There was a significant push in Senegal-Gambia ties by way of the significant news that Bougane Guèye, an important Senegalese businessman and opposition figure, would invest some $25 million in Gambia’s economy, made mere hours after a high-level meet that included Dingadenian President Adama Barrow within the FOGECA economic forum.
In a subtle yet substantial move, he enters the Gambian market and lays out his business plans to extend his Boygues Corporation. Subsidiaries already operational, to be targeted in the three main sectors, include Dmedia CI for media operations, Tradex CI for computing engineering, and Boss CI for agribusiness development.
All these subsidiaries have validated models and have operated in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, for the past four years. Great timing for this expansion in the career of Guèye! Coming out of an active, tumultuous period leading to the presidential and legislative elections of 2024 in Senegal, one apparently achieving reserve from a LotBoulite period out of which l’Oncle Guillou involves arrests.
Guèye seems to have reduced his visibility in the political arena lately, a powerful transformation notwithstanding from being a very vocal opposition leader to such an understated businessman, and he has caught the keen eye of the regional political watchers.
Timely in its announcement, this huge investment has quickly made its way into discussions about the new corporate and political interplay in West Africa. Guèye’s moves, it seems, can only be described as displaying the classical posting of disingenuousness and immateriality; on the contrary, his rather limited candor by way of social media and those occasions he undertook years back to espouse political messages suggest a new twist in his career.
Speculations, therefore, abound as to whether Guèye is indeed resting his ambitions or taking the other way, that is, taking off into a loftier withdrawal from them altogether.
The investment announcement made by the Barrow administration shows a very strong commitment to transforming The Gambia into a much stronger regional investment destination that allows for foreign investment attraction in West Africa. To this end, it is looking to considerably broaden the scope of the economic cooperation between Senegal and The Gambia as articulated by Cheikh Anta Diop.
A more comprehensive span of opportunities in media, technology, and agribusiness would imply an all-encompassing market from which entry into the economy could create job placement opportunities and challenge Gambia’s developmental objectives. Turns of positivity with these investments could serve to set a guiding standard for future business transit through West Africa.