• Thursday, April 25, 2024
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BusinessDay

Mali crises: Buhari, ECOWAS leaders meet today to broker peace

Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari is expected to join other leaders of the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS on Thursday (today) in Bamako, Republic of Mali, as part of ECOWAS intervention to broker peace in the troubled country

Buhari will participate in the one-day talks in furtherance to the briefing earlier held by the ECOWAS Special Envoy to the country, former Nigeria President, Goodluck Jonathan.

The Nigerian President and some ECOWAS leaders led by the Chairman of the Authority of Heads of State and Government of the sub-regional organisation, President Issoufou Mahamadou of Niger Republic, agreed to meet in Mali to engage in further consultations towards finding a political solution to the crisis in the country.

Host President, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita and Presidents Machy Sall of Senegal, Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana and Alassane Ouattara of Cote d’Ivoire are expected to participate in the Bamako meeting, according to a statement on Wednesday by Presidential Spokesman, Femi Adesina

Former President Jonathan was at the State House in company of President of ECOWAS Commission, Jean-Claude Kassi Brou, on Tuesday to brief President Buhari on the unfolding situation in Mali, necessitating the visit of ECOWAS leaders to consolidate on the agreements reached by various parties.

“We will ask the President of Niger, who is the Chairman of ECOWAS to brief us as a group, and we will then know the way forward,” President Buhari had said.

He thanked Jonathan for his comprehensive brief on the situation in Mali, “which you had been abreast with since when you were the sitting Nigerian President.”

The former President had briefed President Buhari on his activities as Special Envoy to restore amity to Mali, rocked by protests against President Keita, who has spent two out of the five years second term in office.

A resistance group, M5, is insisting that the Constitutional Court must be dissolved, and the President resign, before peace can return to the country.

Crisis had erupted after the court nullified results of 31 parliamentary seats in the polls held recently, awarding victory to some other contenders, which the resistance group said was at the instigation of President Keita.

Riots on July 10 had led to the killing of some protesters by security agents, causing the crisis to spiral out of control, hence the intervention by ECOWAS.