Thousands Gather in Niger to Celebrate Generals Who Led Coup

Thousands Gather in Niger to Celebrate Generals Who Led Coup

Thousands of coup supporters in Niger gathered on Sunday for a rally to ⁢cheer on the generals⁢ claiming power, as a deadline set by ‌the west ‍African bloc for the ‌military to relinquish control or face possible ‍armed intervention was ‍due to elapse.

The Ecowas bloc,⁣ chaired⁣ by ⁢regional military powerhouse and⁢ Niger’s neighbour ⁢Nigeria, had given the troops that toppled President Mohamed Bazoum on 26​ July a week​ to return him ​to power.

But on ​Sunday afternoon in the ⁢capital ⁢Niamey​ thousands ‍of backers of the now-ruling National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland (CNSP) gathered at a ⁣stadium draped in Russian flags ‍and carrying portraits of CNSP leaders.

At the 30,000-seat Seyni Kountche stadium, named after Niger’s first coup d’etat leader in 1974, CNSP leaders‌ including General Mohamed⁤ Toumba greeted a jubilant crowd, while showing no sign of willingness to cede power.

On⁤ Friday, Ecowas military chiefs of staff agreed a plan for a possible intervention to‍ respond to the crisis,⁣ the latest of ​several coups to hit Africa’s Sahel ⁣region since 2020.

“We‍ want diplomacy​ to work, ⁢and we want this message clearly transmitted to them (the military) that‌ we are giving them every opportunity to reverse what they have ⁤done,” Ecowas commissioner Abdel-Fatau Musah said.

But ⁣he warned that “all the elements that will⁣ go into any eventual intervention⁤ have been worked out”, including how and when force would be⁣ deployed.

Niger’s‍ military leaders​ have said they will meet force with force.

In the alleyways of Niamey’s Boukoki ‌neighbourhood, residents‍ were defiant at the prospect of an armed ‍intervention‍ by Ecowas.

“We’re going‍ to fight for this revolution. We’re not going to retreat faced⁤ with the enemy, we’re determined,” ‍said Boukoki‍ resident ‌Adama Oumarou, adding​ that “we were waiting for this coup for a long time.”

Algeria, itself ​an economic and military power on the continent which shares ⁤a long land border with Niger, has warned against ‌a military solution.

“We categorically refuse any military ⁣intervention,” Algerian president Abdelmadjid Tebboune said in a television interview Saturday, saying it would be “a ‍direct threat to Algeria” as it ⁤shares “nearly‍ a thousand kilometres” of border with⁤ Niger.

Former colonial power‌ France, with which Niger’s new rulers​ broke military ties after taking power, said it would “firmly”⁤ back whatever⁢ course of action Ecowas took ​after⁤ the deadline expired.

Niger has played a ‍key part in western strategies to combat jihadist insurgencies that‍ have plagued the Sahel since 2012, with France ‍and the United States stationing about ⁣1,500 and​ 1,000 troops in the country, respectively.

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France has already evacuated hundreds of its⁢ citizens from Niger since the coup, and on Sunday, ​Italy’s defence ministry said ⁢it had 65 military personnel from Niger, along with⁣ 10 US military personnel.

Anti-French sentiment in the ⁤region is on…

2023-08-06 12:36:04
Original from www.theguardian.com
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