Is Mali's democracy at risk under military rule?
Mali's military government shut down all political parties and political organizations on Tuesday — a move that followed an increasing number of pro-democracy activists being kidnapped from the streets of the capital, Bamako.
It also came days after a pro-democracy rally was held, with protesters demanding multi-party elections.
The decree dissolving political parties, signed by Mali's transitional president Assimi Goita, cited "reasons of public order" and covered all "associations of a political character," according to Malian state media.
"It is forbidden for members of dissolved political parties and political organizations to hold any meetings," the decree stated.
"The events in Mali in the last few days are a dramatic setback for democracy," said Paul Melly, an analyst and consulting fellow at the London-based international affairs think tank, Chatham House.
Mali is a country "that has gigantic significance" because of the protest and the democracy coup of the early 1990s, Melly told DW, adding that it "has a long, proud history of an elected government although interrupted sometimes by military coups."
"But for the moment, clearly, normal democracy, elected politics and free expression of opinion have been shut down," the analyst said.
Melly noted that it........
© Deutsche Welle
