Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Allies of Niger president seek help to rescue him

- By Ellen Knickmeye and Tracy Brown

WASHINGTON — After nearly three weeks of appealing to the United States and other allies for help restoring Niger’s president to power, friends and supporters of the democratic­ally elected leader are making a simpler plea: Save his life.

President Mohamed Bazoum, leader of the last remaining Western-allied democracy across a vast stretch of Africa’s Sahara and Sahel, sits confined with his family in an unlit basement of his presidenti­al compound, cut off from resupplies of food and from electricit­y and cooking gas by the junta that overthrew him, Niger’s ambassador to the United States told The Associated Press.

“They are killing him,” said the ambassador, Mamadou Kiari Liman-Tinguiri, a close associate who maintains daily calls with the detained leader. The two have been colleagues for three decades, since the now 63-year-old president was a young philosophy instructor, a teacher’s union leader, and a democracy advocate noted for his eloquence.

“The plan of the head of the junta is to starve him to death,” Liman-Tinguiri told the AP in one of his first interviews since mutinous troops allegedly cut off food deliveries to the president, his wife and his 20-year-old son almost a week ago.

“This is inhuman, and the world should not tolerate that,” the ambassador said. “It cannot be tolerated in 2023.”

On Saturday, the president’s captors allowed a doctor to visit the family for the first time, and brought some food, a presidenti­al adviser told the AP. The adviser, who was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, declined to give details.

Mr. Bazoum sits in the dark basement, the ambassador said. He answers the phone when a call comes in that he knows to be his friend or someone else he wants to speak to. The beleaguere­d president and his ambassador, whom junta members have declared out of a job, talk one or more times a day.

Mr. Bazoum has not been seen out in public since July 26, when military vehicles blocked the gates to the presidenti­al palace and security forces announced they were taking power. It is not possible to independen­tly determine the president’s circumstan­ces. The United States, United Nations and others have expressed repeated concern for what they called Mr. Bazoum’s deteriorat­ing conditions in detention, and warned the junta they would hold it responsibl­e for the well-being of Mr. Bazoum and his family.

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