La situation des droits de l’homme
Le rapport Niger Amnesty International (2014-2015)
https://www.amnesty.org/fr/countries/africa/niger/report-niger/
Extraits
Le gouvernement constitué en août 2013 intégrait des membres de l’opposition. Certains d’entre eux ont démissionné par la suite car ils s’estimaient sous-représentés. Les autorités ont pris des mesures de sécurité strictes pour lutter contre le terrorisme, en limitant par exemple la liberté de circulation dans certains quartiers de Niamey, la capitale, où se trouvent les ambassades étrangères. Le Niger accueillait plus de 57 000 réfugiés à la fin de l’année. Parmi eux, 16 000 avaient fui leur foyer soit en raison du conflit qui a fait rage au Mali en 2013 soit à cause des violences persistantes dans le nord-est du Nigeria.
Évolutions législatives, constitutionnelles ou institutionnelles
En mai, plus de 30 membres du Mouvement démocratique nigérien pour une fédération africaine, une formation d’opposition, ont été arrêtés. Ces arrestations étaient en lien avec l’enquête sur les coups de feu qui avaient visé le domicile d’un député du parti au pouvoir, le Parti nigérien pour la démocratie et le socialisme, et sur l’attentat au cocktail Molotov contre le siège de ce parti. Les personnes interpellées ont été maintenues en détention entre deux semaines et trois mois et accusées d’atteinte à l’autorité de l’État. Leur procès n’avait pas débuté à la fin de l’année.
Conflit armé
Des groupes armés, parmi lesquels le Mouvement pour l’unicité et le jihad en Afrique de l’Ouest (MUJAO) et Boko Haram, ont lancé des attaques contre différentes villes du pays en 2013 et 2014, s’en prenant également à des civils.
En octobre, des groupes armés ont attaqué simultanément un poste de sécurité du camp Mangaïzé accueillant des réfugiés maliens, la prison d’Ouallam, et des militaires qui patrouillaient à Bani Bangou. Toutes ces actions ont eu lieu dans la région de Tillabéry, non loin de la frontière avec le Mali, et provoqué la mort d’au moins neuf membres des forces de sécurité.
Recours excessif à la force
En mai, des étudiants ont manifesté pour protester contre des retards dans le paiement de leur bourse. La police a fait usage d’une force excessive pour réprimer le mouvement. Au moins 30 étudiants ont été blessés et 72 arrêtés et remis en liberté après 19 jours de détention. Une grève de la faim a été lancée pour dénoncer ces arrestations. Les étudiants ont été accusés de vandalisme et de destruction de biens publics. Ils étaient en liberté conditionnelle à la fin de l’année.
Liberté d’expression – défenseurs des droits humains et journalistes
En janvier, deux journalistes, dont Soumana Idrissa Maïga, le directeur du quotidien privé L’Enquêteur, ont été inculpés de complot contre la sûreté de l’État à l’issue d’une garde à vue de 96 heures dans les locaux de la police de Niamey. Ces poursuites ont été engagées après la publication d’un article citant les propos de certaines personnes selon lesquelles le compte à rebours avait commencé pour le pouvoir en place. Aucun procès n’avait encore été organisé à la fin de l’année.
Le 18 juillet, Ali Idrissa, le coordonnateur de Publiez ce que vous payez (PCQVP), un réseau constitué d’organisations de la société civile, a été placé en garde à vue à deux reprises après une conférence de presse durant laquelle il avait appelé la société française AREVA à respecter le droit minier nigérien et déclaré que les relations franco-nigériennes étaient teintées de néocolonialisme. Ce jour-là, 10 autres dirigeants d’organisations de la société civile ont également été arrêtés à Niamey puis remis en liberté le soir-même.
Justice internationale
En mars, Saadi Kadhafi, l’un des fils du colonel Mouammar Kadhafi, a été extradé vers la Libye. Il séjournait au Niger pour « raisons humanitaires » depuis septembre 2012. Il y avait de sérieuses raisons de douter de la capacité des autorités libyennes à garantir un procès équitable, devant une juridiction civile ordinaire, dans ce dossier et dans d’autres affaires similaires concernant des fidèles de l’ancien dirigeant libyen, et il était à craindre qu’une condamnation à mort ne soit prononcée à l’encontre de son fils.
Rapport 2015 de l’organisation Freedom House
https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-world/2015/niger
Excerpts
The situation in Northern Niger became increasingly dangerous in 2014, as militants have moved more frequently along the country’s borders with Mali and Libya and Nigeria’s Boko Haram moved its base close to the Niger border. On October 3, nine Nigerien peacekeepers were ambushed in Mali, but President Mahamadou Issoufou stated that his troops will continue to stay in the country. On October 9, the French army attacked a convoy of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) militants in Niger delivering weapons to Mali, and arrested some of its fighters. Attacks on October 31 near a camp for Malian refugees resulted in the deaths of nine Nigerien policemen. On November 19, another attack on Niger’s western border with Mali led to gunfight with the Nigerien army.
In June 2014, an arrest warrant was issued for Niger’s parliamentary speaker and leading opposition figure Hama Amadou, for suspicion of participation in child trafficking. As many as 20 people, including high-level officials and Amadou’s wife, were arrested in the case. Amadou fled the country in August and maintains that charges against him are politically motivated. He had turned against president Issoufou in 2013.
Already one of the world’s poorest countries, Niger has been ravaged by extreme food shortages since a 2009 drought. In addition, 1,300 cases of cholera in 2014 have resulted in more than 51 deaths, while health workers issued a warning of a malaria outbreak in September. Niger is still home to about 50,000 Malian refugees, as well as 12,000 Nigerians who more recently have fled the incursion of Boko Haram into their villages.
Political Rights and Civil Liberties
A. Electoral Process
A 2010 military coup that removed increasingly authoritarian president Mamadou Tandja from power led to the adoption of a new constitution that year. Drafted in broad consultation with civil society, the charter reinstated executive term limits, curbed executive power, and provided amnesty for the coup leaders. Under the constitution, the president is elected by popular vote for up to two five-year terms. Members of the 113-seat, unicameral National Assembly, who also serve five-year terms, are elected through party-list voting in eight multimember regional constituencies and eight single-member constituencies reserved for ethnic minorities.
Presidential, legislative, and municipal elections were held in January 2011 to replace the transitional government established by the junta and restore civilian rule. The junta forbade its members and representatives of the transitional government from running for office. The Party for Democracy and Socialism (PNDS), headed by Issoufou, won 37 legislative seats. The pro-Tandja National Movement for a Developing Society (MNSD)—headed by former prime minister Seini Oumarou—placed second with 26 seats, while former prime minister Hama Amadou’s Nigerien Democratic Movement for an African Federation took 25. Five smaller parties divided the remainder.
In the first round of the presidential election, Issoufou and Oumarou emerged as the top two candidates; Issoufou then claimed victory with 58 percent of the vote in a March runoff election. Both the presidential and legislative elections were declared free and fair by international observers, despite minor irregularities. The PNDS and MNSD won the majority of positions across the country in local elections.
B. Political Pluralism and Participation
After the 2010 military coup, Amadou returned from exile, three former legislators were released from jail, and there was a decrease in harassment of opposition politicians. Since assuming power in 2011, Issoufou has appointed former opponents and members of civil society to high positions in government to foster inclusivity, and a reshuffling of the government in 2013 continued this pattern, though it left most key posts in the hands of Issoufou’s allies.
The constitution reserves eight special constituency seats to ensure ethnic minorities’ representation in the National Assembly. Such minorities, including the nomadic population, continue to have poor access to government services. Under a 2002 quota system, political parties must allocate 10 percent of their elected positions to women.
C. Functioning of Government
Corruption remains a serious problem in Niger, and observers have raised concerns regarding uranium-mining contracts. However, the 2010 constitution provides for greater transparency in government reporting of revenues from the extractive industries as well as for the declaration of personal assets by government officials, including the president. In 2011, the government created the High Authority to Combat Corruption and opened an anticorruption hotline. In the same year, Issoufou was the target of a foiled assassination attempt thought to be motivated by his crackdowns on corruption in the military.
In October 2014, former President Tandja was stripped of his legal immunity and charged with corruption, as authorities began investigating the disappearance of nearly 400 billion francs ($800 million) of public money that Tandja had claimed were in the state treasury when he was overthrown. Transparency is weakly enforced. Niger was ranked 103 out of 175 countries and territories surveyed in Transparency International’s 2014 Corruption Perceptions Index.
D. Freedom of Expression and Belief
In 2010, the National Assembly adopted a new press law that eliminated prison terms for media offenses and reduced the threat of libel cases that journalists had faced under Tandja. In 2011, Issoufou became the first head of state to sign the Table Mountain Declaration, which calls on African governments to promote press freedom. The media are largely allowed to publish political facts and critiques without interference, but journalists still sometimes face police violence while covering protests. Journalists are also prosecuted for libel in some instances.
In January 2014, four journalists were detained by police without charge but released within days; the authorities had accused the journalists of defamation, false accusation, and “appeals to hatred and violence.” Justice Minister Marou Amadou declared the detentions justified, stating that the government would not tolerate “calls to insurrection, hatred, or a coup.” The government does not restrict internet use, though less than 2 percent of the population has access.
Freedom of religion is generally respected in this overwhelmingly Muslim country. In the aftermath of the 2010 coup, both Muslim and Christian leaders worked with the junta to restore peace and democracy. Academic freedom is guaranteed but not always observed in practice.
E. Associational and Organizational Rights
Constitutional guarantees of freedoms of assembly and association are largely upheld. However, police sometimes used force to break up labor and other protests during 2014, including protests in July calling for greater transparency with regards to uranium-mining contracts with French firm Areva. The government does not restrict the operations of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), though a lack of security in the north prevents such groups from accessing or functioning in the region. While the constitution and other laws guarantee workers the right to join unions and bargain for wages, over 95 percent of the workforce is employed in subsistence agriculture and small trading.
F. Rule of Law
The constitution provides for an independent judiciary, and courts have shown some autonomy in the past, though the judicial system has at times been subject to executive interference. The Ministry of Justice supervises public prosecutors, and the president has the power to appoint judges. Judicial corruption is fueled partly by low salaries and inadequate training. Prolonged pretrial detention is common, and police forces are underfunded and poorly trained. Prisons are characterized by overcrowding and poor health conditions.
Insecurity continues to plague many parts of the country, and several people have been kidnapped by groups such as AQIM. In October, French forces, in coordination with the Nigerien government, intercepted and destroyed an AQIM convoy in northern Niger that was transporting weapons from Libya to Mali.
The crisis in neighboring Mali led to an influx in 2012 of some 60,000 Malian refugees, of whom 50,000 remained in Niger in 2014, as well as 16,000 Nigerian refugees fleeing the situation in Northern Nigeria more recently. This influx has raised pressure on food supplies.
While two ethnic groups, Hausa and Djerma, still dominate many government and economic positions, minority groups are represented and their rights are protected by law. Same-sex sexual activity is not illegal in Niger, but same-sex relationships are not recognized and there is no protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation. No NGOs work on LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) rights in Niger.
G. Personal Autonomy and Individual Rights
The constitution guarantees freedom of movement and property rights and these are generally respected throughout the country, though bribery remains an issue for both.
Although the 2010 constitution prohibits gender discrimination, women suffer discrimination in practice. Family law gives women inferior status in property disputes, inheritance rights, and divorce. Sexual and domestic violence are reportedly widespread. Female genital mutilation was criminalized in 2003 and has declined, but it continues in a small percentage of the population.
While slavery was criminalized in 2003 and banned in the 2010 constitution, slavery remains a problem in Niger, with up to 43,000 individuals still in slavery. Niger remains a source, transit point, and destination for human trafficking. Despite a 2010 antitrafficking law and a five-year antitrafficking plan, investigation and prosecution efforts remains weak. More than 20 high-profile arrests, including the agriculture minister and wives of other prominent politicians, were conducted between June and August 2014 related to child trafficking.
Credits photo: http://www.un.org
WATHI propose une sélection de documents sur le contexte économique, social et sécuritaire du Niger et les enjeux les plus importants pour les cinq prochaines années. Chaque document est présenté sous forme d’extraits qui peuvent faire l’objet de légères modifications. Les notes de bas ou de fin de page ne sont pas reprises dans les versions de WATHI.
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