General (ret.) 'Amadou Toumani Touré' (born
November 4,
1948 in
Mopti,
Mali["Malian President announces his candidacy for next elections", African Press Agency, March 27, 2007.]) is the
president of
Mali. He overthrew a military ruler,
Moussa Traoré in 1991, then handed power to civilian authorities the next year. He won the
presidential elections in 2002, with a broad coalition of support and was easily
re-elected in 2007.
Biography
Amadou Toumani Touré was born on
4 November 1948, in Mopti, where he attended primary school. Between
1966 and
1969, he attended Badalabougou Standard Secondary School in
Bamako in order to become a
teacher. Eventually, he joined the army and attended the
Kita Inter-Military College. As a member of the Parachute Corps, he rose quickly through the ranks and after numerous training courses in the
Soviet Union and
France, he became the commander of the
parachute commandos in
1984.
In March
1991, after public demonstrations were violently quelled, he participated in a
coup d'etat against Moussa Traoré and became leader of the Transitional Committee for the Welfare of the People, and performed the functions of the head of state during the transitional period towards democracy. He organized the national conference (between
29 July and
12 August 1991) which drew up the
Constitution of Mali and the legislative and presidential elections in
1992. When the results of the election became known he relinquished power to the newly elected president,
Alpha Oumar Konaré. Because of this, he gained the nickname "The Soldier of Democracy."
[1]
In
June 2001, he became the special envoy of
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to the
Central African Republic after the failed coup attempt there.
In September of 2001 he asked for and was granted his expected retirement from the army. He decided to restart his political career by becoming a candidate in the upcoming presidential election. He was elected President of Mali in the
2002 presidential election, obtaining 64.35% of the vote in the second runoff vote. His primary opponent,
Soumaila Cissé, a former cabinet minister, obtained 35.65% of the vote. Touré was sworn in on
June 8,
2002.
His presidency has been rather atypical; he is not a member of any political party and his government has members from all of the political parties in the country. Following his 2002 election, he appointed
Ahmed Mohamed ag Hamani to the post of Prime Minister. On
April 28,
2004, he was replaced by
Ousmane Issoufi Maiga.
He founded a children's foundation named
Fondation pour l'enfance - a name shared with a similar organization, created by former French first-lady
Danielle Mitterrand. President Toure now runs his foundation by the proxy of his wife, first lady
Toure Lobbo Traore.
Touré announced on
March 27,
2007 that he would run for a second term in the
April 2007 presidential election.
[ According to final results announced on May 12, Touré won the election with 71.20% of the votes. The main opposition candidate, National Assembly President Ibrahima Boubacar Keïta, won 19.15%;]["Présidentielle au Mali: la Cour constitutionnelle valide la réélection de Touré", AFP (Jeuneafrique.com), May 12, 2007 .] the Front for Democracy and the Republic, a coalition including Keïta and three other candidates, rejected the official results.[2] Foreign observers, however, endorsed the election as free and fair.[3] Touré was sworn in for his second term as President on June 8, 2007, at a ceremony attended by seven other African presidents.[4]
References
1. Country profile: Mali
2. "Mali: l'opposition conteste la présidentielle sans attendre les résultats", AFP (Jeuneafrique.com), May 1, 2007 .
3. Nick Tattersall, "Toure camp claims election win", Reuters (''IOL''), May 1, 2007.
4. "Re-elected Malian president sworn-in, 7 peers attend ceremony", African Press Agency, June 8, 2007.
★ This article is based on a translation of the from the French Wikipedia, retrieved on 12 April 2005.
See also
★ List of national leaders