BFF-60 Mali violence flares up on key election day

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MALI-VOTE-ELECTION

Mali violence flares up on key election day

BAMAKO, July 29, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Malians went to the polls on Sunday for a
crucial presidential election as attacks disrupted voting in areas already
beset by deadly ethnic and jihadist violence.

After a campaign marred by armed attacks, 23,000 polling stations opened
at 0800 GMT and are scheduled to close at 1800 GMT.

“I have my voting card, I am going to vote for my country and for my
favourite president,” said Moriba Camara, a 35-year-old teacher, in the
Sebenicoro district of the capital Bamako.

Despite the deployment of 30,000 security personnel throughout the
country, several incidents were reported in the north and centre.

Preident Keita, 73, leads a crowded field of 24 candidates — just one
of them a woman — bidding for the presidency which he has held since 2013.
He also voted in Sebenicoro, surrounded by journalists and supporters.

His record on security has been a dominant theme, with opponents,
including several former ministers, accusing him of incompetence.

The international community hopes the poll will strengthen a 2015 accord
that Mali, a linchpin state in the troubled Sahel region, sees as the
cornerstone for peace.

On the campaign trail, Keita — commonly known by his initials IBK —
highlighted the achievements of the peace agreement between the government,
government-allied groups and former Tuareg rebels to fight jihadi fighters in
the country’s north.

– Polling station, ballots burned –

Despite the heavy security presence, polling stations and ballot boxes
were burned by unidentified armed men.

Voting could not take place in the village of Lafia, in the northern
Timbuktu region, after the ballot boxes were set on fire, according to local
authorities.

“Overnight from Saturday to Sunday, armed men arrived at the town hall
where the ballot boxes and electoral material were held,” a local official
told AFP.

The source added the boxes were burned after “jihadists” fired shots into
the sky. “One of them said God does not like elections.”

In central Dianke, in the Niafunke region where main opposition
contender Soumaila Cisse voted in the morning, “two polling stations were
burned this morning by armed men,” Oumar Sall, a local official, told AFP.

Violence has continued to hit in the lead-up to Sunday, despite the
presence of 15,000 UN peacekeepers and 4,500 French troops and a heralded
five-nation anti-terror force, the G5 Sahel. A state of emergency enters its
fourth year in November.

More than 300 civilians have died in ethnic clashes this year, according
to UN figures and an AFP toll.

Many deaths have occurred in the central region of Mopti, involving the
Fulani nomadic herder community and Bambara and Dogon farmers.

Four days before polling day, armed men — described as Dogon hunters —
killed 17 Fulani civilians in the village of Somena, Fulani representatives
said Friday.

Jihadist violence, meanwhile, has spread from northern Mali to the
centre and south and spilled over into neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger,
often inflaming communal conflicts.

The main Al-Qaeda-linked jihadist alliance made its presence felt on the
final day of campaigning Friday, dubbing the election a “mirage” that would
do nothing for the Malian people.

“These elections are nothing other than the pursuit of a mirage and our
peoples will reap nothing but illusions, as they are used to doing,” said
alliance leader Iyad Ag Ghaly.

Ag Ghaly, the key figure in the jihadists’ operation to take control of
much of the north of the country in 2012, leads the Group to Support Islam
and Muslims (GSIM), formed from a merger of several militant groups.

– Turnout and observers –

Turnout — which has never gone above 50 percent in a presidential
electionfirst round since the advent of democracy in 1992 — was low in the
morning.

“The opening went well but there are not enough people yet,” said Oumar
Camara, a polling station chief in Bamako, blaming morning rains and adding
that “in the middle of the day people should come en masse to vote.”

The European Union, the African Union (AU), the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS) and the International Organisation of La
Francophonie (OIF) are fielding election observers.

Keita’s challengers are headed by Cisse, 68, a former finance and
economy minister, who lost by a large margin in the second round of the 2013
election.

His team have warned of possible fraud, claiming that there are two
electoral lists and hundreds of fake polling stations.

The first poll results are expected within 48 hours, with official
outcome following on Friday at the latest.

If no candidate gains more than 50 percent of the vote in Sunday’s first
round, a second round will take place on August 12.

BSS/AFP/RY/2008 hrs