Ibrahim Boubacar Keita |
Mali’s constitutional court delayed the country’s parliamentary
elections until 2019 by extending the mandate of MPs for six months, as
requested by the National Assembly on Monday, according to the two
institutions.
Citing “force majeure” the court said it “extends the mandate of
representatives until the end of the first semester of 2019”, according
to the order, seen by AFP, which gave no further details.
Elections had initially been slated for October 28, but they were
postponed to November 25 last month by the government. It said delays in
registering candidates after a strike by judges meant some candidates
had been unable to obtain and submit the necessary documentation before
the deadline.
A National Assembly official also confirmed the
court’s decision, saying that the six month delay would allow for
reforms under a peace deal with former Tuareg rebels, as well as “ease
political tensions”.
In August, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, 73, was re-elected president with
more than 67 percent of the vote, but the outcome was challenged in the
constitutional court by his opponent, former finance minister Soumaila
Cisse, who alleged fraud.
Mali has been plagued by violence since 2012, when Tuareg separatists
staged an uprising in the north, which was then exploited by jihadists
to take over key cities in the region.
The militants were largely driven out in a French-led military operation in 2013.
But despite the 2015 peace agreement, large stretches of Mali remain out of government control.
See more:
https://www.today.ng/news/africa/malis-top-court-postpones-elections-2019-162859
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