Mali’s former president, Amadou Toumani Toure, who steered the Sahel nation to democracy and led it for a decade before being ousted in a coup, has died in Turkey aged 72, a family member and a doctor said on Tuesday.
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Toure “died during the night of Monday to Tuesday in Turkey,” where he had been taken for health reasons, his nephew Oumar Toure.
A doctor in Bamako said the former leader had recently undergone heart surgery in the city’s Luxembourg Hospital, which he had helped to found.
Although “everything seemed to be going well”, Toure was later transferred to Turkey for medical reasons, the doctor said.
“He took a regular flight to Turkey very recently. Unfortunately, he died overnight,” the source said.
Several African countries, from Ivory Coast to Senegal, as well as Mali’s former colonial ruler France, issued statements hailing Toure’s memory.
A former soldier, Toure first took charge of the country for a year in 1991, helping to overthrow the unpopular regime of Moussa Traore, who had been in power since 1968.
He took the helm of a transitional committee after the coup, exercising the duties of head of state and steering the country to elections, won in 1992 by Alpha Oumar Konare — the first democratically-chosen president in Mali’s post-independence history.
Universally known by his initials as ATT, and nicknamed the ‘soldier of democracy’, Toure won presidential elections in 2002 and again in 2007.
In power, he favoured forging consensus, using an approach that may have ultimately contributed to his downfall.
Neighbouring Sahel states accused him of neglecting the spread of jihadists in Mali’s north, but he responded that he needed their help to fight the problem, which was not forthcoming.
Then in 2012, mutinous soldiers accused Toure of failing to support their battle against both Tuareg rebels and jihadist insurgents and overthrew him.
The president fled to Senegal, only returning from exile in 2017.
Jihadist insurgence
The chaos that followed the 2012 coup was hugely destructive for Mali’s poorly-equipped and demoralised army.
The jihadists swiftly overran the north of the country before being forced out in 2013 by French intervention.
They then regrouped and expanded into central Mali, a flashpoint region where they ignited bloody ethnic conflict, and then advanced into neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.
Thousands have died and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes.
In August this year, a new chapter was written in Mali’s tale of chronic instability when the military ousted the elected president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, after mounting protests.
Some of the officers involved in this coup were also active in Toure’s overthrow, including their No. 2, Colonel Malick Daw.
Pressured by Mali’s neighbours, the putschists have set up a transitional presidency and government and promised to return to civilian rule within 18 months.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK