Thursday, 14 May 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICA AMERICAN " PRESIDENT IBRAHIM BOUBACAR KEITA " IS A MALIAN POLITICIAN WHO HAS BEEN PRESIDENT OF MALI SINCE 2013 : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

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Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta


Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta
Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta par Claude Truong-Ngoc décembre 2013 (cropped).jpg
President of Mali
Incumbent
Assumed office
4 September 2013
Prime MinisterDjango Sissoko (Acting)
Oumar Tatam Ly
Moussa Mara
Modibo Keita
Preceded byDioncounda Traoré (Acting)
Prime Minister of Mali
In office
4 February 1994 – 15 February 2000
PresidentAlpha Oumar Konaré
Preceded byAbdoulaye Sékou Sow
Succeeded byMandé Sidibé
President of the National Assembly
In office
16 September 2002 – 3 September 2007
Preceded byAly Nouhoum Diallo
Succeeded byDioncounda Traoré
Personal details
Born29 January 1945 (age 70)
KoutialaFrench Sudan
(now Mali)
Political partyAlliance for Democracy in Mali(1990–2001)
Rally for Mali (2001–present)
Alma materUniversity of Dhakar
Pantheon-Sorbonne University
Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (born January 29, 1945), or as he is often known IBK, is a Malian politician who has been President of Malisince 2013. Previously he was Prime Minister of Mali from 1994 to 2000 and President of the National Assembly of Mali from 2002[1][2] to 2007.[3] He founded a political party, Rally for Mali (RPM), in 2001.[4] He was elected as President in the July–August 2013 presidential election and sworn in on 4 September 2013.

Biography

Early life and education

Keïta was born in Koutiala, Mali.[1][2] He studied at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly in Paris and Lycée Askia-Mohamed in Bamako, continuing his education at the University of Dakar, the University of Paris I and the Institut d'Histoire des Relations Internationales Contemporaines (IHRIC; Institute of the Modern History of International Relations). He has a Master's degree in History and an additional graduate degree in Political Science and International Relations.
After his studies, he was a researcher at the CNRS and taught courses on Third World politics at the University of Paris I. Returning to Mali, he became a technical consultant for the European Development Fund, putting together the first small-scale development program for the European Union's aid activities in Mali. He went on to become Mali director for the French chapter of Terre des hommes, an international NGO aiding children in the developing world.

1990's

Upon the founding of the Alliance for Democracy in Mali (ADEMA-PASJ), Keïta became its Secretary for African and International Relations at its constitutive congress, held on May 25–26, 1991.[5] He was the deputy director of ADEMA candidate Alpha Oumar Konaré's successful presidential campaign in 1992. The new president named Keïta as his senior diplomatic adviser and spokesmanin June 1992, and then in November 1992 Konaré appointed Keïta as Ambassador to Côte d'IvoireGabonBurkina Faso andNiger.[1][2]
In November 1993, Keïta was appointed to the Malian government as Minister of External Affairs, Malians Abroad, and African Integration. On February 4, 1994, President Konaré named him Prime Minister, a position he held until February 2000.[1][2] At ADEMA's first ordinary congress, held in September 1994, Keïta was elected as the President of ADEMA.[6] Following presidential and parliamentary elections held in 1997, he resigned from his post as Prime Minister on September 13, 1997[7] and was promptly reappointed by Konaré, with a new government appointed on September 16.[8]
Keïta was re-elected as ADEMA President in October 1999,[9] and in November 1999, he was named Vice-President of the Socialist International.[1]

2000's

Disagreements within ADEMA forced him to resign as Prime Minister on February 14, 2000, and then from the leadership of the party in October 2000. He then founded his own party, the Rally for Mali (RPM), which he has led since its creation was announced on June 30, 2001.[1][10] He stood as a candidate in the 2002 presidential election, receiving the strong backing of many Muslim leaders and associations. Despite this support, some people doubted that Keïta's policies were particularly compatible with Islam, pointing to the creation of casinos and lotteries while he was Prime Minister.[11] In the first round of the election, held on April 28, he received about 21% of the vote and took third place, behind Amadou Toumani Touré and Soumaïla Cissé.[12] He denounced the election as fraudulent, alleging that he was deliberately and falsely excluded from the second round, and along with other candidates sought for the results to be invalidated.[13][14] On May 9 the Constitutional Court ruled that the second round should proceed with Touré and Cissé as the top two candidates, despite acknowledging significant irregularities and disqualifying a quarter of the votes because of the irregularities.[15][16] According to the Constitutional Court, Keïta won 21.03% of the vote, only about 4,000 votes less than Cissé.[12][16] On the same day, Keïta announced the support of his Espoir 2002 alliance for Touré in the second round;[15][16] regarding the Court's ruling, he described himself as "a law-abiding person" and said that the Court had followed the law.[16] The second round was won by Touré.[17]
In the July 2002 parliamentary election, Keïta was elected to a seat in the National Assembly from Commune IV in Bamako District[1][2][18] in the first round.[2][18] He was then elected as President of the National Assembly on September 16, 2002,[1][17][19][20] receiving broad support, including the backing of ADEMA.[19] He received 115 votes from the 138 participating deputies;[19][20] the only other candidate, Noumoutié Sogoba of African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence (SADI), received eight votes, while 15 deputies abstained.[19]
Keïta was also elected as President of the Executive Committee of the African Parliamentary Union on October 24, 2002 at its Khartoum Conference.[1]
He ran for President again, as the candidate of the Rally for Mali, in the April 2007 election, having been designated as the party's candidate on January 28, 2007.[21] Touré won the election by a landslide, while Keita took second place and 19.15% of the vote.[22] As part of the Front for Democracy and the Republic (FDR), a coalition that included Keita as well as three other presidential candidates, Keita disputed the results and sought for the election to be annulled, alleging fraud.[23] On May 19, he said that the FDR would abide by the decision of the Constitutional Court to confirm Touré's victory.[24]
In the July 2007 parliamentary election, Keïta ran for re-election to the National Assembly from Commune IV in Bamako, where 17 lists competed for the two available seats,[25]on an RPM list together with Abdramane Sylla.[26] Keïta's list received 31.52% of the vote in the first round, held on July 1,[18][26] slightly ahead of the list of independent candidate Moussa Mara, which received 30.70%.[26] In the second round on July 22, Keïta's list narrowly prevailed, winning 51.59% of the vote according to provisional results.[27] He was not a candidate for re-election as President of the National Assembly at the opening of the new National Assembly on September 3; the position was won by ADEMA PresidentDioncounda Traoré.[3][28]
Keïta was a member of the Pan-African Parliament from Mali.[29] As of 2007–2008, he was a member of the Commission of Foreign Affairs, Malians Living Abroad, and African Integration in the National Assembly.[30] In addition to serving in the National Assembly, Keïta was a member of the Parliament of the Economic Community of West African States.[31]

2010's

Keïta again ran for President in the July–August 2013 presidential election and was considered a front-runner.[32][33] He won the election in a second round of voting, defeatingSoumaïla Cissé, and he was sworn in as President on 4 September 2013.[34] Keïta had vowed to prioritize ability rather than political considerations when appointing ministers, and on 5 September 2013 he appointed a technocrat, banking official Oumar Tatam Ly, as Prime Minister.[35]

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