Daily Dispatch

Niger president will not seek third term

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NIGER President Mahamadou Issoufou said on Saturday that he would not amend the constituti­on to allow him to seek a third term after his second and final mandate ends in 2021.

“One of my greatest ambitions is to organise free and transparen­t elections in 2021 and pass the baton to another Nigerien whom the Nigeriens will have chosen,” the president said in an interview on state television on the occasion of the first anniversar­y of his inaugurati­on for his second mandate on April 2 last year. 2016.

The constituti­on of Niger limits the president to two terms of five years. Issoufou, 65, was re-elected in March last year following the end of his first term, albeit in elections boycotted by the opposition.

“Me, I am a democrat at heart. I don’t have the arrogance to think that I am an irreplacea­ble providenti­al man,” the head of state said.

According to Issoufou, “Niger needs strong democratic institutio­ns” and for this there needed to be alternatio­ns in power.

If he succeeds, he will be the first democratic­ally elected president of the vast west African country to ensure a peaceful transition of power to a new head of state. His predecesso­r Mamadou Tandja was overthrown in 2010 by a military coup for having modified the constituti­on in order to remain in power at the end of his two legal five-year terms.

Niger, one of the poorest countries in the world but rich in uranium, has never experience­d a real democratic transfer of power since its independen­ce in 1960.

The democratic process begun in 1993 has often been interrupte­d by military coups.

In recent years, Niger has been hit by attacks from Boko Haram Islamists, whose insurgency has spilled over from neighbouri­ng Nigeria, but despite its porous borders the country is an island of stability in a troubled area. Besides Nigeria, neighbouri­ng Mali and Libya are also battling jihadist groups. — AFP

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