Mali charges ex prime minister, others with attempted coup

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Malian authorities on Thursday charged six prominent figures, including a former prime minister, with seeking to mount a coup, a move that came after a military takeover in August, their lawyers said.

The public prosecutor’s office in the capital Bamako said in a statement that six people were under investigation for “plotting against the government, criminal association, insulting the head of state and complicity”.

A group of lawyers defending the six said the individuals, who include Boubou Cisse, the prime minister at the time President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita’s government was overthrown in August, had been charged with an “attempted coup”.

“All of those charged are civilian figures with no established connection to anyone in the military,” they said.

Five of the six have been in custody, except for Cisse, whose whereabouts are unknown, the public prosecutor said.

Apart from Cisse, those charged include his half-brother Aguibou Tall, who runs an agency connected with telecommunications, and Mohamed Youssouf Bathily, a campaigner and radio presenter who is popular among young Malians and whose stage name is Ras Bath.

The others are Vital Robert Diop, director of Mali’s Pari Mutuel Urbain (PMI), an agency that is in charge of gambling on horse races, and two senior financial officials, Mamadou Kone and Souleymane Kansaye.

Another person who was arrested earlier, but later released, is the secretary of the president’s office, Sekou Traore, who holds the ranks of magistrate and minister.

His case has been referred to the prosecutor general to the Supreme Court, the public prosecutor said.

Cisse denied on December 23 of having any involvement with any alleged plot.

Mali, an impoverished landlocked country in the heart of the Sahel, is notoriously volatile.

The August 18 coup was the fourth since the nation gained independence from France in 1960.

It came after weeks of escalating protests against Keita, who had become unpopular over perceived corruption and failures to roll back a militant insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives since 2012 and forced hundreds to flee their homes.

 

 

 

African news/Nneka Ukachukwu

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