NIGER COUP: WEST AFRICAN LEADERS THREATEN MILITARY INTERVENTION
West African leaders have threatened military action against Niger's military junta after it took power in a coup last week
The leaders gave the junta seven days to reinstate President Mohamed Bazoum, who is being held captive.
Earlier, the junta warned it would resist any "plan of aggression against Niger" by regional or Western powers.
Meanwhile hundreds of coup supporters protested outside the French embassy in the capital Niamey.
Leaders from Ecowas, the bloc of West African nations, held crisis talks in Nigeria on Sunday to discuss the latest coup - which follows army takeovers in neighbouring Mali and Burkina Faso.
A statement read out after the summit said that Ecowas had "zero tolerance" for coups.
The regional bloc would "take all measures necessary to restore constitutional order" if its demands were not met within a week.
"Such measures may include the use of force", and military chiefs are to meet "immediately" to plan for an intervention, the statement added.
The West African leaders also announced the immediate enforcement of a no-fly zone over Niger for all commercial flights, the closure of all land borders with the country, and the imposition of financial sanctions against the junta.
Ahead of their meeting, Gen Abdourahmane Tchiani - the head of the presidential guards unit who has declared himself Niger's new leader - warned Ecowas and unnamed Western nations against stepping in.
"We once again reiterate to Ecowas or any other adventurer our firm determination to defend our fatherland," the statement, which was read out on TV.
The coup has prompted concern that Niger, a former French colony, could pivot towards Russia.
The ousted president had worked closely with both regional and Western nations to fight militant Islamists in Niger.
Meanwhile Burkina Faso and Mali both moved closer to Russia after their own coups.
In Niamey, some of the protesters outside the French embassy chanted "Long live Russia", "Long live Putin" and "Down with France", AFP news agency reports.
France would not tolerate any attack on its interests in Niger, and would respond in an "immediate and intractable manner", President Emmanuel Macron's office said in a statement.
Niger's coup has been condemned by Western nations, but welcomed by the leader of Russia's Wagner mercenary group Yevgeny Prigozhin, who has reportedly described it as a triumph.
"What happened in Niger is nothing other than the struggle of the people of Niger with their colonisers," he was quoted as saying on a Wagner-affiliated Telegram channel, although his comments have not been independently verified.
In Mali, the junta has brought in Wagner to help it fight militant Islamists.
France, the former colonial power, announced the withdrawal of its troops last year amid growing hostility from the junta.
It subsequently moved its regional military headquarters to Niger.
In June, Mali's junta said the UN's 12,000 peacekeepers also had to leave following a decade of countering Islamist militants.
The UN agreed, saying the withdrawal would be completed by the end of the year.
On Saturday, France said it had suspended all development aid and budgetary support to Niger. The European Union and the US have made a similar decision.
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