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A bid to restore democratic normality or an internal tussle over power and resources? That is the question yet to be answered as Niger's new military regime confirms its hold over the key institutions of this desperately poor but mineral-rich Sahelian state, one of the world's key producers of uranium.
The clutch of officers who seized power have named themselves the Supreme Council for the Restoration of Democracy (CSRD).
Many Nigeriens, particularly supporters of the opposition, will be hoping that the new regime lives up to its name and rapidly makes arrangements for a transition back to genuine political pluralism.
The increasingly autocratic style of the now-deposed President, Mamadou Tandja, was widely resented.
Last August's referendum vote, which abolished term limits, allowing him to prolong his stay in office, was certainly questionable, with opponents claiming the true turnout may have been as low as 5%.
Political efforts to derail the increasing concentration of power in Mr Tandja's hands had failed.
When parliament and the supreme court stood in his way he shut them down and organised the election of a more compliant national assembly in questionable polls that were not recognised by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas).
Mohamed Ibn Chambas, the outgoing president of the regional bloc, saw Mr Tandja as a threat to West African democracy and submitted evidence against Niger when the European Union was deciding whether to continue aid to Niamey.
Ethnic concerns
But it is too early to assume that Niger will now see the rapid restoration of a genuinely pluralist political system like those of Mali, Benin, Ghana or Senegal.
Although it was caught up in the wave of democratisation that swept across francophone Africa two decades ago, the country's subsequent history has been more troubled than that of these reform success stories.
Niger suffered a coup in 1996, followed three years later by the assassination of President Ibrahim Mainassara, who had come to power through the putsch.
The subsequent election of Mr Tandja as head of state inaugurated a decade of relative stability, but the army was never far from politics.
Mr Tandja himself is a former colonel and coup participant. And by late last year rumours of renewed army discontent were circulating.
Worried by the dominance of ethnic Djerma westerners in the officer corps, Mr Tandja - who is from the east - built up his presidential guard and the security services.
But there was a sense that he was becoming increasingly isolated, over-reliant on his own bullish self-belief and the advice of a few loyalist colleagues.
Mr Tandja managed to maintain an IMF economic programme - the essential minimum for a partnership with outside donors to reduce poverty levels, which are among the most severe in Africa.
Uranium threat
But Niger has not managed to emulate Mali and Burkina Faso in establishing a sustained long-term grassroots development strategy.
And Mr Tandja's increasingly undemocratic hold on power put support from the EU and other key Western donors at risk.
This may explain why he felt the need to cultivate relations with Libya and Venezuela, both of which he visited in recent months.
And it was rumoured in France that he was considering the award of a crucial uranium mining contract to the Chinese, or even the Iranians, potentially threatening the position of the French nuclear group Areva, for whom Niger is a vital source of supply.
Some sources have suggested that talk of a deal with the Chinese whetted the appetite of some in the military for a share of the material rewards, intensifying tensions within the military over Mr Tandja's monopolisation of power.
Uranium is not the only reason why new developments in Niger will be watched closely by Western governments.
They are also concerned about the growing operational reach of the Algeria-based al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), whose fighters are now active in large tracts of the central Sahara and its southern fringe, the Sahel.
Source: BBC
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