Escalating violence and humanitarian crisis In Niger, the government strategy was to continue military pressure on the MNJ, declaring them criminal gangs with whom they will have no negotiations. As the MNJ was apparently the larger and more organized of the two rebel forces, much of the northern regions of the country remained under emergency decrees.
Aid and press barred Press and international aid agencies complained that they had been prevented from monitoring the situation or delivering aid as both sides in the fighting reported that the conflict was continuing to escalate. Humanitarian agencies in Niamey estimated in early December that there were around 11,000 people displaced by the fighting, in addition to the 9,000 Nigeriens who lost their homes in heavy flooding.
Doctors Without Borders claimed that no aid was being delivered by the government in the north, while 2,500 to 4,000 displaced people were estimated to have come to
Agadez from the mostly Tuareg town of
Iferouane, with the entire civilian population apparently fleeing after the army and rebels started fighting in the area in mid-2007. Humanitarian sources were quoted saying that the army was operating with little control and adding to—rather than suppressing—banditry, drug-trafficking and lawlessness in the north.
Anti-terror law In April 2008 the
National Assembly of Niger passed a new anti-terror law giving broader powers of detention to the police and military. The law also strengthened penalties on a wide range offenses, including the manufacture or possession of explosive devices, hostage-taking, attacks on transport and unlawful possession of radioactive materials.
Mine attacks in south The Nigerien government reported that the MNJ began mine attacks against civilians in the southern towns of
Tahoua,
Dosso and
Maradi, areas previously far from the fighting. The MNJ denied targeting civilians, and made counter claims that government militia had continued indiscriminate attacks on Tuareg communities in the north. Western press sources claimed that the rebels were responsible for laying mines that hit Army vehicles, as well as a spike in mines laid in populated areas. On 9 January 2008, the first violence was reported in
Niamey, the capital, some from the conflict zone.
Abdou Mohamed Jeannot, the director of Niger's first independent radio station, Radio R & M (
Radio and Music) was killed after driving over a landmine in
Yantala, a suburb west of Niamey. Mahamane, who was also the vice president of the national press association, , was not reported to have been vocal on the conflict, but his radio station had been banned by the government in 1998, and rebroadcasts western news reports in Niger, where western reporters have been highly restricted by the government and Radio France was accused by the government (July 2007) of siding with the rebels. The neighborhood is also reported to house many Army officers (which might conceivably have made it a target for the rebels), and another mine was found some 200m from the blast site. The government blamed the MNJ. The government's press chief Ben Omar Mohammed called on the population to set up "vigilance brigades" to fight against "these new types of assassins". The MNJ denied the attack, and said it blamed "Niger army militias".
Continued clashes ). A 9 December clash in the
Tiguidit escarpment area (south of
In-Gall and east of
Agadez) was reported by both sides as resulting in civilian casualties. The government reported that army forces fired on civilian vehicles who wandered into fighting with MNJ units who had been ambushed laying mines. The MNJ countered that government militias attacked a civilian convoy, killing a number of civilians, including two Libyan foreign workers. On 21 January, both sides reported an attack by the MNJ on the town of
Tanout, 150 km north of
Zinder, in which seven were killed and 11 kidnapped. The rebels claimed they had captured several high-ranking officers of the
FNIS (
Nigerien Internal Security Forces –
paramilitary police) and the
Prefect of Tanout.
Ethnic expansion At the beginning of January, MNJ rebels claimed they had been joined by ethnic
Toubou rebel leaders and several
Hausa army officers. While there was no independent confirmation of this, the Toubou
Revolutionary Armed Forces of the Sahara (, FARS) had risen against the government in the 1990s (see
Tuareg Rebellion) in the far southeast of
Niger. The MNJ claimed the former FARS commander
Bocar Mohamed Sougouma, (alias
Warabé) had ordered former rebels to rally to the MNJ-controlled Tamgak Plateau near
Iferaouane. By December 2007, fighting had begun to spiral out of control, ending the nascent tourist industry in the
Aïr Mountains, and destabilising areas of Niger not directly involved in the insurgency of the 1990s.
Niger: international support Despite the series of escalating attacks, the government of Niger offered a number of concessions to foreign (especially French) interests in January 2008. Two French journalists, arrested on charges of espionage and aiding the rebels on 17 December, were formally charged with threatening state security and released on bail 18 January, to face trial later. French press reports that
Gabonese President
Omar Bongo Ondimba intervened with President
Mamadou Tandja on their behalf. It was also reported that President
Bouteflika of
Algeria had been in offering security guarantees to Niger. At the same time, the government of Niger renewed Uranium contracts with the French government controlled
Areva, obtaining a 50% increase in payments to the Nigerien state. This comes at a time when security concerns have made the diminishing mines at
Arlit impossible to operate, and construction of their new mine near
Ingal—scheduled to be complete in 2010 yet still not begun—extremely unlikely.
Niger: February – June 2008 Beginning in February and March 2008, mine attacks in the south ended, major rebel incursions out of Aïr and the desert regions subsided, and the Nigerien military went on the offensive, retaking a major rebel position in the far northwest. The rebels launched a daring raid into the Areva facilities in Arlit, seizing four French hostages. International human rights groups condemned the move, and the four were released to the
Red Cross. While the Nigerien Armed Forces have staged attacks in the Aïr, there appeared to be a stalemate. . ==Niger offensive of mid-2008 and renewed stalemate==