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WSWS : News
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Pro-US military strongman elected president in Mali
By Chris Talbot
23 May 2002
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Military strongman General Amadou Toumani Toure (known as ATT)
was declared the new president of the West African country of
Mali on May 16, in a run-off vote that followed the first round
of voting held at the end of April.
ATT won 64 percent of the vote as against 36 percent for Soumaila
Cisse, candidate of the ruling Alliance pour la Démocratie
au Mali (Adema) party. Turnout figures were not given, but were
said to be even less than the 38 percent out of the 5.7 million
registered voters in the first round.
Little is known about Toures political views except that
both he and Cisse support the economic policies pursued by Malis
government for the last decadekeeping up payments on its
$3.3 billion debt to the Western banks and carrying out the decentralisation
and privatisation put forward under the International Monetary
Funds structural reform programme.
According to Africa Confidential magazine, Toure has
links to Washington Democrats. He has headed a charitable foundation
dedicated to child vaccination and supporting education, backed
by the Jimmy Carter foundation. Mali has played a key role in
sending troops to military policing missions in Africathey
were given US training for such tasks in the late 1990s. In 2000,
General Toure acted as United Nation secretary general Kofi Annans
special envoy to the Central African Republic attempting to secure
a peace agreement. He retired from the army last October in order
to enter the presidential contest.
Until his retirement he made a point of staying out of politics.
Although, he is well known for leading junior officers in a 1991
coup that overthrew the dictator General Moussa Traore. After
23 years of Traores despotic rule the country was heading
for bloody conflict. Troops fired on demonstrating youths in the
capital, Bamako, killing over 300. After overthrowing Traore,
instead of continuing in power, Toure handed over to multi-party
elections and the rule of President Alpha Oumar Kanare of the
Adema party.
The first round of the current elections resulted in a row
over ballot rigging. Several of the 24 presidential candidates,
including former prime minister Ibrahim Boubacar Keita (IBK),
protested against irregularities.
Apparently Cisses campaign manager is the wife of the
minister of the interior, who organised the ballot. Allegations
were made that the votes collected by the Interior Ministry did
not have the necessary tally sheets and that local mayors in many
remote areas were tampering with the votes. In some oasis districts
around Timbuktu and further north, Cisse was getting 99 percent
of the votes cast. As well as complaints from the candidates,
observers from the US-based Carter Center were also critical,
saying there were a significant number of irregularities.
Malis Constitutional Court deliberated on the poll and
also accepted there were irregularities. It annulled
541,000 of the votes cast (about a quarter of the total), but
claimed that Toure still had the highest number. Cisses
votes were reduced but he still came second, meaning that he and
Toure went on to the next round according to Malis electoral
procedure.
Cisse seems to have been a victim of factional disputes in
the Adema party. Infighting within Malis tiny ruling elite
exposed corruption scandals and heavily compromised the Adema
government. Apparently even outgoing President Konare switched
his vote to Toure. Keita, who had split with Adema in 2000 to
form his own party, also supported Toure in the second round.
According to Africa Confidential, Keita was the favored
candidate of the French establishment; the former colonial ruler
of the country. Both the French Socialist Party and Chiracs
Rassemblement Pour la République (RPR) are said to have
backed Keita because of their concerns about Toures US links.
Last year US secretary of state Colin Powell picked out Mali
as one of the four countries he visited in Africa. It was, he
said, a model for the rest of the world to see and focus
on. When his predecessor Madeleine Albright visited the
former French colony in 1999, she described the country as being
central to our partnership with African democracies.
In terms of democratic credentials, the comments were patently
false. The first round of the parliamentary elections in 1997
were condemned as fraudulent by opposition parties, who then withdrew
from the second round in protest at Ademas rigging of the
polls. Opposition parties then boycotted the 1997 presidential
elections, which meant that Konare was elected on a very low turnout.
Several opposition politicians were jailed for protesting at Konares
investiture. In late 1997 Amnesty International accused the Malian
government of using torture against jailed opponents.
The model offered by Mali to the rest of Africa
was its apparent stability and willingness to abide by IMF directives.
Toures appointment is designed to insure that position continues,
when there are growing doubts about the clique around Adema.
Last year the World Bank issued a critical report on Mali that
said corruption is systemic and pernicious because of a
system of political clientelism, referring to the ruling
party buying votes and support with top jobs or lucrative government
contracts.
There are also signs of growing popular discontent with the
ruling clique. Fully 72 percent of the population of 10 million
lives below the poverty line. Average income is $240 a year, and
Mali is the fifth poorest country in the world. Despite being
Africas third largest gold producer, after an initial increase
in growth in the 1990s the economy is declining. More than half
the population is illiterate, and less than half attend school.
Interest from the US may also relate to possible oil and gas
exploration, following discoveries in Chad and Mauritania. Malis
Ministry of Mines is offering 15 blocks of land for potential
oil finds. Some indication of the importance the US administration
attaches to oil and gas sources in West Africa is given by the
statement of assistant secretary of state for african affairs,
Walter Kansteiner, that by 2005 fully 20 percent of US oil supplies
will come from Africaa figure expected to rise to 25 percent
by 2015. The main US export to Africa is oil-drilling equipment
and oil is the main import. As well as Nigeria and Angola, other
oil exporters include Equatorial Guinea, Congo-Brazzaville, Gabon
and Cameroon, with a pipeline from Chad to Cameroon under construction.
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