Niger junta says it will prosecute ousted president for treason
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[August 14, 2023]
NIAMEY (Reuters) -The military junta that seized power in
Niger in a coup last month has said it will prosecute ousted President
Mohamed Bazoum for high treason over his exchanges with foreign heads of
state and international organizations.
The coup leaders have imprisoned Bazoum and dissolved the elected
government, drawing condemnation from global powers and neighboring West
African countries, which have activated a standby military force that
could intervene to reinstate Bazoum.
At stake is not just the fate of Niger - a major uranium producer and
Western ally in the fight against an Islamist insurgency - but also the
influence of rival global powers with strategic interests in the region.
Junta spokesperson Colonel Amadou Abdramane said in a statement read out
on state TV late on Sunday that the military authorities had "gathered
the necessary evidence to prosecute the ousted president...for high
treason and undermining the internal and external security of Niger."
Abdramane also said there was a misinformation campaign against the
junta to try to "derail any negotiated solution to the crisis in order
to justify military intervention ... in the name of ECOWAS".
The African Union, the European Union, the United States and the United
Nations have all said they are worried about the conditions in which
Bazoum is being kept.
Bazoum's political party has said his family has no access to running
water, fresh food or doctors, and Bazoum told Human Rights Watch that
his son needed to see a doctor because of a serious heart condition.
But the junta said on Sunday that Bazoum was regularly seeing his doctor
and that the last visit was on Aug. 12.
"After this visit the doctor raised no concerns about the state of
health of the ousted president and members of his family," Abdramane
said.
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Niger's junta supporters take part in a
demonstration in front of a French army base in Niamey, Niger,
August 11, 2023. REUTERS/Mahamadou Hamidou/File Photo
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West Africa's main regional bloc ECOWAS is expected on Monday to
push for more talks with the junta, which has signaled a potential
willingness to find a diplomatic resolution to the standoff over the
July 26 coup.
The bloc's parliament on Saturday said it wanted to send a committee
to meet the junta in Niamey, but the proposed timing of that mission
is not clear.
The Peace and Security Council of the 55-nation African Union is
also expected to meet on Monday to discuss the situation in Niger, a
sign of the level of concern over the possible fallout from West and
Central Africa's seventh coup in three years.
U.S., French, German and Italian troops are stationed in Niger, in a
region where local affiliates of al Qaeda and Islamic State have
killed thousands and displaced millions.
Meanwhile, Russian influence has grown as insecurity increases,
democracy erodes, and leaders seek new partners to restore order.
Western powers fear Russia's clout could increase if the junta in
Niger follows Mali and Burkina Faso, which ejected the troops of
former colonial power France after coups in those countries.
(Writing by Anait Miridzhanian and Alessandra Prentice; Editing by
Alexander Winning, Lincoln Feast and Angus MacSwan)
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