New Era

Military takes key posts in Mali’s interim govt

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BAMAKO - A transition government tasked with leading Mali back to civilian rule was appointed on Monday, with numerous members of the military junta that seized power in a coup occupying key posts.

Following the bloodless 18 August coup that toppled president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, the junta vowed to relinquish control and hold fresh elections.

But Mali’s West African neighbours imposed potentiall­y crippling sanctions, and a key sticking point in negotiatio­ns with the junta has been whether the transition will be led by soldiers or civilians.

Interim president Bah Ndaw, a former foreign minister and retired colonel who was sworn in last month, appointed a 25-strong government on Monday.

At least four central cabinet posts - defence, security, territoria­l administra­tion and national reconcilia­tion - went to colonels in the army, according to a decree read live on state television by the president’s secretary-general Sekou Traore.

One of the junta’s leaders, Colonel Sadio Camara, becomes defence minister, while Colonel Modibo Kone gets the security and civil protection portfolio.

Junta spokesman Colonel Ismael Wague, who broke the news of the coup in a dramatic nighttime television broadcast, will become national reconcilia­tion minister.

But civilians were also appointed, including former prosecutor Mohamed Sidda Dicko as justice minister and former ambassador Zeini Moulaye as foreign affairs minister.

The coup came after months of protests over the country’s bloody jihadist insurgency, economic struggles and chronic inter-ethnic violence.

Former armed groups that signed a peace agreement in 2015 will also be represente­d in the transition­al government.

Members of Tuareg groups that led a rebellion in the north were awarded the agricultur­e and fisheries as well as youth and sports ministries, while proBamako groups also received posts.

The movement that led the protests that built up to the coup received three ministeria­l posts.

The West African bloc ECOWAS has heaped pressure on Mali’s junta to swiftly restore civilian rule, including imposing sanctions.

After long negotiatio­ns, the junta finally agreed to complete that transition within 18 months at most.

The junta will hope that the appointmen­t of the transition government will help convince ECOWAS to lift the sanctions.

But it was still not met all of the ECOWAS demands, in particular the dissolutio­n of the junta and the release of civilian and military figures arrested during the coup.

Last week the junta abandoned a contentiou­s measure that would have enabled its leader, Colonel Assimi Goita, to potentiall­y replace Ndaw - himself a retired colonel - if ever he was incapacita­ted.

Goita officially holds the post of interim vice-president.

Mali’s interim prime minister is former foreign minister Moctar Ouane. -

 ??  ?? Appointee… Interim president Bah Ndaw.
Appointee… Interim president Bah Ndaw.

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