Niger dumps French, adopts Hausa as national language

  Promise Obichukwu

  INTERNATIONAL NEWS

Wednesday, April 9, 2025   4:36 PM

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Niger’s military-led government has announced Hausa as the country’s new national language, substituting French, in a bid to further step away from its former colonial power, France.

The junta stated in a new charter published on March 31 in a special edition of the government’s official journal, “The national language is Hausa” while “the working languages are English and French."

Hausa is Niger’s most widely spoken language, particularly prevalent in the regions of Zinder, Maradi, and Tahoua.

The language is understood and spoken by a large portion of the population in the country of 26 million.

On the contrary, French is spoken by only about 13 per cent of Nigeriens, approximately three million people.

The charter manifested from a national conference held in February, which corroborated the ruling junta’s authority and granted its leader, General Abdourahamane Tiani, the mandate to remain in power for the next five years.


According to the new charter, nine other local languages, including Zarma-Songhay, Fula, Kanuri, Gourmanche, and Arabic, will now be officially recognised as “the spoken languages of Niger.”


Since seizing power in a July 2023 coup that ousted civilian president Mohamed Bazoum, Niger’s ruling junta has cut diplomatic ties with Paris, expelled French troops, and renamed streets and landmarks that once carried French names.
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