Mauritanian President Abdellahi ousted in military coup

2008-08-06

A military coup led by General Mohamed Ould Abdelaziz has ousted Mauritanian President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdellahi from power and created a Council of State to govern the country. Mauritanians are divided over the move, while the international community condemned the overthrow of democracy.

Mohamed Ould Khayar, Mohamed Yahya Ould Abdel Wedoud and Mohamed Ould Khattat contributed to this report for Magharebia – 06/08/08

[Mohamed Ould Khattat] Soldiers were positioned throughout Nouakchott on Wednesday following a military coup to oust President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdellahi.

Mauritanians awoke Wednesday morning (August 6th) to a radio broadcast announcing a presidential decree dismissing the chiefs of staff of the army, the Presidential Guard, the National Guard and the Gendarmerie.

An hour later, acting on orders from General Mohamed Ould Abdelaziz, the head of the Presidential Guard, a group of soldiers arrived at the presidential headquarters and took away President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdellahi.

"There are armed guards outside our lounge and kitchen," the president's daughter Amal Mint Cheikh Abdellahi told Radio France Internationale.

Prime Minister Yahya Ould Ahmed Waghf was also seized.

"The military suddenly turned against the President and took things into their own hands," said presidential spokesman Ahmed Ba.

No gunshots or violence were reported during the operation, which was carried out under the leadership of General Abdelaziz and Generals Mohamed Ould Ghazouani and Félix Négri. Radio and television broadcasts were briefly shut down. When service was restored, the military broadcast a looped recording of "Communiqué Number One", which described President Abdellahi's dismissal of the military officials as "null and void" and announced the creation of a Council of State to rule the country.

The coup follows months of conflict between Parliament and the president, culminating on Monday in the mass resignation of a majority of MPs from the ruling National Pact for Democracy and Development (PNDD). Some political observers have called the MPs' walkout a "constitutional, democratic coup" expressing dissatisfaction with the president and his policies since coming to power one and a half years ago.

"The democratic coup in the country took place days before the military coup," political analyst Mohammed Yahzih Ould Bab Ahmed told Magharebia. "The President lost the parliamentary majority which was supporting his programme, and which introduced the vote of confidence against the previous government. It was about to do the same with the current government, although most of its ministers support Parliament. Therefore, the President had only two options: either disband Parliament or to fire the generals who were accused of supporting the MPs."

"Neither option was in his favour," said the analyst.

Mohammed Mukhtar Ould Zamil, a MP supporting the coup, accused President Abdellahi of "distancing himself from the consultation approach" by refusing to hold an emergency session on "reinforcing democracy".

"It was the National Army which brought democracy, and it is the Army which protects democracy today in light of the political deadlock which started some time ago," Ould Zamil said.

Mohamed Ould Maouloud, President of the Union of the Forces of Progress party, told reporters that "the military took with their left hand what they had given with their right hand." He considered the coup "a disaster for the Mauritanian people, who waited a long time for freedom and democracy."

Mohamed Ould Kerballi, a member of the national council of the majority Adil party told Magharebia: "The president has lost his authority to such an extent that he has turned his back on all his political supporters."

In the street, public opinion was divided on why the coup took place, and whether it was a positive development for Mauritania.

Many Mauritanians were not surprised by the military action.

Newsagent Melainine Ould Cheick said: "Since the president declared on Al Jazeera that he was being supported by the military during the presidential election, I don’t see how he can complain if... he recognises that they were the ones who worked his victory."

Nurse Aminata Bâ offered an additional bit of analysis.

"The deposed president sorted out the problem of the black Mauritanian refugees… He was even prepared to try the military officers implicated in the ethnic purges and punishments suffered by black Mauritanian military officers. Perhaps this is the reason behind him being deposed by the military."

Passer-by Said Ahmed supported the change.

"So far, the president hasn't been able to make any economic, social or political reforms," Ahmed told Magharebia. "The president tried to disrupt the work of Parliament more than once, and has actually threatened to disband it; something that would have brought Mauritania back to the pre-change era before August 3rd, 2005."

Communications specialist El Weli Ould Sidi Haiba agreed.

"The fact that [President Abdellahi] has been trying to prevent a senatorial inquiry concerning public money received by his wife's foundation has set a dangerous precedent. Similarly, the obstacles he has put in the way of a majority vote from MPs to set up a High Court of Justice with the power to judge him have been seen as a way of seizing power."

Mohamed Salem, a market trader in fabrics, denounced the putsch.

"I'm against coups; I’m ashamed that my country has been recognised by the international community as heading down the right road, but now it is being seen as a country where coups take place."

The African Union issued a statement condemning the coup and demanding "the restoration of constitutional legality".

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The European Commission said it is "very concerned by the situation in Mauritania, which puts into question the remarkable democratic progress in this country".

US State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos called the Abdellahi government "a constitutional government, democratically elected, and we condemn the act".

The capital was calm throughout the day on Wednesday. Soldiers were positioned close to the presidential headquarters and around the radio and television stations, and the people of Nouakchott went about their daily business.

Public demonstrations in support of the coup are expected to be organised on Thursday.

This content was commissioned for Magharebia.com.
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champion Posted 28 days ago

The solution is to integrate an autonomous Mauritania into the Moroccan monarchy. The Mauritanian people would elect a prime minister and a parliament, but the army would be under royal-federal control, such that there would be no more coups d’états.

slim16 Posted 25 days ago

You are truly the champion of stupidity! You are a colonialist with a medieval mindset! You dream as if you were living a century ago! Mauritania does not need your foolish autonomy! I think autonomy must be in style over there. It is like your kids’ candy or chewing gum. You would do better to learn to respect other people, so that you yourself may be respected. Mauritania’s democracy is better than yours, so open your eyes to tolerance and to respecting human beings! Forget your idiocy!

houssan Posted 25 days ago

The coup led by generals is very important for Morocco because Morocco needs help from the south. As regards democracy, Arabs should not enjoy it because they are stupid in everything.

champion Posted 24 days ago

The Scots are no idiots, and yet they accept the English monarchy in a federal framework called the United Kingdom. Mauritania is a country only in name; it does not have a viable economy or a future or history that is separate from that of the sultanate of Morocco. Could you remind who the Mauritanian kings were? In fact, the name itself, “Mauritania”, is a Roman name that Morocco borrowed from the French colonisers.

Mohamed Posted 23 days ago

My warmest congratulations go to our soldiers, men who are patriotic and conscientious. Keep on building your patriotic vision!

slim16 Posted 22 days ago

To Champion: You seem to want to live in the past and want to take down all the countries that have a flag, president, constitution and so on with you. You seem to have forgotten that kingdoms are not the only form of governance. History wanted Mauritania to be an independent country and a republic. What is happening there is a result of democracy, a young, one-year-old democracy. The Mauritanians are learning to live according to a modern political schema, with all of the good and bad things it includes. They have chosen a republic and it is up to them alone to make use of their liberty. You seem to say that the Scots are not idiots, as they accepted English monarchy. Why then has Ireland’s IRA been making war for so long? Are the Irish idiots? I think, my dear friend, that you need to open your eyes and look beyond this kingdom that is imprisoning your mind. Be free and use your ability to think like you seem to be able to. Shake your chains off!

Salem Posted 21 days ago

Stop your nonesense, you are living outside the boundaries of history. It is better for you to go to the benches of an elimentary school to study history and geography of the region and after that you can bark any neigbor you want. I advise you to hide your stupid mind. All the brothers in Morroco know very well the rich Mauritanian contribution to the Arab world and the region particularly. You are silly exception.

Adam Thièye Posted 21 days ago

I think that certain comment does need to be valided to site because it creates more problems than solutions. The champion's comment can put fire between Mauritania and Marocco. I want people to be more kind with every one

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