Malians were due to vote yesterday in the second round of parliamentary elections intended to cap the nation’s return to democracy, but overshadowed by the deaths of two UN peacekeepers in an Islamist attack. The polls mark the troubled west African nation’s first steps to recovery after it was upended by a military coup in March last year, finalizing a process begun with the election of its first post-conflict president in August.
However, voting takes place amid an upsurge in violence by al-Qaeda-linked rebels who stalk the vast northern desert, an ever-present danger to French and African troops tasked with providing security for the election alongside the Malian army.
At least two Senegalese UN troops were killed on Saturday, when a suicide bomber ploughed his explosives-laden car into a bank that they were guarding in the northeastern rebel bastion of Kidal.
Photo: AFP
Sultan Ould Badi, a Malian jihadist linked to several armed groups, said the attack was in retaliation for African countries’ support of a French-led military operation launched in January against Islamist rebels in “Azawad,” the ethnic Tuareg name for northern Mali.
“We are going to respond all across Azawad and in other lands ... with other operations against France’s crusades,” he said by telephone.
The French army has been carrying out an operation against armed Islamists north of the desert caravan town Timbuktu over the past week.
The offensive targeting al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is a “huge military operation, the largest in the Timbuktu region since the major northern cities were retaken by allied forces” an African military source in Timbuktu said.
Twenty jihadists have been killed so far, according to French and African military sources.
Just 19 of the national assembly’s 147 seats were allocated in the first round on Nov. 24, with turnout at 38.6 percent, a drop of almost 13 percentage points on that during the first round of the presidential vote.
After the first round of the parliamentary election, Louis Michel, chief of the EU observation mission, called on “all political actors to turn out on December 15.”
“In the specific context of Mali, voting is not only a right, it is a moral duty,” he said.
However, the campaign failed to capture the imagination of the electorate and many analysts in Bamako were expecting participation to be even worse yesterday.
In the restive north, the vote takes place in the Gao and Timbuktu regions, with seats in Kidal decided in the first round. Two of the new intake are former rebels who laid down their arms to join Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita’s ruling Rally For Mali (RPM).
The party has vowed to deliver “a comfortable majority” to smooth the path for reforms Keita plans to put in place to rebuild Mali’s stagnant economy and ease the simmering ethnic tensions in the north.
However, analysts have speculated that the RPM may have to form a coalition with the Alliance for Democracy in Mali, one of the country’s most established parties, which was split during the presidential polls between Keita and his rival, Soumaila Cisse.
Cisse, who is vying to represent the Union for the Republic and Democracy in his home region of Timbuktu, aims to become the leader of the parliamentary opposition.
He was among the fiercest opponents of former junta chief Amadou Sanogo, who has recently been charged with murder, complicity to murder and carrying out kidnappings after overthrowing the democratically elected government in March last year.
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