Thursday, September 19, 2013

Mali announces first post-war cabinet

Mali's first post-war prime minister, Oumar Tatam Ly (left), has appointed a 34-person cabinet featuring a number of old hands and a new ministry charged with reconciliation following 18 months of rebellion and war in the west African nation.


 
Mali’s President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita on Sunday revealed his new cabinet, tasked with reviving the West African nation following a turbulent 18 months that saw a coup and a rebellion plunge the gold exporter into crisis.
The announcement of the make-up of the 34-member cabinet on state television follows the nomination of Oumar Tatam Ly, a technocrat and senior official with the regional BCEAO central bank, as prime minister last week.
Keita, who pledged to put technical competence ahead of party affiliation, included only one of the 22 first-round presidential candidates who supported him in the Aug. 11 run-off which he won with 78 percent of the vote.
US TO RESTORE SOME AID TO MALI
Washington is restoring a portion of US assistance to Mali that it suspended last year following the March 2012 military coup. The state department said on Friday that the decision to provide$97.2 million in development aid was taken after the inauguration this week of new democratically elected president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.
(FRANCE 24 with wires)
Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga was named defence minister, having held the position under President Alpha Oumar Konare. Bouare Fily Sissoko, a former World Bank official, will serve as finance minister. And Zahaby Ould Sidy Mohamed, an Arab from the north and senior figure in a 1990s rebellion, was named foreign minister.
Boubou Cisse, a World Bank economist, will head Mali’s mine’s ministry.
Mali was long praised for its stability while other West Africa states were embroiled in civil wars or post-election violence.
But last year’s troubles led former colonial master France to deploy thousands of troops to fight al Qaeda-linked rebels, underscoring the weakness of a democracy long undermined by corruption, nepotism and the lack of real opposition.
The cabinet announced on Sunday replaces a transitional authority established to lead Mali to presidential elections seen as a necessary step to restoring democratic order and unlocking billions of dollars in foreign aid.
Keita retained a number of ministers from the transitional body.
Two of them - Territorial Administration Minister Moussa Sinko Coulibaly and Transport Minister Abdoulaye Koumare – were part of a military junta that overthrew President Amadou Toumani Toure in March last year.
The coup allowed the rebels to launch a lightning advance and seize the desert north.

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