Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

New Niger rally as deadline looms for French envoy’s exit

Protesters supporting the military leaders behind last month's coup gathered outside the French airbase in Niger
Protesters supporting the military leaders behind last month's coup gathered outside the French airbase in Niger - Copyright AFP JAM STA ROSA
Protesters supporting the military leaders behind last month's coup gathered outside the French airbase in Niger - Copyright AFP JAM STA ROSA

Thousands of people demonstrated Sunday in Niger in support of last month’s coup, a few hours before the deadline given to France’s ambassador in an ultimatum to leave the country.

Demonstrators gathered near the French military base in the capital Niamey, some waving Nigerien or Russian flags, others with placards calling for the departure of French troops.

Former colonial power France still has 1,500 soldiers based in Niger. They had been helping the deposed President Mohamed Bazoum in the fight against jihadist forces active there — before military officers toppled him in the July 26 coup.

The National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland (CNSP) led by General Abdourahamane Tiani has detained him and his family at the presidential palace. 

Sunday’s rally started at dawn on a roundabout near the Niamey airport by the Nigerien air base where the French force is located, as demonstrators answered an appeal from organisations backing the country’s new rulers.

“We don’t want the French army in Niger,” said one demonstrator, Abou Kountche. “Let the French leave.”

“The French say that Niger is a poor country, but when we tell them to go home, they refuse,” said restaurateur Adama Assane.

– 48 hours to leave –

The demonstration comes after a month of rising tensions and anti-France protests in Niger.

On Friday, Niger’s foreign ministry announced that French ambassador Sylvain Itte had 48 hours to leave, saying he had refused to meet with the new rulers and citing French government actions that were “contrary to the interests of Niger”.

Paris has rejected the demand and said the “putschists do not have the authority to make this request”, insisting that the government of Bazoum that they had overthrown remained the legitimate authority.

On Saturday some 20,000 people rallied in the Senyi Kountche stadium to support the country’s new military rulers and call for the removal of French soldiers.

France has consistently backed calls by the West African bloc ECOWAS for the reinstatement of president Bazoum.

A hostile rally outside the French embassy on July 30 prompted Paris to organise the voluntary evacuation of its citizens.

ECOWAS has also applied sanctions against the new regime and threatened to use military means to remove it if the new rulers do not hand back power to Bazoum.

Efforts to find a diplomatic solution are continuing, however, with Molly Phee, the top US diplomat for sub-Saharan Africa, visiting Nigeria to meet ECOWAS officials on Saturday.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

In this business article, there's no theory. No back-to-basics. Just a clear argument and a playbook for the leaders in the middle of this...

World

Trump suggested that "other countries" would be involved in the blockade effort, without specifying.

Tech & Science

his is what computer science looks like at its best — advancing discovery while improving lives on a global scale.

Business

Three in four supply plan failures happen after the plan is set, at the factory execution stage.