Niger junta identifies leader as Salou Djibo
Sat, 20 Feb 2010 09:12:00
NIAMEY, Niger: A junta that seized power in a coup in the West African nation of Niger named a squadron chief as its leader Friday
Niger junta identifies leader as Salou Djibo
President Mamadou Tandja of Niger is shown attending a conference in this 2007 file photo. (EPA)
By DALATOU MAMANE | AP
Posted by Arab News
Published: Feb 19, 2010 2:53 PM Updated: Feb 20, 2010 12:04 AM
NIAMEY,
Niger: A junta that seized power in a coup in the West African nation
of Niger named a squadron chief as its leader Friday, hours after
soldiers announced on state TV that their group was in charge of the
uranium-rich country.
In a statement,
the junta calling itself the Supreme Council for the Restoration of
Democracy said it was being led by Salou Djibo.
Armed soldiers stormed the
presidential palace with a hail of gunfire Thursday, kidnapping the
country's strongman president. The whereabouts of President Mamadou
Tandja remained unknown Friday.
The junta said it wanted to turn
Niger into “an example of democracy and of good
governance.” A diplomat in the region described the coup's
leaders as being part of an army faction that is deeply disillusioned
with Tandja for violating his constitutionally mandated term limit.
The uranium-rich country has become
increasingly isolated since then, with the 15-nation regional bloc of
West African states suspending Niger from its ranks and the US
government cutting off non-humanitarian aid and imposing travel
restrictions on some government officials.
However, there are also fears that
the military group could attempt to cling to power in Niger, as the
junta in Guinea did following a December 2008 coup. The coup leader
there first promised to hold elections in which he would not run, only
to later suggest he may have changed his mind. Only a year later, he
went into voluntarily exile after his aide-de-camp tried to assassinate
him.
The African Union's top executive,
Jean Ping, condemned the coup in Niger and said Friday that the AU
“demands a quick return to constitutional order.” In
Washington, US State Department spokesman P.J.
Crowley said Tandja may have
invited his own fate by “trying to extend his mandate in
office.” Both the United States and ECOWAS have expressed our
concerns about that, and obviously that may well have been an act on
his behalf that precipitated this act today,” Crowley said
Thursday, while adding that the US does not defend the violent
takeover. ECOWAS is the regional bloc of 15 West African countries.
In their broadcast on state TV, the soldiers said the country was under a curfew and that all its borders have been sealed.
Even the private plane of the
Senegalese foreign minister was prevented from landing in Niger by the
army, said Senegalese government spokesman Bamba Ndiaye. The minister
had been dispatched by Senegal's President Abdoulaye Wade, whom ECOWAS
named as mediator for Niger's political crisis just days before.
It was unclear where Niger's
septuagenarian president was on Friday. French radio station Radio
France Internationale reported that the soldiers had politely escorted
Tandja outside to a waiting car, which drove him toward a military camp
on the outskirts of the capital.
During Niger's 1999 coup, though,
the country's military strongman was killed in a hail of heavy machine
gunfire at Niamey's airport as he prepared to board a helicopter.
Official announcements at the time
insisted it was an “unfortunate accident.” A diplomat in
neighboring Burkina Faso said the mutinous soldiers on Thursday had
been led by Col. Abdoulaye Adamou Harouna, the former aide-de-camp of
Niger's previous coup leader Maj. Daouda Mallam Wanke. The diplomat
asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the
media.
In Niamey, soldiers contacted by
telephone inside their barracks said the coup was led by Col. Adamou
Harouna, but gave a different first name - saying it was Djibril, not
Abdoulaye. They did not confirm whether he was an aide to Wanke.
Wanke led Niger's 1999 coup, but
organized democratic elections less than a year later, which Tandja
won. But instead of stepping down as mandated by law on Dec. 22, Tandja
triggered a political crisis by pushing through a new constitution in
August that removed term limits and gave him greater powers.
News Link: http://arabnews.com/world/article19404.ece
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Article by:
DALATOU MAMANE | AP
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