Saturday, April 18, 2026
spot_img
HomeNewsNiger's junta reopens airspace weeks after coup – DW – 09/04/2023

Niger’s junta reopens airspace weeks after coup – DW – 09/04/2023

[ad_1]

Niger’s junta said on Monday that it had reopened the country’s airspace to commercial flights.

Its airspace was closed on July 26 after Nigerien officers overthrow the government of President Mohammed Bazoum.

Why was Niger’s airspace closed?

The junta then reopened its airspace on August 2, only to close it again on August 6, citing the threat of military intervention from the West African bloc ECOWAS.

ECOWAS has threatened the use of force to restore constitutional order if Bazoum is not reinstated, but has yet to act on this threat.

The closure had forced Air France and other European carriers to suspend some flights and take longer routes.

Niger is more than twice the size of France and is the second-largest landlocked country in Africa, covering an area of 1,270,000 square kilometers (around 49,000 square miles). Many flights across the African continent would pass over Niger under normal circumstances.

Niger’s rulers did not give an immediate explanation for the move to reopen the country’s airspace.

Thousands of protesters demand French forces leave Niger

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Niger’s military leadership

General Abdourahamane has appointed himself as the new leader of Niger and established a caretaker government which is to rule “no longer than three years.”

Late last week, junta supporters in Nigerien capital Niamey demanded the withdrawal of the 1,500 French troops present in the country. Paris has so far ignored the junta’s August 3 announcement that it had dropped its military agreements with France, arguing that Niger’s military rulers lack legitimacy and affirming support for the reinstatement of Bazoum’s government.

Niger’s junta also ordered a halt to uranium exports to France, which largely relies on nuclear energy.

A number of countries in Africa have seen coups in recent years, with Gabon’s government being overthrown by officers last Wednesday. Three of Niger’s neighbors — Mali, Chad and Burkina Faso — are under military rule, as are Sudan and Guinea.

EU diplomats say they are preparing sanctions against Niger’s military leadership, with organizations supporting the junta potentially also subject to sanctions.

sdi/jcg (dpa, AFP, Reuters)

[ad_2]

Source link

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisement -spot_img

Most Popular

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img