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NIGER: Mohamed Bazoum leads the way

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The final results of the first round of the presidential election have not yet been announced and yet a name has come out according to the provisional results: Mohamed Bazoum! Even if we know that the official results of the presidential election of December 27 will be proclaimed on Saturday, January 02, according to a statement by the Independent National Electoral Commission, the CEN, the trend is in favor of former minister Mohamed Bazoum. The latter was well ahead in the score of partial results visible on the CNNI website.

Mohamed Bazoum is the candidate of the ruling party, the Nigerian Party for Democracy and Socialism (PNDS)-Tarayya. He is the right-hand man of outgoing President Mahamadou Issoufou who relinquished a third mandate in accordance with the Constitution. 

1.4 million Nigerians voted for him in this crucial election. Mohamed Bazoum thus leads the podium against his challengers. He is followed by former President Mahamane Ousmane who won 675,000 votes. As for the latter, he is supported by the main opponent Hama Amadou who was not able to stand in the presidential election. His candidacy was not selected because of a conviction by the courts. Seini Oumarou and Albadé Abouba, two former ministers, have respectively 345,000 votes and 260,000 votes.

According to the CÉNI website, these results concern the results of 225 of the 266 municipalities for more than 4 million votes out of the 7.4 million Nigerien voters who were called to the polls. However, Mohamed Bazoum is still far from the 50% of the ballot box to win in the first round.

In a few hours, Niger is preparing to live a democratic alternation, escaping the fever of the third mandate as it was the case in Guinea with the re-election of Alpha Condé and in Côte d’Ivoire with its counterpart Alassane Dramane Ouattara, both are running for a controversial third term.

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NIGER

NIGER – France begins the process of withdrawal of its committed forces

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Out of the impasse in Niger, without recognizing the de facto authorities and in a climate of growing hostility, this is what Paris is trying to do. After five weeks of tensions with the perpetrators of the coup d’état on July 26, France finally began discussions on the redeployment of part of its forces engaged in this Sahel country, on Wednesday, September 06, 2023.

After initially refusing to comply with the injunctions of the Nigerien military, who made the departure of the French soldiers their political fuel, the Ministry of Armies and several concordant sources admitted, Tuesday, September 5, the World opened a discussion on the modalities of the «withdrawal of certain military elements».

At the beginning of August, the junta gave France a month to withdraw from Nigerien territory, after having denounced the military cooperation agreements that until now linked Paris and Niamey. On Saturday, September 2, on the eve of the expiration of the ultimatum set by the putschists, thousands of pro-junta Nigeriens demonstrated again against the presence of the French military, a few steps from the base they occupy in Niamey with other foreign detachments.

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NIGER

NIGER – Demonstrators want the departure of French soldiers

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Thousands of protesters gathered on Friday near a military base housing French forces in the Nigerien capital Niamey to demand the departure of French soldiers, AFP journalists said.

This “sit-in” organized at the call of the M62 Movement, a coalition of civil society organizations hostile to the French military presence in Niger, was preceded by numerous rallies with similar demands since the coup of July 26, and must last until Sunday.

“France must leave and it will leave, because it is not at home in Niger,” said Falma Taya, a leader of the M62 Movement, haranguing the crowd.

In the shade of the walls of the houses bordering the base, the demonstrators were sitting on carpets and mats under a strong heat.

“We are here for as long as it takes, until the last French soldier empties the place,” said Ibrahim Abdou, a member of a “Military Support Committee”, wearing a t-shirt bearing the image of General Abdourahamane Tiani, the country’s new strongman.

On 3 August, the soldiers who seized power in a coup d’état denounced several military agreements with France, which has 1,500 soldiers deployed in the anti-jihadist struggle in Niger.

The agreements all contained different notices for their effective end, one of which, relating to a 2012 text, was one month, according to the military.

Several calls for “sit-ins” were launched by civil society organizations from Friday afternoon to request the departure of French forces.

Niger’s military regime is engaged in a diplomatic standoff with France, a former colonial power.

The diplomatic immunity and visa of the French ambassador to Niger were withdrawn and the authorities notified Tuesday in Paris of their intention to expel him.

Last Friday, they had initially left 48H to Sylvain Itté to leave the territory, an ultimatum rejected by Paris that argues that this government is illegitimate and has no authority to base such a request.

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NIGER

NIGER – Political tension: President Emmanuel Macron shoots putschists

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Faced with the will of the putschists in Niger who want to expel the French ambassador to Niger, President Emmanuel Macron does not intend to yield to pressure.

At the annual conference of ambassadors held at the Elysée Palace on Monday, August 28, 2023, the French President defended the retention of the ambassador in Niamey. Emmanuel Macron is uncompromising:

“The problem of Nigeriens today is that they are being threatened by putschists because they are abandoning the fight against terrorism, they are abandoning a policy that is economically sound. They are losing all the international funding that allowed them to get out of poverty. That is the reality. We do not recognize the putschists and we support President Bazoum. We support the diplomatic and even military action of ECOWAS in a partnership approach” served the Head of State of France.

The tenant of the Elysee Palace believes that a coup against a democratically elected president, from a minority ethnic group and who has carried out courageous reforms is simply unacceptable. “Our policy is the right one! It is based on the courage of President Bazoum, the commitment of our diplomats who remain despite the pressure and thanks to the commitment of our internal security forces and our military. We are clear, we will not yield to a narrative used for the putschists that consists in saying that our enemy is France,” Macron added.

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