Voting ends in Mali on junta’s new constitution
BAMAKO: Voting concluded in Mali on Sunday (Jun 18) on a new constitution in the ruling junta’s first electoral test, with insecurity and political disagreement preventing voting in some areas.
The west African nation has been under military rule since an August 2020 coup but strongman leader Colonel Assimi Goita, 40, has vowed to return the country to civilian rule in 2024.
On Sunday, Goita hailed the vote as “(paving) the way for a new Mali”.
“I am convinced this referendum will pave the way for a new Mali, a strong Mali, an efficient Mali, a Mali in the service of the well-being of its population”, Goita said.
Some 8.4 million citizens were eligible to vote in the referendum on the new text which has fuelled speculation that Goita will seek election. Results are expected within 72 hours.
Goita was among the first to cast his ballot, while voters flocked to polling stations in the capital, Bamako, an AFP journalist saw.
“Today is a historic day. This vote will change many things… That’s why I voted ‘yes’, for a new Mali,” said civil servant Boulan Barro.
The danger of jihadist attacks was a consideration in central and northern regions, meaning the vote was not held in some parts of the country, including the town of Kidal, a stronghold of former rebels.
A team of observers from civil society groups backed by the European Union reported that there were only a small number of voting issues in the polling stations to which they were deployed.
They also reported that more than 80 polling stations in Mopti, in the centre of the country, were not open “due to insecurity”.
The group said that a “terrorist attack” had disrupted voting in Bodio, but did not give further details.
In Menaka, a northern region contending with rebels linked to the Islamic State group, voting was limited to its capital due to insecurity, local elected officials said.
Turnout – typically low in the country of 21 million – will be seen as an indicator of the junta’s ability to restore stability and generate popular enthusiasm for its agenda.
CHRONIC INSTABILITY
The junta had advertised the new constitution as the answer to Mali’s inability to tackle its multiple crises.
Mali’s recent woes began in 2012, when separatist insurgents in the north – long seen as marginalised by the southern government – aligned with Al-Qaeda-linked Islamists to seize vast swathes of territory.
Former colonial power France stepped in and helped push back the Islamists, but attacks have continued, and Bamako has since broken its alliance with Paris in favour of Russia.
Disputed parliamentary elections in March 2020, followed by mass protests against a government unable to rein in the insurgency, corruption and economic crisis, ended in a coup.
Goita initially appointed an interim president but kicked him out in a second coup in 2021 and stepped into the top job himself.
Now doubts are swirling over his commitment to step down after elections planned for next year.
The junta called on Friday for the immediate departure of the country’s UN peacekeeping mission, a central and controversial actor in a security crisis that has claimed the lives of nearly 200 peacekeepers in the last decade.
A STRONGER PRESIDENCY
The new constitution will strengthen the role of the president, who will have the right to hire and fire the prime minister and cabinet members.
The government will answer to the president, and not parliament as the current 1992 document states.
It will also give an amnesty to those behind prior coups, reform the regulation of public finances and force MPs and senators to declare their wealth in a bid to clamp down on corruption.
A politician, speaking on condition of anonymity, said some in the military were hoping a new constitution would “reset the clock” – erasing a previous commitment that Goita would not take part in the 2024 election.
“PEOPLE WANT SOMETHING ELSE”
Observers say a vote for “yes” is almost certain.
“Malians say that presidents from democratic regimes did not necessarily shine. Corruption has reached a certain level. People want to see something else,” Bamako University sociologist Brema Ely Dicko said.
However, the proposed reform had drawn vocal opposition, from former rebels and imams as well as political opponents.
Influential religious organisations opposed the continuation of secularism enshrined in the current constitution.
“The concerns of the Muslim faith aren’t taken into account at all, that’s why I voted ‘no’,” said 30-year-old Mariam Diop.
“Mali needs a system built around institutions and not a system built around a man,” said Makan Mary, a member of the Yelema party.
One researcher, who like many others spoke on condition of anonymity, argued the old constitution was satisfactory.
“The problem with the 1992 constitution is that it was never really applied … it cannot be the cause of the crisis,” the researcher said.
Source: CNA