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AFRICA NEWS
Niger: Five things to know
by Staff Writers
Niamey (AFP) Dec 24, 2020

A fact file on Niger, which goes to the polls on Sunday:

- Poverty and migrants -

With its 22.4 million -- mainly Muslim -- people, Niger is among the world's poorest countries. For nine straight years it has ranked last out of 189 nations in the UN's Human Development Index, which compares longevity, education, and income per capita.

Despite progress, the extreme poverty rate remained very high at 41.4 percent in 2019, according to the World Bank.

Before the coronavirus pandemic led it to close its borders, Niger, which is almost three times the size of California, was a transit country for African migrants seeking to reach Europe.

- Politically unstable -

Independent from France since 1960, Niger has not seen a peaceful handover of power since the first democratic elections in 1993, with every serious political crisis ending in a coup.

Outgoing president Mahamadou Issoufou, elected in 2011 and 2016 is not standing again, and his main rival Hama Amadou has been barred from standing.

- Jihadist threat -

Along with Sahel neighbours Mali and Burkina Faso, Niger is struggling with a jihadist insurgency that began in northern Mali in 2012 and since spread through highly-porous borders.

It has also been attacked repeatedly in the south by Islamist militants from the Nigerian movement Boko Haram.

In late 2019 and early 2020, three jihadist attacks killed 174 people, leaving the country in shock.

Niger's military has received training and logistical support from the United States and France, which have military bases there.

In 2017 four US special forces and five Nigeriens were killed in an ambush on their joint patrol by about 50 men from the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara group.

According to the UN, jihadist attacks, which often involve inter-communal conflicts, left 4,000 dead across Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso in 2019.

- Uranium mines -

Uranium is Niger's leading export, with the country ranked the fourth biggest producer.

Niger also became a small-scale producer of gold and oil.

But it has been buffeted by falling prices for both oil and uranium.

More than 40 percent of its GDP comes from agriculture, which also employs nearly 80 percent of the population, and is vulnerable to climate change, according to the African Development Bank.

Niger is already an arid nation but faces increasing desertification because of global warming and human activity.

It has faced repeated famines, with hunger in 1972-73 and 1984-85 blamed on drought and outdated agricultural methods.

Flooding between June and October 2020 created a new crisis, resulting in 2.2 million people needing food aid.

Its promising growth prospects have also taken a hit from the Covid-19 pandemic.

- Tourism troubles -

The Koure National Park, a haven for the West African giraffe outside the capital Niamey, was closed after the Islamic State killed eight people in August, including six young French aid workers.

The clay architecture of the 15th-century Tuareg city of Agadez in the north is listed by UNESCO. It was very popular with tourists before the jihadist attacks scared them away.


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Although U.S. troops are leaving Somalia, they will be deployed elsewhere in East Africa, the U.S. Africa Command leader said. The Pentagon announced Dec. 4 that, under orders from President Donald Trump, U.S. personnel and assets will be removed from Somalia by early 2021. The troops are involved in combating the Islamist terrorist group al-Shabab, training local forces and protecting Baledogle Airfield in southern Somalia. The U.S. forces will likely go to Camp Lemonnier in Djib ... read more

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