Obama reviews aid for Mali after polls

Mali's newly-elected president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita speaks during an interview in Bamako in this August 9, 2013, picture. File photo: AFP

Mali's newly-elected president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita speaks during an interview in Bamako in this August 9, 2013, picture. File photo: AFP

Published Aug 21, 2013

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Washington - United States President Barack Obama on Tuesday congratulated Mali on holding a “peaceful, inclusive and credible” election this month, a step toward resuming US aid to the West African nation.

The US suspended aid to Mali in April last year, after a coup prompted by an uprising by Islamists and Tuareg separatists.

Mali's constitutional court confirmed Ibrahim Boubacar Keita had won Mali's presidential election runoff on August 11 with 78 percent of the vote and he is expected to be sworn in by Mali's supreme court on September 4.

Once the new government is formally in place, the US can begin lifting restrictions on aid.

“This election has helped restore Mali's democratic tradition,” Obama said in a statement. “We look forward to working closely with the new government to broaden and deepen the ties between our two nations.”

A senior State Department official said the United States was already reviewing its assistance program to Mali.

Some US funding can resume once Secretary of State John Kerry “determines and certifies to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations that a democratically elected government has taken office”, the official said.

“We intend to continue close coordination with our partners in the international donor community and with the newly elected Malian government to ensure that any renewed assistance addresses Mali's most pressing needs in an efficient and effective manner.”

Once portrayed as a model democracy, Mali imploded when a military junta, frustrated by a lack of progress in tackling a Tuareg rebellion in the north, toppled President Amadou Toumani Toure in March last year.

The Tuareg rebels and their Islamist allies seized upon the turmoil in the capital, Bamako, to launch a rapid advance, capturing two-thirds of the country.

The al-Qaeda-linked fighters were finally defeated following the intervention of thousands of French soldiers in January. - Reuters

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