A key figure in any post-crisis reckoning is likely to be Imam Mahmoud Dicko exiled in Algeria and now aligned with civilian politicians...
In December prominent individuals headed by the charismatic imam Mahmoud Dicko launched a new opposition movement the Coalition des forces pour la République (CFR) which questions the junta's legitimacy and calls for the restoration of constitutional order and a national dialogue that would include armed groups such as the secular northern Tuareg nationalist Front de libération de l'Azawad (FLA) and the jihadist Jama'at Nusrat al Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM)...
Exiled in Algiers Imam Mahmoud Dicko – the regime's most charismatic opponent – has deepened government mistrust of Mali's northern neighbour already accused of sheltering jihadist and separatist fighters near its Saharan border...
In Bamako the authorities are on alert particularly against any fresh moves by Mahmoud Dicko an influential imam (AC Vol 65 no 3 Juntas in shock split from Ecowas)...
The ruckus comes against the backdrop of civil unrest at the electricity crisis – Malians are reduced to a few hours of current per day if any at all – and a new opposition movement around the influential imam Mahmoud Dicko which on 17 February lambasted the junta for failure to deliver in terms of security basic services and the cost of living and demanded an election date...
President Abdelmadjid Tebboune compounded the insult as seen from Bamako by granting an audience to the prominent Malian imam Mahmoud Dicko a frequent critic of the junta...
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Influential Imam Mahmoud Dicko an opponent of the military junta urged his supporters to oppose the constitution on 16 June and tens of thousands of Malians participated on Friday in rallies in the capital Bamako ahead of Sunday's constitutional referendum (AC Vol 64 No 5 A junta that's going nowhere)...
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A draft went to Goïta in October but after the opposition parties and the prominent imam Mahmoud Dicko rejected it no more has been heard...
There are fears that not even Mali's three most influential religious leaders may be able to stop the tide be it the widely respected and normally reserved Cheik Chérif Ousmane Haidara who released a pessimistic video in December; the firebrand imam Mahmoud Dicko; or the discreet and wealthy businessman and political broker Mohamed Ould Hamahoulah who also goes by Bouyé Haïdara but is universally known as Chérif de Nioro (AC Vol 62 No 14 Paris makes up with the junta)...
The influential imam Mahmoud Dicko recently accused Goïta's junta of arrogance – a hint at the domestic political pressure that could pile up as long as there is little progress on security...
But enthusiasm for it was feeble – even the firebrand imam Mahmoud Dicko stayed away...