Niger President Mahamadou Issoufou |
The journey is not yet finished (120)
(Part one hundred and twenty, Depok, West Java,
Indonesia, 27 September 2014, 10:28 pm)
Niger President Mahamadou Issoufou in his address to the
General Assembly of the United Nations Affirming, the fate of the African
nation depends on the unity and solidarity of unity and cooperation among the
countries in the continent itself.
Africa: 'The Future of Africa Is in Unity', Says Niger's
President, Among Continental
Addressing the United Nations General Assembly at its
annual high-level debate, Mahamadou Issoufou of Niger warned today against
attempts to balkanize Africa and underscored that the post-2015 sustainable
development agenda need to be anchored in the "three D's": defense,
democracy and development.
"The Pandora box of balkanization that is open in
Africa needs to be closed again if one does not want the whole continent to go
up in flames," said President Issoufou, the first of several African
leaders to address the General Debate of the 69th Assembly
"The future of Africa is in its unity. The move
beyond the borders inherited from colonization is not to create new borders
along ethnic or religious bases but to go beyond the current boundaries via
integration," he added.
Africa will be the continent of the 21st century with a
strong middle class born out of good policy and economic governance that eases
poverty through income distribution, the President noted.
The leader of the West African country highlighted
conflicts in neighbouring Libya, Mali and Nigeria. He warned the international
and local communities that it would be dangerous to let the insecurity grow
instead of helping to bring about a peace, and called for a strategy that cuts
off financing and blocks a terrorist strategy that uses propaganda heavily
covered by the press adn social media.
In his address, Mohamed Moncef Mazouki, President of
Tunisia, said that his country was moving ahead with a peaceful democratic
transition though it and its people had had lived for many years under
despotism.
"We are trying to grapple with the
counter-revolution with moderation and ending the residue of despotism."
he said, emphasizing that Tunisia is also initiating socio-economic development
that will be in harmony with the environment and in line with the sustainable
development goals of the UN.
Yet, Tunisia's progress was occurring "at the heart
of a region that had witnessed political conflagrations" and the heinous
activities of armed groups aimed at undermining the drive for democracy. For
example, he was very concerned about the situation in neighboring Libya and
hoped that the leaders there would soon agree on a peaceful democratic State
without outside influence or interventions. The wise men in the country must
preserve national consensus.
Niger Territoty |
More broadly, he expressed deep concern about the
activities of armed groups committing grave acts in the wider region and the
Middle East. Tunisia was ashamed that such acts were being carried out in the
name of Allah, who was for peace and humanity. Nothing justifies this violence,
which has reached such unprecedented levels, Mr. Mazouki said. Condemning the
heinous killing of prisoners or hostages no matter what nationality they are,
he said: "we are all human beings."
He went on to say that regimes must rule in harmony with
the will of the people. They must promote development, education and other
polices which would lead to unifying societies and improving living standards. Some
of the major powers had supported despotism for many years under the pretext of
ensuring stability.
Turning to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he called
for lifting of all blockades on Gaza and throughout the territory. The
Palestinian people are crying out for rebuilding their devastated lands, he
added.
Finally, he reiterated his country's call for the
creation of an "international constitutional court" which would give
advice on such issues as elections and adherence to international legal norms.
Mr. Mazouki said that he hoped such a tribunal would soon "see the light
of day", bringing about the end of despotism. He hoped that process would
not take as long as it taken to create the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Also addressing the Assembly, Hery Martial
Rajaonarimampianina Rakotoarimanana, President of Madagascar, said that his
country was home to five per cent of the world's biodiversity. As such, when he
took office, he had "declared war" on traffickers of rosewood, as
well as on all those traded in protected species. He also established an
inter-ministerial committee that monitored Madagascar's "zero tolerance
policy" on all trafficking of wildlife and natural resources.
Yet, the President continued, traffickers were able to
thwart the stringent oversight measures, largely because of shortfall in
resources. Madagascar's location made it imperative to protect its natural
environment and marine resource. It was a perilous region, vulnerable to piracy
and all manner of trafficking. While addressing other pressing issues, the
Government had been able to declare nearly 10 per cent of the country as
protected natural reserves.
On other matters, he said that after years of political
instability and crippling polices and measures such as sanctions, Madagascar
will not reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. However, the
country is undertaking a major drive to invest in its people, enhance its
infrastructure, expand education opportunity and boost ICT use. Citing one
major example, he said more than 100 basic healthcare centres had been opened
in recent months.
In additions, President Rajaonarimampianina said tangible
results had also been achieved on the security front including, curbing massive
cattle theft in parts of the country. As for the post-2015 development agenda,
he said that Madagascar was committed to creating a modern, open and
transparent nation that respected human rights. "
"Our primary goal is to bring our people out of
their precarious situation," he said, citing major projects to boost
Madagascar's agriculture sector. The aim is not only to improve livelihoods at
home, but to transform Madagascar into a "food hub" in the region. He
added that his Government is also working hard to create jobs and enhance its
tourism infrastructure, both of which are vital for development.
Since Wednesday, speakers have taken to the podium in the
UN's renovated General Assembly Hall to address the 193 Member State on the
theme of "Delivering on and Implementing a Transformative Post-2015
Development Agenda" as well as urgent crises ranging from the ongoing
conflicts in Syria, Iraq, Ukraine and South Sudan.(http://allafrica.com/)
History of Niger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Modern Niger.
Ancient rock engraving showing herds of giraffe, ibex,
and other animals in the southern Sahara near Tiguidit, Niger.
Niger saharan medieval trade routes.PNG
The Songhai Empire at its greatest extent, c. 1500.
Ruins of the trade oasis of Djado in northeast Niger.
French colonial West Africa, c. 1918.
Tuareg men in Niger, 1997.
This is the history of Niger. See also the history of
Africa and the history of West Africa.
Niger People |
Pre-historic Niger[edit]
Humans have lived in what is now Niger from the earliest
times. 2 to 3.5 million-year-old Australopithecus bahrelghazali remains have
been found in neighboring Chad.
Archeologists in Niger have much work to do, with little
known of the prehistory of the societies that inhabited the south, the home of
the vast majority of modern Nigeriens.[1] The deserts and the mountains of the
north, though, have garnered attention for the ancient abandoned cities and
pre-historic rock carvings found in the Aïr Mountains and the Ténéré desert.
Considerable evidence indicates that about 60,000 years
ago, humans inhabited what has since become the desolate Sahara Desert of
northern Niger. Later, on what was then huge fertile grasslands, from at least
7,000 BCE there was pastoralism, herding of sheep and goats, large settlements
and pottery. Cattle were introduced to the Central Sahara (Ahaggar) from 4,000
to 3,500 BCE. Remarkable rock paintings, many found in the Aïr Mountains, dated
3,500 to 2,500 BCE, portray vegetation and animal presence rather different
from modern expectations.[2]
One recent find suggests what is now the Sahara of
northeast Niger was home to a succession of Holocene era societies. One Saharan
site illustrated how sedentary hunter-fisher-gatherers lived at the edge of
shallow lakes around 7700–6200 BCE, but disappeared during a period of extreme
drought that may have lasted for a millennium over 6200–5200 BCE. Several
former northern villages and archaeological sites date from the Green Sahara
period of 7500-7000 to 3500-3000 BCE.[3] When the climate returned to savanna
grasslands—wetter than today's climate—and lakes reappeared in what is the
modern Ténére desert, a population practicing hunting, fishing, and cattle
husbandry. This last population survived until almost historical times, from
5200–2500 BCE, when the current arid period began.[4]
As the Sahara dried after 2000 BCE, the north of Niger
became the desert it is today, with settlements and trade routes clinging to
the Air in the north, the Kaouar and shore of Lake Chad in the west, and (apart
for a scattering of oases) most people living along what is now the southern
border with Nigeria and the southwest of the country.
The probable ancient regional ecology[edit]
North Africa enjoyed a fertile climate during the
subpluvial era; what is now the Sahara supported a savanna type of ecosystem,
with elephant, giraffe, and other grassland and woodland animals now typical of
the Sahel region south of the desert. Historian and Africanist Roland Oliver has
described the scene as follows:
[In] the highlands of the central Sahara beyond the
Libyan desert,... in the great massifs of the Tibesti and the Hoggar, the
mountaintops, today bare rock, were covered at this period with forests of oak
and walnut, lime, alder and elm. The lower slopes, together with those of the
supporting bastions — the Tassili and the Acacus to the north, Ennedi and Air
to the south — carried olive, juniper and Aleppo pine. In the valleys,
perennially flowing rivers teemed with fish and were bordered by seed-bearing
grasslands.[5]
Metalworking technology[edit]
Main article: Iron Metallurgy in Africa
A 2002 UNESCO published study suggested that iron
smelting at Termit, in eastern Niger may have begun as early as 1500 BC.[6]
This finding, which would be of great importance to both the history of Niger
and the history of the diffusion of Iron Age metalworking technology in all of
sub-Saharan Africa, is as yet contentious.[1] Older accepted studies place the
spread of both copper and Iron technology to date from the early first
Millennium CE: 1500 years later than the Termit Massif finds.[7]
Niger Troops |
Ancient history[edit]
By at least the 5th century BCE], Carthage and Egypt
became terminals for West African gold, ivory, and slaves] trading salt, cloth,
beads, and metal goods. With this trade, Niger was on the route between the
empires of the Sahel and the empires of the Mediterranean basin.
Trade continued into Roman times. Although there are
Classical references to direct travel from the Mediterranean to West Africa
(Daniels, p. 22f), most of this trade was conducted through middlemen who
inhabited the area and so were aware of safe passages through the drying
lands.[8]
Recent archaeological discoveries at Bura (in southwest
Niger) and in adjacent southeast Burkina Faso have documented the existence of
the iron-age Bura culture from the 3rd century CE to the 13th century CE. The
Bura-Asinda system of settlements apparently covered the lower Niger River
valley. But further research is needed to understand the role this early
civilization played in the ancient and medieval history of West Africa.
Introduction of the camel[edit]
Herodotus wrote of the Garamantes hunting the Ethiopian
Troglodytes with their chariots; this account was associated with depictions of
horses drawing chariots in contemporary cave art in southern Morocco and the
Fezzan, giving origin to a theory that the Garamantes, or some other Saran
people, had created chariot routes to provide Rome and Carthage with gold and
ivory. However, it has been argued that no horse skeletons have been found
dating from this early period in the region, and chariots would have been
unlikely vehicles for trading purposes due to their small capacity.[9]
Niamey City |
The earliest evidence for domesticated camels in the
region dates from the 3rd century. Used by the Berber people, they enabled more
regular contact across the entire width of the Sahara, but regular trade routes
did not develop until the beginnings of the Islamic conversion of West Africa
in the 7th and 8th centuries.[9] Two main trade routes developed. The first ran
through the western desert from modern Morocco to the Niger Bend, the second
from modern Tunisia to the Lake Chad area. These stretches were relatively
short and had the essential network of occasional oases that established the
routing as inexorably as pins in a map. Further east of the Fezzan with its
trade route through the valley of Kaouar to Lake Chad, Libya was impassable due
to its lack of oases and fierce sandstorms.[10] A route from the Niger Bend to
Egypt was abandoned in the 10th century due to its dangers.
Imperial Niger[edit]
Niger was an important economic crossroads, and the
empires of Songhai, Mali, the Dendi Kingdom, Gao, and Kanem-Bornu, as well as a
number of Hausa states, claimed control over portions of the area. During
recent centuries, the nomadic Tuareg formed large confederations, pushed
southward, and, siding with various Hausa states, clashed with the Fulani
Empire of Sokoto, which had gained control of much of the Hausa territory in
the late 18th century. The area eventually became known as the Bornu Empire,
which ended in 1893.
Colonization[edit]
In the 19th century, contact with Europe began when the
first European explorers—notably Mungo Park (British) and Heinrich Barth
(German)-explored the area searching for the mouth of the Niger River. Although
French efforts at pacification began before 1900, dissident ethnic groups,
especially the desert Tuareg, were not subdued until 1922, when Niger became a
French colony.
Niger's colonial history and development parallel that of
other French West African territories. France administered her West African
colonies through a governor general at Dakar, Senegal, and governors in the
individual territories, including Niger. In addition to conferring a limited
form of French citizenship on the inhabitants of the territories, the 1946
French constitution provided for decentralization of power and limited
participation in political life for local advisory assemblies.
Towards independence[edit]
A further revision in the organization of overseas
territories occurred with the passage of the Overseas Reform Act (Loi Cadre) of
23 July 1956, followed by re-organizational measures enacted by the French
Parliament early in 1957. In addition to removing voting inequalities, these
laws provided for creation of governmental organs, assuring individual
territories a measure of self-government over internal matters such as
education, health, and infrastructure.
After the establishment of the Fifth French Republic on 4
October 1958, the territories of French West Africa and French Equatorial
Africa were given the right to hold a referendum on their membership in the
French Community, a modified form of the French Union which allowed some
limited self-government and was viewed as a path to eventual independence.
Niger Militant troops |
The 4 December elections (on whether to remain in the
French Community, followed shortly by those for the Nigerien territorial
assembly) were contested by the two political blocks of the Territorial
Assembly. The Nigerien Progressive Party (PPN), originally a regional branch of
the African Democratic Rally (RDA), led the Union Pour La Communauté
Franco-Africaine (UCFA) and was headed by PPN leader and deputy-speaker of the
Assembly Hamani Diori. The other block was led by the then majority leader of
the Assembly, Djibo Bakary. His Movement Socialist Africain (known by the name
Sawaba: independence in the Hausa language) called for a "no" vote:
one of only two major formations in French West Africa to do so.[11]
While there have always been questions about French
influence in the voting[12] The results of both elections were confirmed on the
16th. The PPN led UCFA (yes 358,000) defeated Sawaba (no 98,000), winning 54
seats to 4 in the 60 seat assembly.[13] On the 18th Niger declared itself a
republic within the French Community and the Territorial Assembly became the Constituent
Assembly. This date (18 December 1958) is celebrated as Republic Day, the
national holiday of Niger, and considered date of the founding of the nation.
In March 1959 this became the Legislative Assembly.[14]
In 1958 Diori became president of the provisional
government, and then became Prime Minister of Niger in 1959. Having organised a
powerful coalition of Hausa, Fula, and Djerma leaders, especially made up of
chiefs and traditional leaders, in support of Niger's "Yes" vote in
the 1959 referendum, Diori gained French favor. During the 1959-1960 period,
the French government banned all political parties except the PPN, effectively
making Niger a one-party state. The Sawaba leaders fled into exile, and the
member parties of the UCFA were folded into the PPN.
Independence[edit]
On 11 July 1960 France agreed to Niger becoming fully
independent.[15] The French Fifth Republic passed a revision of the French
Community allowing membership of independent states. On 28 July the Nigerien
Legislative Assembly became the Nigerien National Assembly. Independence was
declared on 3 August 1960 under the leadership of Prime Minister Diori.
Subsequently in November 1960 Diori was elected to the new position of
President of Niger by the National Assembly. During his presidency, Diori's
government favored the maintenance of traditional social structures and the
retention of close economic ties with France. He was re-elected unopposed in
1965 and 1970.
Diori gained worldwide respect for his role as a
spokesman for African affairs and as a popular arbitrator in conflicts
involving other African nations. Domestically, however, his administration was
rife with corruption, and the government was unable to implement much-needed
reforms or to alleviate the widespread famine brought on by the Sahelian
drought of the early 1970s. Increasingly criticized at home for his negligence
in domestic matters, Diori put down a coup in 1963 and narrowly escaped
assassination in 1965. Faced with an attempted military coup and attacks by members
of Sawaba, he used French advisers and troops to counter threats to his rule,
despite student and union protests against what they perceived French
neocolonialism. However, his relationship with France suffered when his
government voiced dissatisfaction with the level of investment in uranium
production when French President Georges Pompidou visited Niger in 1972.
The PPN functioned as a platform for a handful of
Politburo leaders grouped around Diori and his advisors Boubou Hama and
Diamballa Maiga, who were largely unchanged from their first election in 1956.
By 1974 the party had not held a congress since 1959 (one was scheduled for
late 1974 during the famine induced political crisis, but never held). The PPN
election lists were made up of traditional rulers from the main ethnic regions
who, upon election to the Assembly, were given only ceremonial power. Ethnic tensions,
too, mounted during Diori's regime. The Politburo and successive cabinets were
made up almost exclusively of Djerma, Songhai and Maouri ethnic groups from the
west of the country, the same ethnic base the French had relied on during
colonial rule. No Politburo ever contained a member of Hausa or Fula groups,
even though the Hausa were the plurality of the population, forming over 40% of
Nigeriens.[16]
Widespread civil disorder followed allegations that some
government ministers were misappropriating stocks of food aid and accused Diori
of consolidating power. Diori limited cabinet appointments to fellow Djerma,
family members, and close friends. In addition, he acquired new powers by
declaring himself the minister of foreign and defense affairs.[17]
1974 to 1990[edit]
On 15 April 1974, Lieutenant colonel Seyni Kountché led a
military coup that ended Diori's rule. Diori was imprisoned until 1980 and
remained under house arrest. The government that followed, while plagued by
coup attempts of its own, survived until 1993. While a period of relative
prosperity, the military government of the period allowed little free
expression and engaged in arbitrary imprisonment and killing. The first
presidential elections took place in 1993 (33 years after independence), and
the first municipal elections only took place in 2007.[18]
Niger Militan |
A member of the FAN Parachute Company, 1988.
Upon Kountché's death in 1987, he was succeeded by his
Chief of Staff and cousin, Col. Ali Saibou. Saibou liberalized some of Niger's
laws and policies, and promulgated a new constitution. He released political
prisoners, including Diori and his old political nemesis Djibo Bakary. However,
President Saibou's efforts to control political reforms failed in the face of
union and student demands to institute a multi-party democratic system. The
Saibou regime acquiesced to these demands by the end of 1990. New political
parties and civic associations sprang up, and a National Conference was
convened in July 1991 to prepare the way for the adoption of a new constitution
and the holding of free and fair elections. The debate was often contentious
and accusatory, but under the leadership of Prof. André Salifou, the conference
developed consensus on the modalities of a transitional government.
1990s[edit]
A transitional government was installed in November 1991
to manage the affairs of state until the institutions of the Third Republic
were put in place in April 1993. While the economy deteriorated over the course
of the transition, certain accomplishments stand out, including the successful
conduct of a constitutional referendum; the adoption of key legislation such as
the electoral and rural codes; and the holding of several free, fair, and
nonviolent nationwide elections. Freedom of the press flourished with the
appearance of several new independent newspapers. In 1993, Mahamane Ousmane,
the Democratic and Social Convention (CDS) party candidate, won the
presidential election with the support of a coalition of parties. The agreement
between the parties fell apart in 1994 leading to governmental paralysis as the
CDS on its own no longer had a majority in the assembly. Ousmane dissolved the
legislature and called new legislative elections, but the National Movement for
the Development of Society (MNSD) party won the largest group of seats, so
Ousmane was compelled to appoint Hama Amadou of the MNSD as prime minister. The
prime minister then prepared for a surprise attack.
Since 1990 Tuareg and Toubou groups that had been leading
the Tuareg Rebellion claiming they lacked attention and resources from the
central government. As the culmination of an initiative started in 1991, the
government signed peace accords in April 1995 with these groups. The government
agreed to absorb some former rebels in the military and, with French
assistance, help others return to a productive civilian life.
The paralysis of government between the President and the
Prime Minister who no longer agreed gave Col. Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara a
rationale to overthrow the Third Republic and depose the first democratically
elected president of Niger, on 27 January 1996. While leading a military
authority that ran the government (Conseil de Salut National) during a
six-month transition period, Baré enlisted specialists to draft a new constitution
for a Fourth Republic announced in May 1996.
Delta Niger |
Baré organized a presidential election in June 1996. He
ran against four other candidates, including Ousmane. Before voting had
finished, Baré dissolved the national electoral committee and appointed another,
which announced him the winner with over 50% of the votes cast. When his
efforts to justify his coup and subsequent questionable election failed to
convince donors to restore multilateral and bilateral economic assistance, a
desperate Baré ignored the international embargo on Libya seeking funds for
Niger's economy. In repeated violations of basic civil liberties by the regime,
opposition leaders were imprisoned; journalists often arrested, beaten, and
deported by an unofficial militia composed of police and military; and
independent media offices were looted and burned with impunity.
In April 1999, Baré was assassinated in a coup led by
Maj. Daouda Malam Wanké who established a transitional National Reconciliation
Council to oversee the drafting of a constitution for a Fifth Republic with a
French style semi-presidential system. In votes that international observers
found to be generally free and fair, the Nigerien electorate approved the new
constitution in July 1999 and held legislative and presidential elections in
October and November 1999. Heading a MNSD/CDS coalition, Tandja Mamadou won the
presidency. The council transitioned to civilian rule in December 1999.
2000s[edit]
In July 2004, Niger held municipal elections nationwide
as part of its decentralization process. Some 3,700 people were elected to new
local governments in 265 newly established communes. The ruling MNSD party won
more positions than any other political party; however, opposition parties made
significant gains.[19]
In November and December 2004, Niger held presidential
and legislative elections. Mamadou Tandja was elected to his second five-year
presidential term with 65% of the vote in an election that international
observers called generally free and fair. This was the first presidential
election with a democratically elected incumbent and a test to Niger's young
democracy.[19]
In the 2004 legislative elections, the MNSD, the CDS),
the Rally for Social Democracy (RSD), the Rally for Democracy and Progress
(RDP), the Nigerien Alliance for Democracy and Progress (ANDP), and the Social
Party for Nigerien Democracy (PSDN) coalition, which backed Tandja, won 88 of
the 113 seats in the National Assembly.[19]
The Second Tuareg insurgency in Niger began in 2007 when
a previously unknown group, the Mouvement des Nigeriens pour la Justice (MNJ),
emerged. The predominantly Tuareg group issued a number of demands, mainly
related to development in the north. It attacked military and other facilities
and laid landmines in the north. The resulting insecurity devastated Niger's
tourist industry and deterred investment in mining and oil. Algeria helped
negotiate an August 2008 Malian peace deal, which was broken by a rebel faction
in December, crushed by the Malian military and wholesale defections of rebels
to the government. Niger saw heavy fighting and disruption of Uranium
production in the mountainous north, before a Libyan backed peace deal, aided
by a factional split among the rebels, brought a negotiated ceasefire and
amnesty in May 2009.
On 26 May 2009, President Tandja dissolved parliament
after the country's constitutional court ruled against plans to hold a
referendum on whether to allow him a third term in office. According to the
constitution, a new parliament was elected within three months.[20] This
touched off a political struggle between Tandja, trying to extend his
term-limited authority beyond 2009 through the establishment of a Sixth
Republic, and his opponents who demanded that he step down at the end of his
second term in December 2009. See 2009 Nigerien constitutional crisis. The
military took over the country and President Tandja was put in prison, charged
with corruption.
The military kept their promise to return the country to
democratic civilian rule. A constitutional referendum and national elections
were held. A presidential election was held on 31 January 2011, but as no clear
winner emerged, run-off elections were held on 12 March 2011. Mahamadou
Issoufou of the Nigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism was elected
president. A parliamentary election was held at the same time.[21][22][23]
(Continoe)
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