The Mali Election Scam:
Legitimizing France’s “Total Re-conquest”
“The objective is the total
reconquest of Mali” -French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, (20 January, 2013)
Presidential elections are due to take place in Mali on Sunday,
July 28th. The latest polls indicate a victory for Ibrahim Boubecar
Keïta, with Soumaila Cissé coming in second place. There are 27 candidates
running in the election. The holding of the election just months after the
French military intervention in January 2013 has been widely criticized due to the
chaotic state of the country.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki
Moon admitted that the elections would not be ‘perfect’ but indicated that they
would have to be accepted by the Malian people.
There have already been reports of widespread fraud and
irregularities, with thousands of NINA (Numero d’identité nationale) voter
cards not being delivered to voters. There have also been reports of dollars
being handed out to bribe voters.
There is a very low
distribution of NINA cards in the refugee camps both inside and outside Mali.
Only 300 voter cards have been distributed among 730,000 refugees in camps in
Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Algeria and Niger while Burkina Faso’s 50,000 Malian
refugees have only received 30 NINA cards.
The electoral lists are the same as 2009, thereby excluding
300,000 eligible voters who have come of age since then. The NINA cards were
only distributed in April in spite of the fact that it would take at least 6 to
12 months for their adequate distribution in a war torn country of Mali’s size.
The regions of the North of the country, formally occupied by
jihadists and separatist forces will hardly vote at all. The MNLA, Azawad
National Liberation Movement, who waged a war against the central government in
Bamako since 2012, want to declare independence from the Malian state. The
region of Kidal in the North is still occupied by the rebel forces, with French
troops also stationed there.
The hastily organized elections will not help the cause of
national reconciliation due to the fact that so many people have been excluded
from voting.
The Malian war and its consequences
In March 21, 2012, generals of Mali’s military (green berets)
overthrew the country’s president Amadou Toumani Toure, inaugurating the
National Committee for the Restoration of Democracy and State. The coup was led
by Captain Amadou Aya Sanogo and was supported the next day by a mass, popular
movement called the March 22nd Movement
led by left-wing deputy Dr. Oumar Mariko.
The generals were unhappy with the half-hearted efforts of their
government to crack down on the terrorists invading the country from the north.
Soldiers had been badly equipped, with many going hungry. Amadou Toumani Toure
had ruled Mali as a French puppet since 2002 and previously been accused of
drug dealing with war lords.
Toure had served Western corporations well, while the Malian
people languished in dire poverty. Many of the supporters of the
coup had demonstrated in support of Muammar Kaddafi during the Libyan war of
2011 and wanted to see a strong state defeat what they considered to be a French
conspiracy to destabilize and subsequently re-colonize the mineral rich
country, by using jihadist terrorism as a pretext for intervention.
The reaction of the ‘international community’ to the military coup
was swift. The coup was condemned and sanctions were imposed on Mali, with
ECOWAS, the Community of West African States threatening to invade and occupy
the country to restore ‘democracy’.
These measures impeded the efforts of the Malian military to
regain control of the Northern territories. The sanctions also helped
precipitate a humanitarian crisis as Malian goods could not be transported from
ports in the Ivory Coast and Guinea.
All of this weakened the country’s defenses enabling the
terrorists to capture village after village. In spite of the fact that the
‘international community’ was fully aware of the advances of the terrorists, it
was more concerned with the ‘rule of law’ and ‘democracy’ than in helping the
Malian military defeat the barbarians. The generals finally ceded to the
international pressure and agreed to nominate Dioncounda Traore,( a NATO asset)
as interim president.
Meanwhile, the MNLA was joined by extremist Wahhabi
terrorists groups funded by Qatar and Saudi Arabia, France’s allies. The
terrorist groups, ACMI, Al Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb and Mujao (Movement for
Unity and Jihad in West Africa), overran some of the country’s most
important cities such as Timbuktu, where they destroyed thousands of ancient
scientific manuscripts and holy shrines, as well as occupying the cities of
Tessalit, Gao and Kidal.
In January 11th 2013
after the occupation of the town of Konna by islamists, France launched
Operation Serval, a military invasion of Mali aimed at ‘liberating’ the country
from the terrorists. The pretext for the intervention was a letter sent
by French puppet president Dioncounda Traore to the UN.
By March most of the terrorist groups had been driven out of
Northern cities, which were now under the control of French and Chadian
military. Most of the fighting was done by Chadian soldiers with the French
playing a supporting role.
An article published by Le Nouvel Observateur in June 2013
revealed that the MNLA had been working closely with the DGSE(Direction
générale de la Sécurité extérieure) the French secret service since 2003,
confirming the suspicions of Malian patriots that the French had deliberately
used the terrorists to destablise the country.[1]
On April 18th the Oauagadougou Accords were signed
in the Burkina Faso capital between the interim government and the MNLA rebels.
As the MNLA rebels are puppets of France and do not have any legitimacy, while
the interim government is unelected, the accords are a violation of the Mali’s
1992 constitution.
The Oauagadougou Accords effectively hand over sovereignty of
Kidal and the Northern regions to the MNLA rebels. Under international law,
states are not required to recognize sovereignty over national territories by
armed gangs. This is precisely what the Qauagdougou Accords require.
Mali is going to be partitioned. This has been the French plan
since the 1990s; the country will be divided and conquered, with an unstable
independent republic of Azawad in the north and a truncated, impoverished Mali
in the South, with French military bases ‘keeping the peace’. To compound the
country’s problems, there are three potential ‘azawads’: the Moor Azawad
of the North west, the Toureg Azawad of the North East and a mixture of
Songhay, Peul and Toureg on the banks of the Niger river. It is
therefore possible that the armed gangs will continue to fight among themselves
if independence is achieved under the UN occupation.
Oumar Mariko- The people’s
candidate.
If there is any ‘terrorist’ feared by the French occupation forces
in Mali, Oumar Mariko is certainly one of them. Dr. Mariko is the secretary
general of Parti Sadi, Solidarité
africaine pour la démocratie et l'indépendance, African Solidarity for
Democracy and Independence.
Mariko comes from a generation of African intellectuals inspired
by Thomas Sankara, the Marxist revolutionary of Burkina Faso, and the African
socialism of Mali’s first president Modibo Keïta. Mariko was one of the
organizers of the March 22 movement, a popular mass movement which initially
supported the military coup, hoping to use the seizure of power to mobilize the
masses in favour of genuine democracy.
Mariko was prevented from travelling to France last year for a
conference to discuss French imperialism
in Mali. One of the reasons for the celerity with which elections have been
organized in Mali is to prevent the masses from voting for Parti Sadi’s
candidate.
Mariko is the only presidential candidate, who has genuine mass
support and has not relied on corporate funding for his election campaign.
Mariko is an admirer of Hugo Chavez and wants to reestablish the role of
the social state through nationalizing national resources, re-establishing
national sovereignty and instituting popular democracy.
Mariko is the man the French government wants out of the picture.
However, given the fact that so many have been excluded from the election and
there has been so little time to organize mass meetings, and the allegations of
fraud, Mariko is unlikely to win.
Legitimizing neo-colonialism
The French ruling class wants to create an image of legitimacy for
its invasion and “total re-conquest” of Mali. The Malian elections are a total
sham. They have been imposed on a people traumatized by a war planned and
foisted upon them by imperialism.
The partition of the country corresponds to the plan elaborated by
French politician Alain Peyrefitte during the De Gaulle era, which involves
creating the conditions for French control over the Sahara/Sahel region.
The French are attempting to resurrect the 1957 L'Organisation commune des régions
sahariennes (OCRS)
in co-operation with the 2004 US Trans-Sahara Counter Terrorism Initiative, a
plan to control the Sahara which could see the eventual destabilization of
Niger, Algeria, Tchad, Morocco, Tunisia, Mauritania, Senegal and Ghana.
This is part of the US initiative Africom, which aims to
militarize all of Africa in accordance with US/NATO strategic interests,
thereby weakening Chinese influence in the continent and ensuring access to
cheap resources for Western multi-national corporations.
The purpose of the electoral charade is to legitimize the break up
of the country and the occupation by French and UN forces, thus preventing the
Malian people from ever having a claim over their own lands and resources.
As a consequence, the country will be partitioned and Mali will become
the new Somalia.
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