Niger Prime Minister Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou speaks with the press outside the Niger Embassy, in Paris on August 5, 2023, days after coup plotters ousted Niger President, Mohamed Bazoum, holding him with his family in his official Niamey residence since July 26. Photo by STEFANO RELLANDINI / AFP via Getty Images
Religious leaders and politicians in northern Nigeria have opened back-door channels in a frantic attempt to stave off military intervention in coup-stricken Niger.
The crisis has sparked fears for ancient cultural, social and commercial links that bind southern Niger with seven border states in northern Nigeria — Katsina, Sokoto, Zamfara, Kebbi, Jigawa, Borno and Yobe.
Many people in the north are shocked by the threat from the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), which is chaired by Nigeria, to intervene militarily to restore Niger’s elected president, Mohamed Bazoum.
“What we had in the last one thousand years has been lost in a matter of a few weeks,” Sule Lamido, Nigeria’s former foreign minister and ex-governor of Jigawa state, said in an article published on Sunday.
Bazoum was detained on 26 July by members of the presidential guard, in Niger’s fifth coup since independence from France in 1960.
Ecowas gave Niger’s military rulers a one-week ultimatum on 30 July to restore Bazoum or face the potential use of force, but the deadline expired without action.
The drumbeat of possible intervention sounded again on 10 August, when Ecowas approved deployment of a “standby force to restore constitutional order” in Niger.
But visits by representatives from northern Nigeria have also helped swing the pendulum back towards diplomacy. Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, the influential former emir of Kano and Nigeria’s former central bank governor, travelled to Niger on the eve of the Ecowas summit for talks with the regime. His visit was followed at the weekend by that of a delegation of religious clerics.
President Bola Tinubu, who came to power in May, has taken a hard line on stemming coups in four Ecowas countries in three years.
But concern in northern Nigeria of a potentially catastrophic intervention is heaping pressure on him to exercise restraint.
Hundreds of residents in the Rijiyar Lemo neighbourhood of Kano took to the streets last week after Friday prayers in protest against any military operation.
Raising the flags of both Nigeria and Niger, the protesters chanted anti-French slogans and dragged a mock French flag along the dusty road, accusing Niger’s former colonial power of prodding Nigeria to go to war with its neighbour.
On 5 August, all 58 Nigerian senators across party lines from the north denounced planned military intervention in Niger, warning of dire consequences for seven border states.
On 9 August, a group of northern academics, retired senior military officers and politicians wrote to Tinubu, cautioning him of the risks of intervention in an already deeply unstable region.
Nigeria’s many security challenges — from jihadist insurgency and farmer-herder conflict to banditry and kidnapping — would be inflamed by the flow of arms and spread of violent extremism and banditry, they warned.
Nigeria’s closure of its land border with Niger is already costing northern states about 13 billion naira ($13.5 million) every week, according to the Arewa Economic Forum (AEF), a northern economic think-tank.
In 2022, the volume of formal trade between Nigeria and Niger stood at $234 million while informal trade, which is mostly in perishable commodities, was $683 million, according to Ibrahim Shehu Dandakata, head of the AEF.
“Nigeriens depend on Nigeria for most of the essential commodities they consume. Nigerian businesses also rely on transit points for importation from Niger Republic,” Dandakata said at a conference in Nigeria’s capital Abuja on Sunday.
More than 2 000 containers laden with goods belonging to Nigerian traders are stuck at the border
“Our customers from Niger, Benin, up to Central Africa, have stopped coming to buy our goods because of the closure of the border and this is affecting us,” said Shamsu Bala, a textile trader at the Kantin Kwari textile market in Kano.
“We want this issue to be resolved amicably. War will only make the situation worse for everyone.” — AFP