The Borneo Post

23 police reported hurt in Niger demo

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NIAMEY: Twenty-three police were hurt and a police station was set on fire in demonstrat­ions against financial reforms late Sunday in the Niger capital of Niamey, the interior minister and private TV stations reported.

“The toll sadly is high: we have 23 injured policemen, four of them seriously hurt.

Fourteen vehicles have been destroyed, 10 of them police vehicles,” Interior Minister Mohamed Bazoum said on television on Sunday.

The police commissari­at at the Habou Bene market, the country’s biggest trading spot, was torched and the front of the building housing the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (CENI), Niger’s voting watchdog, was vandalised, private television reported.

“All those who bear responsibi­lity for these events ... will respond for ... their acts,” Bazoum said.

Local civil society organisati­ons have for weeks been denouncing the 2018 budget for imposing austerity on one of the poorest countries on the planet.

Bazoum said a civilian group called Actice – the Associatio­n for the Defence of the Rights of Consumers of Informatio­n Technology, Communicat­ion and Energy – which had received the authorisat­ion to demonstrat­ion on Sunday was being dissolved.

More than 1,000 demonstrat­ors rallied near the city centre to protest against the government’s financial plan that they branded “anti-social” and said created new taxes.

Violence broke out as a group of protesters tried to head to a square opposite parliament that is a traditiona­l rallying point – a destinatio­n banned under the authorisat­ion – and police fired teargas to try to stop them.

Bazoum accused the Nigerien Democratic Movement, or Modem, of being behind the protests and of being “tempted” by the “insurrecti­onal model” in neighbouri­ng Burkina Faso to gain power.

A popular uprising unseated Burkina Faso’s then-president Blaise Compaore in 2014, after he tried to extend his 27-year grip on power.

It was followed by a general election in 2015 that was largely seen as democratic. — AFP

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