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Evidence of human settlement in the region now known as Niger goes back 6000 years, when what was then a highly fertile area
supported a well-developed civilisation. In the thousand years up to the 19th century, power in the region was based on control
of the great trans-Saharan trade routes. The Hausa Kingdom dominated the central area from the 13th century. This power decreased
from the 18th century onwards, as European traders used sea routes to make contact with West Africa. Colonised by the French
in the late 19th century, Niger became part of French West Africa until 1958. It achieved independence in 1960. Hamani Diori
was elected head of state and re-elected in 1965 and 1970. His government presided over a period of stability until its latter
stages when severe drought from 1968 onwards brought about widespread civil unrest.
In April 1974, the army, which is prone to intervening in Niger’s politics, staged a military coup under Lieutenant Colonel
(later Major General) Seyni Kountché. A series of failed coups followed when Kountché attempted to civilianise the government.
By 1983 however, the legislative Council of Ministers was entirely composed of civilians, under Prime Minister Oumarou Maname.
Kountché died in 1987, to be replaced by his staunch ally, Ali Seibou, who consolidated his position during the late 1980s.
Seibou established the Mouvement Nationale pour une Société de Développement (MNSD), which became the sole legitimate political party.
In the early 1990s, the government came under internal and external pressure to introduce democratic government. After some
initial uncertainty and opposition from Seibou, the government chose to follow the regional trend and installed an interim
administration, prior to multi-party elections and the introduction of a new constitution.
The National Assembly poll, held on 14 February 1993, saw a victory for the six-party coalition, the Alliance des Forces de Changement (AFC), which accumulated 50 of the 83 seats over the MNSD. The MNSD was similarly thwarted in the presidential election, held
in two rounds during February and March 1993, which was won by Mahamane Ousmane, a leading member of the AFC coalition. Apart
from the economy, the new government’s main problem was the Tuareg rebellion. Since 1990, there had been a series of clashes
between security forces and guerrillas belonging to the nomadic Tuareg people. The Tuareg had left Niger to escape the chronic
Sahel drought of the 1980s. A series of agreements were brokered, providing for Tuareg land rights and defined future relations
between the Tuareg and central government. Despite occasional problems, the agreement has held.
Following the January 1995 legislative elections, MNSD recovered control of the national assembly and the government under
ex-World Bank official Amadou Aboubacar Cissé. Over the next 12 months, friction between the Cissé government and President
Ousmane steadily worsened until, exactly one year later, the military stepped in once again. Army chief of staff Colonel Ibrahim
Bare Mainassara took control of the country. Under strong external pressure, particularly from Niger’s main Western financial
backers, the military moved quickly to restore a veneer of civilian government. In April 1999, Mainassara was killed by his own head of security, after an escalating series of disputes with his erstwhile
military colleagues. The uncertain political situation which followed was resolved with the holding of simultaneous presidential
and legislative elections in November that year. The MNSD, the country’s historic ruling party, recovered control of both
the presidency – in the person of Mamadou Tandja – and the national assembly, where it forms the government with Hana Amadou
as premier.
In 2002, the government faced a series of mutinies by soldiers demanding better pay and conditions; these were put down by
other units loyal to the government. The following year, the United States and Britain claimed that Niger had sold uranium
ore to the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in the course of his efforts to build nuclear weapons. The claim was subsequently
proven to have been based on forged documents but the case drew unwelcome attention to Niger and its dependence on sales of
the ore.
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