|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Méhari - the Sénégalese Baby Brousse |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
We are in Africa in the late 1970s. Relative peace and a degree of optimism prevails in the west of the continent, freshly independent. The oil crisis is yet to come, and some are thinking of industrialising the region. In 1979, Citroën signs agreements for production of the FAF with Sénégal, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea Bissau and the Central African Republic. Soon afterwards, the Forges de l’Ebrié, a company in Abidjan in the Côte d'Ivoire, started importing 2CV chassis and engines and "dresses" them in a new robe made locally. These are the FAF sedan and a metal-bodied Méhari, the Baby-Brousse. In Sénégal too, two manufacturers also started production. In Thies (70 Km from Dakar), a VW-based semi truck called "Gaynde" (“lion" in the Wolof language), was built by Institutions Marchand. Was this a wink at Citroën’s main African competitor? No, the lion is the symbol of the country, like the Gallic rooster in France. On 22 September 1979 Citroën and Institutions Marchand signed an agreement allowing the launch of a production line in Sénégal. It was intended to build 500 vehicles per year. These agreements led to the opening of a small "steel-bodied Méhari" production line in a suburb of Dakar, between the capital and Rufisque. Nearby there are slaughterhouses, for readers who know the country. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thanks to Pierre 'Rotule' in Sénégal. © 2009 Julian Marsh/Citroënët/Pierre 'Rotule' |