BAMAKO, Mali
Ousted Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita left the country on Saturday for medical treatment in Abu Dhabi, an adviser said, as talks about a transition back to civilian rule following last month’s military coup got off to a chaotic start.
Keita, 75, was hospitalised in the capital
Bamako on Tuesday, six days after he was released from detention by the ruling
junta, which seized power on Aug. 18.
His former chief of staff, Mamadou Camara, told
Reuters that Keita left Bamako on Saturday evening aboard a plane chartered by
the United Arab Emirates at the request of Mali’s ruling junta.
“It is a medical visit of between 10 and 15
days,” Camara said.
Keita’s medical condition is unclear. He had a
benign tumour removed from his neck in 2016.
West African leaders, fearing the coup could
set a precedent that would undermine their power and an international fight
against Islamist militants in the wider Sahel region, initially insisted Keita
be restored to power.
But they have since dropped that demand and are
now calling for elections within a year: a timeline the junta, the National
Committee for the Salvation of the People (CNSP), has not committed to.
Talks about the shape of the transition period
opened on Saturday with hundreds of representatives from the junta, political
parties and civil society groups attending an opening ceremony in Bamako.
But less than an hour after it began,
supporters of the M5-RFP coalition, which led mass demonstrations against Keita
before the coup, began to protest, accusing the junta of excluding them from
most working groups.
M5-RFP supporters in the conference hall
shouted down the moderator onstage, bringing proceedings to a halt.
The moderator later announced that the M5-RFP
would be able to participate in all of the working groups, which calmed the
coalition’s supporters and allowed the event to resume.
The talks, which are also being held in
regional capitals across Mali, are scheduled to continue on Sunday and then
resume again late next week.
No comments:
Post a Comment