Malian strongman Colonel Assimi Goita survived an assassination attempt at a mosque in Bamako yesterday, in the latest blow to stability in a country reeling from two military coups in less than a year.
An assailant wielding a knife attacked Goita after prayers at the capital’s Grand Mosque for the festival of Eid al-Adha, an AFP journalist saw.
Goita, a special forces colonel who was named transitional president in May, was quickly whisked away by security.
The journalist saw blood at the scene, although it was unclear who was wounded.
Goita later appeared on the state broadcaster ORTM, where he said he was doing “very well” after the attack.
“That’s part of being a leader, there are always malcontents,” he said, wearing a blue hat and shiny blue gown.
“There are people who at any time may want to try things to cause instability.”
His office released a statement saying that Goita was “safe and sound” after what was labelled an assassination attempt.
Security had subdued the attacker, and “investigations are ongoing,” the presidency added.
The assailant went for the president as an imam was directing worshippers outside the Great Mosque for a ritual animal sacrifice.
Religious Affairs Minister Mamadou Kone, who was at the mosque, said that a man had “tried to kill the president with a knife” but was apprehended.
The mosque’s director, Latus Toure, said an attacker had lunged at the president but wounded someone else.
Later, a security official who requested anonymity said that two people had been arrested and were now in detention.
Sadio Tomoda, chief of Bamako’s third police district, said the second man arrested was a special forces member armed with a pistol who had not been recognised in the confusion.
He added that the solo attacker was a “teacher”, without giving further details of his identity.
An AFP journalist who witnessed the attack initially confused an armed security guard with an attacker.
The atmosphere in Bamako was calm yesterday after the assault, according to AFP journalists, including in the area surrounding the mosque.
The shocking attack follows months of political turmoil in Mali, which is also battling a militant insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives and driven hundreds of thousands from their homes.
Goita was sworn into office in June after leading the country’s second coup in less than a year.
He headed a putsch last August that ousted elected president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita after weeks of mass protests over corruption and the long-running militant conflict.
The junta then handed power to a civilian-led transitional government which promised to restore civilian rule in February 2022. But in late May, Goita, who was vice president under the transitional government, ousted the president, Bah Ndaw, and premier Moctar Ouane, saying they had sought to “sabotage” the handover.
In June, with Goita as interim president, a new government was unveiled, with military figures in key roles.
Facing the wrath of the African Union and the West African regional bloc Ecowas, Goita vowed the government would “uphold all its commitments” and pledged to stage “credible, fair and transparent elections.”
The assassination bid is the latest episode in the country’s long history of turbulence.
Mali, a deeply poor state of around 20mn people, has known little stability or democracy since it gained independence from France in 1960.
Security personnel escort an alleged attacker (centre) from The Grand Mosque in Bamako, yesterday, after two assailants attempted to stab Mali’s interim president Assimi Goita during prayers at the mosque.
This image taken from video shows Mali’s interim president Assimi Goita (centre) as he sits with others during Eid al-Adha prayers at The Grand Mosque in Bamako, yesterday, before he was attacked.