An almost insurrectional atmosphere pervaded the capital Bamako as authorities cracked down on the opposition alliance known as the June 5 Movement, even as Cisse promised a government “open to facing the challenges of the day”.
A total of six opposition figures have been detained in two days as the movement vowed to turn up the heat until embattled President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita quits.
As Cisse visited a hospital in the capital he spoke of four dead and around 50 people injured in clashes with security forces on Friday, but doubts were raised over the death toll from some of the worst unrest in years.
Friday saw widespread protests against Keita, with thousands rallying in Bamako to demand his resignation over a long-running jihadist conflict, economic woes and perceived government corruption.
– Deep-seated frustrations –
On Saturday, Cisse told media: “The president and I remain open to dialogue,” and added that he would quickly form a government ready to deal with the country’s problems.
But almost as he spoke, Malian gendarmes arrested Choguel Maiga and Mountaga Tall, both leaders in the June 5 Movement, a group spokesman said.
Led by influential imam Mahmoud Dicko, the movement is channelling deep-seated frustrations in the West African country.
Two other opposition leaders, Issa Kaou Djim and Clement Dembele, were arrested late Friday, the alliance said, and two figures considered intellectual pillars of the movement were also detained, it added.
Friday’s protest was the third such demonstration in less than two months — significantly escalating pressure on the 75-year-old president.
Demonstrators attacked parliament and ransacked the national television station.
Keita warned that security would be maintained “with no signs of weakness”, but signalled his willingness “to do everything possible to calm the situation”.
– ‘Step up’ pressure –
The alliance called on the public “to maintain and step up this mobilisation until the aim is achieved, which is the resignation of the president.”
Meanwhile, however, security forces broke into an opposition meeting that was examining ways to pursue a campaign of civil disobedience and obtain the release of those who had been arrested, spokesman Kaou Abdramane Diallo said.
Security officials “were looking for armed men, and came in cars and rammed the gate”, an opposition member said on condition of anonymity.
On Saturday, officials counted the cost of the violence.
“The material damage has been considerable: six vehicles burnt, the windscreens of seven vehicles smashed, the machine to digitalise the archives stolen — it was new — and the server of the news programme and other material damaged,” the head of the state-run television and radio network, Salif Sanogo, told AFP.
The television station resumed broadcasts on Saturday and was being guarded by security forces.
Such fighting is rare in Bamako, which has been spared much of the violence that is routine across swathes of Mali.
The country has struggled to contain an Islamist insurgency that first emerged in the north in 2012, before spreading to the centre of the country and to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.
Thousands of soldiers and civilians have been killed and hundreds of thousands of people have been forced from their homes.
The opposition’s call for civil disobedience includes suggestions such as not paying fines, blocking entry to state buildings and occupying crossroads.
After weeks of growing political tension, Keita offered Wednesday to appoint new judges to the constitutional court.
It has been at the centre of controversy since April 29, when it overturned provisional results for March’s parliamentary poll for about 30 seats.
That saw several members of Keita’s party elected and triggered protests in several cities and is widely seen as having ignited the country’s latest crisis.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.