Hama Amadou

Hama Amadou
Amadou in 2011
Prime Minister of Niger
In office
1 January 2000 – 7 June 2007
PresidentMamadou Tandja
Preceded byIbrahim Hassane Mayaki
Succeeded bySeyni Oumarou
In office
21 February 1995 – 27 January 1996
PresidentMahamane Ousmane
Preceded byAmadou Cissé
Succeeded byBoukary Adji
President of the National Assembly
In office
19 April 2011 – 24 November 2014
Preceded bySeyni Oumarou
Succeeded byAmadou Salifou
Minister of Information
In office
15 July 1988 – 20 December 1989
PresidentAli Saibou
Prime MinisterMamane Oumarou
Personal details
Born(1950-03-03)3 March 1950
Youri, Colony of Niger, French West Africa
Died23 October 2024(2024-10-23) (aged 74)
Niamey, Niger
Political partyMNSD-Nassara (1989–2010)
MODEN/FA-Lumana (2010–present)

Hama Amadou (3 March 1950 – 23 October 2024) was a Nigerien politician who was Prime Minister of Niger from 1995 to 1996 and again from 2000 to 2007. He was also Secretary-General of the National Movement for the Development of Society (MNSD-Nassara) from 1991 to 2001 and President of the MNSD-Nassara from 2001 to 2009. Amadou was from the Kurtey, a Fula[1] sub-group, and was raised in the Tillaberi Region, in the Niger River valley, north of Niamey.

Following corruption allegations against his government, he was removed from office as Prime Minister through a 2007 no-confidence vote in the National Assembly of Niger. In 2008, he became the target of a corruption investigation which saw him arrested to face criminal charges at the Nigerien High Court of Justice and removed from his post as MNSD President.

From 2011 to 2014, Amadou was President of the National Assembly of Niger. He was elected to that post as an ally of President Mahamadou Issoufou, but in 2013 he went into opposition. He fled Niger in August 2014 to escape arrest on charges related to a baby-trafficking investigation. Upon those charges, Amadou was sentenced to one year in prison, in March 2017, by the Niamey Court of Appeals.[2] Amadou was tried in absentia, since he was exiled in France.[3]

  1. ^ In French: Peul; in Fula: Fulɓe.
  2. ^ AfricaNews (14 March 2017). "Niger opposition leader sentenced to one year in prison for alleged baby trafficking". Africanews. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  3. ^ "Niger's opposition leader Hama Amadou jailed in absentia". BBC News. 13 March 2017. Retrieved 15 March 2017.

Hama Amadou

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