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Mali election runoff marred by intimidation

By Serge DANIEL
Mali The coronavirus is a challenge in Mali's election, but not the only one.  By Souleymane Ag Anara AFPFile
APR 19, 2020 LISTEN
The coronavirus is a challenge in Mali's election, but not the only one. By Souleymane Ag Anara (AFP/File)

Acts of intimidation marred the final round of legislative elections in Mali on Sunday that aim to revive confidence in its embattled institutions despite a bloody jihadist conflict and a virus pandemic.

In central Mali, the president of a voting station was forcibly removed and representatives of the electoral commission "chased away by armed men", one of the representatives told AFP.

Military sources confirmed the incident.

Elsewhere, voting was cancelled after jihadists threatened to attack voters, witnesses said.

Already on Saturday, voting equipment had been destroyed by unknown assailants in northern Mali.

The election had been repeatedly delayed, and the first round on March 29 was disrupted by jihadist attacks as well as the kidnapping of opposition leader Soumaila Cisse.

'Consolidate our democracy'

"I voted. It is important despite the economic situation. We need new MPs to consolidate our democracy," Moussa Diakite, a 23-year-old student, told AFP.

Another student, Hamchetou Toure, said she wore a face mask and observed social distancing rules as she voted in the semi-desert country, which has so far recorded 216 cases of the virus including 13 deaths.

Among measures taken by the government are a nighttime curfew, school closures and restrictions on some activities -- but people still filled markets, mosques and public transport.

The observer umbrella group Synergie said anti-virus protection kits had been distributed to over 96 percent of polling stations that it visited across the former French colony.

It said poll workers wore masks in over 87 percent of the stations visited.

Mali, one of the world's poorest countries, is struggling with an Islamist revolt that has claimed thousands of lives and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes.

Sunday's runoff in the West African nation of 19 million people is for 147 seats in the National Assembly.

Voting was taking place in the capital as well as the troubled central town of Mopti and Gao in the north, according to residents.

Delays

It is the country's first parliamentary poll since 2013 when President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita's Rally for Mali party won a big majority.

Turnout in the first round averaged over 35 percent nationwide but was less than 13 percent in the capital Bamako.

The hope is that the new MPs will endorse changes to the constitution that will promote decentralisation.  By MICHELE CATTANI AFPFile The hope is that the new MPs will endorse changes to the constitution that will promote decentralisation. By MICHELE CATTANI (AFP/File)

The election was meant to take place in late 2018 after Keita was returned to office but the poll was postponed several times, mainly because of security concerns.

A "national dialogue" staged last year to discuss Mali's spiral of violence called for the ballot to be completed by May.

The hope is that the new MPs will endorse changes to the constitution that will promote decentralisation.

That is the key to pushing ahead with the government's plans for peace. It signed a deal with armed separatists in northern Mali in 2015 but the pact has largely stalled.

Violence in that region began in 2012 and was then fanned by jihadists.

Defying thousands of French and UN troops, the jihadists took their campaign into the centre of the country and now threaten neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

Mali's conflict zones and poor healthcare infrastructure place it in the category of countries that health experts say are at high risk of coronavirus.

Keita, addressing the nation wearing a face mask, said "every health and security" precaution would be "rigorously applied" during Sunday's vote.

Polling stations were to close at 1800 GMT, with the first provisional results to be announced at the start of the week.

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