WITNESS: When is a coup not a coup?
Daniel Magnowski is a correspondent for Reuters in West and Central Africa, based in Dakar, Senegal. Before moving to Africa this year, Daniel covered commodities and financial markets for Reuters in London. In the following story he tells of his experience of covering the aftermath of the military coup in Mauritania this month and his encounter with the new junta leader.
By Daniel Magnowski
DAKAR (Reuters) - "First of all," said the mustachioed army general in his pale green uniform, "this is not a military coup."
We were sitting in a reception room in the Mauritanian presidential palace, from which the man opposite me had only days before bundled the country's first freely elected leader, President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi.
Apparently confused by my skepticism, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz went on to tell me how Abdallahi's overthrow was rather a natural consequence of his poor leadership and a necessary step to get the country back on track.
While Abdel Aziz took charge of the government, the army took charge of the streets.
One youth in fatigues gripped a battered Kalashnikov as our car inched past a roadblock.
Wide-eyed, he waved the gun to show it was his to use, though the direction it pointed in suggested he could do with some training on the rifle range. Soldiers stationed near our apartment found their truck most useful as a shade for sleeping.
The military presence was unobtrusive and life went on as normal in the markets, mosques and coffee shops of Nouakchott.
But among the city's chattering classes, Abdel Aziz's propaganda machine was whirring smoothly.
By turns a leader of a usually liberal think-tank, then a university professor, defended the bloodless coup in language so similar they could have been reading from the same autocue.
Their thesis, that soldiers spiriting away a democratically elected president was an example of political stability in action, seemed to me illogical, but the party line had filtered down to street level too.
"It will be good for the economy," a market trader told us enthusiastically. Meanwhile, the United States halted development aid and Western governments queued up to condemn Abdel Aziz.
Still, if international opinion troubled the head of the junta, he wasn't showing it.
I asked him whether he had been able to convince other countries that his takeover was in fact motivated by a desire for stability and democracy, as he so patiently explained to me.
With a look of offence, he shrugged. "I don't know." Continued...




