Entertainment businesses in France had criticised the government’s decision to ban all partnerships with artists from these African countries.
France does not intend to cut cultural ties with Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, culture minister Rima Abdul-Malak has said as the country reacts to the spreading coup epidemic in its one-time African colonies.
Ms Abdul-Malak said this after entertainment businesses in the country criticised the French government’s decision this week to ban all partnerships with artists from these African countries.
“France has always been an open and welcoming nation for artists, so this is not a shift in policy.
“It’s an adaptation to an extremely deteriorated security context,” she told RTL radio.
In July, a military coup toppled the government of Niger, while Burkina Faso has faced ongoing incursions by extremist militants for several years.
Mali’s military has also been fighting a rebel alliance since August, which has led France to ban visas and halt development aid for all three countries.
Ms Abdul-Malak’s remarks appeared intended to defuse a confrontation with the union of artistic and cultural businesses, SYNDEAC, which had demanded to meet with her after her ministry issued a directive to halt all cooperation and financial support to institutions from the three countries.
SYNDEAC had called the ban “completely unprecedented”.
“This total ban on three countries experiencing very serious crises makes no sense from an artistic point of view and is a major mistake from a political point of view”, the union said in a statement.
Following the outcry, Ms Abdul-Malak said she had asked her ministry to send out “clarifications” to the entertainment businesses.
She clarified that the ban would not impact current partnerships; rather, it would only apply to new projects necessitating travel visas for artists.
France is home to a large community of people with ties to the three African countries, and performers from the region, in particular musicians, are popular at festivals.