Niger's incumbent President Mahamadou Issoufou votes at a
polling station during the country's presidential and legislative
elections in Niamey
In line with traditional practice, the government resigned earlier
this month following his re-election in March polls boycotted by the
opposition, but Issoufou immediately reappointed Prime Minister Brigi
Raffini.
Having served in several different posts in previous
cabinets, Mohamed Bazoum, head of the president's Nigerien Party for
Democracy and Socialism, was named minister of the interior, according
to a list of ministers announced on state television.
Hassoumi
Massaoudou, who previously served as interior minister, will take over
the defence portfolio, an important supporting role for Issoufou, who is
a crucial ally of the West in the fight against Islamist militants in
the region.
Saidou Sidibe, meanwhile, returned as finance minister but without the economy portfolio.
Hassane
Baraze Moussa, one of the few new arrivals in the 38-member cabinet,
will head the mines ministry for uranium-producing Niger, after
previously serving as director of a state-owned construction and urban
development company.
Issoufou won a second five-year term with 92.5 percent of the vote in the March 20 run-off election.
His
opponent, opposition leader Hama Amadou, had been in jail since
November on charges related to a baby-trafficking scandal and was
therefore unable to campaign. He was flown to France for medical
treatment just days before the election, and the opposition called for a
boycott of the polls.
Amadou, who said he is innocent and
maintained the charges were part of a strategy to sideline him
politically, was granted provisional release a little over a week after
the election
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