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Niger on 'inexorable march to sovereignty', says coup leader
Niger on 'inexorable march to sovereignty', says coup leader
by AFP Staff Writers
Niamey, Niger (AFP) July 25, 2024

Niger is on an "inexorable" march to "sovereignty", the west African country's military leader said on Thursday in a speech to mark the first anniversary of a coup d'etat that brought him to power.

Abdourahamane Tiani took power on July 26, 2023 after overthrowing elected president Mohamed Bazoum.

"Our march towards full and complete sovereignty is inexorable," said Tiani, two days after former colonial power France demanded Bazoum's "immediate and unconditional release" from detention.

"No state, no inter-state organisation will tell us how to behave, nor what programme of strategic or diplomatic partnerships to follow," Tiani added in a nationally televised speech.

France spoke out against Bazoum's detention following a decision to lift his immunity from prosecution.

Tiani was the head of Bazoum's presidential guard before removing him from power.

"Those who fantasise about an imminent return to the saddle of power of the regimes in their pay will be disillusioned," said Tiani, insisting that the West African country was on the path to "breaking the neocolonial order".

Since taking power, the junta has distanced itself from France and moved towards Russia's orbit.

French forces battling an Islamist insurgency in the Sahel were expelled at the end of 2023. The junta has also scrapped a military cooperation deal with the United States, whose troops completed a withdrawal from the capital this month and are due to leave a base in northern Niger by mid-September.

Dozens of people have been killed in clashes between the Nigerien army and jihadists in the north in recent weeks.

Three international NGOs said on Thursday that human rights in Niger have been "in free fall" since the coup.

Niger says at least 15 soldiers killed near Burkina border
Niamey, Niger (AFP) July 23, 2024 - The Niger defence ministry said on Tuesday that at least 15 soldiers had been killed during combat near the border with Burkina Faso.

"On Monday July 22, a unit of the defence and security forces exchanged fire with armed terrorist groups along the Bankilare-Tera route near the village of Foneko", it said in a communique read on state television, announcing a "preliminary toll" of 15 dead.

The ministry also said three soldiers were missing with 16 injured and hospitalised, adding that 21 "terrorists" had been killed in the clashes in the western region of Tillaberi.

The ministry went on to say the "prompt intervention of reinforcements from Tera" had forced the armed groups to retreat to the north.

The attack came almost exactly a year after a military coup which the army justified by the country's deteriorating security situation.

Twelve months on, armed groups notably from Islamic State and others loyal to Al-Qaeda, have continued to carry out attacks in the Tillaberi region, with bloody clashes over recent weeks leaving dozens dead on both sides.

Despite a large-scale rollout of troops and a junta promise to quadruple military numbers by 2030, civilians have also not been spared by the unrest -- though victim tolls remain imprecise amid scant independent data.

Tera is an intersection point for the thousands of cargo trucks arriving each month from the port of Lome, in Togo, via northern Burkina Faso. The lorries are escorted by troops from both neighbouring states.

Four weeks ago, 20 soldiers and one civilian were killed in the same region in an attack by armed groups. The army said it had killed "more than 100 terrorists" in response.

Earlier this month seven civilians were killed in the nearby village of Dosso Kouregou.

Niger is also having to contend with violence in its southeast from Boko Haram and Islamic State's West African offshoot.

Military leader General Abdourahamane Tiani meanwhile has declared Friday an official holiday to mark a year since the overthrow of elected President Mohamed Bazoum.

Since taking over, the junta has totally reset its international partnerships, asking former colonial power France late last year to withdraw its troops that had been combatting jihadist groups in the Sahel nation.

By mid-September, a US contingent is also due to pull out of an important drone base at Agadez in the north.

Instead, Niamey has been fostering closer links to Iran, Turkey and Russia.

Russia notably sent military instructors to Niger in April and May.

On a regional level, Niger has engaged in rapprochement with Burkina Faso and Mali, likewise ruled by military juntas after recent coups.

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