This summer`s coup in Niger is the fifth military coup in three years in Sahel, the dry savannah area south of the Sahara. Since President Gaddafi was killed and Libya destabilized, conditions have significantly worsened in the Sahel region. Militias and Islamist groups like al-Qaeda and Boko Haram gained easy access to weapons and quickly took over large areas.
France, the former colonial power, responded swiftly with military intervention in Mali, but failed. Other EU countries, the US, and the UN have engaged in the Sahel with military bases, drones, and security installations. There is a fear that the entire region might be collapsing, followed by an exploding migration wave northward.
In Niger the coup-makers have refused to back down, and protesters chant support for Russia in Niamey, Niger's capital.
- What is the background to the conflict?
- What might the coup d'etat and the insecurity mean for Europe?
- What is UiT- Arctic University of Norway doing in Niger, and
the region?
PARTICIPANTS:
Professor Emerita Lisbet Holtedahl
She did a one year long fieldwork in the small town Mainé-Soroa, in Eastern Niger, in 1970. Holtedahl studied village life and its transformations in the then newly created state; while it was losing its “innocence” being introduced to the complexities of the so-called “post-colonial world”. At this seminar Holtedahl will present her new book (2023), a photo ethnography from Maine Soroa and talk about transformations in this eastern region since the 1970s
Professor Trond Waage
He has long experience doing research through filmmaking and institutional collaboration in the Sahel. He is currently in charge of a university collaboration project between UiT, two universities in Cameroon, and the university in Niamey, Niger and Bamako, Mali, which is building up competence in Visual Anthropology and filmmaking in the region. Waage visited Niger in May. He will talk about the background of the conflict, emphasizing on governance, corruption and the Nigerein/Sahelien relation to France.
Al-hassan Suleiman Bello (Online from Accra)'
l-Hassan Sulaiman Bello is a lead international affairs and security analyst at Dan Rakiya Institute. He is also a permanent political analyst on Ghana's most watched political and current affairs program on Good Evening Ghana.
Alhassan speaks on issues pertaining to peace, security, international affairs, and diplomacy. His advocacy explores and promotes democracy and good governance as a prerequisite for political stability, peace, and sustainable development.
More detail about the event here https://fb.me/e/4EQK8ueCD