Opposition mounts in Nigeria over possible military intervention in Niger

Supporters of Niger's ousted president, Mr Mohamed Bazoum, protest in Paris against the coup. PHOTO: REUTERS

LAGOS – Political leaders in Nigeria are urging President Bola Tinubu to reconsider a threatened military intervention against junta leaders in neighbouring Niger, ahead of a Sunday deadline to reinstate the country’s elected government.

As Africa’s most populous country and its biggest economy, Nigeria would play a leading role in any intervention threatened by the Ecowas regional bloc, which Mr Tinubu announced on July 30.

On Saturday, the country’s Senate met behind closed doors to discuss the situation. Its president, Mr Godswill Akpabio, then set out its position to journalists.

“The Senate calls on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as chairman of Ecowas to further encourage other leaders of Ecowas to strengthen the political and diplomatic options.”

Nigeria’s Constitution needs Senate approval to deploy armed forces for combat duty outside the country, unless the president determines that national security is under “imminent threat or danger”.

Risk to civilians

Senators from northern Nigerian states, seven of which share a combined border of about 1,500km with Niger, have already advised against any intervention until all other options have been exhausted.

“The consequences will be casualties among the innocent citizens who go about their daily business,” Mr Suleiman Kawu Sumaila, spokesman for the Northern Senators Forum, said just after the Ecowas ultimatum.

The northern regions have deep social and trade links with southern Niger, where local populations share many cultural, religious and linguistic heritages.

Mr Sumaila also warned of security risks if Niger is destabilised as the Sahel region battles long-running Islamist insurgencies.

“We are also aware of the situation of Mali, Burkina Faso and Libya, which may affect the seven northern states if military force is used,” he added.

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Mali and Burkina Faso have warned that any regional intervention in Niger would be considered “a declaration of war” on them. Both are run by military rulers who toppled democratically elected leaders.

Mr Sumaila warned that there would be serious implications for the country “if military force is used without exhausting all the diplomatic channels”.

‘Overstretched’

Those concerns were shared by the country’s largest opposition grouping, which denounced the potential military operation in Niger as “absolutely thoughtless”.

“The Nigerian military has been overstretched over the years battling terrorism and all manners of insurgency that are still very active,” said the Coalition of United Political Parties on Saturday.

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu brought an end to fuel subsidies, plunging the country into deeper into economic hardship. PHOTO: REUTERS

Besides insurgency groups in the north-east, Nigeria’s security forces are battling organised crime gangs in the centre and north-west, and separatist groups in the south-east.

The country has also plunged deeper into economic hardship with Mr Tinubu’s decision to end fuel subsidies in May.

His goal was to free up funds for investment, in agriculture and social programmes in particular. The immediate result, however, was a quadrupling of fuel prices for a country where nearly half the population is estimated to live in extreme poverty.

“Nigeria, in its current socioeconomic state, cannot afford such a costly intervention,” the coalition argued. “President Bola Tinubu should avoid plunging Nigeria’s fragile economy into more depression by intervening militarily in another country.”

A potential Niger intervention has also been criticised on social media in Nigeria, with users voicing concern about the roughly 200,000 Nigerian refugees who have fled Islamic militant violence to seek shelter in Niger.

Others worry about a potential influx of refugees from Niger, which could further strain the humanitarian crisis facing much of Nigeria’s north. AFP

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