'Ali Saibou' (born
1940) was the
President of Niger from
1987 to
1993, succeeding the deceased
Seyni Kountché.
A member of the
Djerma people, he was born in
Dingajibanda, a village of
Ouallam arrondissement. (Although from Kountché's home village, Saibou is not a cousin.) He was early interested in a military career, and attended the
Saint-Louis preparatory school in
Senegal from
1954, then joined the
First Senegalese Tirailleurs Regiment. He saw action in
Cameroon in
1960, and was wounded there.
Upon Niger's independence in
1960, Saibou was transferred to the new
Niger Army as a
sergeant. He attended officers' school, and in
1969 was put in command of a unit at
N'Guigmi, then in
1973 at
Agadez, where he reached
captain. Saibou threw in his lot with Kountché in the coup of April
1974, and brought his troops from Agadez to
Niamey. As a reward he was promoted to
major, appointed to the cabinet as minister of rural economy and the environment, and on
20 November 1974, made chief of staff.
However, Kountché was suspicious of Saibou; in June
1975 he dismissed Saibou from the cabinet and asked him to relinquish his command of the armed forces. Saibou countered by asking to be retired from the service altogether, an act which apparently allayed Kountché's fears, and Saibou remained loyal until Kountché's death, which occurred on
10 November 1987.
Saibou then secured his nomination by the
Supreme Military Council as Kountché's successor, subsequently sending military rivals overseas with diplomatic tasks, and transforming the
MNSD into the one political party in Niger. In
1989 he had a new constitution approved, and ran as the sole presidential candidate in December.
In the early part of
1990, unrest by students and a
Tuareg assault on
Tchin Tabaraden led to a
National Conference of 1991 that ultimately dismantled military rule, leaving Saibou mostly ineffective. After the election of
Mahamane Ousmane as president in March
1993, Saibou left office on
April 16 and retired to his home village.
Reference
★ Samuel Decalo, ''Historical Dictionary of Niger'', 3rd ed. (Scarecrow Press, 1997, ISBN 0-8108-3136-8) pp. 265-266