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Mali Junta Chief stepped towards banning political parties

Interim Chairman of Mali Republic, Asimi Goeta (File Photo AP)

Bamako: The military ruler of Mali on Tuesday approved a bill to cancel the charter of the political parties of the country, which the opposition sees as a presidential decree, as a step towards its disintegration.The suspension of the charter, which controls the functioning, creation and financing of political parties, performs a new task of suppressing unsatisfactory voices in the West African country, which has been ruled by the army since two coup in 2020 and 2021.Janta’s Chief General Asimi Gite was approved a day after the Military-appointed Parliament, the National Transitional Council adopted the proposal.A National Assembly was held at the end of April – almost completely boycotted by the opposition, calling for the strictness of parties and the conditions for their construction and financing.General Gite’s office decree said on Tuesday that “all disposals” about the political party charter “are” canceled “about the political party charter.Since the explorer of the coup of the coup, legal proceedings and disintegration of a body of associations have weakened Malian protests.On the civic space, this squeeze comes against the backdrop of the Claimer by the authorities to unite behind the military by the officials of the country.Since 2012, the country has been in violence by al-Qaeda and Islamic State Group as well as jihadi groups associated with other criminal organizations.The April Assembly also proposed a five -year renewable presidential presidency for General Gite without election.

Pluralism

Former Justice Minister Mamadou Ismaila Conte said on Monday, “Junta,” the party charter, has “signed after the death of political pluralism in Mali. ,An up-ed Ismaila stated that the move was “attempted to organize political defects powers” in the gardener.The Director General of the Regional Administration of Mali, Abdou Salaam Dipkile disagreed.“Relationship of this law does not question the existence of political parties,” Diykil told public broadcaster Ortum.He said that this decision was in line with the desire to “stop the spread of political parties” in the country.Fearing disintegration, a recent alliance of around 100 parties did not demand an effective end of political-monkey transition to “31 December, 2025,” asked for “establishing a timetable for rapid withdrawal in the constitutional order”.In a rare task of protest against Junta, the alliance raised several hundred people for a demonstration in the capital Bamco in early May.The military government initially committed to hand over power to elected citizens in March 2024.

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