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Mali’s Junta Suspends Political Party Activities

(FILES) Mali’s interim leader and head of Junta, Colonel Assimi Goïta looks on, in Bamako, Mali, on September 22, 2022 during Mali's Independence Day military parade. Mali's ruling military junta on April 10, 2024 announced the suspension of all party political activities on public order grounds. "Until further notice, for reasons of public order, the activities of political parties and the activities of a political character of associations are suspended across the whole country," under a decree decided by junta leader Colonel Assimi Goita at a cabinet meeting, a government spokesman said. (Photo by OUSMANE MAKAVELI / AFP)

AfriqueCAN: MALI’S junta has issued a decree halting political party activities, government spokesperson Abdoulaye Maiga announced in a statement read on state television on Wednesday evening www.AfriqueCAN.com 

The decree suspended until further notice all activities by political parties and “associations of a political nature” on the grounds of maintaining public order, the statement said.

Mali has been under military rule since August 2020, the first of eight coups in West and Central Africa over four years, including in its neighbours Burkina Faso and Niger.

Mali’s current junta seized power in a second coup in 2021 and later promised to restore civilian rule by March 26, 2024 following elections in February of this year.

However, the junta said in September last year that it would indefinitely postpone February elections for technical reasons, sparking outrage among political groups.

Many reacted again after last month’s transition deadline passed without a vote, with some of Mali’s main political parties and civil society groups on March 31 calling for a time frame for elections.

“We will use all legal and legitimate avenues for the return of normal constitutional order in our country,” they said in a joint statement that had over 20 signatories, including a major opposition coalition and the toppled ex-president’s party.

Mali’s military rulers already broke a first promise to hold elections in February 2022.

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