
Mali - May 2025
Junta formally dissolves political parties, escalating democratic rollback
On 13 May, Mali’s junta formally dissolved all political parties and associations through a decree read on national television. The move comes two weeks after a government-organised national consultation recommended appointing transitional leader Gen. Assimi Goïta as president for a renewable five-year term and dismantling multiparty democracy. The consultation, boycotted by nearly all political parties, was denounced as a sham process aimed at consolidating military rule. On 30 April, the junta repealed the charter governing political parties, in what legal experts said was a precursor to their full dissolution. Delegates from the consultation also recommended suspending all election planning until the country is ‘pacified’, asserting that the current leaders need more time to govern. In the build-up to the national consultation, around 100 political parties formed a coalition to confront what they anticipated as the junta's intention to dissolve them. In a rare public statement on 26 April, the coalition accused the authorities of seeking to eliminate political pluralism.
Sources: Prime Minister's Office of Mali, International Crisis Group, British Broadcasting Corporation (1), British Broadcasting Corporation (2), Radio France Internationale, Barron's, Jeune Afrique, International IDEA