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1991 Malian coup d'état

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coup d'état
1991 Malian coup d'état
DateMarch 26, 1991
Location
Result

Coup d'état successful

Belligerents
MaliGovernment of MaliArmy faction
Commanders and leaders
Moussa TraoréAmadou Toumani Touré

The 26 March1991 Malian coup d'état resulted in the overthrow of PresidentMoussa Traoré after over two decades of dictatorship[1] and eventually led to multi-party elections.

Background

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In 1968, Traoré had himself led amilitary coup d'état, ousting the first president ofMali,Modibo Keïta, and making himself the second.[1] On 25 October 1990, opposition to his decades-long rule coalesced into theAlliance for Democracy in Mali (ADEMA), an umbrella organization for opposition groups. Unrest grew as the people blamed the regime's corruption and mismanagement for the economic troubles they faced.[2] Further, Traoré had to institute austerity programs to satisfy theInternational Monetary Fund, causing increased hardship for all but the rich.[3]

ADEMA and other pro-democracy groups demanded the end of theone-party state. On 22 March, tens of thousands of students and others marched through the streets ofBamako, the nation's capital. Government soldiers fired on the peaceful demonstrators, killing 28 and setting off days of rioting.[1] Sources vary as to the toll: the opposition claimed 148 killed and hundreds wounded, while Traoré said there were 27 deaths.[1] Traoré declared a state of emergency and met with opposition leaders. He offered concessions, but refused to step down as they demanded. A general strike was called for 25 March.[4] This time, the soldiers had had enough and did nothing to stop it.

Coup

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Lieutenant ColonelAmadou Toumani Touré launched a coup that deposed Traoré.[1][4] As news spread, hospital sources reported at least another 59 dead and 200 wounded, including revenge killings.[4] Education Minister Bakary Traore and Mamadou Diarra, the former leader's brother-in-law, were burned to death.[1]

The National Reconciliation Council (soon renamed the Transitional Committee for the Salvation of the People), chaired by Touré, was set up to run the country temporarily, until civilian government was reestablished in 1992 afterconstitutional referendum,presidential andparliamentary elections.

Aftermath

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Former President Moussa Traoré was imprisoned in 1992 and sentenced to death.[5] However, PresidentAlpha Oumar Konaré first commuted his sentence tolife imprisonment,[5] then pardoned him and his wife in May 2002 as Konaré's term in office came to an end.[6]

Russian political scientistAndrey Korotayev later cited the 1991 coup as an example of a "coupvolution", as it was carried out in support of pro-democracy protests.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdef"Mali's Dictator Is Overthrown in Coup".The New York Times.Associated Press. 27 March 1991.
  2. ^Harmon, Stephen A. (9 March 2016).Terror and Insurgency in the Sahara-Sahel Region: Corruption, Contraband, Jihad and the Mali War of 2012-2013. Routledge. p. 72.ISBN 9781317046066.
  3. ^"Mali's March Revolution (1991)".International Center on Nonviolent Conflict. Retrieved31 October 2022.
  4. ^abc"Leader of Mali Coup Promises Democracy".Los Angeles Times. 27 March 1991.
  5. ^ab"Former Malian president escapes death again".BBC. 22 September 1999.
  6. ^"Release of Moussa Traore makes front-page news in Mali".PanaPress. 30 May 2002.
  7. ^Korotayev, Andrey; Khokhlova, Alina (2022). "Revolutionary Events in Mali, 2020–2021". In Issaev, Leonid; Korotayev, Andrey (eds.).New Wave of Revolutions in the MENA Region: A Comparative Perspective.Springer. p. 203.ISBN 978-3-031-15134-7.
Years inMali (1960–present)
Coups d'état in Africa since 1960
1960s
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2020s
  • c: successful coup
  • :self-coup
  • no sign:attempted coup
Coups,self-coups, and attempted coups since 1991
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