Twiine Mansio Charles: The Bitter Guest: How Emmanuel Macron Mistook Kenyan Hospitality for a License to Command
There are moments in international relations that appear small in isolation yet carry the weight of centuries within them. The recent spectacle in Nairobi, during the Africa CEO Forum held in May 2026, where French President Emmanuel Macron publicly rebuked an audience of African leaders, entrepreneurs, diplomats, and young innovators, was one such moment. To some observers, it may have seemed like an impatient leader restoring order to a noisy room. To a continent rising in its own consciousness, however, it was a profound disappointment—the naked manifestation of a Western arrogance so deeply internalized that it no longer even attempts to conceal itself.
During a session on culture and innovation, Macron abruptly interrupted the proceedings, seized the microphone, and declared:
“Hey, hey, hey… it is impossible to speak about culture and to have people making speeches with such noise. This is a total lack of respect.”
He then instructed those conversing among themselves to “go outside” or continue discussions in “bilateral rooms.”
One cannot escape the uncomfortable question now echoing from Cairo to Cape Town: Would Emmanuel Macron dare rise in Brussels, Berlin, London, Washington, or Beijing and publicly scold an audience in such a manner? Would he interrupt a European gathering with the impatience of a man disciplining children? The answer is painfully obvious. And if not there, then why here?
Why must Africans continuously endure the subtle humiliation of being spoken to not as equals, but as subjects requiring supervision? This is the tragedy beneath the Nairobi incident. It was not merely a breach of etiquette; it was the behavior of an ill mannered guest who has forgotten that he is a visitor in a house of equals. In which culture is it acceptable for a guest to shout at the host? If it is not arrogance, what is it?
This habitual condescension is precisely why the seats of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Guinea sat empty. Their absence was not a scheduling conflict; it was a prophetic refusal to participate in a theater of humiliation. They have realized that there is no dignity to be found in a room where the guest believes he owns the floor. They never turned up because they no longer wish to kneel in order to cooperate with a man who lacks basic respect for their presence.
This pattern of treatment is a recurring trauma. We must recall the stinging memory of the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, where African heads of state—men and women representing the heritage and future of an entire continent—were bundled onto a shared bus like common tourists, while Western presidents were afforded the sanctity of private, armored convoys. This was a visual declaration of a hierarchy that the West refuses to dismantle. It is the philosophy of the “bus” and the “lecture”—a world where African sovereignty is treated as a junior grade of independence.
What is particularly infuriating is the hypocrisy. Western political culture is itself noisy and confrontational. European parliaments are filled with shouting and disorder, celebrated as democratic vibrancy. Yet when African discourse carries that same energy, it suddenly becomes evidence of indiscipline deserving of a public lashing by Emmanuel Macron. This proves that the issue has never been about behavior—it has always been about hierarchy.
Africa must no longer pretend not to notice. Respect between nations cannot survive where one side assumes the authority to supervise and embarrass the other. Partnership does not mean subjugation, and it is no favor for the West to “partner” with us. This is precisely why leaders like President Yoweri Museveni frequently call for urgent African unity and a “center of gravity.” Without it, the continent remains a playground for the whims of ill mannered guests who mistake hospitality for weakness.
France, and the wider West, must exercise restraint. Power without humility eventually decays into insult. Africa is not asking to be worshipped; it is asking to be regarded as fully human. The age of commanding the world from inherited superiority is fading. The future will not belong to those who speak the loudest from positions of old power, but to those humble enough to recognize that dignity, once awakened, can never again be silenced. This character of Emmanuel Macron shutting down African leaders like school kids must be condemned with the contempt it deserves. The era of his bitter, paternalistic lectures is over.

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13 May '26