Niger coup leader Salou Djibo has reiterated that the military will hold elections soon. The African Union and ECOWAS have both condemned the military seizure of power.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
23:34 Mecca time, 20:34 GMT
Niger soldiers promise elections
Nigerien soldiers seized power after storming the presidential palace on Thursday
The leaders of Niger's military coup have told visiting diplomats that they will return the country to civilian rule as soon as possible.
The soldiers, who call themselves the Supreme Council for the Restoration of Democracy (CSRD), told representatives of the African Union and the regional economic bloc Ecowas that they had no intention of holding on to power.
"If you want proof, in 1999 we had a similar situation and we handed back power and we had 10 years of stability. We are going to do the same thing," Colonel Djibril Hamidou Hima, one the group's leaders, said after Sunday's meeting.
The army removed Mamadou Tandja, Niger's president, on Thursday after a lengthy dispute within the country over his moves to extend his mandate and his powers.
However, Hamidou Hima rejected the characterisation of Tandja's removal as a coup.
"We left the political actors to try and find a solution. This did not happen. Social tensions got worse. We didn't launch a coup, we just reimposed legitimacy, because this had already disappeared," he said.
Tandja 'in good conditions'
Tandja has not been seen since soldiers stormed a cabinet meeting on Thursday, but Hamidou Hima said the ousted president was in custody at the presidential palace.
"Mr Tandja is in a service quarters of the presidency and is being kept in very good conditions," he said.
Hima said that three of Tandja's ministers who were with the president at the time of the coup were also still being held.
The African Union and Ecowas both condemned the overthrow of Tandja, along with the United Nations, European Union and former colonial power France.
But after meeting members of the military, the delegate from Ecowas spoke positively of their intentions.
"They have given us the necessary guarantees and all this will be done with the participation of civil society and the political parties," Mohamed Ibn Chambas, the head of the 15-nation Ecowas, said.
"Dialogue will be opened with all the vital forces of the nation which will end in the drawing up of a new constitution and a period of transition.
"We were encouraged by the fact that the authorities themselves are mindful that this is not their normal function and they are eager to finish this task and go back to their normal military and security duties."
Public support
The overthrow of Tandja appears to have been met positively inside Niger, with thousands of people turning out on the streets to back the military over the last two days.
Voix du Sahel radio said that thousands of people had taken part in "gigantic demonstration" in Zinder, the country's second city, on Sunday.
The turnout was "to salute the defence and security forces for the patriotic work which it has accomplished," the radio station reported.
That came after about 10,000 people gathered outside the parliament building in Niamey, the Nigerien capital, the previous day after a coalition of opposition parties, trade unions and human rights groups called on people to show their support for the military.
The military rulers have suspended the constitution have suspended the constitution brought in by Tandja after he won a referendum that gave him three extra years in power.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
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