Coup in Niger: Not Again
Jibrin Ibrahim, Deepening Democracy Column, Daily Trust, 28 July 2023
The Wednesday coup in Niger finally succeeded at midnight with soldiers announcing on national TV the dissolution of the Constitution, Parliament and Government. Sigh…. This makes it the sixth country in the West Africa region to experience a coup since August 2020. Adding Chad makes it the seventh. Early on Wednesday morning, it had been reported that President Mohammed Bazoum had been held in the presidential palace by his own presidential guard. It appeared the guard then had to negotiate with the regular army while shooting in the air to keep anti coup protesters at bay. President Bola Tinubu sent a strong message to the putschists warning them that West Africa was no longer willing to tolerate coups. He also consulted with President Patrice Talon of Benin Republic who is acting as mediator with the military. The US, France, UN, ECOWAS and African Union also condemned the coup calling for a return to status quo.
The coup might be much more about the new battle for geopolitical control of world politics than about Niger and democracy per se. The tradition of French (and Western) political control of Francophone Africa has been under bombardment in the last three years. The French army has been thrown out of Mali and Burkina Faso and have moved into Niger and of course Chad as the last stronghold of France’s neo-colonial military presence in the zone. Meanwhile, public opinion has turned very strongly against France in the Sahel. The people of Niger have been demonstrating, demanding for the expulsion of the French forces but both former President Mahamadou Issoufou and the current Bazoum have remained resolutely with France, against the trend of popular opinion. The military in Niger would be aware about the possible temporary legitimacy they could get by sending France out of Niger. In that sense, the coup was always on the cards. There is no surprise therefore to hear from the coup plotters that a plane load of French paratroopers arrived in Niamey yesterday morning in spite of the announced border closure but have been contained in the airport.
The problem with France’s ruthless neo-colonial control of its African colonies is the lack of any redeeming features. It’s a long litany of narratives about removing and often killing successive presidents who have sought to liberate their countries from the neo-colonial stranglehold and replacing them with puppets. France would not even allow their neo-colonies pretend to be independent by running their national currencies and public treasuries. Key ministries would often be run directly by French technocrats.
Then Russia came in from the cold and realised that with minimal propaganda efforts and a use of a few social media influencers, they could turn the tide of public opinion against France and dangle Wagner aa a viable mercenary force that could do exactly what a new anti-French leadership wants. The rest, as the saying goes, is history. The geo-politics of the Russia-Ukraine war and the battle between the old regressive hegemonists – the United States and its allies and the emerging hegemonists – Russia, China and their allies is being fought out in West Africa and therein lies the challenge; Africa must learn to play its own strategic game rather than play second fiddle to the game of thrones of the others.
Yesterday, a number of citizens of ECOWAS, drawn from civil society organizations, the private sector, political parties, unions, religious and lay movements, women and youth associations met in Abuja to review the overall state of affairs in the ECOWAS Region and the prospects of realization of the collective vision of democracy and integration for “an ECOWAS of peoples”. The forum noted that after the wave of democratization of the 1990s that raised a lot of hope, the West African region is undergoing democratic regression with an erosion of individual and collective freedoms in a context of growing instability in relation to recurrent socio-political crises and violent extremism. The forum called upon ECOWAS to carry out reforms, including the reform of its Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance to save the democratic gains made in the 1990s and put a stop to growing instability.
If the geopolitics of others is taking over our region, it’s partly because we have been allowing our democracy to rot from within. Indeed, in West Africa, the desire for tenure elongation is increasingly marked among incumbent presidents and democratic alternation of power is an increasingly distant prospect in many countries, thus erasing the democratic norms and standards as prescribed by the Supplementary Protocol and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights.
Although 80% of the peoples of the region are opposed to the confiscation of political power by third termers; in Togo the President is currently exercising his 4th term in power and preparing for a fifth term next year – 25 years in power by the end of his fifth term. In Côte d'Ivoire, 81-year-old President Alasane Ouattara is exercising his 3rd term and will achieve 15 years at the head of the state. In Guinea, it required a coup d'état to disrupt the regime of the 85-year-old Alpha Conde during his 3rd term. In Senegal, the President has just given up his third term bid after massive mobilisation against him. Let us not forget that the rigging of elections precipitated the Malian coup while third term was the reason for the coup in Guinea. When the political class debases democracy, the open doors for coup plotters.
West Africa must close its doors to the three coups – military takeover, constitutional coups for third term and electoral coup based on massive electoral fraud. The democratic culture of periodic alternation at the head of States promotes accountability and better management of public finances. In 2015 and 2022, ECOWAS had almost succeeded in the reform to make the principle of two-term limit an intangible rule of governance. Each time, the process was stopped by a few Heads of State with anti-democratic agendas - those of Togo and Gambia in 2015 and Togo, Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal in 2022. As we head towards its 50th anniversary, it is time for ECOWAS to make the decision that term limits must be enshrined in golden letters in the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol and imposed on all, including gerontocrats who want to rule forever.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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On Jul 29, 2023, at 4:07 AM, 'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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Three quotes from Ibn Sina known in the West as Avicenna
“ Knowledge of anything, because everything has a cause,is not acquired or complete unless the cause is known.”
“Colonised nations usually become lazy because their souls are always supported by the colonialists and they are unable to defend themselves because the feeling of defeat breaks their spirit”
“ Whoever lights the fire of slander, then he himself will become the fuel”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvkNrS6Nk6E
No big grammar specialist, political scientist, geologist, archaeologist, or philologist, etc am I, but if it's true that there’s no smoke without fire and it’s true that it's easy to find the motivation to be where the honey is then obviously the one specific word that's missing in Professor Jibrin’s analysis is a word that he must have wittingly ( in order to obfuscate?) or, perhaps, unwittingly, must have avoided at all costs, namely the centre of gravity and the wild west’s raison d'etre/ insatiable, compelling interest in being anywhere near it : the URANIUM that’s buried in Niger …some say, also plentifully buried in Darfur and perhaps, not only buried in Niger & Darfur but also in many other areas that comprise “ the Sahel”, maybe even in Northern Nigeria
Isn’t there in fact a so-called conspiracy theory, up to no good,busy promoting the idea that France is the power fuelling Boko Haram to help clear up / depopulate that Lake Chad area where a lot of the nuclear fuel known as uranium is buried?
Here’s poetry trying to trump politics: Allen Ginsberg: Plutonian Ode.
I suppose this addresses the issue of divide and rule that has culminated in area politics // regional interests, “ the Sahel” , “the Lake Chad Basin”, “the Horn of Africa” “Africa South of the Sahara” etc : The Division Of Africa Makes Europe Rich
I forwarded Professor Jibrin Ibrahim’s piece to our radical Pan-African Brother from Ghana - who, incidentally, has French as a second language. Perhaps, I should Invite him to join this series? So far, I haven’t done so because I fear that from his very first appearance here he would most probably find a natural ally in Professor Gloria Emeagwali and team up with her to be on a direct collision course with Professor Harrow - a two-pronged direct attack and of course on a direct collisions course with some of the less radical/ more reactionary/conservative powers-that-be in the USA-Africa Dialogue Series. Anyway, here is his curt reply to Professor Jibrin Ibrahim’s piece.
“A good attempt to examine a long-standing problem. A good attempt but limited in scope and depth. The truth is "democracy, human rights, and the rule of law" AS DEFINED AND HANDED DOWN TO AFRICA are empty slogans that will not work and have never practised anywhere. Not even in the very countries that originally propagated them: i.e. The USA, NATO and the EU countries.
Akuffo-Addo, Ouattara, Tinubu, and all the others are nothing but empty-headed dregs!
Good morning
Thanks for sharing, and have a good day!”
Earlier in the week he had sent me the following:
Britain must face justice for crimes in Africa
Foreign Intervention in Africa
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
“France was once the neocolonial power you describe in the 1960s and 1970s. but that changed, and changed again. At this point all the players mentioned above are collectively less significantly invested in africa than is china.
as for the use of french troops, they were not alone, and were unable to stop the collective fighting in the sahel, some of which concerned jihadists, some of which concerned local power struggles having nothing to do with islam. france and the u.s. were interested in islam, and thus in propping up the various failed regimes.”
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Re - “ i would prefer to live in a democracy, and however flawed our system here in the states, i'd prefer it to the situation in cambodia say, or you name it.” ( Kenneth Harrow)
Professor Harrow and my Better Half are two of a kind. All I have to do is express some understanding for Russia and she asks me, "Why don’t you go and live there then?" The reason why I don't go and live there - and I’m sure that there are some pretty Russian women there, is because the Swedish passport is currently ranked 3rd place on the Guide Passport Index - although Quran burning in Sweden and/or/ NATO membership could change all that…
Well, I was in Moscow - and also in Belgrade for a few days in 1991 and didn't like being mistaken for an American.
My friend ( radical Pan-African Ghanaian) hasn’t said anything about Niger, so far. I suspect that the storm is slowly brewing. They say that after a long silence by someone like him, his first words will be revolutionary…
Professor Kenneth Harrow must have watched this al-Jazeera documentary in horror, horror at the terror that was unleashed on Cameroonians, especially since he was in Cameroon during Ahidjo’s reign there :
Al Jazeera: Blood and Tears: French Decolonisation (Part 1.
Concerning the democratic solution that Professor Harrow says is “dear to the heart of moses ochonu” his ideological comrade-in-arms, Ochonu has probably also watched the documentary, his tender heart also either bleeding or reeling in horror and with pro-Africa humanitarian feelings of ”Never Again”. He must be looking on with some trepidation at the latest developments in the region, with what seems to be an uncle tom ECOWAS supported by France and Uncle Sam being “ very concerned” - more concerned than usual, since their Niger plantation/ uranium goldmine is Uncle Sam & France’s last big military outpost in the so-called Sahel - albeit of a much lower status than Israel, Uncle Sam’s best friend and main military outpost and ally in the Middle East - and of course more than “ very concerned”, Uncle Sam would be “terribly concerned” , maybe even frightened if Israel’s top military brass were to stage a military coup on Netanyahu (ostensibly “to save democracy ” in “the Zionist entity”
Al-Jazeera: latest on the coup in Niger
Niger’s military leaders warn against armed intervention
This evening on Al-Jazeera, a very exasperated Adama Gaye, former director of information at ECOWAS was ostensibly sympathetic to and in support of Niger’s new military leaders and justified the coup on the grounds of a very deteriorated security situations in the country, exacerbated by greatly increased poverty being suffered by the long-suffering people of Niger. He said that the new era of coups - of necessary coups in Africa are on the agenda and should be welcomed. in this case of course apparently vastly supported by the long-suffering Nigeriens.
I notice that Sierra Leone's Julius Maada Bio ( ex-Brigadier-General) - a former coup maker himself, was not one of the signatories of the final Communique from ECOWAS. You would have thought that he would have loved to append his signature just in case the Sierra Leone Military could be toying with the idea of deposing him, and of course, at the moment he is probably wary of some" elements" in the Sierra Leone Military getting a little help from their friends among the powers that be, namely the military men sitting in Guinea Conakry...
Avishai Cohen: Variations in G Minor
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Amended and corrected
When it comes to freedom of speech
For those who don’t say their prayers in Latin, it’s easy:
Colonialism: Veni, vidi, vici
Professor Harrow who served in Cameroon and Senegal for several years (and must have been viewed as part of the colonial/neocolonial presence there) hopefully, could do the world a favour by adding some more first-person witness testimony flavour to this his passing description of the good old days :
“in the old days in francophone countries the cars were all peugeots and citroens or renaults; the bakeries, the restaurants, etc. large pharmacies owned by greeks or lebanese; there used to be movie theatres. etc.now everything has changed, and the number of french largely diminished.”
In 1968, zapping through Sierra Leone, narrow roads ( 60% of the cars made in the UK ( I usually drove a Triumph Herald Convertible)10% made in France & Italy, 20% made in Japan ), zapping through Liberia (80% of the cars imported from the USA - in 1968 my father had a Buick - in 1969 a Peugeot - times and maybe fashion, taste and politics had also changed) and finally arriving in Abidjan by car (Renault), for the very first time, I couldn’t believe that I was in the capital city of another African country. I was surprised at the number of Oyibos everywhere, French and Lebanese bank tellers, French and Lebanese barbers, hairdressers, and French and Lebanese restaurants everywhere, (maybe I shouldn't complain too loudly, after all, on Day One in March 1969, I took my current Better Half out to dinner at a Lebanese restaurant “ Khadra”, in Freetown, Sierra Leone) but in Abidjan it was frightening and I was beginning to ask myself the question, “ Where are our African people? And what’s the matter with Houphouët-Boigny? - Not that he could be demented - if anything he was virile and I should know, because my girlfriend's sister was his mistress - frequent visits to Paris - by air - just to buy clothes, shoes, some jewellery - Professor Griff or was it Khalid Muhammad that once said that the word “Jewellery” comes from the word “Jew” and the Anti-Defamation League demanded that he should recant and apologise immediately! I imagine that the ADL would have asked for his head if he had - God forbid - incinerated a Holy Torah Scroll outside the Swedish Parliament ( BTW, we shouldn't be too hard on the ADL, they still haven't got very far with Hon.Minister Farrakhan and his many insinuations about " The SynagogueofSatan" ) but let me backtrack to arriving in Abidjan by road in 1968, and equally up to no good, a large contingent of French hippies in the park ( French hippies easily identifiable by their long hair, and of course the smell of weed hanging in the air) obviously there to enjoy some sunshine, absorb some free vitamin D and more importantly to spread some more of the decadence and of course the French Language both of which must have contributed immensely to Mbembe’s understanding and grasp of “The Aesthetics of Vulgarity” that he talks about in his “On The Postcolony”
Sierra Leone: 777
1967 : Desmond Dekker : 007
This opinion piece in The Washington Post: What the US should do about the coup in Niger.
Any reactions, somebody?
I think that this statement has to be qualified: “The germans seemed the least intrusive, of major european powers.” ( Kenneth Harrow)
There must have been several historical factors at play by which those who know can explain why, although the Berlin Conference of 1884 -85 at which the predatory European powers divided among themselves the cake that for them was” the cake of Africa” took place in Berlin, Germany the Germans only got a smaller share of the cake, what was known as the German colonies in Africa, namely, Burundi, Cameroon, Namibia, Rwanda, Tanzania and Togo.
I discussed the matter with Baba Kadiri who is much better informed than I am, and, hopefully, he will post a rejoinder. What does Kenneth mean by “less intrusive” - was his first retort and pointed at the fate of the Herero in Namibia during German colonisation .I suggested that Ken probably meant the Germans did not pursue an aggressive type of French assimilation colonial policy and that’s why the German colonies don’t have German as their official language, or their language of choice when it comes to producing their national literature ( poetry, fiction, drama, etc) although, I'm sure that all of them, of course, have the Holy Bible translated into their Holy Mother Tongues, for easier comprehension of - according to one wannabe, wanna go to heaven and not to the lake of fire Yoruba pastor, God’s so-called “ Word” . God’s word?
Baba Kadiri said no, that the Germans also had their Language schools and must have certainly produced some elitist big grammar students of their own, experts in the prodigious literature and Philosophy produced in the German Language -and of course, all that Great German CLASSICAL MUSIC - and all that science and technology and medicine, too
Curiously enough, up to the end of WW2, in Sweden, German was the second language of the Swedes, French a close second or third…
Some demystification of what was referred to earlier in this thread ( in passing) Hon Minister Louis Farrakhan and “The Synagogue of Satan”

Add Guinea...and other Islamic forces belonging to The Religion of Peace such as Islamic State, Boko Haram their surrogate, and Tinubu could have bitten more than he can chew...
The Washington Post: The Coup in Niger puts the spotlight on uranium, the country's most important export
TASS: The coup in Niger