PARIS, France
Former Niger Prime Minister Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou, who has been stuck outside the country since last week’s coup, appealed to the international community on Tuesday to help his country restore democracy.
Speaking to The Associated
Press in Paris, Mahamadou said that Niger should be considered crucial for
strengthening democracy in West Africa and protecting countries to the south
“against the spread of terrorism.”
The West African regional body
known as ECOWAS announced travel and economic sanctions against Niger on Sunday
and said it could use force if the coup leaders refused to reinstate Niger’s
democratically elected president, Mohamed Bazoum, within one week.
Mahamadou said the sanctions
would be a "catastrophe" for Niger.
On Tuesday France, Italy and
Spain announced evacuations from Niger for their citizens and other European
nationals.
Mahamadou's government was one
of the West’s last democratic partners against West African extremists.
“Niger is a key country in
terms of security for the rest of Africa, but also for the rest of the world,”
he stressed.
Both the United States and
France have sent troops and hundreds of millions of dollars of military and
humanitarian aid in recent years to Niger.
The current instability in the
country ultimately “could encourage … the further development of insecurity
linked to jihadists,” Mahamadou warned.
"Because if the armed
forces are preoccupied with issues other than ensuring the country’s security,
you can understand that this will enable the jihadists to move forward on the
ground.”
Still, the prime minister said
he wants to remain “optimistic” about the possibility for Niger to regain
democracy and avoid an ECOWAS military intervention.
He said he remains in touch
with Bazoum and that the president “is certainly a hostage,” but also that he
is in “good spirits” and “ready to face the situation.”
Mahamadou said he believed the
coup leaders would heed the ECOWAS call to restore Bazoum rather than face the
threat of military intervention, because they are “patriots.”
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