fbpx
Sunday, December 22, 2024
32.1 C
Abuja

France And The Proverbial Humble Pie In Niger

After weeks of condescending defiance, France has ultimately eaten a diplomatic humble pie served by a former colony. Paris’ Ambassador to Niger was whisked away from Niamey in the wee hours of Thursday 27 September, two months after President Mohamed Bazoum, a French ally was toppled in a military coup led by Brig.-Gen Abdourahamane Tchiani on 26 July 2023.

The junta had on 28 August ordered Ambassador Silvain Itte to leave Niger within 48 hours, accusing him of refusing to honour an invitation to the Foreign Ministry. His action was in line with the French stand of withholding recognition to the military regime.

French President Emmanuel Macron had insisted that deposed and detained Bazoum was the elected and only legitimate authority in Niger, describing the military regime as illegal.

Following the expiry of the 48-hour ultimatum, the Tchiani-led junta, having effectively severed most contacts with France, with a demand for the withdrawal of some 1,500 French troops from Niger, announced that the Ambassador had been stripped of all diplomatic immunity.

Police were subsequently ordered to kick out the French envoy, while Niger citizens staged daily protests at the entrance of the French embassy and military bases in Niamey.

Amid the stand-off and heightened tension, with the envoy helmed in and virtually living on military rations, President Macron announced on Sunday that Ambassador Itte would leave Niger within hours, to be followed by the withdrawal of French troops by year end.

Diplomatic sources have confirmed Ambassador Itte’s arrival in France on a flight via Niger’s neighbouring Chad.

While his deputy is believed to still be in Niger for possible rapprochement in the future, analysts consider this incident as another major diplomatic blow to France in a growing number of its former African colonies given that the military regimes in Mali and Burkina Faso have taken similar anti-French measures.

With two other Francophone countries of Guinea and Gabon also under military dictatorships, the band of African leaders formerly sympathetic to the French cause is shrinking rapidly, yielding place to a groundswell of anti-French sentiments among the citizens.

There could be consequences from eventual withdrawal of French troops from the security-challenged West Africa and the Sahel region, even with the mutual defence pact announced recently by Mali, Guinea and Burkina Faso. But President Macron has not helped matters either, with his imperialist posture and grandstanding.

He is on record as saying that “without France, countries like Mali, Burkina Faso…. would not exist.” Such inflammatory statements are unhelpful when juxtaposed with the lopsided relations between France and its former African colonies, characterised by controversial post-independent agreements which gave Paris overbearing political and economic influence and control over the fortunes of these countries.

Under the patronising agreements, France has set up military bases in most of the countries with guaranteed right of first refusal in the exploitation of their natural resources. The common currency, CFA franc used by 14 of the former colonies is controlled by the French Treasury, that holds a sizeable amount of the countries’ revenue deposits, which they are made to borrow at economic interests.

For instance, Niger is rich in priced minerals such as uranium and gold, but foreign companies, particularly those from France, mine these natural resources to enrich and develop their countries, leaving Niger and its estimated 26 million population in penury and abject poverty.

It is no wonder, that the Niger junta has now demanded renegotiation of the country’s economic and other contracts with France to ensure that the people of Niger maximized the benefits of their God-given resources.

Insecurity, underpinned by terrorism and Islamic insurgency in West Africa and the Sahel, are the reason for the military presence of France, its European and American allies in the region.

But the junta regimes and local populations are unimpressed. They claim that the foreign forces are instead pursuing their own agendas in the name of fighting terrorism.

Meanwhile, the U.S. which has some 1,100 troops in Niger has been conspicuous in its ambivalence over the military takeover in Niger. After initial condemnation and public show of support and pressure on the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to take tough measures against the Niger junta, Washington has since found some accommodation with the junta.

Curiously, Washington remains undecided whether the 26 July putsch “is a coup” or “an attempted coup,” while America’s newly appointed Ambassador to Niger recently assumed duty in Niamey. Also, following an understanding reached with the junta, the U.S. has resumed its strategic military drone flights from Niger for surveillance operations across Africa.

At the same time, continued pressure by France and America on ECOWAS to act, has led to the regional bloc’s unmet threat to intervene militarily to restore constitutional order in Niger.

ECOWAS now has every reason to feel undermined and boxed into a tight corner by the inconsistent and double-faced positions by Paris and Washington on Niger, apparently driven by fear in the West of being displaced in Africa by Russia and China.

However, there could be some silver linings in the cloud of geopolitical game in Niger, particularly a bitter lesson for African leaders that international relations are about national interests and the fact that it is Africans that should solve African problems.

For African countries to develop and prosper, they must be strategic and necessarily review their relationships with foreign powers. Africa is not zero-poor but only badly run and impoverished, no thanks to the conspiracy and unholy alliance between African rulers and powerful foreign interests, be they France, EU, America, China, Russia, or Turkey.

ECOWAS is renowned for achievements in the domain of peace and security. It has to reset its conflict management and resolution strategies with dynamic and properly nuanced home-grown tools, taking into consideration the peculiarities of each situation.

It is obvious that kinetic option in Niger is not only unpopular but risky with potentially unintended catastrophic consequences. Diplomacy, and backchannel initiatives stand a better chance of success when complemented with effective regional sanctions.

Lastly, after more than 60 years of unmitigated exploitation of Africa’s resources through its compromised and corrupt leaders, under the guise of support, France and its Western allies must now listen to the deafening voices of the long-suffering populations yearning for true freedom as opposed to the flag independence granted the former colonies.

 

By Paul Ejime

 

Paul Ejime is a Global Affairs Analyst and Consultant on Peace & Security and Governance Communications

Hot this week

AIICO Insurance Opens 2025 IT Graduate Trainee Programme

AIICO Insurance plc is the leading player in the...

Dangote Group Starts Recruitment of New Employees For 2025

Dangote Group is one of Nigeria’s most diversified business...

Application Opens For IBEDC 2025 Recruitment

Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) Plc – Headquartered in...

Application Opens For Heirs Life – Tony Elumelu Foundation Recruitment 2025

Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) is African private-sector-led philanthropy in...

Dangote Praises Tinubu for Crude-for-Naira Swap Deal’s Impact

President of Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote has commended...

Latest

AIICO Insurance Opens 2025 IT Graduate Trainee Programme

AIICO Insurance plc is the leading player in the...

Dangote Group Starts Recruitment of New Employees For 2025

Dangote Group is one of Nigeria’s most diversified business...

Application Opens For IBEDC 2025 Recruitment

Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) Plc – Headquartered in...

Application Opens For Heirs Life – Tony Elumelu Foundation Recruitment 2025

Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) is African private-sector-led philanthropy in...

Dangote Praises Tinubu for Crude-for-Naira Swap Deal’s Impact

President of Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote has commended...

German Defense Minister, Pistorius Warns of Hybrid Threat From Russia

Berlin (dpa) - German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said on Sunday that...

Player Schick hits four as Leverkusen win, 10-man Mainz shine again

Berlin (dpa) - Patrik Schick scored four goals and Florian Wirtz was...

Germans use healthcare services more often than the EU average

Berlin (dpa) - Germans utilise health services more frequently...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Section

spot_imgspot_img

MORE FROM CHATNEWSTV

Op-Ed: Nigeria’s Hostages in Law By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

In 1991, Nigeria was in the full throes of the interminable transition to civil rule programme of General Ibrahim Babangida. The effort by the...

Op-Ed: Tinubu’s Taxing Times By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu A mere four years after emerging from a civil war, in 1974, Nigeria was at the beginning of an oil boom. Then,...

Ghana’s Mahama: Navigating Economic Challenges And Democratic Legacy By Collins Nweke

This week the good people of Ghana will continue adjusting to last weekend news of the return of John, not The Baptist, but Dramani...

Op-Ed: In The Matter of Dele Farotimi Before The Star Chamber By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

Paul Anyebe was a judge of the High Court of Benue State in north-central Nigeria who had a young son with sticky fingers and...

Tax Reform Debate: Is Dogara Positioning Himself for Tinubu’s Vice Presidency in 2027?

By Adnan Mukhtar The complex relationship between President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Vice President Kashim Shettima appears to be fraying, revealing underlying tensions within Nigeria’s...

Op-Ed: Tinubu’s VAT Reforms Will Break Nigeria’s Economy By Adewunmi Emoruwa

In 2019, a 50% VAT hike slowed Nigeria’s economy, pushed millions into poverty, and failed to deliver meaningful revenue growth. Today, new VAT reforms...

Unlocking Tanzania’s Entrepreneurial Potential for a Dynamic Future

By Christine Grau, European Union Ambassador to Tanzania and the East African Community Imagine Tanzania in 15 years: a nation with one of the fastest-growing...

Mallam Umaru Altine: First Mayor of Enugu Municipal Council, 1952-1958, By Femi Kehinde

Benjamin Cardozo, an American jurist and philosopher, has said, “history, in illuminating the past, illuminates the present and in illuminating the present, illuminates the...

Right Of Reply: When Will The Judges Who Cheated On Their Age Be Made To Account? By Johnson Agwu

On 20 October 2024, I was gloomy. It was four years since the #EndSARS protests by Nigerian Youths against police brutality and the bloody...