Niger’s new ruling junta shuts airspace, accuses neighbors of planning to invade
NIAMEY, Niger — Niger’s mutinous soldiers closed the country’s airspace and accused foreign powers of preparing an attack, as the new ruling junta defied a deadline to reinstate the ousted president.
State television announced the airspace closure Sunday night, hours before the deadline set by West African regional bloc ECOWAS, which has warned of military intervention if democratically elected President Mohamed Bazoum isn’t returned to power.
A spokesman for the coup leaders, Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane, noted “the threat of intervention being prepared in a neighboring country” and said Niger’s airspace would be closed until further notice. The junta also claimed that two central African countries were preparing to invade but did not specify which, and called on the populace to defend the country.
The junta said any attempt to fly over the country would be met with “an energetic and immediate response.”
International airlines have begun to divert flights around Niger’s airspace. The U.S. and other countries had seen Niger as the last major counter-terrorism partner in the vast Sahel region, south of the Sahara Desert, where groups linked to Al Qaeda and Islamic State are expanding their influence.
In Mali, the armed forces said Monday that Mali and Burkina Faso, neighbors of Niger that are also run by military juntas, were sending a delegation of officials to Niger to show support. Both countries have said they would consider any intervention in Niger as a “declaration of war” against them.
Niger is the West’s last, best ally in Africa’s Sahel. A coup there may be a victory for Russia.
Regional tensions have mounted since Niger’s coup nearly two weeks ago, with the mutinous soldiers detaining Bazoum and installing Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, former head of the presidential guard, as head of state. Analysts say the coup is believed to have been triggered by a power struggle between Tchiani and the president, who was about to fire him.
It was not immediately clear what ECOWAS would do now that Sunday’s deadline to restore Bazoum to power has passed. The region is divided on a course of action. There was no sign of military forces gathering at Niger’s border with Nigeria, the likely entry point by land.
On Saturday, Nigeria’s Senate pushed back on the possibility of military intervention, urging Nigeria’s president, the bloc’s current chair, to explore options other than the use of force. ECOWAS can still move ahead with intervention, as final decisions are made by consensus by member states.
A former British army officer who worked in Nigeria said military officials there told him Monday that Nigerian President Bolu Tinubu had not given orders to use military force. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.
The Biden administration says American aid worker Jeffery Woodke, who was kidnapped in Niger six years ago, has been released from captivity.
Guinea and neighboring Algeria, which is not an ECOWAS member, have come out against against the use of force. Senegal’s government has said it would participate in a military operation if one went ahead, and Ivory Coast has expressed support for ECOWAS’ efforts to restore constitutional order.
The junta in Niger does not appear interested in negotiation. An ECOWAS delegation sent to Niger last week for hours of talks was not allowed to leave the airport and met only with Tchiani’s representatives.
At a rally Sunday, thousands cheered the junta leaders, who said their loyalty would be repaid.
“We are with you against them. We will give you the Niger that you are owed,” Brig. Gen. Mohamed Toumba said. After his speech, the Associated Press saw rally-goers behead a chicken decorated in the colors of former colonizer France.
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The junta is exploiting anti-French sentiment among the population to shore up its support base and has severed security ties with France, which still has 1,500 military personnel in Niger for counter-terrorism efforts. On Monday, France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs formally discouraged any travel to Niger, Burkina Faso or Mali, and called on French nationals to be extremely vigilant. The day before, the ministry announced that France had suspended development aid to Burkina Faso.
It’s not clear what will happen to the French military presence in Niger, or to the 1,100 U.S. military personnel also in the country.
Many people, largely youth, have rallied around the junta, taking to the streets at night to patrol after being urged to guard against foreign intervention.
“While they [jihadists] kill our brothers and sisters ... ECOWAS didn’t intervene. Is it now that they will intervene?” said Amadou Boukari, a coup supporter at Sunday’s rally. “Shame on ECOWAS.”
The United Nations food agency says millions of hungry people in West Africa are left without aid because it is struggling with limited funding.
Niger’s junta has also asked for help from the Russian mercenary group Wagner, which operates in a handful of African countries, including Mali.
But others have expressed concerns about the junta’s tightening grip.
One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment, said the junta was scaring people into joining it.
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