France shocked Algeria about the Niger coup
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France embarrasses Algeria today and reveals the truth about what happened in Niger recently, as the French newspaper Le Figaro said.
The false news published by the Algerian official media saying that the Algerian government rejected a request from France to open its airspace for a military operation in Niger.
It is a new episode of the media campaign that is being launched in Algeria against France, whose chief of staff denied that Paris made such a request, considering that these allegations are nothing but an Algerian prelude to Russia entering the African Sahel region.
Articles against the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and France have already been promoted from the same sources, accusing each of them of wanting to set fire to the Sahel region.
Translated by Algeria's real concern about seeing the region on fire now, but the French Army Chief of Staff assured me that everything will be fine between the French and Algerian armies.
We interact normally with our Algerian partners, and Algeria helped Paris in an exemplary way to repatriate French citizens from Niger by providing transit through Algiers until they arrived in France safely.
Le Figaro added that these “allegations” are not new, as private Algerian media “pro-government” publish articles every day against the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and France, accusing each of them of wanting to set fire to the region. the coast; Translating Algeria's real concern to see the region on fire.
Since the July 26 coup in Niger, Algeria has repeatedly said that a political solution is the only possible way. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune has rejected any military intervention, and his diplomacy has called for President Mohamed Bazoum to be reinstated as the legitimate president of Niger.
And the Algerian Foreign Ministry spoke, again, on Saturday, expressing its “deep regret” about the fact that “the use of violence has taken precedence over the path of a negotiated political solution, which peacefully restores the constitutional and democratic system.”
She noted, "The history of our region teaches us unequivocally that military interventions brought with it additional problems, and that they were additional factors for confrontations and setbacks, rather than being a source of stability and security."
Meanwhile, attacks against France became regular in the Algerian media, some of which were launched at the same time in several private media in the month of May, for example.
Some widely read headlines in Algeria, citing security sources, reported that Israeli, French and Moroccan intelligence services had met in Tel Aviv to discuss a plan to destabilize Algeria and Tunisia called Operation Wolf.
Other accusations were leveled through official channels, including Algeria's accusation, last February, against the French General Directorate of External Security (French Foreign Intelligence).
By organizing the escape of the Algerian-French activist Amira Bouraoui, from Algeria to Tunisia, so that she could be transferred to France. The incident caused a diplomatic crisis that lasted for several months, according to Le Figaro.
Last July, the official Algerian news agency described France 24, the French public broadcaster, as a “trash can,” accusing it of biasingly dealing with the forest fires in Algeria.
Considering that the French media group “France Media Monde”, which includes “France 24”, “sows hatred and incites chaos, in an extension of the policy of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs,” likening it to “Radio de Mille Collins” during the genocide in Rwanda in 1994.
Le Figaro explained that some observers, whom she described as “perplexed,” see in this anti-France campaign organized in the corridors of Algerian power itself, while President Abdelmadjid Tebboune boasts, as soon as he has the opportunity.
With the quality of his relationship with his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, they see in it a desire from certain currents to sabotage bilateral relations between Paris and Algeria. So far, diplomatic hurdles have been avoided or fixed, but for how long? Le Figaro asks.
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