BAMAKO, Mali
Mali’s interim President Assimi Goita has been targeted in an attempted stabbing attack during Eid al-Adha prayers at the Grand Mosque in the capital, Bamako, his office said.
“The attacker was immediately overpowered
by security. Investigations are ongoing,” the presidency said in a Twitter post
on Tuesday.
Goita was taken from the scene, according
to an AFP news agency, who said it was not immediately clear whether he had
been wounded.
An official at the presidency later told
AFP that Goita was “safe and sound”.
The president arrived at
the military camp of Kati, outside Bamako, “where security has been reinforced”,
the official said.
Religious Affairs Minister Mamadou Kone
told the news agency that a man had “tried to kill the president with a knife”
but was apprehended.
Latus Toure, the director of the Great
Mosque, said an attacker had lunged for the president but wounded someone else.
The president, 37, was sworn into office
last month despite facing a diplomatic backlash over his second power grab in
nine months.
In August 2020, Colonel Goita had led a
military coup that removed embattled President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita after
months of anti-government protests over perceived corruption and the failure to
tackle a deteriorating security crisis that first emerged in 2012.
In late May, Goita, who
was serving as Mali’s vice president in a transitional government tasked with
leading the country back to civilian rule in February 2022, seized power again
after accusing interim President Bah Ndaw and Prime Minister Moctar Ouane of
failing to consult him about a cabinet reshuffle.
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