
Mali military chief granted renewable five-year presidential term
The country's transitional parliament approved the move on Thursday, clearing the way for Goita to lead Mali until at least 2030.
'This is a major step forward in the rebuilding of Mali,' Malick Diaw, president of the National Transitional Council (NTC), told the AFP news agency after the bill was voted on.
'The adoption of this text is in accordance with the popular will.'
However, critics say this is the latest in a series of restrictions on freedom imposed by Mali's military leadership to consolidate its power in the country.
Goita came to power after staging two coups in Mali, first in 2020 and then in 2021. Initially, the military government pledged to return to civilian rule in March 2024.
The bill on Thursday was unanimously backed by the 131 members present in the NTC, according to AFP and Mali's state-run L'Essor website.
The NTC, composed of 147 legislators, had already adopted the measure in April, while the Council of Ministers adopted it last month. It now only requires the approval of Goita himself.
The transition is fixed at five years, renewable 'as many times as necessary, until the pacification of the country, from the promulgation of this charter', reported AFP, quoting the bill.
Previous bans have also been lifted, allowing the transitional president, government and legislative members to stand in presidential and general elections, the text says.
Critics have raised concerns about the revised transition charter, as all references to political parties have been removed, questioning the government's political neutrality.
In May, the military government announced the dissolution of all political parties and organisations, as well as a ban on meetings.
The continuing squeeze on Mali's civic space comes against a backdrop of a clamour by authorities for the country to unite behind the military.
Violence from armed groups
When Goita was officially sworn in as transitional president in June 2021, he insisted on Mali's commitment to fighting against 'jihadist' violence, and initially pledged a return to civilian rule.
But the military ultimately reneged on its promise to cede power to elected civilians by its self-imposed deadline.
Since 2012, Mali has been mired in violence carried out by armed groups affiliated with al-Qaeda and ISIL, as well as criminal organisations. Attacks have intensified in recent weeks.
However, the Malian army and its Russian mercenary allies from the Africa Corps, tasked with tracking down armed fighters, are regularly accused of their own rights violations against civilians.
Mali and its military-led neighbours Burkina Faso and Niger have teamed up to create their own confederation, the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), and announced the creation of a joint 5,000-strong force for joint military operations.
All three Sahelian countries have turned their backs on their shared former coloniser, France, in favour of stronger ties with Russia and other partners.
Goita has also withdrawn Mali from the regional group, ECOWAS, over its demands that Mali restore democratic rule, and Burkina Faso and Niger have followed suit.
The coup that brought Goita to power overthrew then-President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita after huge antigovernment protests against his rule and handling of the armed rebellion.
However, armed attacks have continued and even intensified since he took power.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
a day ago
- Al Jazeera
Nigerians 'divided' over former President Buhari's legacy
'The three promises Buhari made coming into power are still the issues bedevilling Nigeria today.' Bulama Bukarti, a conflict and development analyst, looks at the legacy of former Nigerian president, Muhammadu Buhari, who died on July 13, at the age of 82.


Al Jazeera
a day ago
- Al Jazeera
Nigeria's ex-President Muhammadu Buhari dies in London aged 82
Nigeria's former President Muhammadu Buhari has died in London at the age of 82 following a long illness. 'President Buhari died today in London at about 4:30pm (15:30 GMT) following a prolonged illness,' President Bola Tinubu's spokesperson announced on Sunday via the social media platform X. Buhari made history in 2015 when he became the first opposition candidate in Nigeria's modern era to defeat a sitting president at the polls, unseating Goodluck Jonathan in what was widely praised as the country's most credible election. A retired major general, Buhari first ruled Nigeria in the 1980s after taking power in a military coup. He later rebranded himself as a civilian politician, adopting a softer image in flowing kaftans and declaring himself a 'converted democrat'. Known for his austere style and fiery rhetoric against corruption, Buhari was seen by his supporters as a reformer. 'I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody,' he often declared, seeking to position himself above Nigeria's entrenched political factions. Yet his presidency struggled to contain rising insecurity. While he promised to defeat Boko Haram and restore order, armed violence spread far beyond the northeast. Gunmen, separatists, and criminal groups operated with impunity across large parts of the country by the end of his tenure. Still, Buhari leaves behind a legacy as a symbol of democratic change in Nigeria, even if the transformation he promised remained incomplete. A mixed legacy Buhari is being remembered as both a pivotal figure in the country's democratic evolution and a deeply flawed leader when it came to economic management and security. Speaking to Al Jazeera from London, Alexis Akwagyiram, managing editor at Semafor and a longtime observer of Nigerian politics, said Buhari will be remembered for achieving what many thought impossible: winning power as an opposition candidate. 'He was the first opposition candidate since the return to civilian rule to win at the ballot box,' Akwagyiram said, referencing Buhari's 2015 victory over Jonathan. 'History will remember him favourably for that.' Yet Akwagyiram was blunt about the failings that marked Buhari's time in office. He described the former general as 'very ineffective' in managing Nigeria's economy, citing his insistence on maintaining a strong naira, which led to a convoluted system of multiple exchange rates and two recessions during his tenure. 'His handling of the economy wasn't great,' Akwagyiram noted, pointing to his fallout with former Niger Delta insurgents that led to renewed attacks on oil infrastructure. Combined with low global oil prices and the COVID-19 pandemic, these factors pushed Nigeria – once Africa's largest economy – down to fourth place. On security, Buhari's record was equally disappointing, Akwagyiram said. Although elected with a promise to crack down on Boko Haram, an insurgency in Nigeria's northeast only expanded under his leadership. A rival faction, the ISIL affiliate in West Africa Province (ISWAP), also emerged and spread, while armed kidnapping gangs flourished in the northwest. 'All that happened was Boko Haram and ISWAP both proliferated under his tenure,' Akwagyiram said. 'The armed forces were spread thin across the country and became weakened overall.' Despite the criticisms, Akwagyiram highlighted why Buhari resonated so strongly with many Nigerians. 'He had the personal brand of integrity and honesty,' he said. 'In a political climate renowned for corruption, that was appealing.' Buhari's austere image and northern support base helped him build a national coalition that twice propelled him to the presidency, a rare feat in Nigerian politics. 'He didn't try to enrich himself,' Akwagyiram said. 'That's something history will look on favourably.'


Al Jazeera
4 days ago
- Al Jazeera
Where is Liberia, whose president Trump praised for his ‘good English'?
United States President Donald Trump has drawn mockery after he complimented the president of Liberia for speaking English 'beautifully', even though it is the country's official language. 'Such good English, where did you learn to speak so beautifully?' Trump asked Joseph Boakai during a meeting with five African leaders at the White House on Wednesday. 'In Liberia?' Trump asked. Boakai seemed to chuckle before responding: 'Yes sir.' Alex Vines, head of the Africa Programme at the London think tank, Chatham House, told Al Jazeera: 'President Trump's limited knowledge of Africa was on show with his comment on President Boakai's quality of English.' Liberia was founded in 1822 as a colony for freed Black American slaves as white Americans sought to address what they saw as a problem – the presence of Black people in the United States once slavery ended. Here is a potted history of the African nation: Where is Liberia and how populous is it? The country of five million people is located on the Western African coast and is bounded by Sierra Leone to the northwest, Guinea to the north, Ivory Coast to the east and the Atlantic Ocean to the south and west. Liberia was founded in 1822 and became a republic in 1847. It is now Africa's oldest republic and is seen by many as a symbol of African self-determination. Along with Ethiopia, it is the only African nation that was never colonised during Europe's scramble for the continent. There are officially 16 ethnic groups that make up Liberia's Indigenous African population, with the largest being the Kpelle. How, why and when was Liberia founded? As the abolitionist movement against slavery gained ground in the US in 1822, a group of 86 formerly enslaved people arrived in Liberia's present-day capital, Monrovia, the country's largest port. Jehudi Ashmun, a white American, was leading efforts by the American Colonization Society (ACS) to resettle free people of colour in Africa. While some chose to emigrate willingly, the organisation is known to have pressured or coerced others into relocating. ACS was established by white Americans who believed that the presence of free Blacks in America posed a threat to the nation, as they might incite those who remained in slavery to rebel. Some also believed in the 'inferiority' of Black people and thought them unable to achieve equality in American society. The organisation's goal was, therefore, to establish a colony in West Africa that would take them in. Liberia was proclaimed an independent republic in 1847, becoming the first African republic to achieve such status and be recognised by Western nations. Joseph Jenkins Roberts, an African American who had emigrated to Liberia in 1829 and become a politician, was elected the first president of the new country. While Indigenous leaders resisted American attempts to purchase land, the newborn country was created after a US Navy officer coerced a local ruler to sell a strip of land to ACS. Its capital was named Monrovia after the US's fifth president, James Monroe, who had procured government money for the project. It is estimated that, in total, about 12,000 formerly enslaved Black Americans immigrated to Liberia between 1820 and 1861. Who makes up the population? African Americans and their descendants, known as Americo-Liberians, dominated the government of Liberia thanks to their ties with the US government, through which they were able to conduct trade, until a military coup ended their influence in 1980. Despite being a minority of about 5 percent of the total population in Liberia, from the start of the republic, they mostly excluded the Indigenous African population from any meaningful participation in the political life of the country. Indigenous people who had migrated from western Sudan in the late Middle Ages constitute a majority of the population. A smaller portion also migrated from neighbouring western African states during the anti-slave-trade campaign and European colonial rule in the 1800s. In more recent years, it has opened its doors to refugees from neighbouring countries, especially from the Ivory Coast, where civil war broke out in 2002 and 2011. What is the official language of Liberia? English is Liberia's official language, though more than two dozen Indigenous languages are spoken there as well. Americo-Liberians, who dominated political power until the military coup in 1980, imposed English as the commonly spoken language when they founded the republic in 1847. Other languages spoken by Liberia's Indigenous ethnic groups fall under three main groups, all belonging to the Niger-Congo language family: the Mande, Kwa and Mel languages. What caused the civil wars in Liberia? Liberia has endured two major civil wars in more recent decades. The country's conflicts were deeply rooted in ethnic divisions. Samuel Doe, a member of the Indigenous Krahn ethnic group, led a military coup in 1980, which overthrew the Americo-Liberian government and put an end to its political dominance marked by ethnic inequalities. Liberian President William R Tolbert was assassinated during the coup. However, Doe ushered in a period of authoritarianism and human rights abuses that led to the First and Second Liberian Civil Wars. The first war erupted in 1989, when Charles Taylor, a descendant of freed American slaves, launched an armed rebellion against Doe, which killed more than 200,000 people and displaced millions. A second war broke out in 1999 when a rebel group, Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD), began a military offensive to topple Taylor's government with the support of neighbouring Guinea. The conflict spilled over into Guinea and Sierra Leone but subsided in 2003 with the intervention of international peacekeeping forces and Taylor's resignation and exile. Taylor was accused of human rights violations and indicted by a United Nations-sponsored war-crimes tribunal in 2003. He received a sentence of 50 years in prison. What is the situation now? Liberia has mostly experienced political stability since the second civil war ended. It held democratic elections in 2017, marking the first peaceful transfer of power since 1944. Boakai was elected president in 2023 with 50.64 percent of the vote for a six-year term, defeating former international football star George Weah. Vines, from Chatham House, said: 'Ethnicity is less important in Liberia today and Americo-Liberians are a lot less dominant.' 'Liberians still perceive close ties with the US,' especially because of deep connections with many Green Card holders, Vines said, but the significant cut of USAID funding to the African continent earlier this year came as a shock. During Wednesday's White House meeting with Trump, Boakai described Liberia as 'a longtime friend of the United States'. 'We believe in your policy of making America great again,' he told Trump at the meeting before advocating for US investment in his country. 'We just want to thank you so much for this opportunity.' Why did Trump meet the leaders of Liberia and other West African nations? The five countries whose leaders met Trump – namely Liberia, Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania and Senegal – possess untapped natural resources, including rare earth minerals. The US president saluted them as 'very vibrant places with very valuable land, great minerals, great oil deposits and wonderful people'. Vines said Boakai's presence at the White House was 'opportunistic', as the Liberian president was already on a trip to the US, rather than a reflection of deep historical ties between the two nations. Africa has become a battleground for global influence in the US-China geopolitical rivalry, but Trump is known for his apparently dismissive remarks about the continent. During his first term as president, Trump caused outrage after criticising immigration to his country from El Salvador, Haiti and the African continent, which he reportedly dubbed 's***hole countries'. The current Trump administration is also known to be seeking to deport people who have outstayed their visas or are otherwise in the US illegally to West African countries willing to receive them. According to some media reports, a plan was presented at Wednesday's meeting, but it remains unclear what Trump offered in exchange and whether any leaders were willing to accept his offer.