Mali interim president sworn-in, vows to handover power in 18 months

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Mali’s interim president, Bah Ndaw, chosen to head a transitional government following a coup last month, was sworn in during ceremonies in the capital Bamako on Friday, AFP journalists witnessed.

Ndaw, speaking after being sworn in on Friday, vowed to hand over power within a previously agreed 18-month limit.

He said in a speech he would strive for “a stable, calm and successful transition, in the agreed conditions and timeframe.”

A committee appointed by the junta which seized power on 18 August, toppling President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, selected a 70-year-old retired colonel, Ndaw, as interim president.

Ndaw is due to lead a transition government for a maximum of 18 months before organising national elections.

Colonel Assimi Goita, who led the military junta, was also sworn in as interim vice president.

The ceremony on Friday took place in a theatre filled with officials dressed in military fatigues, senior judges, and foreign diplomats.

During the ceremony, Supreme Court Chief Prosecutor, Boya Dembele, said the challenges facing both men were “enormous”.

“It will truly require a reformulation of the state,” said the judge, dressed in red fur-lined robes.

The swearing-in comes as the fragile Sahel state’s neighbours have leaned on the military junta to appoint civilians as interim president and prime minister.

The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) slapped sanctions on the poor country on 20 August to push for a swift return to civilian rule.

A decision by the bloc on whether to ease the measure is possible on Friday, according to former Nigerian president and Ecowas mediator, Goodluck Jonathan.

“We are optimistic that this event will signal the beginning of the return to normalcy in Mali,” he said on Twitter on Thursday night, referring to the swearing-in of interim-government leaders.

Last month’s coup followed weeks of mass protests against Keita, spurred by frustrations over a brutal jihadist conflict, perceived corruption, and the country’s slumping economy.

Mali has struggled to quell an eight-year-old Islamist insurgency, which has claimed thousands of military and civilian lives.

AFP

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