Description
Added on the 14/09/2020 15:24:43 - Copyright : France 24 EN
Mali's military junta holds meetings to discuss its promised transition to civilian rule after mounting pressure from neighbours to yield power in the weeks since it overthrew the nation's leader. IMAGES
Guinean civil society members wait outside parliament to attend the consultation with the ruling junta on the country's political future. The leader of the coup plotters, Lieutenant Colonel Doumbouya, has so far not commented on the possible nature of the transition, how long it will last, what role the military will play, or how elections will be organized. IMAGES
Images of Kati, the military town about 18 km from Mali's capital Bamako, which houses the camp where Malian transitional president Bah Ndaw and his Prime Minister Moctar Ouane are being held. IMAGES
After Mali's military junta announced the leaders of a new transition government, the West African bloc ECOWAS meets with the National Committee for the Salvation of the People (CNSP) in Bamako. IMAGES
Mali's junta and representatives of the political class and social movements meet for a third day in a second round of talks to agree on a transitional government following the overthrow of President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita. IMAGES
Mali's military junta launches a three-day "national consultation" with political parties, unions and NGOs, facing questions at home and pressure from abroad over its plans for returning the country to civilian rule. Around 500 people are attending the forum, unfolding at a conference centre in Bamako, the capital of the impoverished West African state. At the opening of the talks, the normally spotlight-shy head of Mali's junta, Colonel Assimi Goita, underscored the importance of delivering "political and institutional reforms" and an outline for restoring a civilian government. IMAGES