Mali’s prime minister was forced to resign on Tuesday by the soldiers who staged a coup in March, complicating international efforts to help push rebels from the north of the country, according to Reuters.
Once a beacon of democracy in West Africa, Mali has been mired in crisis since Tuareg rebels seized the northern two-thirds of the arid nation in the wake of the coup.
Although the soldiers handed over to a civilian president and prime minister under international pressure, they have remained powerful.
CheickModiboDiarra resigned as prime minister hours after he was arrested trying to leave the country for former colonial power France and was brought to the ex-junta’s headquarters at a barracks in Kati, just outside Bamako.
“I, CheickModiboDiarra, hereby resign with my entire government,” a nervous-looking Diarra said in a short statement broadcast on state television early on Tuesday. Diarra is a former NASA scientist and Microsoft chief for Africa who was made prime minister in April.
Fearing Mali has become a safe haven for terrorism and organised crime, West African leaders have signed off on a plan to send 3,300 soldiers to Mali to revamp Mali’s army and then support operations to retake the north.
Diarra’s forced resignation was a clear indication that those behind the coup still maintained considerable control however, a fact that could discourage international partners from backing the plan until civilian rule is strengthened.
A spokesman for the former junta said Tuesday’s events did not amount to a new coup and that interim civilian President DiouncoundaTraore remained in place.
Diarra was forced to step down during a meeting with ex-coup leader Captain AmadouSanogo, according to Bakary Mariko, the spokesman.
Mariko accused Diarra of recording two speeches – the contents of which were not disclosed – and of urging his supporters to disrupt talks on the political crisis this week.
“This is not a coup. The president is still in place but the prime minister was no longer working in the interests of the country,” Mariko said.
There was no immediate reaction from the president.
Downtown Bamako was calm, but the main road leading to Kati was blocked for security reasons, residents said.
Coup leader Sanogo has been repeatedly accused of meddling in politics since he stepped down and was officially tasked with overseeing reforms of Mali’s army.
A senior west African diplomat said Diarra’s resignation shows there was a de facto leader orchestrating things in Mali.
“Sanogo is pulling at the strings. Until we have a real transitional government in place, we will keep having these problems,” the diplomat said, requesting not to be named.
Even before Diarra’s arrest and resignation, support for the military intervention plan was not universal.
Some of Mali’s politicians support the idea of a foreign-backed military operation while others, including much of the military, say they need only financial and logistical support.
Mariko said the Malian army was ready to act even without international help.
“We want the help of the international community but if it has to wait until September or until an undefined date, then the Malian army will act to free its territory,” he said.
However, tensions became particularly acute in recent weeks, with analysts saying Diarra, a relative newcomer to Malian politics after years abroad, seemed keen to establish a political base of his own ahead of any future elections.
R.S