Cape Times

Ruling party candidate set for Niger victory

-

THE ruling party’s candidate in Niger, Mohamed Bazoum, will enter Sunday’s presidenti­al run-off vote as the heavy favourite to succeed outgoing Mahamadou Issoufou, whose policies to combat Islamist violence and widespread poverty he has vowed to continue.

After winning the first round in December by 22 points over his nearest rival, former president Mahamane Ousmane, Bazoum was endorsed by the third and fourth-place candidates.

Ousmane, who was president from 1993-1996, hopes to score an upset by promising change in the face of intensifyi­ng attacks by militants linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State, part of a wider security crisis across West Africa’s Sahel region.

Suspected jihadists killed at least 100 civilians on Jan. 2 in raids on two villages in the Tillabery region near the Mali border, one of the deadliest episodes in the country’s recent history.

“I promise to do everything, if I am elected president of the republic, to

give you security,” Bazoum said while campaignin­g in Tillabery last week.

Whatever the outcome, the vote is expected to mark a watershed for Niger, which has experience­d four coups since gaining independen­ce from France in 1960, by leading to its first transition of power between two freely elected presidents.

Unlike his counterpar­ts in Ivory Coast and Guinea, who used constituti­onal changes to extend their tenures last year, Issoufou is stepping aside after two five-year terms.

While Bazoum has pledged continuity with Issoufou’s policies - and even hired Issoufou’s son as his campaign manager - Ousmane has criticised the government’s record, especially

on matters of corruption.

He has seized on a government audit last year that found almost 40% of the $312 million Niger spent on defence contracts in the past three years was lost through inflated costs or material that was not delivered.

“I am not for the continuity of bad governance, waste and ineffectiv­e investment,” Ousmane said in an interview with French radio this week. “I am the candidate of change.”

Ousmane disputed that Bazoum is the favourite, saying his rival’s winning margin in the first round was due to fraud. He did not provide any evidence.

Both candidates have focused on security on the campaign trail.

 ??  ?? CANDIDATE Mohamed Bazoum expected to is expected to win the Niger run-off vote on Sunday. | Reuters
CANDIDATE Mohamed Bazoum expected to is expected to win the Niger run-off vote on Sunday. | Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa