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Mali votes for president

Sunday July 29 2018
Mali

Mali's outgoing President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita speaks to journalists as he leaves a polling station on July 29, 2018 in Bamako after casting his vote. Mali went to the polls with the president seeking a second five-year term. PHOTO | AFP

By AFP

Mali went to the polls on Sunday, with President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita seeking a second five-year term in the fragile Sahel state.

After a campaign marred by violent incidents, 23,000 polling stations opened at 0800GMT and are scheduled to close at 1800GMT.

"I have my voting card, I am going to vote for my country and for my favourite president," said Mr Moriba Camara, a 35-year-old teacher, in the Sebenicoro District of the capital Bamako.

Started queuing

"I know there is going to be no cheating. I trust the authorities," he added, as a few voters started queuing around him.

President Keita, 73, leads a crowded field of 24 candidates — just one of them a woman — bidding for the presidency which he has held since 2013. He voted in Sebenicoro, in the capital, surrounded by journalists and supporters.

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His record on security has been a dominant theme, with opponents, including several former ministers, accusing him of incompetence.

On the campaign trail, Keita — commonly known by his initials IBK — highlighted the achievements of a 2015 peace agreement between the government, government-allied groups and former Tuareg rebels to fight jihadi fighters in the country's north.

Reap nothing

But the main Al-Qaeda-linked jhadist alliance made its presence felt on the final day of campaigning Friday, dubbing the election a "mirage" that would do nothing for the Malian people.

"These elections are nothing other than the pursuit of a mirage and our peoples will reap nothing but illusions, as they are used to doing," said alliance leader Iyad Ag Ghaly.

Ag Ghaly, the key figure in the jihadists' operation to take control of much of the north of the country in 2012, leads the Group to Support Islam and Muslims (GSIM), formed from a merger of several militant groups.

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