SORT BY 
ISSUES
WRITERS
DATE
4 posts in the last 24 hours
Suggest a post:
undispatch@gmail.com
Get help:
Report a problem
If a coup falls in Niger, does it make a sound?

RT @SayNO_UNiTE: RT @safeworld4women: YOU can support #IVAWA (International Violence Against Women Act) http://is.gd/7DXw5
from UNIFEM
New Blog Post: #Peacekeeping -- International Forum Helps Turn Talk into Action http://bit.ly/cPTDEY
from DipNote
I posted 14 photos on Facebook in the album "UNIC Memorials for Haiti Earthquake" http://bit.ly/aVrjeG
from UN


|
|
|
Visitor:
1 Feb 3:39pm
We are shipowners and we like to offer our vessel to the responsible agency
for contracting vessels
read more
Visitor:
26 Jan 1:15pm
WHo is this idiot? Tom Miller, president and CEO of the United Nations
Association of the United Sta
read more
Visitor:
26 Jan 4:16am
Haiti,Haiti, world waves, there are a survivalsituation, water, fire(energy),
shelter(whetherdefence
read more
Visitor:
25 Jan 10:17am
We have to keep Haiti in the news
read more
Visitor:
24 Jan 1:57pm
I think only good buildings will help them to prevent the disaster
read more
Visitor:
23 Jan 11:15am
Como podemos Ayudarsi El personal de las Naciones Unidas o la Fundación no
correso respoden los
read more

Final Durban Thoughts
John Boonstra - April 24, 2009 - 2:06 pm
Haiti Earthquake
Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 5:52 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 8:06 am
The Coup Caucus
Mark Leon Goldberg - July 7, 2009 - 11:05 am








DISPATCH TWEETS






Mark Leon Goldberg - July 1, 2009 - 10:01 am
Judging by the relative silence in western media, nary a peep does it make. But there are some striking similarities between the unfolding situations in Honduras and Niger. To wit:
Country A) Elected President wants to serve beyond the limits of his constitutionally mandated term. Country B) Elected President wants to serve beyond the limits of his constitutionally mandated term.
Country A) Elected President wants to hold a referendum to change the constitution Country B) Elected President wants to hold a referendum to change the constitution
Country A) Supreme Court decides this is not legal. Country B) Supreme Court decides this is not legal.
Here, however, is where the similarities seem to end.
Country A) The military, backed by opposition leaders, ousts the president.
Country B) The president declares a state of emergency, dissolves the supreme court and arrests the main opposition leader.
A, is of course, Honduras. B is Niger, where aformentioned opposition leader accused President Mamadou Tandja of carrying out the equivalent of a coup. And, it would appear, President Tandja is coming under fire from both the European Union and Economic Community of West African States, both of which have cautioned Tandja over his proposed term-extension. The African Union may also pile on when it meets in Libya for a summit today.
In Niger, the military has so far stayed neutral. But is this the sort of case where the military can act as an check on the power of the president and as a guarantor of the constitution? As usual, Paul Collier has some smart views on this sort of thing.
Obviously, the situations in Honduras and Niger are different from Collier's ideal-type of coup. But something to keep in mind.