Military ousts civilian leaders in Mali
By Elian Peltier
BAMAKO – Military officials in Mali ousted the country’s interim civilian leaders on Tuesday (25), setting up a new crisis for the Western African nation, just nine months after the previous president was forced out in a military coup.
The leaders — Bah N’Daou, the president, and Moctar Ouane, the prime minister — were appointed last year to lead a transitional government to prepare for new elections. They were both detained by the military on Monday (24) and taken to a base outside the capital, Bamako. On Tuesday, they were officially stripped of their duties, the military said.
President Emmanuel Macron of France denounced the ouster as a coup on Tuesday and threatened to impose sanctions on the military leaders. France has remained involved in the affairs of Mali, a former colony, intervening in 2012 to fight an Islamist insurgency there and in the broader Sahel region.
The removal of the civilian leaders followed a government reshuffle announced by Ouane on Monday that sidelined some officers who had taken part in the coup that ousted the former president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, in August. It also comes as workers in important sectors of the economy, including bankers and civil servants, have been on strike since last week after failed salary negotiations with the previous government.
Col. Assimi Goïta, who led last year’s coup and had been serving as a vice president to N’Daou, said on Tuesday in a statement read on public television by one of his advisers that N’Daou and Ouane had sought to “violate” the transition to a new civilian government.
In his statement, Goïta said that the new government had been formed without consulting him. The newly appointed defence minister, Souleymane Doucouré, was also detained, alongside N’Daou and Ouane.
Goïta said that the transition process would continue and that elections would be held in 2022, as planned, but he did not provide further details.
The removal of the interim leaders could further destabilize Mali, where rebel and Islamist groups have controlled large swaths of territory in the north for almost 10 years. Keïta, the former president, was forced by military officers to resign on state television following weeks of protests against the government.
N’Daou and Ouane were appointed in September to oversee an 18-month transition back to civilian rule after the coup.
The detentions on Monday drew widespread condemnation. The United Nations, the United States and the European Union were among the countries and organizations that issued a joint statement denouncing the move as an “attempted coup” and calling for the leaders’ release.
Nine days after the coup in August, Keïta, the former president, was released from the same military base where N’Daou and Ouane were taken and driven back to his home.
A delegation from ECOWAS, the regional organization of West African states that negotiated the appointment of the transitional leaders last year, was headed to Bamako on Tuesday, according to the joint statement, which was released before the announcement of the ouster.
-New York Times