Italian Foreign Minister, Antonio Tajani has raised fear that a military intervention in Niger following the coup might trigger a migration “disaster.”
There have been talks about the possibility of deploying military force to restore democratic order following the coup that ousted President Mohamed Bazoum.
West African bloc, ECOWAS, has been attempting to reach a settlement with the coup leaders who took over last month, but has warned that if talks break down, it is prepared to send soldiers into Niger to re-establish constitutional order.
“(A) military solution (would) be a disaster,” Tajani told reporters as he arrived at a meeting of EU foreign ministers in the Spanish city of Toledo. “We need to work day by day for a diplomatic solution.”
Hassoumi Massoudou, the deposed government’s foreign minister, and Omar Touray, the head of the ECOWAS Commission, will speak at the meeting which will focus mostly on the Niger problem.
When asked if he was worried that military action may trigger a migratory catastrophe, Tajani responded: “Of course, I say. Similar to how more and more people are leaving Sudan, more people would leave Niger if there is a war there.”
African immigrants notably exploit the coasts of Libya to cross the Mediterranean Sea in significant numbers in an effort to arrive on Italian shores.
The majority are from Ghana, Senegal, Nigeria, and Eritrea. The migration path is perilous and frequently unsuccessful.