The officers, identifying themselves as the Military Committee for Refoundation, were reportedly led by Lieutenant Colonel Pascal Tigri.
The presidency of Benin has confirmed that President Patrice Talon is safe and that the army is gradually regaining control following an attempted coup.
The announcement comes after a group of military officers appeared on Benin national television on Sunday morning, claiming to have removed the president and dissolved all state institutions.
The officers, identifying themselves as the Military Committee for Refoundation, were reportedly led by Lieutenant Colonel Pascal Tigri.
According to reports from Beninese media outlet TchadOne, the group attacked President Talon’s residence in the Le Guézo neighborhood and took control of the national television station, where Tigri declared himself “chairman of the military re-establishment committee.”
However, the president’s office, as reported by AFP, stated that President Talon remains unharmed and that loyalist forces are working to restore order across the capital.
“This is a small group of people who only control the television,” AFP quoted the presidency as saying.
“The regular army is regaining control. The city and the country are completely secure.’
Earlier on Sunday, Lieutenant Tigri spoke to the National Television to announce the military coup.
A Wave of Recent Coups d’État in West Africa
West Africa has been gripped by a troubling wave of coups in recent years, underscoring the fragility of democratic institutions across the region.
Guinea-Bissau became the latest flashpoint in November 2025, when army generals seized power on the eve of a presidential election. Heavy gunfire erupted near the presidential palace in Bissau, and President Umaro Sissoco Embaló was detained.
The military suspended the electoral process, citing threats to national stability, and installed General Horta Inta-A as head of a one-year transitional government.
The move deepened Guinea-Bissau’s long history of political instability, drawing condemnation from ECOWAS and prompting Nigeria to grant asylum to opposition candidate Fernando Dias da Costa amid fears for his safety.
Mali’s political crisis has simmered since its 2020 and 2021 coups, which brought Colonel Assimi Goïta to power. In August 2025, the junta announced it had thwarted another coup attempt, arresting two generals and a French national accused of plotting to destabilize the transitional government.
The arrests came against a backdrop of growing frustration: political parties remain banned, elections have been indefinitely postponed, and the junta has tightened its grip on power.
Mali’s instability has been compounded by jihadist violence and strained relations with Western partners, fueling fears of further unrest.
Burkina Faso, under Captain Ibrahim Traoré since the 2022 coup, also faced a foiled coup attempt in April 2025.
Authorities disclosed that senior officers had conspired with terrorist groups to topple the junta, prompting lockdowns of military barracks and heightened security in Ouagadougou.
The government rallied public support against alleged Western interference, but internal divisions within the military and worsening jihadist attacks have kept the country on edge.
The junta has postponed elections and introduced sweeping reforms, including a controversial plan to restore the death penalty for treason and terrorism, signaling its determination to consolidate control.
Niger Republic’s coup in July 2023 marked another turning point.
President Mohamed Bazoum, elected in the country’s first peaceful democratic transfer of power, was detained by his own presidential guard. General Abdourahamane Tchiani, head of the guard, declared himself leader with backing from the armed forces.
The junta justified its takeover as necessary to address economic hardship and security threats, but two years on, Niger remains under military rule, with ECOWAS sanctions and strained ties with Western allies shaping its trajectory.
Popular demonstrations in Niamey have reflected both support for the junta and resentment toward foreign influence.