About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

1 1 (July 31, 2023)

handle is hein.crs/govemjp0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




     NeCongress onal




Niger: In Focus


isear h Serv ca
abae sinco1914


July 31, 2023


On  July 26, 2023, military officers detained elected
President Mohamed  Bazoum   and asserted that they had
seized power. On July 30, West African leaders announced
sanctions and threatened military action if Bazoum is not
reinstated, while pro-junta protesters attacked the French
embassy  in Niamey. U.S. officials had previously
characterized Niger as an emerging democracy and
important U.S. partner amid growing insurgencies, political
instability, and Russian engagement in the Sahel region.
Over  1,000 U.S. soldiers were stationed in Niger as of mid-
2023, the second-largest U.S. military presence in Africa.
Niger has been a top recipient of U.S. security assistance in
Africa and a growing U.S. development aid recipient.
Context. President Bazoum's inauguration in 2021
represented Niger's first ever transition between two
elected presidents. Niger last experienced a coup in 2010,
and claimed to foil coup attempts in 2021 and 2022. If the
current attempt stands, Niger will be the sixth country in
Africa where the military has seized power since 2020.
Landlocked  and arid, Niger is among the world's poorest
countries. Despite relative stability over the past decade, its
history has been marked by coups and ethnic rebellions.
Security threats, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Russia-
Ukraine war worsened  socioeconomic hardships,
historically a trigger for unrest. Insurgents affiliated with Al
Qaeda  and the Islamic State (IS) are active in border
regions. Conflicts involving these groups have killed
hundreds of Nigerien soldiers and civilians and displaced
hundreds of thousands of Nigeriens. The Sahel-based IS
affiliate killed four U.S. soldiers in western Niger in 2017,
and terrorist groups have kidnapped U.S. citizens in Niger.
Regional Security Partner. The Western  troop presence in
Niger ballooned over the past decade as the country became
a key regional security partner for the United States,
France, and the European Union. France's withdrawal of
over 2,000 troops from Mali and Burkina Faso in 2022-
2023, about half of whom were sent to Niger, magnified the
country's importance for Western-backed security efforts.
Niger has also been a focus of European counter-migration
initiatives. The growing foreign troop presence and the
government's close ties to former colonial power France
have prompted  some local backlash, including protests and
rioting (e.g., in 2022, 2021, and 2015). Juntas in Mali and
Burkina Faso have leveraged similar discontent.
Legal and policy concerns have complicated U.S. relations
with other Sahel countries, further elevating Niger: The
country's elected leadership and relatively disciplined
military have stood in contrast to neighboring Mali,
Burkina Faso, and Chad, where soldiers have seized power,
repressed the opposition, and abused civilians during
counterterrorism operations. President Bazoum was also
one of the few regional leaders to openly criticize Russia's
Wagner  Group, which has been active in Mali.


Figure  1. Niger at a Glance


Source: CRS graphic. Data from CIA World Factbook and IMF (2023).
Embattled   Democracy
President Bazoum, a career politician and former cabinet
minister, won election in 2021, succeeding longtime ally
Mahamadou   Issoufou, who had served two terms. Although
observers generally deemed the 2020-2021 general
elections credible, opposition groups criticized the decision
to bar a prominent opposition politician from running (due
to criminal charges that supporters viewed as politically
motivated), and leading opposition candidate Mahamane
Ousmane,  a former president, rejected the results as
fraudulent. Large protests and rioting erupted in Niamey in
February 2021 following Bazoum's  victory in a run-off
against Ousmane. Authorities arrested hundreds of
protesters and reportedly disrupted internet service. Just
before Bazoum's  inauguration, the government announced
that it had put down a coup attempt. In 2022, Nigerien
officials reported that they had foiled another plot.
Freedom  House rated Niger as Partly Free as of early
2023, noting multiparty political competition alongside
persecution of opposition leaders and the co-option of key
opposition figures. Freedom House added that security
concerns provided an alibi for civil liberties restrictions.
Under  Bazoum, civil society groups and media outlets were
active and regularly criticized the government. The State
Department's 2022  human rights report indicated that there
were no cases of political prisoners-unlike in prior
years-but  that civil society activists and members of
opposition political parties appeared to be especially subject
to abuse of their due process rights. Per the report, the
government  continued to threaten and harass journalists.

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most