Citing threat of attacks, Niger puts army on highest alert

Nigerien nationals board a bus in the border town of Malanville, Benin, to travel to neighboring countries. The junta is resisting regional pressure to stand down. (Reuters)
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Nigerien nationals board a bus in the border town of Malanville, Benin, to travel to neighboring countries. The junta is resisting regional pressure to stand down. (Reuters)
Nigerien police officers sit outside the customs offices in Niamey, Niger, on August 21, 2023. (AP)
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Nigerien police officers sit outside the customs offices in Niamey, Niger, on August 21, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 26 August 2023
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Citing threat of attacks, Niger puts army on highest alert

Nigerien nationals board a bus in the border town of Malanville, Benin, to travel to neighboring countries. The junta is resisti
  • Internal document issued by its defense chief on Friday deemed threat authentic
  • ECOWAS has been trying to negotiate with the leaders of the July 26 coup

NIAMEY: The junta in Niger has ordered its armed forces to go on highest alert, citing an increased threat of attack, according to an internal document issued by its defense chief on Friday that a security source in the country confirmed was authentic.

The document, which was shared widely online on Saturday, said the order to be on maximum alert would allow forces to respond adequately in case of any attack and “avoid a general surprise.”
“Threats of aggression to the national territory are increasingly being felt,” it said.
The main West African bloc ECOWAS has been trying to negotiate with the leaders of the July 26 coup, but has said it is ready to deploy troops to restore constitutional order if diplomatic efforts fail.
On Friday, the bloc downplayed this threat and said it was “determined to bend backwards to accommodate diplomatic efforts,” although an intervention remained one of the options the table.
“For the avoidance of doubt, let me state unequivocally that ECOWAS has neither declared war on the people of Niger, nor is there a plan, as it is being purported, to invade the country, ECOWAS Commission President Omar Alieu Touray said.
The bloc’s decision earlier in August to activate a so-called standby force for a possible intervention has raised fears of an escalation that could further destabilize the insurgency-torn Sahel region.
Niamey’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Friday that Niger’s military rulers gave the French ambassador 48 hours to leave the country,
France’s government quickly rejected the order against its ambassador, repeating that it did not recognize the military rulers’ authority.
The French Foreign Ministry said on Friday evening: “The putschists do not have the authority to make this request, the ambassador’s approval coming solely from the legitimate elected Nigerien authorities.”
Paris has repeatedly backed calls by ECOWAS for the reinstatement of Bazoum.
France has 1,500 soldiers based in Niger who had been helping Bazoum in the fight against extremist forces that have been active in the country for years.
Niger’s northern neighbor Algeria has also warned of disastrous consequences for the region from an intervention.
Foreign Minister Ahmed Attaf this week toured West African countries to try to find a solution to a crisis in which Algiers firmly opposes any military option.
“There is a time for everything and we are currently in the time of finding peaceful solutions,” he said on a visit to Benin.
“Let’s put all our imagination into giving every chance to a political solution.”