Mali’s junta, which seized power two weeks ago, will hold transition talks with political parties and civil society groups this weekend.
This followed mounting pressure for a quick handover to civilian rule.
“These meetings aim at drawing up a roadmap for the transition, to define the outlines and organs of the transition and to define the charter of the transition,” the junta said in a statement Tuesday.
The August 18 putsch has prompted Mali’s neighbours along with ally and former colonial ruler, France, to call for a swift transfer of power, amid worries over instability in a country struggling with an Islamist insurgency, ethnic violence, endemic corruption and economic malaise.
The military rulers have this time invited to the talks the June 5 Movement, which spearheaded a protest movement that led to the toppling of president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.
The movement was not invited for transition talks last Saturday when the junta called off discussions at the last minute.
The other players invited to the talks on Saturday and Sunday include former rebels, unions and representatives from the media.
The June 5 group has demanded that the military rulers give it a role in the transition to civilian rule, which the military has promised without setting a timetable.
Mali’s influential imam (Islamic cleric), Mahmoud Dicko, a key player in the mass opposition protests that led to Keita’s ouster, said the junta did not have “carte blanche”.
“We will not give a blank cheque to anyone to run this country, that’s over,” he said.
“We led the fight,” he said. “People have died and the soldiers who have completed (this fight) must keep their word.”
The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States regional bloc has been piling pressure on the junta to hand over power quickly, fearing that the crisis could impact neighbouring states.
ECOWAS mediator and former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan, said last week that the coup leaders wanted a three-year transition period.
This was rejected by the bloc, which has demanded an immediate civilian transition and elections within 12 months.
ECOWAS slapped sanctions on Mali after the coup, including a closure of borders and ban on trade and financial flows.
– Call for reforms –
Civil society platforms have meanwhile called for deep reforms, especially on electoral laws and the administrative machinery.
The powers of the president, the prime minister and parliament need to “be clearly defined”, said Abdourhamane Ben Mamata Toure, a lawyer and a former director at France’s prestigious Ecole nationale d’administration (ENA) which trains future bureaucrats.
One of the criticisms levelled against the toppled president is that he hogged power.
Keita, 75, was elected in 2013 as a unifying figure in a fractured country and was returned in 2018 for a second five-year term.
But his popularity crashed as he failed to counter the raging eight-year-old jihadist insurgency and brake Mali’s downward economic spiral.
Thousands of lives have been lost, hundreds of thousands of people have fled their homes and swathes of the country have been abandoned to armed Islamists by the state.