African Union rejects military intervention in Niger – media

The African Union has reportedly opposed a plan by the regional bloc ECOWAS to use force against the Nigerien coup leaders

African Union rejects military intervention in Niger – media

African Union rejects military intervention in Niger – media

Such a move by West African leaders “would be an unprecedented contradiction,” according to a policy analyst

The Peace and Security Council (PSC) of the African Union has come out against the deployment of armed troops in Niger to free ousted President Mohamed Bazoum and restore constitutional order, the French outlet Le Monde reported on Wednesday.

This comes after the PSC met in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on Monday to discuss the situation in Niamey and efforts to address it.

Bazoum was toppled on July 26 by members of his own presidential guard, provoking outrage from Western nations and regional democratic governments, which called for the coup to be overturned.

The West African regional bloc, ECOWAS, said the Niger’s coup leaders had rebuffed attempts at negotiation. The regional authority threatened to use force to reinstate the ousted Bazoum, whom the new military rulers have detained since July 26.

Last week, ECOWAS authorized the activation of a stand-by force for potential use against the putsch leaders, with the bloc’s army chiefs meeting on Thursday and Friday to prepare for a military intervention if negotiations fail.

On Friday, African Union Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat expressed “strong support” for the ECOWAS' decision and called on the junta to “urgently halt the escalation with the regional organization.

However, the PSC, the body responsible for deciding on issues of conflict resolution in Africa, decided to disassociate itself from the use of force in Niamey, according to diplomatic sources cited by Le Monde.

The decision, which will be formalized on Wednesday, was reached after a “tense” meeting on Monday that lasted “more than ten hours,” according to the outlet.

Paul-Simon Handy, senior policy advisor at the Institute for Security Studies, told Le Monde that ECOWAS will find it difficult to launch a military offensive in Niamey without the approval of the African Union.

Without the union’s backing, such an operation “would be an unprecedented contradiction,” Handy is quoted as saying.

Earlier this month, the Nigerian Senate also declined to give approval to ECOWAS Chairman Bola Tinubu to send soldiers against the coup leaders in neighboring Niger.

The Senate urged Tinubu and other West African regional leaders to explore diplomatic means to resolve the crisis.