Background: Border Closure After Niger’s 2023 Coup
Following the military takeover in Niamey in July 2023, the land border between Niger and its southern neighbour Benin was shut down. The closure persisted for almost three years, during which Niger accused Benin of allowing French‑backed forces to operate near the frontier and of attempting to destabilise the border region.
Renewed Diplomatic Push to Reopen the Niger‑Benin Frontier
In early 2025 the stalled talks gained new momentum after Benin’s president visited Niamey. The visit prompted both governments to launch a series of negotiations aimed at restoring trade flows and regional connectivity. A Nigerian delegation subsequently travelled to Cotonou for follow‑up discussions, signalling a willingness on both sides to address the impasse.
Security Guarantees Take Center Stage in Negotiations
While the initial agenda focused on customs procedures and logistics, the discussions quickly shifted to security concerns. Niger’s delegation insisted that any agreement to reopen the border must be anchored in binding defence commitments.
Two Non‑Negotiable Conditions Set by Niger
General Mohamad Toumba, Nigeria’s Security Minister, outlined the country’s firm prerequisites during the talks, describing them as essential and non‑negotiable:
- The signing of a defence and security agreement that establishes an “inviolable principle” – neither country’s territory may be used against the other – and requires full transparency about all foreign military installations operating close to the shared border.
- The creation of a permanent bilateral information‑sharing mechanism to coordinate responses to cross‑border security threats, such as insurgent groups that move freely across the porous Sahel frontier.
Intelligence Sharing as a Core Demand
Toumba stressed that intelligence cooperation is vital in a region where armed groups operate across borders, arguing that unilateral security responses are no longer effective. He was quoted on Nigerien state television Télé Sahel saying:
“We stop fighting alone against an enemy that knows no borders,” he added, noting that Niger’s position is “firm and absolute” because it concerns the survival of both states and the safety of their peoples.
He also called for “complete transparency on foreign equipment deployed near the border” along the Niger River, a reference to long‑standing allegations that Benin hosts French military bases close to the frontier – claims that both Cotonou and Paris have repeatedly denied.
Implications for Regional Trade and Security
The outcome of the current negotiations will determine not only whether the key trade corridor between Niger and Benin can be reopened, but also the broader tone of relations in a Sahel region undergoing rapid geopolitical realignment. Niger’s post‑coup security doctrine emphasises sovereignty, tighter scrutiny of foreign military presence, and regionally driven security coordination. If the two sides can reach an agreement that satisfies Niger’s defence requirements while addressing Benin’s economic interests, the border could become a model for how neighbouring states balance trade revival with collective security in the Sahel.


