Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine appointed Prime Minister by the junta

Despite international pressure for a return to constitutional order, the new masters of Niamey are establishing their power. The soldiers responsible for the coup in Niger announced Monday evening the appointment of a Prime Minister, Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine, in a press release read on national television.

As soon as he came to power, former president Mamadou Tandja appointed Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine as chief of staff in 2001, then finance minister in 2002, to redress a chaotic economic and financial situation. A context inherited from soldiers who came to power after the assassination in 1999 of General and President Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara, in this country with a history marked by seizures of power by force.

A former finance minister

Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine had been Minister of Finance until the overthrow of Mamadou Tandja during a coup in 2010 by Commander Salou Djibo, before a presidential election won by Mahamadou Issoufou, predecessor of Mohamed Bazoum, ousted on July 26 last.

An economist by training, he was also resident representative of the African Development Bank (AfDB) in Chad, Côte d’Ivoire and Gabon. Born in 1965 in Zinder (south), in the second most populous city in the country, he joined the Ministry of Economy and Finance in 1991 after studying at the National School of Administration (ENA) in Niamey. He is also a graduate of the Center for Financial, Economic and Banking Studies of Marseille and Paris-I.

“Lieutenant-Colonel Habibou Assoumane” was also “appointed commander of the presidential guard”, added Colonel-Major Amadou Abdramane on national television. These appointments come the day after the expiry of the ultimatum issued by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to the military in power, to restore President Mohamed Bazoum to his duties. The organization did not rule out the use of force in the event of non-compliance with this request.

Niger’s Western and African partners are divided over the question of a military intervention to return power to civilians, before ECOWAS meets again Thursday in Abuja, Nigeria. President Bazoum is still sequestered in his private residence since the day of the coup.

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