A security
analyst, Colonel Festus Aboagye (Rtd.), has said that the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS) was hasty in its threat to carry out a military
intervention in Niger if the ousted President Mohamed Bazoum was not released
and reinstated on Sunday.
On July 27,
soldiers, primarily from the presidential guard, seized Niger’s President
Mohamed Bazoum, leading to the dissolution of the constitution, suspension of
all institutions, and the closure of the nation’s borders. President Mohamed
Bazoum remains in the custody of the presidential guard.
ECOWAS therefore
gave the coup leaders until Sunday to reverse the military takeover and restore
President Bazoum’s rule, but the coup leaders have closed the country’s
airspace until further notice, citing the threat of military intervention from
their neighbors. Flight tracking website Flightradar24 is showing that there
are currently no aircraft in Niger’s skies.
Speaking in an
interview on Eyewitness News on Citi FM on Monday, Mr. Aboagye said, “I would
wish to suggest that ECOWAS was being hasty, not quick. When you have a
dispute, you have a number of options, tools, and approaches that you can use.
So even in international law, the UN charter emphasizes the pacific settlement
of disputes.”
“When you have
exhausted all of those options, then you may use force as a last resort. And
even that force is clarified to be a defensive force, because you have to be
aggressed. None of these happened. At the time that ECOWAS met, when it imposed
a sentence, it also imposed an ultimatum.”
Mr. Aboagye said
that the proclamation of ECOWAS defeated the gesture of sending any delegation
because once sanctions and ultimatums had been imposed, there was no need for
negotiations. For this reason, he said, ECOWAS was hasty.
“And my concern
is that it is not the first time. Each time there is a coup, that is the very
approach that we take. When we were the chair of ECOWAS, we did the same thing.
We take punitive measures before we engage, and we don’t do that. You engage
first and exhaust all your options, it might take time, but that is the nature
of diplomacy,” he added.
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