Coalition rejects Mali political charter

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Malian Armed Forces troops.


The M5-RFP coalition in Mali that led anti-government protests before last month’s coup rejected a political charter pushed through by the ruling junta on Saturday, M5-RFP said.


After three days of talks with political leaders and civil society groups, the junta roadmap was meant to chart an agreed transition after the August 18 coup and reassure international powers, which fear Mali’s political turmoil could further destabilise the region.


M5-RFP said the final version of the charter did not reflect the outcome of negotiations, which it said included a majority choice of a civilian interim president. Instead the charter says the interim president can be civilian or soldier.


“M5-RFP distances itself from the resulting document which does not reflect the views and decisions of the Malian people,” it said in a statement.


“The desire to grab and confiscate power for the benefit of the CNSP does not justify the means,” it said, referring to the junta, which calls itself the National Committee for the Salvation of the People (CNSP).


M5-RFP’s stance on transition leadership reflects that of the West African regional bloc, which has given the junta until Tuesday to name a non-military president and prime minister to lead a one-year interim government.


Under the junta charter, the interim president can be a civilian or a soldier and will preside over a transitional period of 18 months before elections, a spokesman for the talks said.


It is not yet clear how the junta will proceed following rejection of the charter by M5-RFP, under whose influence large-scale protests were held against President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita in the run-up to the coup.


International powers are concerned ongoing political instability will undermine a joint fight against Islamist militants across West Africa’s Sahel region.


Leaders from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which imposed economic sanctions after the coup, will meet to discuss the situation in Mali.

 

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