Niger president seized in military coup

NIAMEY, (Reuters) – Mutinous troops led by an army  colonel captured Niger’s President Mamadou Tandja after a gun  battle yesterday, and said they were suspending the  constitution and dissolving all political institutions.

Tensions had been high in the west African uranium exporter  since Tandja changed the constitution to extend his rule last  year, a move that drew widespread criticism at home and led to  international sanctions.

“We, the security and defence forces, have decided to take  responsibility for putting an end to the tense political  situation that you are already aware of,” a spokesman for the  military junta, which called itself the Supreme Council for the  Restoration of Democracy (CSRD), said in a statement on state  television late last evening.

The statement made no mention of Tandja, but military  sources said he had been seized along with several ministers.

They said soldiers led by Colonel Adamou Harouna had stormed  the presidential palace in a four-hour gun battle in the heart  of the capital, Niamey.

The new military rulers’ statement said they had closed the  borders and imposed an overnight curfew.

They gave no indication of how long they intended to hold  power but called on Nigeriens and the international community to  support their actions. The West African economic body ECOWAS  said it would punish any unconstitutional power-grab.

During the day, plumes of smoke were seen rising from the  palace amid heavy gunfire. Hospital sources said at least three  soldiers were killed in the clashes. A Reuters witness saw five  injured soldiers at a hospital.

Later a Niamey resident told Reuters: “Calm has returned and  tanks have taken up positions close to the barracks, where  Tandja and members of his government were rumoured to be held.”

The resident, who asked not to be named, said a soldier  living next door had told her not to worry as there would be no  more resistance since the entire army supported the coup.

Harouna, previously thought to be a major, heads Niger’s  ECOWAS standby force. Analysts and local journalists played down  the possibility of a counter-coup, saying Tandja’s presidential  guard was divided and heavy weapons had been taken to barracks  under the junta’s control.

Tandja drew criticism and sanctions after dissolving  parliament and orchestrating a constitutional reform in 2009  that gave him added powers and extended his term beyond his  second five-year mandate, which expired in December.

The reform removed most checks on his authority, abolished  term limits, and gave him an initial three more years in power  without an election. Tandja said he needed extra time to  complete large-scale investment projects.