Why IBK?
My friend and frequent commentator David asked me to explain why I believe IBK is the correct choice for Mali, or perhaps to explain the reasons for his lead over the other candidate Soumaila Cisse.
Everything boils down to the bare essentials in this second round and what emerges are the legends and the hopes. There must be a break from the old and the candidate who is able to stir peoples' dreams will win. This is true of all elections perhaps, but never so much as in Mali right now. There is a yearning for a new Mali. This is why people who never voted came out and voted in the first round, making this the largest turn-out in Malian history.
Somaila Cisse and his party URD, together with the large party ADEMA belongs to what is known as the FDR, the 'Front uni pour la Sauvegarde de la Democratie et la Republique' or the 'anti-Putchists' for short. They represent for a large number of the Malian people all those who were happy to line their pockets at the people's expense and who wanted the status quo to remain.
'Les deux GRANDS VOLEURS du Mali sont ds le meme CAMP maintenant.....' (the two great thiefs of Mali are now in the same camp) wrote a commentator on Malijet after this announcement.
Meanwhile 20 of the smaller candidates have rallied behind IBK, it was announced last night. The Cisse camp came out in a storm of protests of 'disgust', seeing in this rallying only an unseemly scramble for potential ministerial posts in a future IBK administration. Even the hapless ADEMA candidate Draman Dembele has joined the IBK camp, against his own party- probably for an impure motive along the above lines... However, what cannot be so easily explained is that the ADEMA youth movement has also rallied IBK!
Hmmmm.... most interesting.... I wish I could be in two places at once Bamako on Sunday will be THE place to be, inshallah!
Vive le nouveau Mali, Vive IBK!
Everything boils down to the bare essentials in this second round and what emerges are the legends and the hopes. There must be a break from the old and the candidate who is able to stir peoples' dreams will win. This is true of all elections perhaps, but never so much as in Mali right now. There is a yearning for a new Mali. This is why people who never voted came out and voted in the first round, making this the largest turn-out in Malian history.
Although IBK is the oldest of the two at 68 and has worked as a career
politician in Mali all his life in high positions including being the Prime
Minister under Alpha Oumar Konare, he now represents the break from the old corrupt
years of the ATT government to the the
Malian people. Some people believe there is actually little difference between
the two candidates- there is little to divide them from an ideological
stand point. They are both pro-west, and are both technically capable of high office. The difference lies in two important facts:
First ,and very important symbolically, IBK took a stand
against ATT in the last elections while all the other parties were persuanded not to
stand, and were 'bought off' by ATT by receiving high ranking government positions or other perks.
Secondly, although IBK did condemn the
coup at the time, he has recently said that he understands the reasons why it
happened: 'If the government does not govern and ignores the wishes of the
people, it is regrettable but undertandable that it will be overturned'
(heavily paraphrased)This is the sentiment of the majority of the Malian people
with regards to the coup. Somaila Cisse and his party URD, together with the large party ADEMA belongs to what is known as the FDR, the 'Front uni pour la Sauvegarde de la Democratie et la Republique' or the 'anti-Putchists' for short. They represent for a large number of the Malian people all those who were happy to line their pockets at the people's expense and who wanted the status quo to remain.
So, in the 'boiling down' process, Somaila Cisse stands for the Anti-Putch and IBK for the pro-Putch.
It is quite difficult for us westerners, used to stable parliamentory democracies, to understand that someone seen to represent the 'pro-Putch' may be on the side of the angels, as it were. My interview with our friend Guida Landoure in the wake of the coup (see April 8, 2012) still contains much relevant material regarding this thorny and confusing matter.
The fact that Modibo Sidibe, another major candidate in the first round representing a party in the FDR union, has this morning announced his
support for Sumaila Cisse is probably not going to do the latter's cause any favours
since Sidibe, the prime minister under ATT, is the personification of greed and
corruption in the eyes of a large proportion of Malians. 'Les deux GRANDS VOLEURS du Mali sont ds le meme CAMP maintenant.....' (the two great thiefs of Mali are now in the same camp) wrote a commentator on Malijet after this announcement.
Meanwhile 20 of the smaller candidates have rallied behind IBK, it was announced last night. The Cisse camp came out in a storm of protests of 'disgust', seeing in this rallying only an unseemly scramble for potential ministerial posts in a future IBK administration. Even the hapless ADEMA candidate Draman Dembele has joined the IBK camp, against his own party- probably for an impure motive along the above lines... However, what cannot be so easily explained is that the ADEMA youth movement has also rallied IBK!
Hmmmm.... most interesting.... I wish I could be in two places at once Bamako on Sunday will be THE place to be, inshallah!
Vive le nouveau Mali, Vive IBK!
4 Comments:
Many thanks for the clarification. You are duly accoladed Over There (Here above).
Hi Sophie, can I repost your (award-winning) latest blog on my home page? www.gn.apc.org We have a lot of interest in African issues and African-linked NGOs in our network, including Pambazuka news and formerly Southscan.
Hi Howard,
of course you can put the blog up, I am thrilled!
Sophie
Thanks very much!
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