Joseph Palmer II in 1968 Niger gained independence from
France on 3 August 1960 and Diori was elected president by the country's national assembly in November 1960. Organizing a powerful coalition of
Hausa,
Fula, and (most prominently)
Djerma leaders, including chiefs and traditionalists, in support of Niger’s independence referendum, Diori gained French favor. Soon after independence, Diori made the PPN to be the only legally permitted party. His government favored the maintenance of traditional social structures and the retention of close economic ties with France. From the early 1960s, he ruled through a small number of pre-independence figures who sat on the PPN Politburo and largely bypassed even the cabinet. In addition to being both president of the republic and president of the PPN, Diori directly led a number of
Ministries. From 1960 to 1963 he served as his own
defence minister and
foreign minister, and again took over the Foreign Ministry from 1965 to 1967. Most prominent, and perhaps most powerful, among Diori's advisers was writer and
President of the National Assembly of Niger,
Boubou Hama, who one writer has called the "
eminence grise" behind Diori's rule. The
National Assembly of Niger met in largely ceremonial yearly sittings to ratify government positions. Traditional notables, elected as parliamentary representatives, often unanimously endorsed government proposals. As president of the PPN, Diori was the only candidate for president of the republic, and as such was re-elected unopposed in 1965 and 1970. He gained worldwide respect for his role as a spokesman for African affairs and as a popular arbitrator in conflicts involving other African nations. Domestically, however, his administration was rife with
corruption, and the government was unable to implement much-needed reforms or to alleviate the widespread
famine brought on by the
Sahelian
drought of the early 1970s. Increasingly criticized at home for his negligence in domestic matters, Diori put down a coup in December 1963, which occurred concurrently with a border dispute with the
Republic of Dahomey. He also narrowly escaped assassination in 1965. Faced with an attempted military coup and attacks by members of
Sawaba, he used French advisers and troops to strengthen his rule. Close links with France lead to student and union protests against what they described as "French
neocolonialism". However, his relationship with France suffered when his government voiced dissatisfaction with the level of investment in uranium production when
Georges Pompidou visited Niger in 1972. ==Unrest and fall==