A Hungarian man was on a cultural round trip in Niger when the coup d’état happened. As a result, the international airport was closed, so his flight never left the African country.
According to rtl.hu, the man was in the company of four Bulgarians. They participated in a Muslim religious celebration in Agadez and headed back to the capital when they got info about the airport’s closure. The Hungarian said locals remained peaceful even after the national guard arrested the democratically elected president.
Thanks to the help of the Hungarian consular office in Tripoli, Libya, they could leave the country on board a military plane of the Italian army. But the Hungarian citizen had to pay for the route back to Vienna and the bus travel to Budapest. He said they were not saved because there was no danger, but were helped a lot by the Hungarian diplomacy, chiefly the consular office in Tripoli. The Bulgarian diplomacy did not help the group, he added.
Government: Niger crisis to impact migration situation in Europe
The crisis in Niger threatens to impact security and migration in Europe, the state secretary responsible for aiding persecuted Christians told MTI on Thursday. Until the coup on 27 July, Niger was “one of the last stable states of the Sahel”, Tristan Azbej said. Upending the stability in the region would have grave consequences on security and migration in the Mediterranean and Europe, he said. The region’s countries serve as source and transit countries of migration, he added.
Azbej noted that during his visit to Niger in May, the country showed signs of another kind of impending crisis: the desertification of the southern regions had triggered a food shortage, he said. Since the Nigerien fertility rate is one of the highest in the world, Hungary’s proposal to support the local Catholic Church’s education programmes was welcomed warmly, he said. Countries in the region have recently collapsed one after the other, Azbej said. Mali is ravaged by armed conflicts, Burkina Faso has seen several coups this year, and a civil war has pushed Sudan to the brink of a humanitarian crisis, he said.
All that increased the significance of Niger, which functioned as a democratic country until last week, he said. So far, it has managed to contain the humanitarian and migration crises caused by terrorists in the country, he said. In the wake of last week’s coup, now looms the threat of a humanitarian crisis, armed conflict and migration towards Europe, he added. Azbej warned that the number of migrants leaving Africa for Europe could reach 100 million in the coming year, and “there is no border protection in Europe to handle such a wave.”
Hungary and the EU are pushing for a diplomatic solution to restore peace, he said. Since its launch in 2017, Hungary’s aid programme, Hungary Helps, has focused on the Middle East and the Sahel: Mali, Niger and northern Nigeria, he said, where it works to avoid humanitarian crises and to help Christian communities persecuted by Islamist terror organisations, he added.
Featured image: illustration
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1 Comment
The civil was in Niger is unfortunate. Why did the army felt that they had to depose the elected president. So far, the only concrete fact on western news was that the ex-president was a great friend of the US. The melee should be condemned but all foreign powers should stay out and let the people of Niger settle their own affairs.