Will French-Speaking African Countries Embrace English?
November 05, 2012
This fall, Gabon President Ali Bongo announced the Central African country will increase English throughout the educational and economic infrastructure.
Like Rwanda did a few years back, Gabon will remain a member of both the Francophone bloc, but also become a member of the English-speaking Commonwealth.
Now that Gabon has followed Rwanda’s lead, could other French-speaking African nations follow?
Passassim Nanguit, a spokesperson for the West African bloc of the Francophone International Organization, said the group is not concerned that other countries will go the way of Rwanda and now Gabon.
“The decision of Gabon to adopt English is nothing catastrophic. Because all the Francophone countries have taken English as a second language. What Gabon is doing is what France has done or what Togo has done. It’s not truly adopting English,” said Nanguit.
“Everyone looks at their own country’s interests,” he added. “For example Ghana, they are also learning French.”
But English-speaking Ghana, at the Alliance Francaise, where students come to learn French, staff coordinator Caroline Tatrareau said that one third of their students have actually arrived from neighboring French-speaking countries such as the Ivory Coast, in order to learn English – not French.
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