Tag: Niger

  • Niger partners U.S varsity on Minna study centre

    Niger partners U.S varsity on Minna study centre

    Niger State and Kent State University in Ohio, United States have signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MoA).

     This agreement encompasses student and lecturer exchange programmes, scholarships, vocational and executive education, and institutional capacity enhancement for educational establishments, among others.

     Furthermore, the state intends to establish a Niger State – Kent State University Study Centre in Minna.

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     This centre will offer a platform for students and faculty to participate in academic and cultural exchanges to augment educational prospects.

    Governor Mohammed Bago said the MoA marks a milestone in the drive to set the benchmark for education in Nigeria.

     In another meeting in Kent, Ohio, Bago engaged Nigeria-USA Chamber of Commerce.

     The chamber presented opportunities for collaboration in agriculture, value chain enhancement, exports, and mining with the government

  • Niger begins three-day national mourning for killed soldiers

    Niger begins three-day national mourning for killed soldiers

    Niger began three days of national mourning yesterday after 29 soldiers were killed in a suspected jihadist attack, the deadliest since the military took power in July.

    The latest violence comes as the country’s coup leaders indicated they were considering neighbouring Algeria’s offer to mediate talks for a transition back to civilian rule.

    Niger is battling two jihadist insurgencies — a spillover in its southeast from a long-running conflict in neighbouring Nigeria, and an offensive in the west by militants crossing from Mali and Burkina Faso.

    When military leaders overthrew democratically elected president Mohamed Bazoum on July 26, they cited the deterioration of the security situation in the country as justification.

    Monday’s attack in western Niger involved “improvised explosive devices and kamikaze vehicles by more than a hundred terrorists”, the Ministry of Defence said in a televised statement.

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    It added that two soldiers were seriously wounded and “several dozen terrorists” were also killed.

    The attack took place northwest of Tabatol near the border with Mali, which is plagued by fighting with militants affiliated with the Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda.

    Violence in the “three borders” area between Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso has fuelled military takeovers in all three countries since 2021.

    Algeria, Niger’s influential neighbour, said on Monday that Niamey has accepted its offer to mediate talks on a transition to civilian rule.

  • France’s Niger Republic dilemma

    France’s Niger Republic dilemma

    For all its decades of subordinate relationship with France, Niger Republic enjoyed no special privileges. Nearly three months after the palace coup in that arid and impoverished Sahelian country, France has grudgingly decided to comply with the coup leaders’ quit order. On the whole, more than a century of imperialist control of Francophone countries is ending on a dismal and ignoble note. Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, and now Niger, are out of the French orbit. The severance will have devastating consequences for all the parties. And, sadly, it has taken the military and their coups to engineer that seismic change. But it will take a while to know who will suffer the more between the neocolonial ruler and former colonists.

    Read Also: Still on ECOWAS dilemma in Niger Republic

    French West Africa is likely to substitute France with either China or Russia or both. That abysmal substitution is unlikely to augur well or end well. President Tinubu of Nigeria has warned about that substitution; but neither he nor the rest of West Africa can do anything about it in the near term. More than a century of pillage cannot be corrected overnight. Had the new military rulers been equipped for civil governance, there would have been hope. But they are full of rhetoric, are as incompetent and shortsighted as the civilian elite they replaced, and are destitute of vision. West Africa should brace up for a cataclysm in the years ahead.

  • Terrorists attack Niger community, abduct 31 villagers

    Terrorists attack Niger community, abduct 31 villagers

    Thirty-One inhabitants of Tsohon Kabula and Zagzaga communities in Munya Local Government Area, Niger State have been abducted by terrorists.

    The incident occurred at about 7 pm on Thursday when the terrorists invaded the community on foot in large numbers.

    Twenty-three people were abducted from the Tsohon Kabula community while eight women were abducted from Zagzaga.

    The attack came barely two weeks after an entire community was sacked by terrorists and the houses, including a worship centre, were taken over by the terrorists who used them as temporary camp.

    A middle-aged man was shot in the leg by the gunmen when he tried to escape. It was learned that when the community was invaded, the men took to their heels, leaving the women and children behind.

    This gave the terrorists the opportunity to abduct eight of the women.

    A source from the community said: “This time around, they came on foot and they were many. But we don’t know the exact number because it was already dark.

    “They came around 7 pm and all the men ran into the bush for safety, but they carried about eight women and went away with them.”

    The Senator representing Niger East Senatorial District, Alhaji Mohammed Sani Musa, described the escalation of the activities of terrorists in his Senatorial district as alarming and worrisome.

    In a statement signed by the Senator, he said that five out of the nine local government areas in his senatorial zone were under siege by terrorists, pointing out that the economic lives of the people, which is farming, have been destroyed and have increased food crisis and hunger in the area.

    Musa called on the government to do its best to restore normalcy in the senatorial district.

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    He said: “The latest attack and act of terrorism targeted at the people of my constituency, Niger East Senatorial Zone, by these criminal elements is inhuman, wicked and unacceptable.

    “The people have been forced out of the farmlands and their ancestral homes, and have been turned into refugees in their land. This is unfortunate.

    “I seriously feel the pains of my people. It is very sad to see people forced out of their homes without committing any crime.

    “My people are helpless and the authority must act immediately to restore normalcy in the community.”

    The senator warned that if the current escalation of the activities of the terrorists in Niger State and other parts of the country was not urgently addressed, it is capable of frustrating the food security programme of the present administration.

    “If the people are not allowed to go to their farms because of insecurity, how do we achieve the food security agenda of the present administration?

    “I strongly believe that the time to act is now, and that is why I am appealing that this situation must be tackled with all seriousness it deserves for the good of Nigeria and Nigerians,” he said.

  • Terrorists attack Niger community, abduct 31 villagers

    Terrorists attack Niger community, abduct 31 villagers

    No fewer than thirty-one people from Tsohon Kabula and Zagzaga communities in the Munya local government area of Niger state have been abducted by terrorists.

    The incident occurred on Thursday, September 28, when the terrorists in their numbers invaded the community on foot.

    It was gathered that twenty-three people were abducted from the Tsohon Kabula community while eight women were abducted from the Zagzaga community.

    The attack is coming barely two weeks after an entire community was sacked by terrorists and the houses, including a worship center was taken over by the terrorists who used them as temporary camp.

    Read Also: Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    It was learned that when the community was invaded, the men took to their heels leaving the women and children behind.

    This gave the terrorists the opportunity to abduct eight of the women.

    A source from the community said: “This time around, they came with legs and they were many in numbers but we don’t know the exact number because it was already dark. They came around 7:00 pm and all the men ran into the bush for safety but they carried about eight women and went away with them”.

    The senator representing Niger East Senatorial District, Alhaji Mohammed Sani Musa has described the escalation of the activities of terrorists in his senatorial district as alarming and worrisome.

    In a statement signed by the senator, he said that five out of the nine local government areas in his senatorial zone are under siege from terrorists pointing out that the economic lives of the people which is farming have been destroyed and have increased food crisis and hunger in the area.

    Musa called on the government to do its best to restore normalcy in the senatorial district.

    He said: “The latest attack and act of terrorism targeted at the people of my constituency, Niger East Senatorial Zone by these criminal elements is inhuman, wicked, and unacceptable. The people have been forced out of the farmlands and their ancestral homes, and have been turned into refugees in their land, this is unfortunate.

    “I seriously feel the pains of my people, it is very sad to see people being forced out of their homes without committing any crime. My people are helpless and the authority must act immediately to restore normalcy in the community.”

    The senator warned that if the current escalation of the activities of the terrorists in Niger state and other parts of the country are not urgently addressed, it is capable of frustrating the food security programme of the present administration.

    He added: “If the people are not allowed to go to their farms because of insecurity, how do we achieve the food security agenda of the present administration? I strongly believe that the time to act is now, and that is why I am appealing that this situation must be tackled with all seriousness it deserves for the good of Nigeria and Nigerians.”

  • Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    Three men, who were abducted by terrorists in Shapai and Igu Tsauni communities in Munya Local Government of Niger State, have escaped from their abductors.

    The men were among the 26 villagers abducted two weeks ago when the terrorists raided their communities.

    Describing how they escaped, the victims said that the heavy rainfall on Wednesday night made it possible for them to escape.

    One of the abductees, who is a timber dealer, who gave his name as Chukuwdi, said they were being moved from the temporary camps of the terrorists located along Mangoro to a permanent camp in Kaduna.

    He said the rain, which was very heavy, made movement difficult, especially as the abductees were tied together to stop them from escaping.

    “They kept us at the river bank because we could not cross due to the volume of the water. Even though we were tied together to stop us from escaping, God made it possible for us to escape”, he said.

    The escapee explained that the remaining victims were women and children and it was not possible for them to escape along with them especially as they were not tied together.

    Read Also: Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    “We ran and ran and trekked in some places all through the night and inside the rain so that we would not be caught in case they wanted to come after us. We were able to arrive at a village in the morning at about 4 a.m. today (Thursday).

    “our escape was a miracle, it was God because the decision to escape was a difficult one especially as they threatened to shoot anyone who escaped but when we saw that the rain was very heavy, we told ourselves that we could use the opportunity of the rain to escape and God made it possible for us”.

    Chukuwdi said that the three of them were from different places but were abducted by the terrorists and brought together.

    He said that because the three of them who escaped were Igbos, the terrorists demanded their families to pay the ransom of N5 million each while the other victims were asked to pay N1 million each before they could regain their freedom.

    Recounting how they lived for two weeks in captivity, Chukuwdi said that sometimes they were left without food for days and they were told that their bodies would be abandoned if they died.

  • France’s humble pie in Niger

    France’s humble pie in Niger

    • By Paul Ejime

    After weeks of condescending defiance, France has ultimately eaten a diplomatic humble pie served by a former colony. Paris’ ambassador to Niger was whisked away from Niamey in the wee hours of Thursday September 27, two months after President Mohamed Bazoum, the French ally was toppled in a military coup led by Brig.-Gen Abdourahamane Tchiani on July 26.

    The junta had on August 28 ordered Ambassador Silvain Itte to leave Niger within 48 hours, accusing him of refusing to honour an invitation to the foreign ministry. His action was in line with the French stand of withholding recognition to the military regime.

    French President Emmanuel Macron had insisted that deposed and detained Bazoum was the elected and only legitimate authority in Niger, describing the military regime as illegal.

    Following the expiration of the 48-hour ultimatum, the Tchiani-led junta, having effectively severed most contacts with France, with a demand for the withdrawal of some 1,500 French troops from Niger, announced that the ambassador had been stripped of all diplomatic immunity.

    Police were subsequently ordered to kick out the French envoy, while Niger citizens staged daily protests at the entrance of the French embassy and military bases in Niamey.

    Amid the stand-off and heightened tension, with the envoy helmed in and virtually living on military rations, President Macron announced on Sunday that Ambassador Itte would leave Niger within hours, to be followed by the withdrawal of French troops by year end.

    Diplomatic sources have confirmed Ambassador Itte’s arrival in France on a flight via Niger’s neighbouring Chad.

    While his deputy is believed to still be in Niger for possible rapprochement in the future, analysts consider this incident as another major diplomatic blow to France in a growing number of its former African colonies given that the military regimes in Mali and Burkina Faso have taken similar anti-French measures.

    With two other Francophone countries of Guinea and Gabon also under military dictatorships, the band of African leaders formerly sympathetic to the French cause is shrinking rapidly, yielding place to a groundswell of anti-French sentiments among the citizens.

    Read Also: Independence lecture: Collaborate with FG for prosperous Nigeria, Shettima begs Nigerians

    There could be consequences from eventual withdrawal of French troops from the security-challenged West Africa and the Sahel region, even with the mutual defence pact announced recently by Mali, Guinea and Burkina Faso. But President Macron has not helped matters either, with his imperialist posture and grandstanding.

    He is on record as saying that “without France, countries like Mali, Burkina Faso…. would not exist.” Such inflammatory statements are unhelpful when juxtaposed with the lopsided relations between France and its former African colonies, characterised by controversial post-independent agreements which gave Paris overbearing political and economic influence and control over the fortunes of these countries.

    Under the patronising agreements, France has set up military bases in most of the countries with guaranteed right of first refusal in the exploitation of their natural resources. The common currency, CFA franc used by 14 of the former colonies is controlled by the French Treasury, that holds a sizeable amount of the countries’ revenue deposits, which they are made to borrow at economic interests.

    For instance, Niger is rich in priced minerals such as uranium and gold, but foreign companies, particularly those from France, mine these natural resources to enrich and develop their countries, leaving Niger and its estimated 26 million population in penury and abject poverty.

    It is no wonder, that the Niger junta has now demanded renegotiation of the country’s economic and other contracts with France to ensure that the people of Niger maximized the benefits of their God-given resources.

    Insecurity, underpinned by terrorism and Islamic insurgency in West Africa and the Sahel, are the reason for the military presence of France, its European and American allies in the region. But the junta regimes and local populations are unimpressed. They claim that the foreign forces are instead pursuing their own agendas in the name of fighting terrorism.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. which has some 1,100 troops in Niger has been conspicuous in its ambivalence over the military takeover in Niger. After initial condemnation and public show of support and pressure on the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to take tough measures against the Niger junta, Washington has since found some accommodation with the junta.

    Curiously, Washington remains undecided whether the July 26 putsch “is a coup” or “an attempted coup,” while America’s newly appointed Ambassador to Niger recently assumed duty in Niamey. Also, following an understanding reached with the junta, the U.S. has resumed its strategic military drone flights from Niger for surveillance operations across Africa.

    At the same time, continued pressure by France and America on ECOWAS to act, has led to the regional bloc’s unmet threat to intervene militarily to restore constitutional order in Niger.

    ECOWAS now has every reason to feel undermined and boxed into a tight corner by the inconsistent and double-faced positions by Paris and Washington on Niger, apparently driven by fear in the West of being displaced in Africa by Russia and China.

    However, there could be some silver linings in the cloud of geopolitical game in Niger, particularly a bitter lesson for African leaders that international relations are about national interests and the fact that it is Africans that should solve African problems.

    For African countries to develop and prosper, they must be strategic and necessarily review their relationships with foreign powers. Africa is not zero-poor but only badly run and impoverished, no thanks to the conspiracy and unholy alliance between African rulers and powerful foreign interests, be they France, EU, America, China, Russia, or Turkey.

    ECOWAS is renowned for achievements in the domain of peace and security. It has to reset its conflict management and resolution strategies with dynamic and properly nuanced home-grown tools, taking into consideration the peculiarities of each situation.

    It is obvious that kinetic option in Niger is not only unpopular but risky with potentially unintended catastrophic consequences. Diplomacy and backchannel initiatives stand a better chance of success when complemented with effective regional sanctions.

    Lastly, after more than 60 years of unmitigated exploitation of Africa’s resources through its compromised and corrupt leaders, under the guise of support, France and its Western allies must now listen to the deafening voices of the long-suffering populations yearning for true freedom as opposed to the flag independence granted the former colonies.

    • Ejime is a global affairs analyst.
  • Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    Three abductees escape from terrorists in Niger

    Three men who were abducted by terrorists in Shapai and Igu Tsauni communities in Munya local government area of Niger state have escaped from their abductors.

    The men were among the 26 villagers abducted two weeks ago when the terrorists raided their communities.

    Describing how they escaped, the victims said that the heavy rainfall on Wednesday night made it possible for them to escape.

    One of the abductees, a timber dealer, who was simply identified as Chukuwdi, said that they were being moved from the temporary camps of the terrorists located along Mangoro to a permanent camp in Kaduna.

    He said that the rainfall which was very heavy made movement difficult especially as the abductees were tied together to stop them from escaping.

    Read Also: How medical college helps Nigeria save billions of dollars

    Chukuwdi noted: “They kept us at the river bank because we could not cross due to the volume of the water. Even though we were tied together to stop us from escaping, God made it possible for us to escape.”

    The escapee explained that the remaining victims were women and children and it was not possible for them to escape along with them especially as they were not tied together.

    He added: “We ran and ran and trekked in some places all through the night and inside the rain so that we would not be caught in case they wanted to come after us. We were able to arrive at a village in the morning at about 4 a.m. today (Thursday).

    “Our escape was a miracle, it was God because the decision to escape was a difficult one especially as they threatened to shoot anyone who escaped but when we saw that the rain was very heavy, we told ourselves that we could use the opportunity of the rain to escape and God made it possible for us.”

    Chukuwdi said that the three of them were from different places but were abducted by the terrorists and brought together.

    He said that because the three of them who escaped were Igbos, the terrorists demanded their families to pay the ransom of N5 million each while the other victims were asked to pay N1 million each before they could regain their freedom.

    Recounting how they lived for two weeks in captivity, Chukuwdi said that sometimes they were left without food for days and they were told that their bodies would be abandoned if they died.

  • Majority of Niger population live below poverty line, says Gov Bago

    Majority of Niger population live below poverty line, says Gov Bago

    Gov. Umaru Bago of Niger has said that majority of the population in the State live below poverty line.

    He made the assertion while delivering a keynote address at a Sustainable Economic Development Cluster (SEDEC) programme for critical stakeholders in Minna on Tuesday.

    The event is organised by German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ).

    Bago, represented by the Deputy Gov. Yakubu Garba, said that statistics of inequality on a wide range of indices in the state  was worrisome.

    “Over half of our population live below the poverty line. Some of the ills bedeviling us as people include perennial insecurity, lack of quality and affordable education and economic downturn.

    “Others are poor healthcare, lack of access roads and unemployment,” he said.

    The governor pointed out that corruption was also responsible for the perennial insecurity, poverty, economic downturn and unemployment in the state.

    ”While these challenges are multifaceted, corruption is obviously the cancerous worms responsible for the woes, ” he added.

    He noted that corruption had taken a centre stage in the public and private endeavour and that patriotism in the context of national interest had been relegated.

    Read Also: ‘Why Bago is focusing on urban renewal, devt projects in Niger’

    According to him, good governance and accountability for good of the people has become a mirage.

    He, however, said that his administration was determined to propel a paradigm shift and set a new bar in addressing the challenges and pledged the state government to GIZ.

    In his remarks, Mr Marcus Wauschkuhn, SEDEC Coordinator said the organisation would focus on economic development.

    He said that the organisation would also help to improve market access and access to finance for MSME in the new phase of its programme from 2023 to 2026.

    (NAN)

  • Niger coup authorities welcome French troop withdrawal

    Niger coup authorities welcome French troop withdrawal

    Niger’s junta issued a statement on the country’s national television on the evening of the 24th, welcoming France’s decision to withdraw its troops from Niger and recall its ambassador.

    The statement said that France’s decision “proves the Nigerien people’s firm determination and will to defend their sovereignty.”

    French President Macron announced in a TV interview on the evening of the 24th that the French troops stationed in Niger will withdraw before the end of this year, and the French ambassador to Niger will return to France as soon as possible.

    The coup authorities in Niger issued a statement on Aug. 25, requiring the French ambassador to Niger to leave the country within 48 hours.

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     The French side stated that the Nigerien coup authorities had no right to ask the French ambassador to leave the country. Niger was a French colony.

    According to reports, France currently has about 1,500 troops stationed in Niger.

    On July 26, some soldiers from the Niger Presidential Guard detained President Bazoum.

    Late that night, military representatives from the coup announced on Niger’s national television the establishment of a National Committee for the Defense of the Motherland, the removal of President Mohamed Bazoum from power, and a military regime to take over national affairs.

    France does not recognise the military junta in Niger.

    On Sept. 10, when answering questions from the media at the G20 Summit in New Delhi, Macron said that if France wanted to adjust its military presence in Niger, it would only coordinate with the legitimate government of Niger, not the coup soldiers.