NIGER: MARCH IN NIAMEY AGAINST PRESENCE OF FRENCH ARMY
NIAMEY - Several hundred people demonstrated peacefully on Sunday in the streets of the Nigerien capital Niamey, to protest against the French anti-jihadist force Barkhane, while praising Russia, a journalist from AFP noted.
With cries of “Barkhane out”, “Down with France”, “Long live Putin and Russia,” the demonstrators went through some streets of the capital before holding a meeting in front of the headquarters of the National Assembly.
Some demonstrators carried Russian flags and held up signs hostile to France and Barkhane.
Some of the placards read “Get out of the criminal French army” or “The colonial army Barkhane must go” in this demonstration authorised by the municipal authorities of Niamey.
Some 3, 000 French troops are still deployed in the Sahel - including Niger, one of Paris’ main allies - after their total withdrawal from Mali.
The Barkhane force had been ousted by the junta in power in Mali since 2020, which is suspected of working with the Russian paramilitary group Wagner.
In April, Niger’s deputies had largely voted in favour of a text authorising the deployment of foreign forces on the territory, including French, to fight jihadists.
“There are anti-French slogans because we demand the immediate departure of the Barkhane force in Niger, which is alienating our sovereignty and destabilising the Sahel,” Seydou Abdoulaye, the coordinator of the M62 Movement, which is organising the demonstration, told AFP.
Wearing a T-shirt bearing the image of Burkina Faso’s former revolutionary president Thomas Sankara, he accused the former colonial power of “active support” for “jihadists who have spread terrorism from Mali,” which borders Niger and Burkina Faso.
Last month, the Malian government accused France of supporting jihadist groups, statements that were “insulting” to Paris. – AFRICA NEWS.