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Mali Coup: Constitution Reinstated, Leader Amadou Haya Sanogo Promises Free Elections

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI and MARTIN VOGL 04/ 1/12 05:42 PM ET AP

Amadou Haya Sanogo
Junta leader Capt. Amadou Haya Sanogo, speaks to journalists outside junta headquarters, after a meeting with Burkina Faso's Foreign Affairs Minister Djibril Bassole, not pictured, in Kati, outside Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

BAMAKO, Mali — The junior officer who overthrew Mali's democratically elected leader earlier this month and dissolved the nation's constitution made a public U-turn Sunday, declaring amid enormous international pressure that he was reinstating the 1992 constitution and planning to hold elections.

Capt. Amadou Haya Sanogo added that he would organize a national convention to agree on a transitional government which will organize free and fair elections. What he did not make clear is when the convention would be held, or when elections would take place, or if he would remain president during the transitional period.

Sanogo's announcement came as Tuareg rebels penetrated and seized control of the ancient northern city of Timbuktu, a move that deepens the crisis in the West African nation.

Tuareg rebels took advantage of the chaos surrounding last week's coup in the faraway capital to take the town of Kidal, located 1,300 kilometers (800 miles) from Bamako on Friday. They seized the biggest northern city of Gao, located around 1,200 kilometers (745 miles) away on Saturday – cities that never fell in previous rebellions. A resident in Timbuktu said that the rebels entered the town after a heavy firefight, and were going house to house asking people to remain calm.

Mali, once a model democracy, was plunged into crisis on March 21 when a mutiny erupted at the Kati military camp located around 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the presidential palace. The 30-something Sanogo was one of the few officers who didn't flee the camp when the rank-and-file soldiers began rioting, and he quickly became their leader as they broke into the camp's armory, grabbed automatic weapons and headed for the seat of government.

His coup reversed 21 years of democracy, and sent President Amadou Toumani Toure into hiding. Toure was due to step down after the presidential election, which was scheduled to take place at the end of this month. Mali's neighbors had given the country a 72-hour deadline to restore constitutional order, or else face crippling sanctions. Sanogo's declaration appears intended to stave off the sanctions, which were due to take effect Monday.

A senior adviser to the president of neighboring Ivory Coast said that the regional body representing states in West Africa was considering calling off the sanctions for one week. The information was confirmed by a diplomat from Burkina Faso, the country that is taking the lead in mediating the crisis.

In his declaration, Sanogo said, "We take a solemn promise to re-establish from this day on the constitution of the Republic of Mali of February 25, 1992, as well as the institutions of the republic."

"Taking into account the multidimensional crisis that our country is facing," he added, "we have decided that ... we will engage in consultations with all the actors of society in the context of a national convention in order to put in place a transitional body with the aim of organizing calm, free, transparent and democratic elections in which we will not participate."

Legal experts say that his declaration is contradictory. If the 1992 constitution is reinstated, said law professor Malick Sarr at the University of Bamako, then logically the ousted president should become head of state again.

Sarr said the putschists may be leaning on one of the articles in the 1992 law, which says that in the event that the president is unable to carry out his functions, a 25- to 45-day transitional period will go into effect before new elections are held.

However, the article clearly stipulates that the transition will be led by the head of the national assembly who would become interim president. When reporters asked the coup leader if he still considered himself president, he dodged the question, and turned to leave.

After seizing the strategic northern towns of Kidal and Gao, Tuareg rebels on Sunday besieged the fabled city of Timbuktu, taking their fight for a homeland for the nomadic Tuareg people to the last major government holdout in northern Mali. They penetrated its defense by late morning and by afternoon, residents saw pickup trucks brandishing the rebel flag zipping through town.

Residents contacted by telephone said they were cowering inside their homes as blasts from heavy arms and automatic gunfire crackled early Sunday around the renowned Islamic intellectual center. Once they entered, resident Mohamed Lamine said he saw them take down the Malian flag at the governor's office, attach it to the back of their pickup truck, and drive off, sullying the symbol of the Malian nation.

The lighter-skinned Tuaregs, who dominate the north of the country, have long felt marginalized by the dark-skinned Bambaras who dominate the nation's south, and whose members are overwhelmingly represented in the junta now leading the nation.

By evening, the airport, the administrative buildings and the military camps inside Timbuktu were under the control of rebels. "The city is totally under their control," Mayor Ousmane Halle told The Associated Press by phone.

In Gao, which the rebels seized overnight, the insurgents were going from bank to bank trying to force their way into the safes, said resident Hama Dada Toure. And in Kidal, which is now starting its second day under rebel control, residents said that an Islamic faction within the larger rebellion was demanding shopkeepers take down pictures of unveiled women.

A hairdresser who fled the city said that he was told to take down the posters in his beauty shop showing different types of hairstyles, because the women were not covered.

___

Associated Press writers Baba Ahmed in Bamako, Mali, and Michelle Faul in Niamey, Niger, contributed to this story.

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BAMAKO, Mali — The junior officer who overthrew Mali's democratically elected leader earlier this month and dissolved the nation's constitution made a public U-turn Sunday, declaring amid enormo...
BAMAKO, Mali — The junior officer who overthrew Mali's democratically elected leader earlier this month and dissolved the nation's constitution made a public U-turn Sunday, declaring amid enormo...
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
07:56 AM on 04/02/2012
There are good coups and bad coups. This might be a good one. We'll see.
05:04 AM on 04/02/2012
The Coup is one of the consequences of the "Libyan Arab Spring". The Tuaregs--part of whom were Qaddafi mercenaries--are composed of terrorist groups such as Aqmi which is still holding French hostages. Interestingly enough, France is not helping Mali fight back the rebellion....The international community should expect disruptions after the fall of Qaddafi who, after all, was a key factor as far as the stability of the region was concerned.....
04:24 AM on 04/02/2012
It seems that the country is being split by ethnic lines seeing that the north is dominated by a different group that the south (and junta dominated opposing ethnic group). Usually, when an ethnic group tries to take over more power from an other ethnic group some type of ethnic cleansing (such as in Rwanda) or severe ethnic marginalization (such as in Sri Lanka) takes place. Does anyone know which ethnic group the former president was a part of?
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
03:08 AM on 04/02/2012
Juntas that overthrow freely-elected governments seldom offer up free elections then step aside.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Darius Molark
de gustibus non est disputandum
02:32 AM on 04/02/2012
Ah, this is the way revolutions should come out, back to sanity and the constitution. However, this one has more interesting items in the pot: race color and gold. I wonder how the US strategic command in Africa is figuring this.
02:31 AM on 04/02/2012
From incompetent Amadou to impotent Amadou. Here goes 20yrs of democracy up in smoke. Donnez moi ma pipe. Svp!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Frey
unCommon sense for the common good
01:50 AM on 04/02/2012
Who cares about what happens in equatorial Africa, except Nigeria, where there is oil?
01:17 AM on 04/02/2012
Tuareg lands were divided up by post colonial nations Mali being one and the Tuareg have been kind of upset about it for some time.
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Tewhiti
For the people, not for the dollar.
02:07 AM on 04/02/2012
Except that it's not just the Tuareg who inhabit northern Mali, and these other ethnic groups aren't necessarily on their bandwagon...
11:39 PM on 04/01/2012
I will believe it when I see free elections! When the junta steps down and allows free elections will not come easy. Juntas don't want to give up power in favor of a better government.
10:45 PM on 04/01/2012
" ....and planning to hold elections" Yeah, sure you are. Thats what every coup leader, wanabe dictator, or dictator in power always says. They never mean it and will try and hold unto power no matter what. Seen this playbook before. Lets check back in say 6 months and see where things stand.