NIAMEY (Reuters) – France said on Saturday it will support efforts to overturn Niger’s military coup, a day after West Africa’s regional bloc said it had a plan for military intervention.
Niger’s military takeover, the seventh in West and Central Africa in three years, has rocked the western Sahel region, one of the poorest in the world with strategic significance to global powers.
Defence chiefs from Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) have drawn up a plan for military action if the coup leaders do not reinstate elected President Mohamed Bazoum by Sunday, raising the spectre of further conflict in a region that is already battling a deadly Islamist insurgency.
The 59-year-old coup leader, General Abdourahamane Tiani, who received some of his military training in France, said the junta will not back down.
“France supports with firmness and determination the efforts of ECOWAS to defeat this coup attempt,” the French foreign ministry said in a statement after Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna met Niger Prime Minister Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou in Paris.
“The future of Niger and the stability of the entire region are at stake.”
France, the former colonial power, did not specify whether its backing would entail military support for an ECOWAS intervention in Niger.
ECOWAS has taken a tough stance on the takeover. Given its uranium and oil riches and pivotal role in the warwith the militants, Niger holds importance for the United States, China, Europe and Russia.
Under the intervention plan, the decision of when and whereto strike will be made by heads of state, said Abdel-Fatau Musah, ECOWAS commissioner for political affairs, peace and security. He did not give a timeline for intervention or say what the plan would entail.
“All the elements that will go into any eventualintervention have been worked out here, including the resourcesneeded, the how and when we are going deploy the force,” he saidat the close of a three-day meeting in Nigeria’s capital Abuja on Friday.
Whatever option the 15-nation body chooses risks furtherconflict in a zone where groups linked to Islamic State and al Qaeda thrive on chaos.
They may also face resistance: Niger’s neighbours Mali and Burkina Faso, where military juntas have also seized power in recent years, said they would support Niger in the event of military intervention.
An ECOWAS delegation was visiting Algeria and Libya this weekend to drum up support from important regional players ahead of any possible military action.
(Reporting by Julitte Jabkhiro and Michel Rose; Writing by Edward McAllister; Editing by Giles Elgood)