A defrocked priest, his three African wives, a village chief, and a series of ‘despotic’ French colonial administrators stand at the center of the M'Pésoba Affair, named for the small village in the French Soudan (Mali) where its events unfolded between 1913 and 1918.Footnote 1 Unlike the infamous ‘scandals of empire’, the M'Pésoba Affair never left the correspondence of the colonial administration of French West Africa (AOF).Footnote 2 Although scholars tend to fixate on major scandals — episodes involving conspicuous abuses perpetrated by colonial officials that escalated into metropolitan debate and legal reform — this trajectory hardly ever played out. Most scandals were triggered by events more banal than the egregious corruption and violence of Warren Hastings and Edward John Eyre: white men sleeping with African women, siphoning money from colonial coffers, or perpetrating petty crimes were far more common culprits.Footnote 3 Scandals only rarely rose to the metropole's scrutiny, typically hitting dead ends in colonial bureaucracies dedicated to quashing, not meaningfully addressing, tales of Europeans’ wrongdoings.
In AOF, dead-end scandals were the rule, not the exception. The initial French conquest of West Africa generated a series of well-publicized scandals, including the Voulet and Chanoine and Albert Jeandet Affairs.Footnote 4 Chance encounters with rogue journalists produced a handful more in subsequent decades, detailing only the most extreme cases of administrative abuse: assault, torture, and murder.Footnote 5 In general, the bureaucratic structure of AOF blocked the escalation of scandals. ‘Direct rule’ placed responsibility for investigating criminal incidents onto local colonial administrators, the commandants de cercle and their auxiliaries, who operated with little oversight.Footnote 6 British-style metropolitan-ordered inquiries were extraordinary.Footnote 7 And superior officers seldom questioned commandants’ reports, especially during frequent crises when attention was diverted elsewhere. Consequently, archives in former French colonial capitals are today littered with heaps of so-called ‘affaires contentieuses’, the remains of scandals that lived and died in the backwaters of empire.Footnote 8
Dead-end scandals help illuminate the chasm between metropolitan legal discourse and colonial justice on the ground. Scholars of empire have pointed to major scandals as turning points in the development of colonial and international law.Footnote 9 Following the popular refrain that the colonial encounter shaped Europe as much as it did the colonies, a growing number of historians suggest that scandals caused European publics and legislators to grapple with the monster within, promulgating reforms to better ‘order’ relations with the colonial other and restrain despotic power.Footnote 10 Many argue the legally-defined boundaries between ‘colonial categories’ constituted the very center of European authority in the colonies, slowly ensnaring the world in an ‘empire of law’.Footnote 11 There is certainly truth to these narratives. The ‘scandals of empire’ did expose European publics — albeit briefly — to the horrors of imperialism, normalizing socially, politically, and legally the violence inherent to the colonial project.Footnote 12 European legal fantasies, in turn, doubtlessly blueprinted the moral and social politics that undergirded colonial rule.Footnote 13 However, historians of Africa have countered that emphasizing the pursuit of legal reform draws attention away from the arbitrary surveillance, extrajudicial sanctions, and categorical violence that maintained everyday colonial domination.Footnote 14 On the ground, colonial policies were filtered through the needs of the local administration with pushback from African actors, generating myriad ‘unintended consequences’.Footnote 15 There was no even rule of law. Dead-end scandals add to these insights. They demonstrate that officers ‘on the spot’ derived their authority from the disorder and ambiguity tolerated — even encouraged — by institutions of colonial justice.
On the local level, diverse political factors, largely outside Europeans’ control, dictated the shape of this justice.Footnote 16 Contrary to popular stereotypes of AOF's commandants as ‘rois de la brousse’, colonial administrators were far from omnipotent.Footnote 17 Beyond the ‘circle of iron’, Africans regularly forced colonial officials to accede to their political demands.Footnote 18 For without appeasement to some extent, it would have been impossible to maintain their tenuous grasp on power.Footnote 19 In their application of justice, commandants did not rely predominately on an ‘imperial constitution’ but on a politics of expediency.Footnote 20 This politics sought to balance administrative priorities with the demands of Africans and other economic and social concerns in a complex cost-benefit analysis that revealed itself most clearly in moments of crisis.Footnote 21 During the initial conquest, the World Wars, and periodic rebellions, administrative oversight in AOF was either nonexistent or directed elsewhere.Footnote 22 Zones distant from colonial capitals were particularly susceptible to the vagaries of local political conditions as commandants there possessed few resources to ‘broadcast’ their power.Footnote 23 Concessions had to be made to ensure domination.
This article examines one dead-end scandal, the M'Pésoba Affair, to demonstrate how colonial justice on the local level was often determined by the politics of expediency. The extraordinary cast of characters at the scandal's center, its remote location, and its timeframe during the upheaval of the First World War help reveal the political machinations of colonial justice, generally hidden behind layer upon layer of ‘colonial common sense’.Footnote 24 Reading archival records of dead-end scandals ‘along the grain’ uncovers the oft-unstated anxieties and preoccupations of colonial rule; it also helps articulate the shape of a local social and political world, full of contradictions and complexity, generally concealed from view. An analysis of the M'Pésoba Affair not only helps uncover the priorities of colonial justice in AOF, it also unveils the fluctuations of a complex political landscape reeling from the early effects of French colonization.
French conquest dramatically undermined precolonial forms of political authority in the Soudan. Before colonization, M'Pésoba was situated in a no man's land of Minianka-speaking villages nestled between the powerful Ségou and Kénédougou empires.Footnote 25 Political power was diffuse there: villages comprised of patrilineal kin groups, and inter-village alliances were temporary and tenuous at best. Community authority was divided evenly between ‘political’ and ‘spiritual’ leaders, intimately entangled with bamanaya religious practice.Footnote 26 When the French arrived, they ignored the political authority of spiritual leaders, narrowly defining the role of village chief. This action granted select men and their lineages newfound authority, exacerbating political, social, and religious tensions within villages. The wave of Islamic conversion that swept the French Soudan in the early twentieth century further aggravated these tensions.Footnote 27 As some chiefs and villagers abandoned bamanaya and converted to Islam, conflicts over authority reached a boiling point.
Cotton exploitation and World War magnified local political conflict. Koutiala cercle, the region surrounding M'Pésoba, produced much of the Soudan's cotton. Before colonization, this cotton went to African craftsmen, who weaved textiles for local consumption.Footnote 28 But by 1910, the cotton went instead to the colonial administration which, partnering with the private Colonial Cotton Association (ACC), sold it to trading firms in Bamako and Kayes. Maintaining the lucrative cotton trade entailed navigating delicate conflicts over authority within African communities. Cotton had to be grown by villagers, ginned in local factories, and transported by African porters. This process demanded a close collaboration between African notables, colonial administrators, and private enterprise. When the First World War broke out, political conflicts exacerbated the difficulties facing an already weakened colonial administration. Koutiala's inhabitants vigorously opposed French recruitment efforts, sparking military scuffles in every corner of the cercle. In 1916, aversion to conscription sparked the largest revolt AOF ever saw: the Volta-Bani War.Footnote 29 The region's administrators desperately attempted to contain the rebellion, while still exporting their cotton quotas. The M'Pésoba Affair cannot be understood outside this wartime context. Armed rebellion laid bare the politics of expediency at the heart of French colonial justice.
A dead-end scandal in two parts
Naba Kamara fell violently ill. So, too, did her co-wives. The three African women lived together with their French husband, a man named Hilarion Fau, in the small village of M'Pésoba. In the ensuing court case, Kamara described what happened that night in January 1913:
It was dinnertime, and I was seated with three women, like me living with Monsieur Fau, in a room joining the dining room and serving as an office, when, like usual, Massa, young boy of Mr. Fau, brought us the leftover dessert, that day some pieces of papaya. We bit into them in complete confidence, but while we were still on the first mouthful my neighbors and I, we noticed simultaneously that the fruit betrayed a strong bitter taste. No suspicion occurred to us, to the point that we still ate a few more mouthfuls of the papaya; but soon enough we all began vomiting and suffering from violent headaches. This state extended throughout the night until my stomach began to swell, worsening my pain.Footnote 30
In the morning, Kamara told her white husband that she had been poisoned and proposed the bold claim that Sigoua Coulibaly, M'Pésoba's village chief, was behind it. Hearing his wife's allegations, Fau summoned his young servant, Massa, for questioning: Massa admitted he had put powder on the slices of papaya, believing it to be a ‘love potion’. Fau then invited Sigoua to his compound and, when he offered the village chief some of the poisoned papaya, Sigoua ‘energetically refused it, protesting that the fruit could be poisoned’.Footnote 31 This was all the evidence Fau needed. He jumped on his horse and rode to Koutiala, the cercle's capital. There, he met his close friend, Commandant Ernest Augustin Bleu, who agreed to investigate the matter. Political poisonings — real and imagined — were common in the region, lending credence to Kamara's claims.Footnote 32 As the wife of a European trader and a powerful political actor in her own right, Kamara was a real target. Bleu's willingness to investigate Sigoua also stemmed from the closeness of his relationship with Fau; the men were two of only seven Europeans in a three-thousand square mile region inhabited by nearly 220,000 Africans.Footnote 33 Not to mention the ACC, Fau's employer, was central to the economic development of Koutiala.
Bleu's investigation revealed a love scandal. In his initial report, Bleu claimed that Massa, Fau's servant boy, was in love with Naba Kamara and that he had enlisted N'Golopé Coulibaly, Fau's stable boy, to help him seduce her.Footnote 34 N'Golopé was 17 years old; Massa only 12.Footnote 35 But hearing of Massa's passion for the Frenchman's wife, N'Golopé agreed to help him ‘possess her’. Together, they approached ‘a village thaumaturge’, a leper named Ouara Diallo, who agreed to make them a ‘love potion’.Footnote 36 After receiving the potion from Diallo, Massa sprinkled it on Kamara and her co-wives’ food. Only after the three women began vomiting did Massa realize he had inadvertently poisoned the object of his affection.
A remarkably different narrative emerged when the trial convened in Koutiala two weeks later. The matter was heard before the tribunal de cercle on which sat two African judges — one Muslim and one non-Muslim — and Bleu's European assistant, Adjoint-Administrator Féron. From the start, Naba Kamara attempted to pin the poisoning on Sigoua Coulibaly. She claimed the chief had threatened her in the past, yelling at her: ‘You! I'll play a dirty trick on you!’ Other than Sigoua, Kamara maintained, she had ‘nothing but friends in M'Pésoba’. Suspiciously, Massa radically changed his story, testifying that N'Golopé had handed him a sachet with directions to ‘take it and pour the powder in it over the food of Naba and her companions whom Sigoua has decided must die’. N'Golopé admitted giving the sachet to Massa but he denied knowing it was poison. He swore that when he went to see Ouara Diallo to get the powder the night before the incident, Diallo told him the powder ‘brought about well-being’ and was ‘completely inoffensive’. The testimony was entirely contradictory.
The remaining witnesses did little to clarify the matter. The judges solicited the testimony of a man named Baba who claimed he overheard N'Golopé and Diallo discussing the poison the day of the attempted murder. N'Golopé reversed course: ‘It's Sigoua, [Diallo] told me; he wants to end the days of Mr. Fau's moussos [wives]’.Footnote 37 Nonetheless, Ouara Diallo attested that he only gave N'Golopé and Massa a ‘medication to go look for a woman’, knowing nothing of the plot. Similarly, Sigoua maintained his innocence, although conceding he ‘was not on very good terms with Naba’ because of ‘the damages caused by her sheep to [his] fields’. The village chief decried the antipodal nature of the evidence against him, accusing the witnesses of being ‘nothing but the instrument’ of those who wanted to see him ‘removed from [his] duties as chief’. Despite the vast discrepancies in the testimony, the judges were convinced of Sigoua's guilt. Sigoua and Diallo were sentenced to a year in prison and N'Golopé to six months.Footnote 38 Because of his youth, Massa was let off with a warning, so long as he worked as the unpaid servant of the commandant. Sigoua Coulibaly was further banished from M'Pésoba and stripped of his duties as village chief.
But the M'Pésoba Affair was far from over. During the Volta-Bani War, Sigoua interfered repeatedly in M'Pésoba's internal politics from exile. Bleu was largely successful in circumventing his influence but was replaced in 1918 by a new commandant: François-Joseph Cornet. This was the chance Sigoua had been waiting for. He petitioned Cornet, accusing Naba Kamara and Hilarion Fau of lying five years prior to have him exiled. Sigoua claimed the couple had framed him in 1913. Cornet agreed. Sensing irregularities in Massa's testimony, he called in Fau's young servant for questioning. Fau, who had rehired Massa a mere month after the 1913 incident, came, too, whispering in Bamanankan in the young man's ear.Footnote 39 During the first interview, Massa said nothing. But in the weeks that followed, Massa's father and then brother came to inform the commandant that Massa had lied under threat.Footnote 40 In a second interrogation, Cornet came to a startling realization:
Q: Why did you accuse Sigoua before the judges?
A: Because I was pushed to do it by Naba and her lover Baba. I was very young; I let myself be influenced; I obeyed Naba's commands.
Q: Did Mr. Fau push you to accuse Sigoua?
A: No, but he knew that Naba was pushing me to do it.
The interrogation continued:
Q: Didn't you tell Mr. Fau that Sigoua was innocent?
A: Yes. The day after the one where I poured the powder on the food, Mr. Fau called for Sigoua. Before those two, I declared that he was not involved at all in the matter.
Q: Why, then, did you give false testimony to the court?
A: I didn't do anything other than obey the suggestions of Mr. Fau and Naba.Footnote 41
Not only had Massa lied to the court, so had the eyewitness Baba, whose testimony implicated N'Golopé and Diallo. According to Massa's new attestation, there had been no poisoning. Naba Kamara, her French husband, and — apparently — her lover had fabricated the incident to force out the village chief. Their exact motive was unclear, but Cornet decided that Sigoua Coulibaly was indeed innocent.
Cornet had trouble gauging how to react to the scandal. Fau and the ACC were important to the economic health of the cercle; the man had been a close friend of his predecessor. What good would it do to arrest him for crimes including perjury, witness tampering, and filing a false claim? Naba Kamara, on the other hand, was a perfect scapegoat. Cornet penned three letters to the lieutenant-governor in Bamako, vamping on tropes of the hypersexualized African woman to present Kamara as the ‘personage of primary culpability’ in the scandal. He depicted Fau as a ‘Jesuitic and cautious spirit’ corrupted by a seductress who ‘bullies him, cheats on him, publicly ridicules him, steals from him, and makes him do as she pleases, like a puppet’.Footnote 42 Cornet assured his superior that ‘Mr. Fau will not fail to adopt a more correct attitude towards French authorities’ if and when Kamara were punished with ‘severe judicial sanctions’.Footnote 43 A failure to reprimand her, he warned, would severely diminish ‘the prestige of our justice in the eyes of those we administer’.Footnote 44
Although no evidence in the archive supported it, Cornet claimed that Kamara had incited revolt during the Volta-Bani War.Footnote 45 He asserted that she had hosted a ‘mutilated tirailleur who made anti-French propaganda in M'Pésoba, imploring families not to give up their children’ to French recruiters. She even contributed to the armed revolt, Cornet protested, encouraging villagers to make ‘thousands of arrows’ while inviting marabouts who ‘preached resistance’. Cornet also alleged that his predecessor, Commandant Bleu, had improperly wielded his authority by acquitting Kamara of slave trading in 1917 and entirely ignored the brothel she established in a few huts owned by her husband. Fau had used his friendship with Bleu to ensure his wife's freedom. These blatant violations of the law, Cornet argued, necessitated Naba's permanent banishment from the cercle. It would be best for all involved, even Fau, who would ‘gain peace in not finding his name mixed up in these big scandals’.
The lieutenant-governor seemed unconvinced that the case was worthy of reevaluation. He noted that Naba Kamara could not be banished without the approval of the governor-general of AOF, and he expressed reluctance to elevate the matter. He wrote Cornet: ‘I approve of the attitude you have adopted regarding Mr. Fau, which is informed by the worry of hindering the intensification of cotton production in your cercle. I appreciate the tact and consideration you have brought to the exercise of your functions, and I do not doubt that you will come to solve the questions that occupy you in a way that will ensure the political and economic stability of your region’.Footnote 46 The scandal hit a dead end; Fau and Kamara got away scot-free. The need to maintain ‘the political and economic stability’ of Koutiala cercle outranked the imperative to punish lawbreakers. The only one who benefited from Cornet's investigation was Sigoua Coulibaly, who returned to his post as village chief of M'Pésoba, where he served until his death in 1923.Footnote 47
Local politics and colonial justice
There is no easy truth to the M'Pésoba Affair. Unlike the ‘scandals of empire’, which attracted media speculation, public curiosity, and reform-minded parliamentarians, this dead-end scandal was settled, like most, within the confines of the colonial administration. Its two contradictory resolutions reflect the ever-shifting political priorities of colonial rule in the region. In 1913, Sigoua Coulibaly was banished from M'Pésoba on scant evidence and, in 1918, was reinstated to his role on little more than conjecture. The fall and rise of Sigoua suggests that colonial justice in AOF, especially during moments of crisis, relied heavily on the politics of expediency, a complex balancing act between the political priorities of the administration and the reality of what could be accomplished on the ground. While removing Sigoua in 1913 was politically expedient, regardless of whether the accusations made against him were true, by 1918 his banishment became a political liability.
Sigoua Coulibaly's 1913 banishment can only be understood in the context of Koutiala cercle's complex political landscape. Conquered by French colonial forces under the command of Faama Mademba Sèye in 1893, M'Pésoba was considered a backwater.Footnote 48 Political organization in the region depended on village associations (tonw) and inter-village alliances.Footnote 49 The power of these organizations and the laughably ‘thin white line’ in the region caused one early Koutiala administrator to lament that region's inhabitants did not ‘see the whites as anything but a fictitious authority’.Footnote 50 Tax collection exposed the truth behind his observation. In 1903, an African intermediary collecting taxes in M'Pésoba was ‘threatened and even hit’, which led to the trial of several villagers in the native court.Footnote 51 A year later, the commandant ordered soldiers to raid a neighboring village and kidnap six notables, imprisoning them until taxes were paid as ransom.Footnote 52 Violence was so normalized in the region that, in the midst of his kidnap and ransom scheme, the commandant calmly reported to his superiors that ‘from the point of view of tax collection, pacification has made some progress’.Footnote 53
Infighting presented constant dilemmas for Koutiala's colonial administrators as African leaders refused to play by French rules. Following the conquest, the colonial administration attempted to delineate clear boundaries between villages and cantons, confining chiefs’ power to legible zones of influence. But this did not suit African politicians, whose authority depended on expanding their access to land and labor. In 1908, two villages neighboring M'Pésoba came to blows over access to hunting grounds. Demonstrating ‘a peccant spirit of independence’ from the commandant's authority, the village chiefs urged their followers to ‘exchange arrows and gunfire’ to seize the territory.Footnote 54 Beyond outright warfare, supernatural poisons (kòròtiw) — deployed by animists and Muslims alike — provided means to attain political ends. Not all kòròtiw were literal poisons; they included multifarious methods for toppling one's enemies, from secret incantations to amulets and charms. African elites relied on practitioners of kòròtiw to both protect them and defeat their opponents.Footnote 55 Indigenous methods of political dispute alarmed colonial officials, who could not grasp how to regulate these alternate arenas of combat.
Women, too, played active roles in local political conflicts. Although they were excluded from most formal positions of power, women did form and manage their own tonw.Footnote 56 Like many women's societies in West Africa, the relative power of these associations declined with the onset of patriarchal colonial politics.Footnote 57 As men unanimously filled roles as village chiefs, women became progressively marginalized. In 1903, the Koutiala commandant noted that women were ‘rowdy’ in many areas of the cercle, protesting the reorganization of village political structures.Footnote 58 Such accounts disappear within the decade. This background suggests that Naba Kamara's distaste for Sigoua Coulibaly may have gone beyond personal animosity: her attempts to usurp the village chief reflected the frustrations of many African women who found themselves increasingly sidelined by male politicians.
In Koutiala's fraught political landscape, Sigoua Coulibaly proved to be an exceptionally large thorn in the local administration's side. As the ACC, Hilarion Fau's employer, began construction of its cotton ginning factory in M'Pésoba in 1909, Sigoua started stirring up trouble. During the mass Muslim conversion that swept the French Soudan in the early twentieth century, M'Pésoba divided into two factions: one animist, led by a man named Niara, the other Muslim, steered by Sigoua Coulibaly. Things came to a head when Sigoua accused Niara's faction of ‘not participating in paying taxes’ and ‘preparing [poison] powder and arrows to attack them’.Footnote 59 The commandant intervened, ultimately imprisoning both men after Sigoua marched on Koutiala with 300 villagers to demand his appointment as sole chief of M'Pésoba. Sigoua was troublesome, but the weakness of the regional administration demanded concessions be made. Estimating that 2,300 of 2,700 villagers supported him, the commandant freed Sigoua and installed him as village chief in return for the promise of peace.
The conflict between Sigoua and Niara indicated broader political cleavages in Koutiala cercle. It is likely Niara came from a lineage that led the bamanaya initiation society (yapèrè folo) whereas Sigoua descended from a family that managed land tenure (ninge folo) or administrative affairs (kulu folo) for the village.Footnote 60 Indeed, before the French conquest, there was no single ‘village chief’; rather, a diverse mélange of tonw (men's and women's), family heads, neighborhood chiefs, and a handful of specialized spiritual and political leaders jointly managed village affairs. Islam and colonial rule threatened this delicate balance.Footnote 61 The conversion of Sigoua and the majority of M'Pésoba to Islam undermined Niara's authority as yapèrè folo. The new religion disparaged bamanaya initiation societies, diminishing the influence of elders over newly initiated youths. Sigoua's designation as the sole village chief, likewise, reduced Niara's stature by excluding him from a formal political position.
The politique des races, an expression of French paranoia about ‘Islamic fanaticism’, threatened Sigoua's hold on power shortly after his appointment. The policy, launched around 1911, instructed administrators to grant preference to animists over Muslims in governing local populations to discourage the spread of Islam.Footnote 62 On tournée in early January 1913, Commandant Bleu discovered Sigoua hosting a ‘marabout from Sansanding’ and ordered him imprisoned for 15 days for insubordination.Footnote 63 During the same trip, Bleu noted ‘numerous complaints against Sigoua’. Villagers alleged that he had ‘asked for higher taxes than they ought to pay’ and improperly kept ‘the money given to him by Europeans passing through to pay for food, eggs, chickens, and millet’. Many wanted to elevate Niara, Sigoua's animist rival, as chief. ‘They now regret having abandoned their fetishes and their sacred snakes and would like to return to Niara’, Bleu claimed.Footnote 64 Although the administrator could find ‘no solid proof’ of the allegations, Sigoua lost the reluctant backing of the administrator only weeks before the poisoning of Hilarion Fau's wives.Footnote 65
While Sigoua's troublesome past doubtlessly played a role in his 1913 conviction, so, too, did Fau's presence at the center of the case. Fau was one of only a handful of Europeans living in Koutiala cercle and, as agent of the ACC, he held great sway over local politics. This position blurred the boundary between private trader and public official. Despite the fact the ACC was ‘very weak’ with financial resources of a ‘very marked precariousness’, the colonial administration lent the organization unconditional support.Footnote 66 Ernest Roume, the Governor-General of AOF, declared cotton cultivation an economic priority that had to be met with ‘the most complete and close collaboration’.Footnote 67 In this spirit, the government footed the bill for the construction of the cotton ginning factory in M'Pésoba and an office in Ségou, some fifty miles away.Footnote 68 While the ACC was in part an ‘organ of propaganda’ meant to encourage commercial investment in colonial cotton projects, it also held a tangible role in the cotton trade.Footnote 69 The association purchased cotton from African producers, ginned it locally, and sold it to European trading firms in Kayes and Bamako.Footnote 70 In their mission, the company's agents worked hand in hand with colonial administrators. Although the ACC did not hold a role analogous to that of the concessionary companies of Central Africa or the old empire ‘company states’, some agents found themselves partaking in administrative duties.Footnote 71 Fau periodically helped negotiate and collect taxes.Footnote 72 He also distributed currency in times of shortage and even occasionally received a stipend from the administration for this work.Footnote 73 Many Africans, who rarely saw Europeans, assumed Fau held a position equal to that of the commandant.Footnote 74
Koutiala's administrators enthusiastically supported Fau, relying on him to inject industry into the region. After construction of the M'Pésoba factory finished in 1909, Louis Colliaux, the commandant preceding Bleu, wrote in the ACC's Bulletin:
Is the time of charter companies so far from us, and do we forget the services that these state-sponsored companies rendered to colonization? Of course, the Cotton Association mustn't have similar privileges. The objective it pursues pertains above all to the future of the colony, as it does our national industry. Come commercial competition, the price of cotton will set itself naturally. What is needed now is the creation of trade flow.Footnote 75
Koutiala cercle faced difficulty attracting commercial investment and ‘trade flow’ proved Colliaux's continual preoccupation. Although trading companies occasionally sent African agents to the region to purchase cotton or rubber from local producers, most business remained in the neighboring cercles of Ségou and San, hindering the administration's attempts at mise en valeur.Footnote 76 In the years following the ACC's arrival, Colliaux noted an increased presence of major trading firms.Footnote 77 When Ernest Bleu replaced Colliaux in 1911, he noted, ‘The importance taken on by the development of cotton cultivation has been considerable and marks a very real progress since the Cotton Association set up in M'Pésoba’.Footnote 78 ‘For cotton’, he declared, ‘it's a fait accompli’.Footnote 79 Hilarion Fau's role in this economic victory worked against an already unpopular Sigoua Coulibaly.
Beyond his role in the ACC, Fau had close personal relationships with several local administrators. The fact that he fathered at least seven métis children with no fewer than three African women did not diminish this mutual affection.Footnote 80 In fact, Fau named one of his children Louis Hubert after his employer, ACC general agent Louis Level, and adjoint-administrator Hubert Georges.Footnote 81 Because AOF had such a miniscule white residential population, especially in its backwaters, enforcing the boundaries between ‘colonial categories’ hardly constituted an administrative priority. It is probable that many, if not most, Frenchmen in Koutiala had African mistresses.Footnote 82 Indeed, before the First World War, interracial sexual unions were not only accepted but encouraged as a tool of the mission civilisatrice.Footnote 83 In many ways, Fau resembled his contemporary, fellow erstwhile priest, and likely friend August Dupuis-Yakouba: the ‘white monk of Timbuktu’.Footnote 84 Like Fau, Dupuis abandoned the White Fathers and married an African woman, scandalizing the missionaries. Both men doubtlessly met the stereotype of the ‘décivilisé’, a colonist who had ‘gone native’; but this status did not diminish the respect colonial officials accorded them.Footnote 85
Fau's status as a former Catholic missionary only increased his worth in the eyes of many administrators.Footnote 86 After arriving in the Soudan in 1900 as a White Father, Fau helped establish ‘liberty villages’ for newly emancipated slaves in coordination with the colonial administration in Ségou.Footnote 87 The missionaries served as intermediaries between the freed slaves and colonial officials, going so far as to help negotiate tax burdens.Footnote 88 Although some administrators expressed concern that the fathers would incite interreligious conflict by converting the former slaves to Catholicism, many accepted the society's platform that ‘the anti-slavery mission [was] not necessarily a work of proselytization but above all humanitarian’.Footnote 89 This humanitarian work included crude ‘aid’ during the famines that swept the Soudan in the early twentieth century.Footnote 90 During famine, men would often pawn their wives and children to earn money for food or taxes; a practice the French interpreted as slavery.Footnote 91 In response, the Fathers engaged in ‘preventative repurchases’, buying slaves and pawned family members to prevent them from ‘falling into the hands of Muslims’.Footnote 92 While these maneuvers benefitted the missionaries, who gained converts, they were also viewed positively by the administration, whose international legitimacy, in part, rested on promises of eradicating slavery.Footnote 93
In 1913, the evidence against Sigoua Coulibaly for the attempted murder of Hilarion Fau's wives was dubious, but the politics were transparent. Sigoua was a nuisance, danger, and liability; Fau was an essential economic player and a close friend of the administration despite his ‘décivilisé’ lifestyle. Naba Kamara's allegations of poisoning, furthermore, carried legitimacy based on French understandings of African internal politics. Whether Sigoua was guilty beyond doubt was irrelevant because ‘colonial justice’ was utterly entangled in local politics. Commandant Bleu — or in this case his assistant — sat on the court that heard ‘felony’ charges.Footnote 94 While a project for reforming the courts in 1912 promised to extend the rule of law throughout AOF, it made little difference on the ground.Footnote 95 The criminal courts remained under the direct control of the commandant, evidentiary standards were practically non-existent, and African judges were chosen for their loyalty to the administration.Footnote 96 Even if Bleu intended to give Sigoua a fair shake, the structures of colonial justice made it all but impossible to separate political priorities from the rule of law; nor was it practical for the commandant to make such distinctions. With French rule in Koutiala cercle so tenuous, it would have been foolhardy not to make the expedient decision to convict Sigoua.
A shifting political landscape
In the midst of the First World War, what first appeared as an isolated rebellion against military recruitment in what is today Burkina Faso quickly spiraled into the largest anticolonial revolt the French ever faced in AOF. The Volta-Bani War spread in early 1916 to eastern regions of Koutiala cercle, where Commandant Bleu and his successor, Joseph-François Cornet, engaged in a scorched-earth campaign against African rebels.Footnote 97 The brutal conflict further accentuated the vulnerability of the colonial administration, which barely managed to subdue the uprising. The war pressured commandants throughout the region to adopt a ‘politics of appeasement’, making concessions to African actors to retain a precarious control.Footnote 98 The politics of appeasement accompanied a precipitous decline in the reputation of the ACC as the war hindered cotton production.Footnote 99 Sigoua Coulibaly did not bring any new evidence when he approached Cornet in 1918 to request reinstatement as village chief, but the political landscape, embroiled in evolving crisis, had shifted markedly in his favor.
The Volta-Bani War rattled the colonial administration across the Soudan. The rebellion began in Bona, 150 miles east of Koutiala, in reaction to highly unpopular wartime recruitment efforts. Yisu Kote, the chief of that village, called an assembly of elders from surrounding areas in November 1915 and the men, fearful they would never see their sons again, decided to take up arms against the French.Footnote 100 The news of the incipient revolt spread quickly to villages further afield, disseminating through inter-village social networks and the remnants of precolonial ‘defensive leagues’.Footnote 101 Astonished by the scale and brisk onset of the revolt, the French faltered in their response. Emboldened by these early victories, the rebels rapidly multiplied in number as more villages joined the fight. It was only after an infusion of thousands of African tirailleurs and a protracted year-long conflict that the French quelled the revolt. To the administration, the ferocity of the anticolonial campaign demonstrated the resilience of village leagues and the threatening power of African political leaders.
Unrest in M'Pésoba during the Volta-Bani War proved banishing Sigoua had been a grave miscalculation. While Bleu was distracted by the revolt, Sigoua began plotting a coup from exile.Footnote 102 After his banishment in 1913, Sigoua's rival, the animist Niara, had been appointed chief of M'Pésoba. When Niara died in June 1915, Sigoua pushed his ‘brothers and cousins’ to protest the ascension of Niara's heir, Niangolo. Sigoua's Muslim supporters refused to pay the head tax or carry cotton for the ACC unless Sigoua was reinstated to his former position. It was only under threat of permanent exile from the cercle that Bleu managed to rein in Sigoua, forcing his faction to recognize Niangolo as the rightful chief.Footnote 103 But a month later, Niangolo suddenly died and M'Pésoba fell into ‘poor spirits’.Footnote 104 Niangolo's cousin, N'Ki, was reluctantly ‘accepted by most of the population’ as the new chief although the administration found him to be ‘without influence or energy’.Footnote 105 The expansion of Koutiala's Muslim population during the war only further undermined N'Ki's authority: Sigoua Coulibaly, a Muslim notable with a loyal following, seemed a natural solution to the instability plaguing the village.
The ACC's influence in Koutiala declined during the First World War as the M'Pésoba ginnery faltered. Before the war, several trading companies complained that the ACC held an unfair monopoly on the cotton industry as it barred other companies from purchasing cotton directly from African producers.Footnote 106 In response, the lieutenant-governor banned commandants from advancing money to the ACC's agents for purchasing raw cotton, as they had done in the past.Footnote 107 For Fau, this was a disaster. M'Pésoba's remoteness made it difficult to communicate with ACC headquarters in Paris to request funds.Footnote 108 Although at one time considered ‘the most important ginnery’ in the Soudan, M'Pésoba's significance declined rapidly as the war progressed.Footnote 109 Its remote location was its downfall. One administrator remarked that the factory ‘did not seem to [him] to meet at all the desired goal, given that M'Pésoba is located around 100 kilometers from the center of cotton production’ and another 60 kilometers from the Niger River, making the evacuation of the ginned cotton extremely laborious.Footnote 110 What was challenging before became impossible during the chaos of the Volta-Bani War. In 1913, the M'Pésoba ginnery processed 260 metric tons of cotton; by 1917, it was down to 30.Footnote 111
Sigoua's 1918 accusation that Naba Kamara had manufactured the evidence that convicted him five years prior presented Cornet with an opportunity. M'Pésoba was in turmoil and Sigoua, who retained a loyal following in the village, could bring peace by returning as chief. After the crisis of the Volta-Bani War, Cornet recognized that appeasing powerful political actors like Sigoua was a necessity; the administration could not withstand another rebellion. Cornet's ensuing ‘investigation’ focused more on smearing Kamara than uncovering the truth. Only one witness in the 1913 trial — 17-year-old Massa — recanted his testimony.Footnote 112 Naba Kamara maintained her innocence. Then, Cornet dredged up her slave-trading charge and accused her on the word of one anonymous witness of running a brothel and fermenting armed rebellion against the French.Footnote 113 The history of women's protest in Koutiala and colonial stereotypes of the ‘African seductress’ made his claims tenable. Nonetheless, lacking firm evidence, Cornet did not submit the charges to the native court; instead, he wrote discretely to his superiors, asking for approval to banish Kamara from the cercle. Although he very well may have believed them to be true, Cornet's indictments were more speculation than fact. The declining influence of the ACC opened Kamara up to scrutiny as a ‘corrupting’ influence on Fau, but she was ultimately shielded by her husband's race and status. Husband and wife both escaped the commandant's justice unscathed.
Conclusion
Did Sigoua Coulibaly poison Naba Kamara that night in January 1913? The evidence is utterly inconclusive. That mattered little, however, to the two commandants who examined the case, each coming to a markedly different conclusion. The ‘scandals of empire’ show how ‘truth’ bent politics: the recognition of wrongs encouraged introspection and promulgated reform, for better or worse. Dead-end scandals demonstrate how politics often twisted ‘truth’ to further domination. As such, these events provide invaluable opportunities for historians to elaborate the gap between metropolitan legal fantasies and their implementation on the ground. These incidents illustrate the consistent and persistent vagaries of justice in the colonial situation, challenging the impression left by scholarship that emphasizes an ever-encroaching reformist rule of law.
Dead-end scandals also write Africans into colonial legal history. They reveal that colonial officials did not apply law to indifferent populations; rather, African actors, guided by personal ambitions, helped contour local legal landscapes. From village to village, Africans’ divergent aspirations generated myriad conflicts, seldom understood by European observers. The enormous social, political, and religious changes brought on by colonial conquest only exacerbated these tensions. In M'Pésoba, Islamic conversion, the removal of religious actors from political power, the decline of women's organizing, and the rapid growth of cotton exploitation put Africans under unprecedented pressure. As Sigoua Coulibaly struggled to retain his respectability in this new world, Naba Kamara took advantage of the moment to bolster her authority. Poorly prepared to navigate internal conflicts, colonial administrators walked a tightrope that strained to bridge the letter of the law with the political needs of the moment.
Analyzing moments of ‘revealing crisis’, the politics of expediency that underwrote colonial justice floats to the surface. Local politics restricted the decisions of colonial officials, especially on the fringes of empire. There, an even rule of law could never be enforced because the colonial administration simply did not possess the means to unilaterally broadcast its power. Negotiated collaboration was essential to maintaining colonial rule. Commandant Bleu could not have declared Sigoua Coulibaly innocent in 1913 without jeopardizing his relationship with Hilarion Fau and the ACC. Cornet could not have dismissed Sigoua's claims in 1918 without risking another anti-colonial rebellion; he could not banish Naba Kamara because of her husband's status. Ultimately, the M'Pésoba Affair demonstrates that colonial authority in AOF derived not from the certitude law provided but the ambiguous space between truth and fiction it tolerated in the pursuit of domination.
Acknowledgements
Funding for this research was provided by the Center for African Studies at Stanford University. In Bamako, I was grateful for hospitality and logistical support of N'Do Cissé, Maria Grosz-Ngaté, Maryam Coulibaly, and the Naman family. In Rome, Dominique Arnauld and Jean Lamonde provided invaluable assistance. I thank Richard Roberts, J. P. Daughton, Alaa El-Shafei, Sonya Schoenberger, Chepchirchir Tirop, and two anonymous reviewers for their feedback on various drafts of this article. Author's email: [email protected].
Competing interest
The author declares none.