By Sam Mednick, NIAMEY
Niger
Niger ‘s ruling junta and civil society groups called on the nation to mobilize in the capital on Thursday to fight for the country’s freedom and push back against foreign interference.
“We are talking about the
immediate departure of all foreign forces,” Mahaman Sanoussi, interim
coordinator for the M62 civil society group that’s organizing the protest, told
The Associated Press. “(We’ll mobilize) against all forms of threats to
continue the struggle for the sovereignty of the people. The dignity of the
Nigerian people will be respected by all without exception.”
The march falls on the West
African nation’s independence day from its former colonial ruler, France, and as
anti-French sentiment spikes, more than one week after mutinous soldiers ousted the country’s democratically
elected president. Protests are expected throughout the capital, Niamey, to
push back against foreign meddling.
The coup has been strongly
condemned by Western countries, many of which saw Niger as the last reliable
partner for the West in efforts to battle jihadis linked to al-Qaida and the
Islamic State group in Africa’s Sahel region. Russia and Western countries have
been vying for influence in the fight against extremism.
France has 1,500 soldiers in Niger who
conduct joint operations with its military, and the United States and other
European countries have helped train the nation’s troops.
In an
address to the nation on Wednesday, the new military ruler, Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, lashed out at neighboring
countries and the international community and called on the population to be
ready to defend the nation.
Tchiani said Niger will face
difficult times ahead and that the “hostile and radical” attitudes of those who
oppose his rule provide no added value. He called harsh sanctions imposed last week by the West African block
known as ECOWAS illegal, unfair, inhuman and unprecedented.
ECOWAS has also threatened to
use force if ousted President Mohamed Bazoum, who remains under house arrest,
is not released and reinstated by Aug. 6.
In a closed door meeting on
Wednesday, dozens of people from civil society organizations, professional
groups and trade unions spoke with the coup leaders about their vision for the
country. Sanoussi, from M62, was at the meeting and said the junta talked about
their priorities for the nation, including securing it from violence.
But another civil society
member at the same gathering who did not want to be named for security reasons
told the AP they left feeling concerned. They had a strong impression that the
French military was going to be ousted soon and that members of civil society
groups would help the junta do it.
During the meeting, Tchiani
spent a long time speaking about the history of foreign military presence in
the region, discussing France’s involvement without naming it specifically, and
asked those present to help maintain the country’s integrity. Tchiani also
didn’t seem concerned that ECOWAS would intervene or that President Bazoum
would resign — which he has yet to do — noting he was no longer in power, the
civil society members said.
Even if the junta demands the
withdrawal of French troops — as they did in neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso,
both of which are run by military leaders — it wouldn’t make a difference, said
Anne-Claire Legendre, a spokesperson for the French foreign minister during a
press briefing on Wednesday.
“We don’t answer to the
putschists. We recognize one constitutional order and one legitimacy only, that
of President Bazoum,” she said.
Ahead of Thursday’s
demonstration, the French Embassy in Niamey asked Niger’s government to take
all measures to ensure the security and protection of its premises after it was
attacked by protesters last week and a door was set on fire.
Demonstrators in Niger are
openly resentful of France and have been waving Russian flags during protests. Some see Russia and its Wagner mercenary group, which operates in a
handful of African countries, including Mali, as a powerful alternative. The
new junta leaders have not said whether they intend to ally themselves with
Moscow or stick with Niger’s Western partners.
As tensions grow in the
capital and the region, many European countries announced the evacuations of
their citizens.
By late Wednesday night,
nearly 1,000 people had left on four flights and a fifth evacuation was
underway, France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
The State Department on
Wednesday ordered what it said was the temporary departure of nonessential
embassy staff and some family members from Niger as a precaution. It said its
embassy would remain open. Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said
late Wednesday that the State Department had not requested U.S. military
assistance for the departure.
Nigeriens are now bracing for
what’s ahead. The sanctions announced by ECOWAS included halting energy
transactions with Niger, which gets up to 90% of its power from neighboring
Nigeria, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency.
Earlier this week, power
transmission from Nigeria to Niger was cut off, an official at one of Nigeria’s
main electricity companies said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized to comment on the issue. The official did not clarify
how much of Niger’s power the cut represented, but any reduction would further
squeeze citizens in the impoverished country of more than 25 million people.
On Wednesday, the president’s
party accused the junta of cutting off electricity to his residence since that
morning. “As a result, the president of the republic and his family no longer
benefit from the rotating supply of energy,” said Kalla Ankourao, the ruling
party’s general secretary.
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