France begins handing over military bases in Senegal
Publish date: 17 March 2025
Issue Number: 1117
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Tenders
France has began handing over military bases in Senegal, as part of a withdrawal of troops from the west African nation where it has had a presence since 1960. The withdrawal follows the departure of French forces from Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad and Ivory Coast in recent years, reports France24. The French embassy in Dakar announced that facilities and housing in the Marechal and Saint-Exupery districts of the capital had been transferred to Senegalese control. Others ‘will be returned according to the jointly agreed schedule’, it added, without specifying a timeline. Senegal gained independence from France in 1960 but has remained one of its former colonial ruler's closest allies in west Africa. French forces have withdrawn from other African countries and left their last base in Chad at the end of January, after the surprise end to military co-operation agreements between Paris and N'Djamena. Four other former French colonies – Niger, Mali, Central African Republic and Burkina Faso – urged France to withdraw its troops from their territories, and have moved closer to Russia. The French military presence has similarly decreased in Ivory Coast and Gabon, as part of a restructuring plan in west and central Africa. At the end of February, France handed over the military base in Ivory Coast that it had occupied for nearly 50 years near the economic capital, Abidjan. The French base in Djibouti, which houses some 1 500 people, is not part of the reduction. Paris wants to make it a ‘projection point’ for ‘missions’ in Africa, after the withdrawal of its forces from the Sahel. President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, who swept to power on an agenda of change and national self-sufficiency, announced in November that all French and foreign troops would leave Senegal by the end of 2025.