Audio By Carbonatix
Some 200 West African soldiers, mainly from Nigeria and Ivory Coast, are in Benin to support the government following Sunday's failed coup, Benin's foreign minister says.
The attempt was foiled after Nigeria deployed fighter jets to drive the mutineers out of a military base and state TV headquarters, where they had declared a takeover.
This is the first time that officials have said how many foreign soldiers were deployed to the country, although it is not clear if some have been withdrawn since Sunday.
Benin's Foreign Affairs Minister Olushegun Adjadi Bakari on Thursday said some of the regional troops sent to help had remained in the country "as part of the sweep and clean-up operation".
A manhunt for those involved in the plot is under way, with the leader of the failed coup said to be taking refuge in neighbouring Togo.
The rebel soldiers justified their actions by criticising President Patrice Talon's management of the country, complaining first about his handling of the "continuing deterioration of the security situation in northern Benin".
The West African regional bloc, Ecowas, deployed troops from Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast to secure key installations and prevent any resurgence of the violence.
Nigeria, Benin's large neighbour to the east, said its soldiers had reached there on Sunday, describing the coup attempt as a "direct assault on democracy".
An Ivory Coast security source told AFP news agency that 50 soldiers from the country had been sent as part of the regional deployment.
"There are currently around 200 soldiers present, who came to lend a hand at the end of the day to the Beninese defence and security forces as part of the sweep and clean-up operation," said Bakari, while addressing journalists in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, on Thursday.
Bakari, who was speaking alongside Nigeria's Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, said that by the time the Beninese forces called for help, the coup "was already a failure".
"When we started discussions for the intervention of Nigeria and the others, under Ecowas protocol, our military had already pushed them back," he added.
According to Bakari, what was required was "precise aerial back-up to carry out a surgical operation that targeted the enemy's key positions without risking civilian casualties".
Tuggar said that fast diplomatic, military, and intelligence actions between Nigeria and Benin had helped to foil the coup.
Discussions are continuing over how long the regional forces would remain, but Bakari said any decision "will be taken in close collaboration with Benin's defence and security forces, who have demonstrated their bravery".
It is not clear if the French special forces who also reportedly helped loyalist troops thwart the coup are still in Benin.
Under intense pressure after a string of successful coups in the region, Ecowas is signalling that it is no longer willing to watch democratically elected governments be toppled by the military.
Bakari praised Ecowas as "an important tool that allows us to defend democracy and the values of democracy in our regional space".
Benin's army has suffered losses near its northern border with insurgency-hit Niger and Burkina Faso in recent years, as jihadist militants linked to Islamic State and al-Qaeda spread southwards.
Talon, who is regarded as a close ally of the West, is due to step down next year after completing his second term in office, with elections scheduled for April.
Latest Stories
-
NPP set to finalise Ayawaso East candidate without primaries
5 minutes -
Ekuban inspires late Genoa comeback in thrilling Bologna victory
5 minutes -
AG’s accusations do not equal conviction- Kwakye Ofosu
19 minutes -
Fidelity Bank deepens community impact with nationwide end-of-year social interventions
21 minutes -
Ken Ofori-Atta cannot receive special treatment under the law -Felix Kwakye
21 minutes -
Black Greek Life in Ghana: Divine Nine, NPHC and rise of Heritage Tourism
27 minutes -
280 cases of corruption are under investigation – Kwakye Ofosu
31 minutes -
IMF does not build nations; Ghana must move beyond economic stability – Solomon Owusu
35 minutes -
Joseph Opoku marks injury return with goal in Zulte Waregem’s seven-goal thriller
37 minutes -
NRA and other US gun activists push back at Trump officials over Minneapolis shooting
41 minutes -
Caribbean cannabis growers eye budding domestic sales and exports
42 minutes -
Job scam survivors warned as over 100 youths rescued in Ho trafficking bust
48 minutes -
None of Agenda 111 hospitals were operational before Akufo-Addo gov’t left office – Kwakye Ofosu
51 minutes -
Agenda 111 was rushed and poorly thought through – Kwakye Ofosu
52 minutes -
UK-Ghana JET programme urges faster decarbonisation of Ghana’s transport sector
53 minutes
