Military mutiny in Niger comes after string of coups across region

Military mutiny in Niger comes after string of coups across region

Rebel soldiers in Niger deposed the country’s Western-allied president, Mohamed Bazoum, last week, amid a backdrop of political upheaval, a rise in Islamist extremism and growing Russian influence across the region.

Britain, France, Germany and the European Union announced the end of aid to Niger after the ouster, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States could follow suit. So far, President Biden has not labeled the situation a coup. West African countries warned of military intervention if Bazoum is not returned to power by Sunday.

Bazoum’s overthrow, if successful, would add Niger to a growing list of junta-led countries, including Burkina Faso, Chad, Guinea, Mali and Sudan, that create a geographical belt of turmoil across Africa.

Coup supporters in Niger’s capital city of Niamey, as well as in neighboring Burkina Faso and Mali, have been spotted waving Russian flags, and experts say uncertainty around the coup leaders’ motivation may hamper Western attempts to restore Bazoum through diplomacy.

The coup has also thrust the fate of Niger’s uranium to center stage as experts say European countries may have to grapple with the effects on the nuclear industry — especially in France, which announced plans Tuesday to evacuate European nationals from the country.

Niger has been a key ally of the United States, which has deployed about 800 troops at a time to the country and operates drones out of a military base in Agadez. Shortly after Bazoum’s removal, Blinken confirmed communication with him and the Niger government, and said that officials “condemn any efforts to seize power by force.”

U.S. laws prohibit military aid to junta regimes, and it is unclear what repercussions the ongoing events will have on U.S. military activity in the country.

Burkina FasoReturn to menu

The country saw two coups within about eight months in 2022, beginning with Lt. Col. Paul-Henri Damiba’s overthrow of President Roch Kaboré that January. Damiba promised to restore the country’s security after a rise in attacks by Islamic extremists.

The current leader, Capt. Ibrahim Traoré, ousted Damiba in September after a mutinous group of military leaders saw no improvement in the violence.

The Pentagon has stationed U.S. Green Berets in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso’s capital, and the State Department pays contractors to train the country’s forces, the Wall Street Journal reported, in the hope of countering a growing Islamist militant threat and the Russian mercenary Wagner Group’s influence in the region.

MaliReturn to menu

Led by Assimi Goïta, a group of Malian military leaders overthrew President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta on Aug. 18, 2020, after anti-government protests over corruption, pandemic management, the country’s poor economy and ongoing security threats.

International leaders and the United Nations Security Council condemned the coup, and the United States ended military assistance to Mali three days later.

In early January 2021, the junta backed out of a September 2020 agreement to transition the country back to civilian elections after Bah N’daw was installed as interim president. In May 2021, Goïta staged another coup and remains in power today.

Recent U.S. sanctions have targeted key junta leaders for their connections to the Wagner Group, which is believed to have 1,000 fighters in the country and has been accused of human rights violations against Malian civilians.

GuineaReturn to menu

U.S.-trained Special Forces military commander Mamady Doumbouya ousted Guinea’s first democratically elected president, Alpha Condé, in September 2021 after years of protests against Condé altering the constitution to allow himself a third term and imprisoning opposition candidates.

The United States condemned the coup and terminated military assistance to the country, which had included sending small teams of U.S. Special Forces to train Guinean special forces.

Amid criticism and ongoing violent protests, Doumbouya agreed to return the country to civilian rule with a 24-month transition beginning in early 2023.

ChadReturn to menu

After President Idriss Déby, who seized control in his own 1990 coup, was killed in a military operation against rebels on Chad’s northern border in April 2021, the speaker of parliament should have ascended to the presidency. Instead, a military council took control and installed Déby’s son, Gen. Mahamat Idriss Déby, as president, leading to deadly protests in the capital.

The elder Déby had been a Western ally against Islamist extremist group Boko Haram, and the United States did not formally impose sanctions on the country after the unconstitutional transition of power.

SudanReturn to menu

Sudanese Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan seized control of the country in 2021, ending a precarious power-sharing agreement between Sudan’s government and military forces enacted after the military deposed President Omar Hassan al-Bashir in 2019 amid pro-democracy protests.

Tensions have risen this year as Burhan’s government struggles to transition to civilian rule, resulting in some of the worst fighting the country has ever seen between the Sudanese-armed forces and paramilitary rebels.

In April, the Pentagon sent two warships to the Port of Sudan and the United States evacuated hundreds of citizens from the devolving chaos that has resulted in hundreds of deaths and an impending human-rights crisis.  » …
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