Senior US official heads to Africa on Niger crisis

 

(FILES) In this file photo taken on April 27, 2022 the US flag flies at half staff at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, for former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. – A bipartisan group of US senators on June 12, 2022 announced measures aimed at curbing rampant gun violence plaguing the country, but the limited proposals fall far short of changes called for by the president. (Photo by Stefani Reynolds / AFP)

A senior US official headed Friday to West Africa in a new diplomatic bid to find a way to reverse a month-old military takeover in Niger.

Molly Phee, the top US diplomat for sub-Saharan Africa, will visit Nigeria and Ghana — democratic regional heavyweights that have led calls to restore Niger’s elected government — as well as Chad, Niger’s turbulent neighbour and fellow partner in Western military operations.

Niger’s military on July 26 detained President Mohamed Bazoum, the elected leader who has welcomed US and French troops to fight jihadists in the Sahel.

Phee on her trip “will raise the shared goals of preserving Niger’s hard-earned democracy and achieving the immediate release of President Bazoum, his family and those members of his government unjustly detained,” the State Department said in a statement.

It said Phee was also consulting senior officials in Benin, Ivory Coast, Senegal and Togo, fellow members of the ECOWAS regional bloc.

Nigeria and Ghana have been at the forefront of an agreement by ECOWAS to set up a standby military force in its push to restore Bazoum.

In Chad, the State Department said Phee will also discuss the violence in another of its neighbors, Sudan, and Chad’s own political transition.

General Mahamat Idriss Deby took power in Chad in April 2021 after the death of his father, longtime strongman Idriss Deby, and promised a political transition which has since been extended.

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