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EUROPE AND AFRICA
and considerably extended since the war, but in 1923 pri-
mary schools numbered only about 850 with 27,500 boys and
1700 girls, or only about one in forty-five of the population
of school age. The school system is designed to give to the
whole of French West Africa a common language — French
— to give practical training in agriculture, in crafts, and in
medicine, and to develop only on the most restricted scale
higher literary education. The government is attaching the
greatest importance to sanitation and medical work, though
the program is greatly hampered for lack of funds and has
scarcely been begun in earnest. Anxiety regarding the
population of France itself makes the government more
desirous of checking the decline in population in French
Equatorial Africa and in stimulating the slow growth of the
population of French West Africa. The birth-rate in West
Africa is very high, but the infant mortality is said to be
fifty per cent and even eighty per cent in some regions.
And a country with over 12,000,000 people has been found
scarcely able to supply the quota at first assigned of 15,500
soldiers annually. French leaders, however, are not insist-
ing that West Africa should at present give the maximum of
assistance, military, financial, or economic, but rather that
the colonial governments should so increase the well-being
and contentment of the population and so develop the great
potentialities of the eight colonies that they may become
important factors in the great future which they see for
Greater France.