Niger’s new military junta announced yesterday it had dissolved the government after a coup that toppled Nigerien President Mamadou Tandja in the impoverished but uranium-rich west African country.
The Supreme Council for the Restoration of Democracy (CSRD) announced that its head would be Squadron Leader Salou Djibo, whose heavily armed unit played a key role in Thursday’s coup.
“The government is dissolved,” a statement signed by Djibo and read by an unnamed military officer on state television said. “The CSRD informs the population that public business will be run by secretaries of ministries and local government administrators.”
Soldiers in Niger ousted Tandja amid gun battles that killed at least three troops on Thursday.
“On this day February 18, we the defense and security forces, decided to take our responsibilities in ending the tense political situation,” CSRD spokesman Colonel Goukoye Abdoulkarim said.
Commander of Niger’s elite military unit and former member of the junta behind the 1999 coup, Colonel Dijibrilla Hima Hamidou, popularly known as “Pele,” flanked the spokesman who announced the takeover.
Abdoulaye Adamou Harouna, a former aide-de-camp of 1999 coup leader Commander Daouda Mallam Wanke, also stood next to Abdoulkarim.
The CSRD said it “has decided to suspend the Constitution of the Sixth Republic and dissolve all its institutions.”
Tandja had defied outcry both inside the country and abroad at his move to change the Constitution to allow himself to extend his grip on power.
Gunfire and loud explosions sounded across the capital Niamey as soldiers assaulted the presidential palace where Tandja, the country’s strongman for the past decade, presided over a Cabinet meeting.
The new military council declared a dusk-to-dawn curfew and announced the closure of all border entry points.
A French diplomat said Tandja’s own guard had taken part in the coup and one senior US official suggested that Tandja only had himself to blame.
“President Tandja has been trying to extend his mandate in office and, obviously, that may well have been, you know, an act on his behalf that precipitated this act today,” US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said.
Tandja was reportedly detained at a separate location from his ministers, who were also held elsewhere.
“It is our country and no one wants to set it ablaze,” said one Cabinet minister contacted by mobile phone and speaking on condition of anonymity.
Djibo’s junta called on the people of Niger — ranked last at 182 on the UN Human Development Index for last year — to stay calm and united around its ideals of “restoring democracy and good governance.”
An official said Tandja was believed to be held in a military barracks on the outskirts of the capital.
Former colonel Tandja, 71, extended his term through a controversial referendum last August after dissolving parliament and the constitutional court, leading to the west African nation’s international isolation.
Witnesses said they had seen the bodies of at least three soldiers being lifted out of a badly damaged armored vehicle that pulled up outside the morgue of the main hospital. At least 10 soldiers were injured, a medical source said.
France, the colonial power in Niger until independence in August 1960, urged its nationals to stay indoors. French nuclear giant Areva is the country’s biggest private employer.
The African Union condemned the violence in Niger, the latest in a litany of states — such as Guinea, Madagascar and Mauritania — where coups and unrest have replaced democratic rule.
“We are always concerned when there is threat of a coup or reports of an ongoing ‘coup d’Etat’ in Africa,” African Union Security Commissioner Ramtane Lamamra said in Addis Ababa.
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