The junta in power in Mali announced, Monday, September 25, the postponement of the presidential election scheduled for February 2024 and supposed to mark the return of civilians to the head of this country in the grip of jihadism and a deep multidimensional crisis. This is a new postponement on the part of the colonels in relation to the commitments made under pressure from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) with a view to a transfer of power.

The initially selected dates of February 4 and 18, 2024 for the two rounds “will experience a slight postponement for technical reasons,” said government spokesperson Colonel Abdoulaye Maïga in a statement read to journalists in Bamako.

“The new dates for the presidential election will be the subject of [a] press release later,” the government said. The authorities are also refusing to organize legislative elections before the presidential election, initially scheduled for the end of 2023.

The government “decides to organize, exclusively, the presidential election to exit the transition. The other elections will certainly be the subject of another chronogram [calendar] which will be established by the new authorities, under the directives of the new President of the Republic,” details the press release.

“No more contractual framework”

The authorities cite among the “technical reasons” explaining this postponement factors linked to the adoption in 2023 of a new Constitution and the revision of the electoral lists, but also a dispute with a French company, Idemia, involved according to them in the process at the census level.

In a reaction sent to Agence France-Presse Monday evening, Idemia assured for its part that there is “no ongoing dispute” with the Malian authorities and that there is “no longer a contractual framework in place.” force” between the group and the Malian Ministry of Territorial Administration and Decentralization, “due to non-payment of invoices”.

Authors of successive coups in August 2020 and May 2021, the military first committed to giving way to elected civilians after presidential and legislative elections initially scheduled for February 2022.

But the junta led by Colonel Assimi Goïta finally announced at the end of 2021 that it was unable to respect the timetable agreed with ECOWAS. She had even considered remaining for several more years, time, according to her, to carry out the necessary profound reforms.

Transitions

ECOWAS then imposed heavy trade and financial sanctions at the beginning of 2022 which had hit Mali, a poor and landlocked country, hard. She lifted them the following July when the colonels agreed to leave in March 2024, and announced an electoral calendar setting the presidential election for February 2024.

The junta also set a constitutional referendum for March 2023, which ultimately took place in June. Critics of the new Constitution describe it as tailor-made to keep the colonels in power beyond the presidential election.

Since the Malian colonels took power, West Africa has seen a succession of military coups, in Burkina Faso and Niger, countries also hit by jihadism and violence, but also in Guinea. In all these countries, the military says it is carrying out “transitions” before a return to “constitutional order”.

The Malian presidential election is postponed while the country remains subject to violence in the center and east, and in the north faces a resumption of hostilities by separatist groups and an intensification of jihadist activities. Since August, the regions of Timbuktu and Gao have been the scene of a succession of attacks against Malian army positions and against civilians.

The junta pushed out the French anti-jihadist force in 2022 and the UN mission in 2023. It turned politically and militarily towards Russia. The government press release does not refer to recent security developments. The head of the junta intends to “make a return to a peaceful and secure constitutional order, after having carried out priority institutional political reforms”.