September 29, 2023
Tinubu's ECOWAS

Release and Reinstate

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West African bloc gives Niger military junta seven days to release and reinstate ousted president or face military action as French Embassy is attacked

West African nations imposed sanctions and threatened force on Sunday if Niger’s coup leaders fail to reinstate ousted President Mohammed Bazoum within a week, while supporters of the junta attacked the French embassy in Niamey.

The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) bloc’s response to the Sahel region’s seventh coup of recent years came as crowds in Niger’s capital Niamey burned French flags and stoned the former colonial power’s mission, drawing tear gas from police.

Images showed fires at the embassy walls and people being loaded into ambulances with bloodied legs. At an emergency summit in Nigeria to discuss the coup last week, leaders of the Economic Community of West African States called for constitutional order to be restored, warning of reprisals if not.

In this photo taken Monday, April 16, 2018, a U.S. and Niger flag are raised side by side at the base camp for air forces and other personnel supporting the construction of Niger Air Base 201 in Agadez, Niger. On the scorching edge of the Sahara Desert, the U.S. Air Force is building a base for armed drones, the newest front in America’s battle against the growing extremist threat in Africa’s vast Sahel region. Three hangars and the first layers of a runway command a sandy, barren field. Niger Air Base 201 is expected to be functional early next year. (AP Photo/Carley Petesch)

“Such measures may include the use of force,” their communique said, adding that defence officials would meet immediately to that effect.

Chad’s President Mahamat Idriss Deby, who came to power in 2021 after a coup in his country, met his Nigerian counterpart Bola Tinubu on the sidelines of the summit and volunteered to speak to the military leaders in Niger, two presidential aides told Reuters, asking not to be identified.

ECOWAS and the eight-member West African Economic and Monetary Union said that with immediate effect borders with Niger would be closed, commercial flights banned, financial transactions halted, national assets frozen and aid ended.

Similar sanctions were imposed by ECOWAS on Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea following coups in those countries in the past three years.

Although the financial sanctions led to defaults on debt – in Mali in particular – such measures have tended to hurt civilians more than the military leaders who seized power in some of the world’s poorest countries, political analysts say. Timelines to restore civilian rule have been agreed in all three countries, but there has been little progress implementing them.

The military coup in Niger, which began unfolding on Wednesday, has been widely condemned by neighbours and international partners including the United States, the United Nations, the African Union, the European Union and former colonial power France.

They have all refused to recognise the new leaders led by General Abdourahamane Tchiani, who commands the presidential guard.

The United States, France, Italy and Germany have troops there on military training and missions to fight Islamist insurgents. Niger is also the world’s seventh-biggest producer of uranium, the radioactive metal widely used for nuclear energy and in nuclear weapons, as well as for treating cancer.

Ahead of the summit, Niger’s junta had warned that ECOWAS was considering an imminent military intervention in collaboration with other African and some Western nations. “We want to once more remind ECOWAS or any other adventurer, of our firm determination to defend our homeland,” junta spokesperson Colonel Amadou Abdramane said.

Following the junta’s call thousands of people rallied in the capital on Sunday. “We are here to express our discontent against France’s interference in Niger’s affairs. Niger is an independent and sovereign country, so France’s decisions have no influence on us,” said protester Sani Idrissa.

After gathering in a public square in central Niamey, some headed to the diplomatic mission.”Down with France!” “France Out!” read placards.

Similar to events in neighbouring Burkina Faso in September last year following a coup, some protesters tried to climb the walls of the embassy, while others stomped on burning French flags. Some youths threw stones at the embassy building before the protesters were dispersed by Niger national guard.

France condemned the violence and said anyone attacking French nationals or interests would face a fast and uncompromising response. “The era of coups d’etat in Africa must stop. They are not acceptable. They threaten the security of a country, the stability of the region,” French foreign minister Catherine Colonna Catherine Colonna told RTL radio.

She added that the situation in Niamey had calmed by the afternoon and no evacuation of French citizens was planned for now.

The European Union and France have cut off financial support to Niger and the United States has threatened to do the same.

In a statement on Friday, the African Union Peace and Security Council condemned the “alarming resurgence” of coups across the continent. The bloc called on the soldiers who ousted Bazoum to “return immediately and unconditionally to their barracks and restore constitutional authority, within a maximum of fifteen (15) days.”Should the military refuse to comply, the council said that it would take “necessary action, including punitive measures against the perpetrators.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov condemned the coup on Thursday as an “anti-constitutional act.”

Tchiani’s men have shown no signs of backing down. Following Friday’s meeting with civil servants, senior junta official General Mohamed Toumba told reporters that “the message given was not to stop the processes underway, to keep on with things,” and that “everything that must be done will be done.” 

Source Twitter/ECOWAS/AU/Reuters/AFP

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