Thousands celebrate Mali leader's ouster as diplomatic pressure builds after coup
 
The UN's peacekeeping mission in Mali announced that
a human-rights team had gained access to the ousted president and other
detainees late Thursday.
Thousands of Malians took to the streets of the
capital Bamako on Friday to celebrate the military ouster of President Ibrahim
Boubacar Keita, as West African envoys prepared to join diplomatic pressure to
resolve the crisis triggered by the coup.
Rebel soldiers seized Keita and other leaders after
a mutiny on Tuesday at Kati, a military base outside the capital, dealing
another deep blow to a country already struggling with an Islamist insurgency
and wide public discontent over its government.
Keita's ouster was met with celebration in the
capital on Friday, as thousands gathered in Bamako's central square draped in
the national flag and blasting on vuvuzela horns.
The rally, originally organised as an anti-Keita
protest staged by a loose coalition that has lead months of mass rallies
against him, was recast to "celebrate the victory of the Malian
people".
"I am overjoyed! We won," said Mariam
Cisse, 38.
Speaking at the rally Ismael Wague, spokesman for
the new junta, paid tribute to the public.
"We merely completed the work that you began
and we recognise ourselves in your fight," he said.
The West African bloc ECOWAS will send envoys to
Mali on Saturday, the new junta said, after it gave the UN access to the ousted
president and released two other leaders held in the dramatic rebellion that
has drawn widespread international condemnation.
The delegation to Bamako will be led by former
Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan, an ECOWAS source said, describing the
trip as aiming "to help the search for solutions".
He will be joined by the president of the ECOWAS
Commission, Jean-Claude Kassi Brou, and Niger's foreign minister, Kalla
Ankourao.
A junta official told AFP that the envoys would be
received "with pleasure... it is important to talk to our brothers."
ECOWAS -- the 15-nation Economic Community of West
African States -- on Thursday announced it would dispatch a high-level
delegation "to ensure the immediate return of constitutional order".
ECOWAS has demanded Keita be restored as president
and bluntly warned the junta that they bore "responsibility for the safety
and security" of the detainees.
Keita won election in a landslide in 2013,
presenting himself as a unifying figure in a fractured country, and was
re-elected in 2018 for another five-year term.
But he failed to make headway against the jihadist
revolt that has left swathes of the country in the hands of armed Islamists and
ignited ethnic violence in the country's volatile centre.
Thousands of UN and French troops, along with
soldiers from five Sahel countries, have been deployed to try to stem the
bloodshed from Islamist militant violence.
The United States on Friday suspended military aid
to Mali, with no further training or support of the Mali armed forces.
"We have halted everything until we can clarify
the situation," the US special envoy for the Sahel, J. Peter Pham, told
reporters. "It's not clear which forces are involved in the mutiny, who is
involved specifically, where loyalties lie."
The UN's peacekeeping mission in Mali announced that
a human-rights team had gained access to the ousted president and other
detainees late Thursday.
          
     
                               
 
 


