Mali court names coup leader Assimi Goita as interim president
The colonel who led a military coup in the West African nation of Mali this week is now officially the country’s leader.
Mali's Constitutional Court
published a judgement late Friday declaring that Colonel Assimi Goita would
assume the presidency.
The judgment gives Goita, who is
also the vice president, the power to lead the interim government and
"lead the transition process to its conclusion."
Goita also asked the opposition
coalition movement M5-RFP to name a candidate for prime minister. The coalition
was key in mobilising demonstrations that led to a coup last year.
The group announced politician
Choguel Kokalla Maiga as their candidate in a Friday evening press briefing.
The court judgement noted “the
vacancy of the presidency of the transition following the resignation of Mr Bah
N'Daw, president of the transition, head of state.”
N'Daw and prime minister Moctar
Ouane were forced to resign from their positions after being detained for
several days this week in a coup staged by Goita.
On Tuesday, Goita announced that
they had been deposed and promised new elections in 2022.
The trigger was the military's
anger over a cabinet reshuffle that saw two senior military officers stripped
of their positions.
Last August, those two military
officers were part of a coup that ousted president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita from
office after nearly seven years. That power grab nine months ago was also led
by Goita.
It resulted in an interim
government headed by transitional president N'Daw, who had served as defence
minister from 2014 to 2015 and held several other military positions, with
Goita assuming the vice presidency.
The regional alliance ECOWAS will hold a summit to discuss the political turmoil in Mali on Sunday.