Usually, military coups in Africa are treated by neighbouring states as internal affairs. But there is one major exception: when a coup threatens French interests. When Niger's military removed Paris-aligned President Mohamed Bazoum in 2023, ECOWAS, led by Nigeria and heavily backed by France, threatened to invade and reinstall him. It was only Burkina Faso and Mali's warning that they would defend Niger, combined with Nigeria's own parliament rejecting the invasion plan, that prevented a disastrous regional war.
Fast forward to today: a coup unfolds in Benin, and suddenly the "internal affair" principle disappears. Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, in coordination with Emmanuel Macron, authorised a military intervention in Benin without any parliamentary approval or public debate. One phone call with Paris was apparently enough. Nigerian fighter jets even took off from the Lagos base and fired on Beninese soldiers.
Meanwhile, Tinubu seems far less eager to deploy the same military resources to confront the terrorists destabilising Nigeria and the wider region. The contrast speaks for itself.
You might ask why Nigeria is so keen to intervene. We break it down and explain why Benin is strategically important to France, to the AES alliance, and to ECOWAS.
Source: Sovereign Media
🇧🇯 Beninese Are Sending A Clear Message, Only The People Can Say It Is Over ✊🏾
The citizens of Benin have taken to the streets protesting against France, Nigeria and ECOWAS, after Tinubu bombed their country to keep French puppet as president.












