Affairs; the latter was renamed to the African Department. The main instigator of strong relations with Mobutu's Zaire, he signed a defense pact with the Zairese regime in 1974 which gave way to substantial French aid to Mobutu during the 1977 civil war.[5] In 1977, documents forgotten by the mercenary Bob Denard during a coup attempt in Benin revealed the complicity of Journiac (alongside Omar Bongo, Hassan II and Gnassingbé Eyadéma) in the attempt.[6] He was also closely involved in Operation Tacaud in Chad[7] and played an important role in negotiating with Jean-Bédel Bokassa (who allegedly threatened to beat Journiac with his cane when the latter proposed that he step down) in the period that built up to the French-orchestrated 1979 coup.[8]

In 1980, while travelling in a Gabonese airplane piloted by a nephew of Omar Bongo, Journiac's plane crashed in Cameroon, killing him.[9] Martin Kirsch briefly succeeded him as head of the African Department before being replaced by Guy Penne [fr].[1][2]

References

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