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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
All candidates in Niger elections pledge to enforce IMF and
World Bank dictates
By Brian Smith
4 November 1999
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The West African state of Niger went to the polls on October
17 to elect a new head of state, following the assassination of
former President General Ibrahim Bare Mainassara in April. Seven
candidates stood in the election, but this was merely a pretence
of democracy meant to comply with current demands from Western
governments. The candidates included ex-president Mahamane Ousmane,
two former prime ministers and two retired army colonels, all
of whom promised to continue with World Bank and IMF agreements,
including the privatisation of state-owned enterprises.
A run-off election will be needed, as no candidate gained a
clear majority. The two proceeding to the next ballot are Tandja
Mamadou of the National Movement for the Development of Society,
a retired Lieutenant Colonel and former ambassador to Nigeria
who received 32.3 percent of the vote, and ex-Prime Minister Mahamadou
Issoufou of the Nigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism who
received 22.8 percent of the vote. Ousmane came in a close third
with 22.5 percent. The election is to be held on November 24.
A United Nations Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)
report of October 20 lays out the future for the victor in Niger's
election. Ukowa Ukiwe, a regional analyst from the Centre for
Advanced Social Sciences in Nigeria, suggests that the new regime
must aggressively seek direct foreign investment, as Niger's uraniumits
chief exportcan only be harnessed by external private initiative.
Private investors, he added, will need legislation that guarantees
the repatriation of their profits. Otherwise foreign companies
would side with insurrectionary groups in order to gain access
to solid mineral deposits. This has been a factor in Sierra
Leone, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ukiwe
said.
Following the April coup, almost all foreign government aid
was withdrawn from Niger, though World Bank and International
Monetary Fund schemes remained in place. This withdrawal resulted
in the cutting of various development projects and added to the
government's fiscal problemsalready strained due to falling
uranium prices. Consequently, public sector salaries have not
been paid since April, when they were already many months behind.
Civil disquiet is increasingly a problem. As many as 40,000
public sector employees have taken strike action in the last two
years, some demanding 11 months' unpaid wages. Eighteen thousand
teachers boycotted the opening of schools in October, along with
a strike by six thousand nurses, midwives and laboratory staff,
all of whom were demanding wages owed them. Late-paid salaries
provoked army mutinies in April and October.
It is thought that European government aid might resume if
the elections are seen to establish a civilian government. The
World Bank suspended its aid to Niger on September 15 due to the
non-payment of the country's share of projects sponsored by the
bank. This affected educational and agricultural schemes, which
have been cut.
Mainassara's overthrow was decried in the West, particularly
in France, as the ousting of a democratic regime.
However, Mainassara himself came to power in a military coup in
January 1996, overthrowing the civilian government of Mahamane
Ousmane. Mainassara had denounced Ousmane's administration as
the source of the country's instability. There had been continuous
conflicts, to the point of impasse, between the president and
the prime minister, who came from different parties.
Mainassara's own coup was widely welcomed by Western governments
as a turn to a more stable and compliant regime. There have been
accusations that France, for whom he became a virtual puppet,
may even have aided it. French interests lie in Niger's uranium,
which fuels 25 percent of France's energy production.
Following the coup, every aspect of Niger's economy was put
under World Bank direction. A six-year debt repayment package
was negotiated with the IMF and the World Bank, under the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt relief scheme, and government
spending was severely cut, with plans laid to privatise state
industry.
Six months after seizing power, Mainassara attempted to legitimise
his rule by holding a rigged election. He replaced the existing
independent electoral commission with his own commission, and
instructed the military to seize ballot boxes all over the country
and take them to a secret location before delivering them to election
central. He then arrested all the opposing candidates.
Under pressure from the US and France, Mainassara began the
process of reintroducing the trappings of democratic rule, with
elections held in February this year. Again there were cries of
foul play, as the published results included only 70 percent of
municipal seats and only 50 percent of local council seats. On
April 7, two days before his assassination, the country's Supreme
Court effectively annulled the election by ordering a rerun, but
did not set a date.
The ensuing instability was the main factor in the Presidential
Guard deciding to get rid of Mainassara on behalf of the ruling
elite. Prime Minister Ibrahim Assane Mayaki described the assassination
as an unfortunate accident.
However, in an astonishingly frank interview with Jeune
Afrique on September 21, Mayaki explained why he had lied:
You need to place my words, for which I assume complete
responsibility, in their context. My consistent objective, right
from the announcement of the assassination of President Bare,
was to avoid a bloodbath. It was necessary to find the right words
that, although they were not true, could calm the vengeful ardour
and the resentment of the dead President's supporters; all the
more so because, confronting them, the soldiers appeared determined.
When one is in the middle of a conflict, one must keep cool-headed
and put the general interest first.
He continued, To sum up, on April 9, I had to make up
something to explain the events. It was either the unfortunate
accident' or Sierra Leone. In other words, either accept
the fiction of an accident or face the descent into civil waras
in Sierra Leone.
A former French colony, Niger is ranked as the second poorest
country in the world and has been run by military regimes for
most of the time since independence. Fully 80 percent of its people
are illiterate, 63 percent live below the official poverty line
and life expectancy is just 47 years. Whoever wins the election
in November, Niger's military and political elite's subservience
to IMF and World Bank dictates will ensure that debt maintenance
and access to uranium are top on the priority list.
See Also:
Niger
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