
NIGER IS THE FOURTH COUNTRY
IN THE SAHEL TO HAVE AN ANTI-WESTERN COUP
The Coup In Niger Follows Coups In Mali, Burkina Faso, And Guinea.
Each of these
was led by military officers angered by the presence of French and US troops
and by economic crises inflicted on their countries
At 3 a.m.
on July 26, 2023, the presidential guard detained President
Mohamed Bazoum in Niamey, the capital of Niger. Troops,
led by Brigadier General Abdourahmane Tchiani closed
the country’s borders and declared a curfew. The coup d’état was immediately
condemned by the Economic Community
of West African States, by the African Union,
and by the European
Union. Both France and the United States—which have military bases in
Niger—said that they were watching the situation closely. A tussle between the
Army—which claimed to be pro-Bazoum—and the
presidential guard threatened the capital, but it soon fizzled out. On July 27,
General Abdou Sidikou Issa of the army released
a statement saying
that he would accept the situation to “avoid a deadly confrontation between the
different forces which… could cause a bloodbath.” Brigadier General Tchiani went on television on July 28 to announce that he was
the new president of the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland (Conseil
National pour la Sauvegarde de la Patrie or CNSP).
The coup in
Niger follows similar coups in Mali (August 2020 and May 2021) and Burkina Faso
(January 2022 and September 2022), and Guinea (September 2021). Each of these
coups was led by military officers angered by the presence of French and U.S.
troops and by the permanent economic crises inflicted on their countries. This
region of Africa—the Sahel—has faced a cascade of crises:
the desiccation of the land due to the climate catastrophe, the rise of Islamic
militancy due to the 2011 NATO war in Libya, the increase in smuggling networks
to traffic weapons, humans, and drugs across the desert, the appropriation of natural
resources—including uranium and gold—by Western companies that have simply not
paid adequately for these riches, and the entrenchment of Western military
forces through the construction of bases and the operation of these armies with
impunity.
Two days after
the coup, the CNSP announced the
names of the 10 officers who lead the CNSP. They come from the entire range of the
armed forces, from the army (General Mohamed Toumba) to the Air Force (Colonel
Major Amadou Abouramane) to the national police
(Deputy General Manager Assahaba Ebankawel).
It is by now clear that one of the most influential members of the CNSP is
General Salifou Mody, former chief of staff of the military and leader in the
Supreme Council for the Restoration of Democracy, which led the February 2010
coup against President Mamadou Tandja
and which governed Niger until Bazoum’s predecessor
Mahamadou Issoufou won the 2011 presidential election. It was during Issoufou’s
time in office that the United States government built the
world’s largest drone base in Agadez and that the French special forces garrisoned the
city of Irlit on behalf of the uranium mining company
Orano (formerly a part of Areva).
It is important
to note that General Salifou Mody is perceived as an influential member of CNSP
given his influence in the army and his international contacts. On February 28,
2023, Mody met with the United States Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
General Mark Milley during the African Chiefs of Defense Conference in Rome
to discuss “regional
stability, including counterterrorism cooperation and the continued fight against
violent extremism in the region.” On March 9, Mody visited Mali to meetwith
Colonel Assimi Goïta and the
Chief of Staff of the Malian army General
Oumar Diarra to strengthen military cooperation between Niger and
Mali. A few days later on March 16, U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken visited Niger
to meet with Bazoum. In what many in Niger perceived as
a sidelining of Mody, he was appointed on
June 1 as the Nigerien ambassador to the United Arab Emirates. Mody, it is said
in Niamey, is the voice in the ear of Brigadier General Tchiani,
the titular head of state.
Corruption And The West
A highly informed
source in Niger tells us that the reason why the military moved against Bazoum is that “he’s corrupt, a
pawn of France. Nigerians were fed up with him and his gang. They are in the process
of arresting the members of the deposed system, who embezzled public funds,
many of whom have taken refuge in foreign embassies.” The issue of corruption
hangs over Niger, a country with one of the world’s most lucrative uranium
deposits. The “corruption” that is talked about in Niger is not about petty
bribes by government officials, but about an entire structure—developed during
French colonial rule—that prevents Niger from establishing sovereignty over its
raw materials and over its development.
At the heart
of the “corruption” is the so-called “joint venture” between Niger and France
called Société des mines de l’Aïr
(Somaïr), which owns and operates the uranium
industry in the country. Strikingly, 85 percent of Somaïr
is owned by France’s Atomic Energy Commission and two French companies, while
only 15 percent is owned by Niger’s government. Niger produces over
5 percent of the world’s uranium, but its uranium is of a very high quality. Half
of Niger’s export
receipts are from sales of uranium, oil, and gold. One in three
lightbulbs in France are powered by
uranium from Niger, at the same time as 42 percent of the African country’s population lived below
the poverty line. The people of Niger have watched their wealth slip through their
fingers for decades. As a mark of the government’s weakness, over the course of
the past decade, Niger has lost over $906 million in only 10 arbitration cases
brought by multinational corporations before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment
Disputes and the International Chamber
of Commerce.
France stopped
using the franc in 2002 when it switched to the Euro system. But, fourteen
former French colonies continued to use the Communauté
Financiére Africaine (CFA),
which gives immense advantages to France (50 percent of the reserves of these countries
have to be held in the French Treasury and France’s devaluations of the CFA—as
in 1994—have catastrophic effects on the country’s that use it). In 2015, Chad’s
president Idriss Déby Itno said that
the CFA “pulls African economies down” and that the “time had come to cut the cord
that prevents Africa from developing.” Talk now across the Sahel is for not
only the removal of French troops—as has taken place in Burkina
Faso and in Mali—but
of a break with the French economic hold on the region.
The New Non-Alignment
At the 2023
Russia-Africa Summit in July, Burkina Faso’s leader, President Ibrahim Traoré
wore a red beret that echoed the uniform of the assassinated socialist leader
of his country, Thomas Sankara. Traoré reacted strongly to the condemnation of
the military coups in the Sahel, including to a recent visit to
his country by an African Union delegation. “A slave that does not rebel does not
deserve pity,” he said.
“The African Union must stop condemning Africans who decide to fight against their
own puppet regimes of the West.”
In February,
Burkina Faso had hosted a meeting that included the governments of Mali and
Guinea. On the agenda is the creation of a new federation of
these states. It is likely that Niger will be invited into these conversations.
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor, and journalist. He is
a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is an editor of LeftWord Books and
the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.
He has written more than 20 books, including “The Darker Nations” and “The Poorer
Nations.” His latest books are “Struggle Makes Us Human: Learning from Movements
for Socialism” and (with Noam Chomsky) “The Withdrawal: Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan,
and the Fragility of U.S. Power.”
Kambale Musavuli,
a native of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), is a leading political and cultural
Congolese voice. Based in Accra, Ghana, he is a policy analyst with the Center
for Research on the Congo-Kinshasa.