Page added on July 11, 2008
Around 30,000 people marched through Niger’s capital Niamey on Thursday to protest against the high cost of living and electricity blackouts caused by disruptions in power supplies from neighbouring Nigeria.
It was one of the biggest public protests seen in recent years in the landlocked Sahel state, which is a leading world exporter of uranium but, like many African nations, has suffered the squeeze of sharp increases in oil and food prices.
Witnesses said the protesters shouted slogans complaining about the high cost of basic food products and about frequent daily power outages which have been affecting Niamey and other cities in the former French colony over the last two months.
Niger’s national electricity company NIGELEC imports 90 percent of its needs from neighbouring Nigeria, Sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest oil producer. It has recently suffered serious disruptions in these supplies, causing the blackouts.
“Niger is in danger and the authorities must snap out of their indifference towards NIGELEC’s catastrophic situation and the high cost of living,” said Badje Hima, coordinator of the Citizens’ Convergence coalition which organised the march.
Hima said it made no sense for Niger, a top supplier to the world of the nuclear reactor fuel uranium, to be suffering power shortages. The coalition was demanding that the government negotiate the acquisition of a nuclear power plant for the country, so it could have an independent supply of energy.
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