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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
Paul Lorgerie and Tiemoko Diallo

Mali president and prime minister freed by military after resigning

FILE PHOTO: Malian Prime Minister Moctar Ouane during his official visit in Bamako, Mali October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Paul Lorgerie

Mali's ousted interim president and prime minister have been freed after they were detained by the military and later resigned, an aide to the vice president said on Thursday.

Interim president Bah Ndaw and Prime Minister Moctar Ouane were arrested and taken to a military base outside the capital on Monday, triggering a crisis in the West African country and drawing threats of sanctions from major powers.

FILE PHOTO: The new interim president of Mali Bah Ndaw is sworn in during the Inauguration ceremony in Bamako, Mali September 25, 2020. REUTERS/Amadou Keita

The two men resigned from their posts while in detention on Wednesday.

The arrests, orchestrated by Vice President Assimi Goita, have jeopardised Mali's transition back to democracy after a coup in August overthrew former President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

Goita, a colonel, also led last year's coup. He has promised that elections planned for next year will go ahead.

FILE PHOTO: Commander Baba Cisse, representative of Mali vice president Colonel Assimi Goita gives a statement in Bamako, Mali May 26 2021. REUTERS/ Amadou Keita/File Photo

"They resigned, their release was scheduled, we have nothing against them," said Goita aide Baba Cissé.

Ndaw and Ouane's whereabouts will be kept secret to protect their security, Cissé told Reuters. He declined to detail any plans for their replacement.

Goita ordered their arrest after a cabinet reshuffle in which two fellow coup leaders were sacked from their posts.

Their resignations coincided with a visit by an Economic Community of West African States delegation to press the military to back down. ECOWAS has floated the possibility of sanctions against the officers responsible for the takeover.

Mali's influential M5-RFP political coalition, which led anti-government protests ahead of last year's coup, has opposed the leadership of Ndaw and Ouane, but it said it would strongly oppose Goita's appointment as president.

Although considered by analysts to be Goita's most likely future governing partner, the coalition said talks with ECOWAS had failed in part because of him.

ECOWAS did not comment about the talks on Thursday.

"The discussions yesterday were unsuccessful because Assimi wants to be the president, which is contrary to the texts of the Transition Charter," Nouhoum Togo, a spokesman for M5-RFP, told Reuters.

"Nowhere is it stipulated that the vice-president can replace the president," he said.

(Writing by Cooper Inveen; editing by Edward McAllister and Giles Elgood)

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