“Lift the sanctions first, agree with them to start negotiating on when and how they are going to release the ousted President Bazoum, and then when they are going to hand over to civilians,” he advised.
Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume
Tinubu ill-advised on Niger Republic sanctions – Ndume
The Senate Majority Chief Whip, Ali Ndume, has said that President Bola Tinubu was wrongly advised on ECOWAS sanctions on Niger military junta.
Mr Ndume, who represents Borno South in the Senate, said the sanctions were ineffective because they were only affecting innocent citizens.
Newstrends reports that the West African regional bloc imposed heavy sanctions on Niger following the ouster of President Mohammed Bazoum by the country’s military.
But speaking during an interview with journalists in Maiduguri, Mr Ndume said the sanctions were not affecting the military junta but innocent citizens.
“The sanctions are not affecting the military junta. The sanctions are affecting the poor people that are not part of the coup, and these are people, especially children, women, petty traders, and poor middle-income earners.
“Even the international law that guides us does not support sanctions that affect humanitarian needs. The suffering the people of Niger Republic are going through is more than imaginable.
The senator lemented that seven northern states who shared borders with Niger are also bearing the brunt of the sanctions.
He, therefore, appealed to Mr Tinubu, who is the ECOWAS chairman, to immediately lift the sanctions and address the crisis.
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“Because Nigeria is ECOWAS, and ECOWAS is Nigeria. Nigeria has the majority of votes and contributes 70 percent of ECOWAS funding.
“I am one of those against the actions taken by the ECOWAS leadership to impose sanctions on Niger. I strongly believe that that decision was rushed and it was not the right thing. I don’t support those sanctions because the decision affects me, my state and my region.
“Over 100,000 Nigerians, Borno State citizens from Abadam, Guzamala, Kukawa, and other places, all migrated to Niger, and they received them with open arms, not putting them in the camp, but taking them to their own houses; and they have been for more than 10 years now,” he said.
“Niger Republic has been supporting Nigeria. During the Biafran War, France, the colonial masters of Niger, supported the Biafrans, but the then Niger Republic President [Diori Hammani]refused to follow France in that decision. They gave us military support. Not only that, every time Nigeria stands for something, Niger stands with us.
“Lift the sanctions first, agree with them to start negotiating on when and how they are going to release the ousted President Bazoum, and then when they are going to hand over to civilians,” he advised.
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