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French Diplomats Held Hostage in Niger: Latest Updates and International Response

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• Several French diplomats, including ambassador Sylvain Itté, are held hostage in the French embassy in Niger.
• On 31 August, the French ambassador received an ultimatum to leave the country. France’s President Emmanuel Macron refused to comply with the demand.
France does not recognize the military junta in Niger as the leaders of the country.
France has around 1,500 soldiers stationed in Niger and participated in military operations against extreme Islamist rebels in West Africa.

The summary is made by an AI service from OpenAi. The content is quality assured by NRK’s ​​journalists before publication.

France’s top diplomatic envoy to Niger, Ambassador Sylvain Itté, is one of those locked up in the embassy complex.

– They don’t get food in, and survive on field rations, says Emmanuel Macron at a press meeting in Burgundy.

The French embassy is located in Niger’s capital, Niamey.

Photo: AFP

On 31 August, the French ambassador received an ultimatum to leave the country.

The military junta claimed that the ambassador no longer had diplomatic immunity, and asked the police to throw him out of the country.

From Paris came the clear message that the coup masters did not have the power to expel Ambassador Itté.

On Friday, he and other outgoing French service personnel are said to have been captured.

Nigerien soldiers stand guard during a demonstration outside an airport in Niamey,

Photo: – / AFP

When asked by the AFP news agency whether France is considering bringing home the ambassador who is its prisoner, Macron replies:

– I do what we have agreed with President Bazoum on because he is the one who has the legitimate authority in Niger, and I talk to him every day.

Bloody coup

The former French colony has had anything but a peaceful summer. The democratically elected president Mohamed Bazoum was deposed on 26 July, and power now rests with military officers.

Demonstrations have been held outside Niger’s embassy in Paris in support of deposed President Bazoum.

Photo: Sophie Garcia / AP

It was the fourth coup since Niger became an independent country in 1960, after more than three decades as a colony.

French authorities have refused to recognize the military junta in Niger, which landed its leaders.

The coup plotters demanded in August that the French ambassador had to leave the country – a demand Macron has refused to comply with.

Military intervention

After the coup, the West African organization Ecowas announced that they would depose the coup plotters in Niger by military force. The plan received support from the African Union, a cooperative organization with 55 member countries.

The military junta owes the former colonial power to prepare for a military attack.

France continues to deploy its forces in several Ecowas countries as part of the preparations for an intervention, the regime’s spokesperson Amadou Abdramane explained on national television on Saturday.

France has around 1,500 soldiers stationed in Niger. They participate in military operations against further Islamist rebels in West Africa. The country also has significant economic interests in Niger, and imports large quantities of uranium from there.

Relax Frenchman

On Thursday, another man who was arrested became the prisoner of the lauslat. Stephane Jullien is an adviser to the French in the country, and was arrested on 8 September, write CNN.

French authorities asked for his immediate release. Nevertheless, he was arrested for a short week before being released on Thursday.

France, leave my country!” says the poster of the supporters of the military junta in Niger.

Photo: AFP

The latest coup has been condemned by the world, including the UN’s human rights chief Volker Türk.

– There must be an immediate return to civilian governance and spaces opened up where people can participate, influence and criticize the government’s actions and lack of actions, Türk said.

Support from neighboring countries

At the end of August, the military junta in Niger allowed military forces from Burkina Faso and Mali to enter the country, write France 24. It was done “in the event of an act of war” from the outside, the Niger Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

Also in Niger’s neighboring country to the west, Burkina Faso, tensions have escalated between the rulers and the former colonial power France.

Niger and northern Burkina Faso are part of the Sahel, the transition between the Sahara desert in the north and the Sudanese savanna belt in the south.

On Friday evening, the military junta ordered the defense attaché at the French embassy to leave the country due to “anti-state activities”

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs states that diplomat Emmanuel Pasquier and his team have two weeks to leave the country, reports AFP.

– The allegation of subversive activities is clearly fanciful, says a spokesperson for the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

2023-09-15 18:04:03
#Nigers #military #junta #French #diplomats #locked #Macron #confirms

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