Mali National Dialogue Recommends Longer Military Rule

A major part of the opposition boycotted the dialogue, accusing the army officers of exploiting it to stay in power. - AFP
A major part of the opposition boycotted the dialogue, accusing the army officers of exploiting it to stay in power. - AFP
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Mali National Dialogue Recommends Longer Military Rule

A major part of the opposition boycotted the dialogue, accusing the army officers of exploiting it to stay in power. - AFP
A major part of the opposition boycotted the dialogue, accusing the army officers of exploiting it to stay in power. - AFP

Hundreds of participants in a Malian national dialogue mainly boycotted by the opposition recommended that military rulers, who took power in 2020, keep power for several more years.

They also said that when elections were eventually held junta chief Colonel Assimi Goita should be a candidate for the presidency, according to a statement read on state television, AFP reported.

The rapporteur of the steering committee for the consultations, Boubacar Sow, said they had recommended extending the transition "from two to five years".

They also recommended promoting "the candidacy of Colonel Assimi Goita in the next presidential election", he added.

That implies the colonels would stay in power for three more years from the end of March 2024 until 2027.

The dialogue also recommended "opening doctrinal dialogue with the so-called jihadist armed groups", said Sow.

A major part of the opposition boycotted the dialogue, accusing the army officers of exploiting it to stay in power.

The West African nation has been ruled by juntas since back-to-back coups in 2020 and 2021, with the military promising to hand over power through the ballot box in February.

But they have postponed elections indefinitely, citing a precarious security situation aggravated by jihadist attacks.

In April, military authorities suspended all party political activities after muzzling opponents, journalists and human rights activists.

Goita has insisted the dialogue had been "entirely inclusive" in line with his wish for all Malians to "take part and express themselves freely".



Russia Detains German Man Accused of Blowing up Gas Distribution Pipe

A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
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Russia Detains German Man Accused of Blowing up Gas Distribution Pipe

A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)

Russia has detained a German citizen on suspicion of explosives-smuggling and terrorism, accusing him of blowing up a pipe at a gas distribution station, the Federal Security Service (FSB) said on Wednesday.

The FSB said the man, whom it named as Nikolai Gaiduk, had been involved in the attack in Russia's Kaliningrad Baltic Sea exclave in March, using a home-made bomb.

It said he was arrested during a subsequent attempt to enter Kaliningrad from Poland, when authorities searched his car and found 0.5 liters of liquid explosive.

The FSB said Gaiduk was born in 1967 and lives in Hamburg. It accused him of acting on the instructions of a Ukrainian man also living in the north German city.

"Currently, measures are being taken to identify and bring to justice the persons who assisted Gaiduk ... in carrying out illegal activities," the agency said.

The German foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to Russia's emergencies ministry, the pipe explosion in March caused a fire but there were no casualties.