Mali junta opens talks on civilian transition
Mali's military junta began talks with opposition
groups Saturday on its promised transition to civilian rule after mounting
pressure from neighbours to yield power in the weeks since it overthrew the
nation's leader.
The West African country has long been plagued by
chronic instability, a simmering jihadist revolt, ethnic violence and endemic
corruption, prompting a clique of rebel colonels to detain president Ibrahim
Boubacar Keita last month.
They pledged to step down after an undefined
transition period, but the putsch has prompted Mali's neighbours and former
colonial ruler France to demand a swift transfer of power to civilian rule,
with fears the crisis could impact neighbouring states.
The talks in Bamako are being held under junta chief
Assimi Goita but he was not present Saturday, a military source said.
"Since August 18, we are charting a new history
for our country," junta number two Malick Diaw told the opening session.
The 15-nation Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) regional bloc has imposed sanctions and closed borders to Mali
as part of efforts to press the junta into handing over power quickly.
Saturday's summit was originally planned for last
weekend but was called off at the last minute after a quarrel between the
military and the June 5 Movement, which spearheaded the protests that led to
the toppling of president Keita.
The opposition coalition of civil and religious
leaders has demanded that the military rulers give it a role in the transition
to civilian rule, but was not invited for the transition talks last Saturday.
It was then included for the rescheduled talks on
Saturday and Sunday, along with political parties, former rebels, unions, civil
society organisations and media representatives.
Parallel talks will take place in regional capitals,
led by regional governors, according to the junta.
Members of the Malian diaspora will also have their
say, according to a spokesperson for the National Committee for the Salvation
of the People (CNSP), as the junta is known.
One of the key issues will be the length of the
transition to civilian rule.
Originally the junta proposed a three-year
transition, before bringing that down to two years.
The June 5 Movement has said it wants a transition
period of 18-24 months.
West African leaders, who have called for elections
within 12 months, will meet via videoconference on Monday with the Mali
situation at the top of their agenda.
The June 5 Movement led the protests against Keita
for weeks before he was removed from power after seven years in charge.
It fears the junta is hijacking the coup and is
demanding equal billing during the transition period.
Influential imam Mahmoud Dicko, a key player in the
mass opposition protests that led to Keita's ouster, has insisted that the
junta does not have "carte blanche".
"We will not give a blank cheque to anyone to
run this country, that's over," he said.
"We led the fight. People have died and the
soldiers who have completed (this fight) must keep their word."
Mali's security situation deteriorated in the
lead-up to the country's fourth coup since it became an independent nation 60
years ago.
The ill-equipped army has the Herculean task of
securing an area two-and-a-half times the size of France from different groups
allied to Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State and various militia groups -- some
fighting for the government and others against it.
At least 10 Malian soldiers were killed in an
overnight ambush in a central region near the Mauritanian border where armed
jihadist groups are rampant, security and local sources said Friday.
It was the third time Malian security forces have
suffered heavy losses since the military took power.



