Niger coup: Catastrophic security repercussions on Sahel, Sahara
The situation in Niger took a dangerous turn after the coup
in which a group of presidential guards led by General Omar Tchiani detained
President Mohamed Bazoum and closed the roads leading to the presidential
palace in Niamey.
Effect of the coup
Soon, the echoes of past events reverberated in neighboring
countries. Whether in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso or Niger itself, the recurring
theme and stereotype remains the same, military leaders attempting to seize
power, using state television as a platform to make their first statement to
the nation.
It is the same scenario that Ruth First spoke about in 1970
in her most famous book entitled “The Barrel of a Gun” about power and military
coups in Africa, as if times had never changed.
In a statement read by Colonel Amadou Abdramane of the Air
Force, the Bazoum government was overthrown and the
constitution suspended, and the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland
(CNSP) was installed to carry out the tasks of running the country. In the same
usual context, a night curfew was imposed, and borders and airspace were
closed.
Major repercussions
Researcher Mohamed al-Sharqawi, who specializes in terrorist
movements and crisis areas, said that the Niger coup would have major security
repercussions for stability in the Sahel and Sahara region, since Niger was
considered the most stable area in the region, which is afflicted by security crises.
In a special statement to the Reference, Sharqawi explained that
the coming days will witness an armed movement towards Niger in particular in
an attempt to exploit the security confusion that the state is experiencing
after the overthrow of the elected president, Mohamed Bazoum, especially in
light of the arms chaos that the region as a whole suffers from, and with the
possibility that Niger, which was a relatively stable country before the coup, would
enter a state of internal strife.
Very disturbing
According to Sharqawi, the security situation in the Sahel
region is “extremely worrying.” For months, militias and armed extremist
movements have launched large-scale attacks in an
attempt to access resources and impose regional control and influence. He added
that this wave has increased in light of the state
of chaos afflicting Sudan, which is the eastern gateway to the Sahel and Sahara
region.
The crisis of arms proliferation in the Sahel and Sahara
region is one of the most prominent problems entrenched in the region, and its
repercussions are increasing over time in light of the state of security
fragility in the region, Sharqawi stressed, adding that it is possible the
crisis could spread outside the regional borders and impact neighboring
countries, as was evident in the success of extremist groups in transferring their
threats to neighboring countries that are not members of the G5 Sahel,
including Benin, Côte d'Ivoire, and Togo. This has devastated fragile local
economies and hampered humanitarian aid efforts in the region.
Sharqawi pointed out that with time, some of the causes of
the crisis of arms proliferation and its entrenchment in the region have turned
into challenges that are increasing with the continued absence of a radical
solution to the problems that the region suffers from, and therefore the crisis
will prolong as Niger enters into a security chaos that may be prolonged, as
well as the possibility of the emergence of new terrorist hotbeds and the
occurrence of agreements and coordination with extremist groups in the Sahel
and Sahara region.
He added that there are extremist groups operating in Niger,
including al-Qaeda, ISIS, Boko Haram, and other groups of an ethnic nature,
such as the Fulani herders, who spread with their livestock in the tri-border
between Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso. Consequently, the increasing security
fragility and confusion will exacerbate armed confrontations and the movement
of groups.
ISIS movements
Sharqawi said that ISIS will move violently in response to
the military operations that Bazoum had launched against it in March, when the
Nigerien army launched a military operation against ISIS bases in West Africa
on the border with neighboring Nigeria, resulting in the killing of about 20 of
the organization's fighters and the arrest of 83 others, with the aim of
cutting off the supply lines, in addition to the increasing waves of Boko Haram
fighters fleeing towards Niger to escape the fighting with ISIS in the
neighboring areas.