Organisation internationale de la Francophonie

The term francophonie (with a lowercase "f"), or francosphere (often capitalized in English), also refers to the global community of French-speaking peoples,[8] comprising a network of private and public organizations promoting equal ties among countries where French, Belgian, Swiss, Canadian people or France, Belgium, Switzerland or Quebec play a significant historical role, culturally, militarily, or politically.Starting as a small group of French-speaking countries, the Francophonie has since evolved into a global organization whose numerous branches cooperate with its member states in the fields of culture, science, economy, justice, and peace.The Secretary General carries out their four-year mandate under the authority of the three main institutions of the Francophonie: the Summits, the Ministerial Conference and the Permanent Council.By enabling the heads of state and government to hold a dialogue on all international issues of the day, the summit serves to develop strategies and goals of the Francophonie so as to ensure the organisation's influence on the world scene.[15] The Ministerial Conference of the Francophonie gathers the foreign or francophone affairs ministers of member states and governments every year to ensure the political continuity of the Summit.Furthermore, it follows the execution by the operators of the Francophonie of action plans elaborated by the Conference of the members using French as a common language It also favours the cooperation and strengthens the solidarity within the French-speaking communities, mainly towards the parliaments of the South.The Senghor University in Alexandria, Egypt is a private postgraduate institution that trains managers and high-level trainers in areas that are a priority for development in Francophone Africa.The Senghor University regularly organizes seminaries to help its students and of the public specialized in the domains of its action, by collaborating with the other operators and the institutions of the Francophonie.In this regard, countries that are members of the Francophonie have contributed largely to the adoption by the UNESCO of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions (20 October 2005).[57] The Francophonie is committed to working towards sustainable development by supporting the improvement of economic governance, capacity building, cooperation and the search for common positions in major international negotiations.[67] Xavier Deniau, founder of the Association des parlementaires de langue française (now the Parliamentary assembly) and author of La Francophonie, expressed concern that the enlargement of the OIF to countries where French is practically nonexistent risks diluting the effectiveness of the organisation.[74] Following the arrival of Boutros-Ghali, the OIF had also seen a steady increase in the number of its missions and priority action areas — peace and conflict prevention, human rights, democracy, international cooperation, sustainable development, cultural and linguistic diversity, education and training, youth, gender equality, civil society — bringing a fundamental shift from the cultural to the political sphere.[75] Many actors of the francophone sphere interested in the future of the organisation, including former French ministers or secretaries of state for the Francophonie such as Pierre-André Wiltzer and Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, have been calling on the OIF to refocus on its fundamentals: language and culture.[76] Human rights and fundamental freedoms, despite having been declared "categorical imperatives" by Secretary General Boutros-Ghali in 1998, are routinely abused by many members states of the OIF.Prime Minister Chrétien and President Chirac felt compelled to declare at the close of the summit that a human rights observatory would be established to tackle the problem.[77][78] Given that during his 12-year tenure, President Chirac, dubbed Papa Afrique or Chirac l'Africain, had confided more than once that Africa was not ready for multi-party democracy (l'Afrique n'est pas mûre pour le multipartisme) and was known for his close relationship with many entrenched African strongmen, calling Omar Bongo of Gabon, Gnassingbé Eyadéma of Togo, Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Republic of the Congo and Blaise Compaoré of Burkina Faso "personal friends",[79][80] nothing came out of this declaration.The French daily Le Monde noted at the time that if respect for fundamental freedoms was to become a criterion for membership in the OIF, the organisation would simply cease to exist.[81] French President Macron's surprise announcement in May 2018 that France officially backed the nomination of Louise Mushikiwabo, Rwanda's longtime foreign minister, as the next secretary general of the OIF was seen by many as a setback for the defense and promotion of human rights.[82] Ambassador James Roscoe, UK Acting Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, commented in 2020: The Francophonie undoubtedly has a role to play alongside the UN and other organisations in the fields of conflict prevention, mediation and the exercise of good offices, including in settings such as Cameroon.
Flags of the Francophonie members
Members of and participants in the Francophonie:
member (national)
member (regional)
associated member
suspended member
observer
The Francophonie flag flying at the Parliament of Canada in Ottawa
FrancophonieFrenchMembershipAlbaniaAndorraArmeniaBelgiumFrench Community of BelgiumBulgariaBurkina FasoBurundiCambodiaCameroonCanadaNew BrunswickQuebecCape VerdeCentral African RepublicComorosCyprusDR CongoDjiboutiDominicaEquatorial GuineaFranceGreeceGuineaGuinea-BissauIvory CoastLebanonLuxembourgMadagascarMauritaniaMauritiusMoldovaMonacoMoroccoNorth MacedoniaRomaniaRwandaSaint LuciaSão Tomé and PríncipeSenegalSeychellesSwitzerlandTunisiaVanuatuVietnamLouise MushikiwaboJacques KrabalFrançois ParadisNiameyFrench CommunityFrench colonial empireFrance's mottoFrench languageLangues d'oïlDialectsCreolesHistoryPhonological historyOaths of StrasbourgOrdinance of Villers-CotterêtsAnglo-NormanGrammarAdverbsArticles and determinersPronounspersonalconjugationmorphologypassé composépassé simpleOrthographyAlphabetReformsCircumflexBraillePhonologyElisionLiaisonAspirated hinternational organizationcultureliberté, égalité, fraternitéUnited NationsconventionAgence de Coopération Culturelle et TechniqueLéopold Sédar SenghorHabib BourguibaHamani DioriNorodom SihanoukJean-Louis Roysecretary-generalSecretary-General of the United NationsBoutros Boutros-GhaliAbdou DioufRepublic of SenegalBucharestMontreuxGovernor General of CanadaMichaëlle JeanMinister of Foreign Affairs of EgyptPresident of SenegalPrime Minister of SenegalMinister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of RwandaVersaillesFrançois MitterrandQuebec CityBrian MulroneySenghor UniversityPort LouisVeerasamy RingadooCotonouNicéphore SogloTrần Đức LươngMonctonJean ChrétienBeirutÉmile LahoudOuagadougouBlaise CompaoréTraian BăsescuStephen HarperDoris Leuthardcombat climate changeKinshasaJoseph KabilaMacky SallAntananarivoOlivier SolonandrasanaJustin TrudeauLGBT rightsOntarioYerevanNikol PashinyanRwandanMacronPaul KagameSaudi Arabiahuman rightsJamal KhashoggiLouisianaDjerbaNajla BoudenVillers-CotterêtsEmmanuel MacronIsrael–Hezbollah conflictAfrican UnionEconomic Community of West African StatesconfederationAlliance of Sahel StatesKing of CambodiaAmbassadorsParliamentary Assembly of the FrancophonieJacques LegendreLibrevilleMember states of the Organisation internationale de la Francophoniemilitary coup d'étatcoup d'étatsame reason2013–14 political crisisNova ScotiaAlgeriainternal partAgence Universitaire de la FrancophonieTV5MondeAssociation Internationale des Maires FrancophonesUniversité SenghorMontrealAssociation of Francophone UniversitiesAfricaArab worldSoutheast AsiaCentral and Eastern EuropeCaribbeansustainable developmentInternational OrganisationsJean PelletierJacques ChiracAnne HidalgoAlexandriaFrancophone AfricaParliament of CanadaOttawaeconomic globalizationUNESCOCommonwealth of NationsdemocracyUnited Nations VolunteersRussian Foreign Ministryneo-colonialismRussian State propagandaanti-WesternLe DevoirAmnesty InternationalReporters Without Bordersmulti-party democracyOmar BongoGnassingbé EyadémaDenis Sassou NguessoLe MondeKagameMinister responsible for La Francophonie (Canada)Jeux de la FrancophonieInternational Francophonie DayConseil international de la langue françaiseFrench immersionAlliance françaiseEspace Francophone pour la Recherche, le Développement et l'InnovationJournée internationale de la Francophonie (March 20)FrancophoneGeographical distribution of French speakersFrench in AfricaFrench in IndiaFrench in the United StatesFranco-Canadian relationsFrench AmericaVietnamese FrenchLao FrenchCambodian FrenchList of countries where French is an official languageList of international organisations which have French as an official languageList of French possessions and coloniesThree Linguistic SpacesUnion of International AssociationsWayback MachineThe TimesRadio France InternationalUnited Nations General AssemblyLa Documentation françaiseThe GuardianThe New York TimesCentre for International Governance InnovationMembersDemocratic Republic of the CongoRepublic of the CongoKosovoNew CaledoniaSerbiaUnited Arab EmiratesAngolaArgentinaAustriaBosnia and HerzegovinaCosta RicaCroatiaCzechiaDominican RepublicEstoniaFrench PolynesiaGambiaGeorgiaHungaryIrelandLatviaLithuaniaMexicoMontenegroMozambiquePolandSaarlandSlovakiaSloveniaSouth KoreaThailandUkraineUruguayAssemblée parlementaire de la FrancophonieUN French Language DayPrix des cinq continents de la francophonieFrancophone economyInternational organizationsIntergovernmentalorganizationsBank for International SettlementsInternational Criminal CourtInternational Monetary FundInternational Seabed AuthorityWorld Customs OrganizationInter-Parliamentary UnionInterpolNew Development BankOrganisation for the Prohibition of Chemical WeaponsWorld Bank GroupWorld Trade OrganizationCommunity of Portuguese Language CountriesCountrieslanguagesCountries by the number of recognized official languagesArabicChineseDutch/AfrikaansEnglishGermanHindustaniItalianPersianPortugueseRomanianRussianSpanishEndonyms and exonymsCountries and capitals in native languagesCountry names in various languagesGermanyIcelandIndonesiaMyanmarSingaporeSri LankaLanguages of the European UnionAmericasNorth AmericaSouth AmericaEast AsiaSouth AsiaEuropeOceaniaMelanesiaMicronesiaPolynesiaOfficial languagesby country and territoryNumber of languagesBy number of native speakersBy number of total speakersLanguages in censuseslanguage familyLanguage familiesList of Indo-European languagesList of Mongolic languagesList of Turkic languagesList of Uralic languagesgeopoliticalArab LeagueDutch Language UnionLatin UnionPaíses Africanos de Língua Oficial PortuguesaHispanidadOrganization of Turkic StatesInternational Organization of Turkic Culture