UN chief urges restraint, dialogue on Niger crisis
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday voiced concern over the political and constitutional crisis in Niger, calling for restraint and political dialogue to resolve the issue. In a statement issued at the UN headquarters in New York, Ban said he was “deeply concerned” about the ongoing political and constitutional crisis in Niger. “The crisis threatens to destabilise the country and undermine the progress made in recent years to consolidate democratic governance and the rule of law,” Ban noted.
The secretary-general also expressed regret at the most recent decisions taken by the Niger government, which he said “have made it extremely difficult for the country's democratic institutions and the Constitutional Court to play their roles as guarantors of the rule of law”. Niger's President Mamadou Tandja on Monday dismissed the Constitutional Court following the dissolution of National Assembly in late May. Tandja took office in November 1999 and was re-elected in 2004. In a bid to retain the presidency, Tandja, whose legal term limit ends in December, proposed a referendum in April to amend the Constitution but was turned down by the Constitutional Court.
The UN chief also offered his good offices to work with regional partners, in particular the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States to find a solution to the political crisis.
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