A senior United States diplomat is in Niger Republic where he is making a move to push coup authorities to restore democratic rule after their overthrow of President Mohamed Bazoum last month.
The acting deputy secretary of state of the United States, Victoria Nuland, said on Monday that she held ‘frank and difficult’ talks with military leader Moussa Salaou Barmou and three of his colonels in Niger’s capital, Niamey. It was the first trip by a US official to the country since the coup on July 26.
Nuland stated that her requests to meet with Bazoum and Abdourahmane Tchiani, who claims to be the leader of the military government, were rejected. During a subsequent phone briefing with reporters, she provided a somber update on her discussions with the military officials.
‘They are quite firm in their view of how they want to proceed, and it does not comport with the Constitution of Niger,’ she said. ‘It was difficult today, and I will be straight up about that.’
Nuland, however, reaffirmed her country’s commitment to a ‘a negotiated solution’ to the conflict. If the coup leaders are willing to return to Niger’s ‘constitutional order’, Nuland said that the US is ‘prepared to help with that’.
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Earlier on Monday, the US State Department had confirmed it had made direct contact with the coup leaders and had stressed the need for Bazoum to be reinstated.
‘There has been direct contact with military leaders urging them to step aside,’ Matthew Miller, the department’s spokesperson.
Military leaders seized power in the landlocked West African country on July 26 and detained Bazoum, sparking international condemnation.
Africa Today News, New York recalls that last week, an African regional bloc imposed sanctions on Niger and threatened to use force against the new authorities if Bazoum is not restored to power. But a Sunday deadline set by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) expired without any military action.
Still, the coup authorities — called the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland — shut down the country’s airspace in anticipation of a conflict and promised to “defend the integrity of our territory”.
Tchiani denounced the ECOWAS sanctions as ‘illegal’ and ‘inhumane’ and rejected what he called interference in the country’s internal affairs.
ECOWAS, which consists of 15 countries, will hold an emergency meeting on Thursday to discuss the crisis.
Miller said the US is in ‘close contact’ with the ECOWAS leadership and is “using diplomacy” to help Niger return to civilian rule.
Miller estimated on Monday that the suspended aid is worth at least $100m.