Leaders of a coup in Mali faced increasing pressure yesterday as Malian lawmakers and opposition figures joined forces to call for them to go and Tuareg rebels closed in on a key northern town.
In Bamako, still tense four days after the coup, several hundred people gathered at a meeting of 38 political parties, who announced the formation of a united front against the junta.
CLEAR AIMS
“Our aim is clear, to get the junta to leave,” said Soumaila Cisse, who would have been one of the main presidential candidates in polls that had been planned for April 29, but were canceled by the military rulers.
“This coup d’etat is unconstitutional and we will not accept it,” he said.
“Get out Captain [Amadou] Sanogo,” opposition supporters shouted, referring to the coup’s leader.
The Malian National Assembly issued a statement demanding an immediate return to constitutional order, the opening of all borders, the release of all arrested government officials and for elections to go ahead as planned.
Only one small opposition party has come out in support of the coup.
Fourteen government figures, including the prime minister and foreign minister, began a hunger strike over their detention at a military barracks outside the capital, which serves as the junta headquarters.
“There are 14 of us in a room of 12m2, sleeping three to a mattress,” a message from one of the officials sent to Agence France-Presse said. “Our basic rights are being violated.”
Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure’s whereabouts are still unknown, but he is believed to be safe under the protection of his loyalist paratrooper guard.
About 1,000km to the north, military officials said on Sunday they had fought off a Tuareg rebel attack on Kidal, one of the region’s key cities.
The Islamist rebel group Ancar Dine said in a statement on Saturday its fighters were on the verge of taking the city.
Ancar Dine, which means “Defenders of Faith” in Arabic, is one of two rebel movements involved in the separatist battle.
MILITIA LEADER KILLED
In the eastern Gao region south of Kidal, Tuareg fighters killed Amadou Diallo, the head of a militia fighting beside the army, along with eight of his fellow fighters on Sunday, several sources reported.
A Malian army source said he had died in an ambush.
The Tuareg desert tribes in January launched their first rebellion since 2009 in a decades-old campaign for independence.
Their forces were boosted by the return of heavily armed battle-hardened fighters from Libya who served former Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi.
In early fighting, they have overwhelmed the weak Malian army and scores of soldiers are said to have been killed and captured.
It was anger among rank-and-file troops at the government’s handling of the conflict that led to the coup.
Soldiers revolted in Bamako on Wednesday, leading to a full-blown coup early on Thursday as they seized government buildings and forced the president to flee.
Sanogo has invited the rebels to hold peace talks.
In a meeting with French Ambassador to Mali Christian Rouyer on Saturday, Paris had urged Sanogo to give up the putsch and hold elections next month as scheduled, French Minister for Cooperation Henri de Raincourt told French television on Sunday.
Sanogo had not yet responded to the demands, the minister said.
The junta has been largely frozen out by the international community in a chorus of rebukes and suspension of aid.
The African Union suspended Mali, while Europe and Canada froze aid and the US threatened to follow suit.
Leaders from the regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) will hold an emergency meeting in Abidjan today, the day the junta has called for civil servants to return to work.
Yesterday marked the 21st anniversary of the last coup, when Toure led the overthrow of dictator Moussa Traore.
Toure steered the country to its first democratic election a year later, for which many consider him a hero.
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