By Sam Mednick, NIAMEY
Niger
The deadline arrived Sunday for Niger’s military junta to reinstate the country’s ousted president, but the West Africa regional bloc that has threatened a military intervention faces prominent appeals to pursue more peaceful means. In the capital, coup leaders appeared at a stadium rally where a chicken decorated in the colors of former colonizer France was beheaded, to cheers.
Neighboring Nigeria’s Senate has pushed back against the plan by the regional bloc known as ECOWAS, urging Nigeria’s president, the bloc’s current chair, on Saturday to explore options other than the use of force.
ECOWAS can still move
ahead, as final decisions are made by consensus by member states, but the
warning on the eve of the deadline raised questions about the intervention’s
fate.
The July 26 coup, in which
mutinous soldiers installed General Abdourahmane Tchiani as head of state, adds
another layer of complexity to West Africa’s Sahel region that’s struggling with
military takeovers, spreading Islamic extremism and a shift by some states
toward Russia and its proxy, the Wagner mercenary group.
Niger’s ousted President
Mohamed Bazoum said he is held “hostage” by the mutinous soldiers. An ECOWAS
delegation was unable to meet with Tchiani, who analysts have asserted led the
coup to avoid being fired. Now the junta has reached out to Wagner for
assistance while severing security ties with former colonizer France.
Algeria and Chad, non-ECOWAS neighbors with strong militaries in the region, have said they oppose the use of force or won’t intervene militarily, and neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso — both run by juntas — have said an intervention would be a “declaration of war” against them, too.
It was
not immediately clear on Sunday what ECOWAS will do next. Thousands of people
at Sunday’s rally in Niger’s capital, Niamey, cheered the coup leaders’
appearance and expressed defiance against both the ECOWAS threat and France’s
long presence in the region. Some waved Russian flags.
“We will all stand and fight
as one people,” declared one of the junta leaders, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Toumba.
“We are asking you to stay mobilized.”
Hours before Sunday’s
deadline, hundreds of youth joined security forces in the darkened streets in
the capital to stand guard at a dozen roundabouts until morning, checking cars
for weapons and heeding the junta’s call to watch out for foreign intervention
and spies.
“I’m here to support the
military. We are against (the regional bloc). We will fight to the end. We do
not agree with what France is doing against us. We are done with colonization,”
said Ibrahim Nudirio, one of the residents on patrol.
Some passing cars honked in
support. Some people called for solidarity among African nations.
ECOWAS shouldn’t have given
the junta a one-week deadline to reinstate Bazoum but rather only up to 48
hours, said Peter Pham, former U.S. special envoy for West Africa’s Sahel
region and a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council. “Now it’s dragged
out, which gives the junta time to entrench itself,” he said.
The most favorable scenario
for an intervention would be a force coming in with the help of those on the
inside, he said.
The coup is a major blow to
the United States and allies who saw Niger as the last major counterterrorism partner in the Sahel, a
vast area south of the Sahara Desert where jihadists linked to al-Qaida and the
Islamic State group have been expanding their range and beginning to threaten
coastal states like Benin, Ghana and Togo.
The United States, France and
European countries have poured hundreds of millions of dollars of military
assistance into Niger. France has 1,500 soldiers in the country, though their
fate is now in question. The U.S. has 1,100 military personnel also in Niger
where they operate an important drone base in the city of Agadez.
While Niger’s coup leaders
have claimed they acted because of growing insecurity, conflict incidents
decreased by nearly 40% in the country compared to the previous six-month
period, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project. That’s
in contrast to surging attacks in Mali, which has kicked out French forces and
partnered with Wagner, and Burkina Faso, which has gotten rid of French forces
as well.
Some in Niger quietly
expressed concerns about the coup. One official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to comment, said many people want
Bazoum resinstated but were afraid to say so for fear of retaliation.
“At present, the population is
living in total psychosis,” the official said.
The uncertainty in Niger is
worsening daily life for some 25 million people in one of the world’s poorest
countries. Food prices are rising after ECOWAS imposed economic and travel
sanctions following the coup. Nigeria, which supplies up to 90% of the
electricity in Niger, has cut off some of the supply.
Humanitarian groups in Niger
have warned of “devastating effects” on the lives of over 4.4 million people
needing aid.
Some struggling residents said
military intervention is not the answer.
“Just to eat is a problem for
us. So if there is a war, that won’t fix anything,” said Mohamed Noali, a
Niamey resident patrolling the streets.
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