Niger junta accuses France of amassing forces for military intervention

Niger’s new military leaders have accused France of amassing forces for a possible military intervention in the country following the coup in July.

French president Emmanuel Macron said on Sunday that he would only take action at the demand of deposed Nigerien leader Mohamed Bazoum.

Niger’s junta spokesman, Major Amadou Abdramane, said that France was also considering collaborating in such an intervention with the
Economic Community of West African States, a regional bloc known as ECOWAS.

“France continues to deploy its forces in several ECOWAS countries as part of preparations for an aggression against Niger,” Maj Abdramane said late on Saturday in a statement broadcast on state television.

French president Emmanuel Macron
French president Emmanuel Macron his country ‘fully’ supported the position of ECOWAS (Evelyn Hockstein, Pool/AP)

“If we redeploy anything, it will only be at the demand of Bazoum and in co-ordination with him, not with those people who are holding a president hostage,” he said.

But Mr Macron added that France “fully” supported the position of ECOWAS, which had said it was considering a military intervention as an option to reinstate Mr Bazoum as president.

Since toppling Mr Bazoum, the junta in Niger, a former French colony, has leveraged anti-French sentiment among the population — asking the French ambassador and troops to leave — to shore up its support in resistance to regional and international pressure to reinstate the president.

The country had been a strategic partner of France and the West in the fight against growing jihadi violence in the conflict-ridden Sahel region, the arid expanse below the Sahara Desert.

“This is why the National Council for the Protection of the Fatherland and the transitional government launch a solemn appeal to the great people of Niger to be vigilant and never to demobilise until the inevitable departure of French troops from our territory,” he said.

Meanwhile, French military spokesperson Colonel Pierre Gaudilliere said previously that there was now “a little less” than its 1,500 troops in Niger who had been working with Nigerien security forces to beat back the jihadi violence.

All French activities had been suspended since the coup, “therefore, declarations that have been made (earlier by the French) are about exploring what we’re going to do with these capabilities”, Col Gaudilliere said.

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