Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Niger junta invites two nations’ troops

- CHINEDU ASADU Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Baba Ahmed of The Associated Press.

ABUJA, Nigeria — Niger’s junta authorized troops from neighborin­g Mali and Burkina Faso to come to its defense and asked the French ambassador to leave the country Friday, raising the stakes in a standoff with other West African nations that are threatenin­g force to reinstate Niger’s democratic­ally elected president.

The junta leader, Brig. Gen. Abdrahmane Tchiani, signed two executive orders authorizin­g the “security forces of Burkina Faso and Mali to intervene on Niger territory in the event of aggression,” senior junta official Oumarou Ibrahim Sidi said late Thursday after hosting a delegation from the two countries in the Nigerien capital, Niamey.

Sidi did not provide further details about the military support from the two countries whose military regimes have said any use of force by the West African bloc ECOWAS against Niger’s junta would be treated as an act of war against their own nations.

The Nigerien Ministry of

Foreign Affairs said French Ambassador Sylvain Itte was asked to leave Niger within 48 hours in a letter that accused him of ignoring an invitation for a meeting with the ministry.

The letter dated Friday also cited “actions of the French government contrary to the interests of Niger.”

Before last month’s ouster of Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum, Niger, a former French colony, was seen as the West’s last major partner against jihadi violence in the Sahel region below the Sahara Desert, which is rife with anti-French sentiment.

The French Embassy in Niamey was attacked in the early days of the July 26 coup. The military leaders of the coup have requested help from private Russian military company Wagner to stem extremist attacks.

The status of that request after the death of Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin in a plane crash this week is unknown. ECOWAS said on Friday that along with the African Union, it “stands against the use of private military contractor­s.”

The junta’s agreement with Mali and Burkina Faso was the latest of several actions taken by Niger’s mutinous soldiers to defy sanctions and consolidat­e a junta they have said would rule for up to three years, further escalating the crisis after last month’s coup in the country of more than 25 million people.

The ECOWAS Commission president, Omar Alieu Touray, said Friday that the bloc’s threat to use force to reinstate Bazoum was “still on the table,” rejecting the junta’s three-year transition plan.

Eleven of the bloc’s 15 countries, not including the military-ruled countries of Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea and Niger itself, have expressed commitment­s to deploy troops to restore democracy in Niger once a decision is made to intervene.

The bloc would in the meantime continue to explore diplomatic options to reverse the coup, Touray told reporters in Nigeria’s capital city of Abuja.

The latest of such diplomatic efforts came Thursday when Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, who is the chairman of the regional bloc, sent a delegation of Islamic leaders to speak with the junta.

Touray said the West African heads of state would decide on when to use force whenever they feel like all diplomatic means have failed.

“ECOWAS cannot just fold its hands,” he said.

Details of what has been called the ECOWAS “standby” force have not been released.

The junta has been exploiting grievances among the population toward Niger’s former colonial ruler, France. It also has accused Bazoum’s government of failing to do enough to protect the country from Islamic extremists.

On Friday, Niger also faced new sanctions when the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporatio­n — which has signed $750 million in grant programs with the country since 2008 — suspended operations that focused on improving agricultur­e, women’s literacy and roads in Niger.

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