West Africa army chiefs to meet in coming days to discuss possible Niger intervention

Concerns rise over detention conditions of ousted president Mohamed Bazoum

Members of the armed forces of Senegal on the sidelines of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), which held an emergency summit on the coup in Niger. Photograph: Kola Sulaimon/Getty Images
Members of the armed forces of Senegal on the sidelines of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), which held an emergency summit on the coup in Niger. Photograph: Kola Sulaimon/Getty Images

West African army chiefs will meet in the coming days to prepare plans for a possible military intervention in Niger, a spokesperson for the regional bloc said on Friday, as concern grew over the detention conditions of ousted president Mohamed Bazoum.

The Ecowas bloc of west African states ordered the activation of a standby force on Thursday, two weeks after generals ousted Mr Bazoum in the seventh coup in west and central Africa in three years.

The chiefs of staff meeting indicates that west African nations are stepping up preparations to commit troops for a possible action to reverse the coup.

“One [meeting] is being planned for next week,” the Ecowas spokesperson said. A Nigerian official and an Ivory Coast army source said the meeting would be held on Saturday in Ghana.

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It was not yet clear how big the force would be, how long it would take to assemble, and if it would actually invade.

But the proposed mission has raised the spectre of deepening conflict in a strategically important region where Western powers have lost sway during the spate of coups and where Russian influence appears on the rise.

Ecowas said all options were on the table and it still hoped for a peaceful resolution to the Niger crisis.

EU begins work on sanctions against Niger military juntaOpens in new window ]

Security analysts said an Ecowas force could take weeks or longer to assemble, potentially leaving room for negotiations.

Ivory Coast is the only country so far to specify how many troops it would send. President Alassane Ouattara on Thursday promised a battalion of 850 troops.

Benin’s army spokesman said on Friday it would contribute troops but did not say how many. Senegal said last week it would contribute troops if there were an intervention.

Most other EcowasS countries – including regional heavyweight Nigeria, which holds its rotating presidency – have so far declined to comment.

Gambia’s defence minister Sering Modou Njie and Liberia’s minister of information Ledgerhood Rennie said on Friday they had not yet taken a decision to send troops.

Military governments in neighbouring Mali and Burkina Faso, both Ecowas members, have said they will defend the junta in Niger.

The junta has yet to react to Ecowas’s decision although it has given no indication that it might relinquish power.

Meanwhile, the African Union, the European Union and the United States all said they were increasingly worried about Mr Bazoum’s detention conditions.

The African Union called on the international community to rally to “save the moral and physical integrity of” Mr Bazoum and end what it called the “worryingly poor conditions” of his detention.

Human Rights Watch said it had spoken to Mr Bazoum this week and that he had told them that his family’s treatment in custody was “inhuman and cruel”.

“My son is sick, has a serious heart condition, and needs to see a doctor,” HRW quoted Mr Bazoum as telling them.

Mr Bazoum’s daughter Zazia Bazoum, who is in France, told Britain’s Guardian newspaper the junta was keeping him in deplorable conditions to try to pressure him to sign a resignation letter.

The coup in uranium-rich Niger, one of the world’s poorest countries but a key ally for the West in the fight against Islamist militants in the Sahel region, was triggered by internal politics but has repercussions far beyond its borders.

US, French, German and Italian troops are stationed in Niger as part of the fight against local affiliates of the terror groups al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

The capital Niamey was calm on Friday morning, but residents were angered by the threat of military intervention. “Deep down inside, I’m not afraid, I’m going about my business. I think this is just blackmail,” Balla Souleymane, said of Ecowas’s decisions.

Since the coup, many Nigeriens have turned up at junta-organised rallies to show support for the generals, criticising Western powers and lauding Russia, mirroring reactions following recent coups in Mali and Burkina Faso, whose military juntas kicked out French forces after taking power.

The embassy of former colonial power France has been the target of protests in Niamey.

France said it fully backed all the conclusions of the Ecowas emergency summit held on Thursday. But it stayed clear of outlining any concrete support it could give to any potential intervention. – Reuters