Ruto calls for new Africa-France partnership based on equality
National
By
Mate Tongola
| May 12, 2026
President William Ruto has called for a reset of Africa’s partnership with France, urging a shift from aid-driven relations to cooperation grounded in sovereign equality, mutual respect, and shared economic responsibility.
Speaking on Tuesday during the opening of the Africa Forward Summit at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre, Ruto said Africa’s future depends on building win-win partnerships centred on investment, value creation, and sustainable growth rather than dependency.
“The times before us demand stronger cooperation, renewed multilateralism, and partnerships grounded not in hierarchy, but in sovereign equality, mutual respect, and shared responsibility,” Ruto said.
At the same time, he stated that Africa must decisively move away from overreliance on external support and instead harness its own financial resources to drive development across the continent.
READ MORE
Africa's skills crisis blocking development capital, PMI warns ahead of summit
Future of art, technology and Kenya's creative economy in job creation
Tala strengthens customer ID checks to protect borrowers from fraud
Government opens up power sector to competition, reduces KPLC monopoly
Summit billions, little relief: economist questions Africa Forward gains
Insurance penetration slips as firms target underserved groups
Kenya's trade deficit widens to Sh1.6tr on raised maize imports
How startups are using tech to solve farmers' biggest challenges
Why State is in rush to push job creation in cotton value chain
Revealed: How SMEs are losing millions to lack of circular economy certification rules
“Africa today holds more than $4 trillion in long-term domestic savings, including over $1 trillion in pension and insurance assets, and more than $500 billion in central bank reserves,” he said.
The President noted that Africa’s development priorities should now focus on reforming the global financial system, expanding infrastructure, accelerating green industrialisation, and investing in youth skills, innovation and artificial intelligence.
He added that such reforms would position Africa as an equal player in global development while unlocking economic opportunities for future generations.
The summit was co-chaired by Ruto and French President Emmanuel Macron and brought together 24 heads of state, five prime ministers, four vice-presidents, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, and African Union Commission Chairperson Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, among other global leaders.