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Hamani Diori
president of Niger
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Hamani Diori

president of Niger

Hamani Diori, (born June 6, 1916, Soudouré, Niger, French West Africa—died April 23, 1989, Rabat, Morocco), nationalist politician and first president (1960–74) of independent Niger.

A teacher after 1936, Diori entered politics full-time following World War II and in 1946 became one of the founders of the Progressive Party of Niger, an affiliate of the African Democratic Rally, a party influential throughout French West Africa. He was also elected to the French National Assembly as a representative from Guinea, becoming a vice president in 1957–58. For a time in 1957 his more radical rival, Djibo Bakary, became the leader of Niger’s first responsible African government. Diori, however, received increasing support from the powerful traditional chiefs, and in the referendum of 1958 he successfully campaigned for limited autonomy within the French community against Bakary’s position of immediate independence. In the elections of the same year his party won an overwhelming victory, and he became president of the council of ministers. He banned Bakary’s Sawaba Party in 1959, though it continued to be a subversive force into the 1960s.

After Niger became independent (August 3, 1960), Diori was elected president. Moderate and businesslike, he weathered a period of instability in the mid-1960s, including Sawaba guerrilla infiltration and an assassination attempt. After 1966 he strengthened his position both within and outside Niger as chairman of the African and Mauritian Common Organization, defending African economic interests in dealing with the European Common Market countries. His stature as an African statesman was also enhanced by his role as a mediator on several occasions—e.g., during the Biafran War (1967–70) in Nigeria. Diori’s government was unable to relieve a famine in Niger resulting from a drought in the Sahel, and on April 15, 1974, he was overthrown in a coup led by the army chief of staff, Lieutenant Colonel Seyni Kountché. Diori was imprisoned by the new government from 1974 to 1980 and then held under house arrest until 1987.

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