AFRICA NEWS
New Malian PM is veteran of political jungle
By Amaury Hauchard
Bamako (AFP) June 7, 2021

Choguel Kokalla Maiga, who on Monday was named prime minister of Mali, is a veteran figure who has flipflopped between supporting dictators and launching verbal broadsides as a member of the opposition.

Some describe him as a political chameleon -- although this could also be a handy quality in the challenges that lie ahead.

Maiga, 63, was appointed following international pressure on Mali to name a civilian government leader after its second coup in nine months.

Colonel Assimi Goita last month deposed the leaders of a caretaker government who were themselves installed after a putsch that toppled elected president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

Keita was forced out in August by young army officers, led by Goita, following protests over perceived corruption and a bloody jihadist insurgency.

In response to the second coup, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) suspended Mali from the 15-nation bloc and urged Goita to appoint a civilian prime minister. France has also suspended military cooperation.

Goita was sworn in as the new transitional president on Monday and promised to stand by Mali's commitments.

Maiga, his choice as premier, is a complicated character with a long record of finding a path through the jungle of Malian politics.

A Malian researcher who requested anonymity cast Maiga as someone who had "supped at every table."

Maiga is now expected to form an inclusive government -- a tall order in a vast and politically polarised nation, where a brutal jihadist conflict has left swathes of territory outside of state control.

- Soviet-trained -

In the 1970s, Maiga spent a decade in the Soviet Union studying telecommunications, before returning to Mali to work in the telecoms sector.

He then entered politics by joining the party of Mali's former dictator Moussa Traore, who ruled from 1968 until he was overthrown in 1991.

From then on, Maiga often found himself at the centre of political affairs in the capital Bamako.

He ran for president of Mali in 2002, 2013 and 2018, but never received more than three percent of the vote.

However, he twice served as a government minister, and was a close associate of Keita's before joining the opposition and becoming one of his fiercest detractors.

Last year, he became a leading figure in the M5 movement, which spearheaded the anti-Keita protests.

After the August coup, Maiga pushed for power-sharing between the army and the M5 movement, but the military quickly sidelined the opposition group.

He blasted the post-coup government a "disguised military regime" in December.

But in a mark of his shifting loyalties, Maiga said on Friday that the offer of the prime minister's role "touched his heart".

Maiga remains divisive among M5 members, according to Malian news editor Bokar Sangare.

But, he said, Maiga was a talented strategist who had advanced the M5's agenda.

- 'His moment' -

Maiga supported Keita's presidential bid in 2013, after he himself was knocked out of the race.

He then served as Keita's communication minister from 2015 to 2016, before being replaced in a reshuffle.

An African diplomat in Bamako, who declined to be named, said Maiga "never got over" the fact that Keita had sidelined him.

In opposition, Maiga became known for his criticism of the 2015 Algiers peace accord, a shaky agreement between the government and several armed groups in the country.

Then during the uprising against Keita last year, Maiga called for a "total change of system" and a "refoundation of the state".

Boubacar Haidara, a researcher a Mali's University of Segou, said that the M5 "allowed Choguel Maiga to regenerate himself politically".

The opposition movement embodies the change demanded by Malian people, he explained, adding that this was Maiga's "moment".

M5 has plans -- which critics say are vague -- to reform the constitution and fight corruption, among other issues.

But questions remain about the amount of power Maiga will have with the army lurking in the background.

"Will he have the freedom?" Haidara asked.


Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food

AFRICA NEWS
Two Chinese mining employees kidnapped in western Niger
Niamey (AFP) June 7, 2021
Armed men have kidnapped two Chinese employees of a mining company in a volatile area near western Niger's borders with Mali and Burkina Faso, the regional governor said Monday. "Two Chinese nationals were kidnapped... by armed men in Mbanga" on Sunday night, the governor of the Tillaberi region Tidjani Ibrahim Katiella told AFP. The "three borders" zone between the Sahel nations is regularly hit by attacks from jihadist groups linked to either al-Qaeda or the Islamic State. The governor sai ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

AFRICA NEWS
USS Paul Ignatius fires Standard Missile-3 interceptors in test

MDA test does not intercept target

First modernized SBIRS Missile Warning Satellite under Space Force control

ULA postpones launch of missile detection satellite

AFRICA NEWS
Surveillance planes test Harpoon missiles in NATO exercise

French frigate downs supersonic missile in NATO exercise

Lockheed Martin tests Navy's Hypersonic Strike System

Marines' 24th MEU deploys with HIMARS rocket system

AFRICA NEWS
AFRL completes Golden Horde Collaborative Small Diameter Bomb flight demonstrations

Northrop Grumman Maritime Autonomous system surpasses 40,000 flight hours

Europe's Future unmanned Combat Air System

Poland becomes first NATO country to buy Turkish drones

AFRICA NEWS
Quantum communication in space moves ahead

Bad connections: US-China defense relations mired in call dispute

SES Government Solutions provides medium earth orbit satellite services for combatant command

STPSat-6 safely arrives in Florida

AFRICA NEWS
Oshkosh Defense wins potential $942.9M contract for Stryker armaments

Marine Corps ends involvement in tank warfare

N.C. National Guard unit first to use new Army M109A7 Paladin howitzer

Air Force demonstrates value of rapid prototyping at Emerald Warrior

AFRICA NEWS
Fall in French arms sales blamed on pandemic

Israel says military exports hit $8.3 bn in 2020

Austin, Milley say $715B defense budget is ample for DoD's needs

GAO report: Lack of data causing delays in military spare parts contracts

AFRICA NEWS
US condemns 'escalatory' Chinese military flights off Malaysia and Taiwan

Belarus tensions show need to boost NATO, Berlin says

U.S., partners fly over all 30 NATO nations

11 NATO members participate in Exercise Steadfast Defender 2021

AFRICA NEWS
Nano-Bio Materials Consortium introduces new AFRL-Industry Co-Development Program

Nanostructured device stops light in its tracks

Scientists use DNA technology to build tough 3D nanomaterials