Niger military supporters protest near French base in Niamey
The protest comes a day after Niger junta issued ultimatum for French ambassador to leave the country for reportedly ignoring an invitation for a meeting at the Foreign Ministry.
Hundreds of supporters of the military administration in Niger have rallied near the French military base in the nation’s capital of Niamey in the latest protest against the presence of French troops in the West African country.
Like previous protests, demonstrators carried placards on Saturday with anti-French slogans and accused France of interfering in the country’s affairs, according to social video footage.
They chanted anti-French sentiments and threatened to storm the French Embassy and the French military base, if French troops and its ambassador do not leave the country.
"We have the right to choose the partners we want," said Ramatou Ibrahim Boubacar, wearing Nigerien flags from head to toe.
The protests came a day after the military administration issued an ultimatum for the French ambassador to leave the country for reportedly ignoring an invitation for a meeting at the Foreign Ministry and other actions of the French government deemed contrary to Niger’s interests.
France maintains about 1,500 personnel in Niger as part of a counter-insurgency force in the Sahel region, fighting militants affiliated with Daesh and al Qaeda.
Sustaining pressure
Earlier this month, the military administration said it had revoked several military accords Niger signed with France, a move Paris dismissed and said military leaders have no legitimate authority to do so.
In a related development, thousands of protesters marched on Saturday to the country’s largest stadium in Niamey to celebrate one since President Mohamed Bazoum was deposed.
They displayed support for the military administration.
The marchers raised Nigerien, Algerian and Russian flags and were joined by members of the National Council for the Safeguard of the Country (CNSP), formed in the aftermath of the military takeover, who encouraged supporters to sustain pressure.
"The French ambassador, instead of leaving, thinks this is the land of his parents," said Idrissa Halidou, a healthcare worker and CNSP member who was attending Saturday's rally.
Diplomatic standoff
Niger’s military administration ordered on Friday only the French ambassador to leave the country, the Foreign Ministry announced.
On Friday, it gave the French Ambassador Sylvain Itte 48 hours to leave the country, accusing him of refusing to respond to an invitation to meet Niger's Foreign Minister.
A ministry statement said that "Niger does not need authorisation or an interpretation of the Vienna Convention of 1961" to order the ambassador’s expulsion within 24 hours.
The French Foreign Ministry rejected the move, saying the military administration does not have the authority to expel the ambassador, according to French media.
French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna sent an August 8 note to express solidarity with the Nigerien Ambassador in Paris, Aichatou Boulama Kane, who refused to leave her position after the military administration took power.
Niger was plunged into uncertainty on July 26 when General Abdourahamane Tchiani, a former commander of the presidential guard, led a military intervention that ousted President Mohamed Bazoum.