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Mali ex-president returns home 7 years after coup

Former Malian president Amadou Toure returns to the country after his government was overthrown in 2012
Last Updated 17 December 2019, 03:02 IST

A former Malian president overthrown in a 2012 coup has returned from exile to the capital Bamako, prompting speculation about a political comeback as the country's security crisis deteriorates further.

Amadou Toumani Toure -- better known as "ATT" -- with his family on Sunday night landed in Bamako airport, where he was welcomed by some 1,000 supporters, according to an AFP journalist.

"I'm doing well and I'm happy to be here," Toure said in a brief statement. He had been ousted in a military coup in 2012 after separatists and jihadists seized much of northern Mali.

He formally resigned shortly after and went into exile in neighbouring Senegal, where he kept a low profile.

The former president has now arrived back home just as incumbent President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita is hosting talks hoping to find a political solution to the rolling crisis in the vast West African country.

Violence in Mali has grown worse since 2012, spreading to the centre of the country and to neighbouring Sahel states despite the presence of thousands of foreign troops.

Toure has yet to comment on the reasons for his return.

Some members of his entourage have said he will not return to politics, while others have said he will not stand by as insecurity gets worse.

"I have come to welcome ATT because he's the father of Malian democracy," Oumar Toure, a 32-year-old teacher, told AFP.

"Nothing has worked since he left Mali," the supporter, who declined to give his name, said.

Former MP Mohamed Coulibaly said it was certain Toure would return to the political arena. "He will not distance himself," he said.

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(Published 17 December 2019, 02:53 IST)

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