PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Mali
Geography
Area: 1,240,278 sq. km. (474,764 sq. mi.); about
the size of Texas and California combined.
Cities: Capital--Bamako
(pop. 1 million). Other
cities--Segou (200,000), Sikasso (120,000),
Mopti (90,000), Gao (65,000), Kayes (65,000),
Timbuktu (38,000).
Terrain: Savannah and desert.
Climate: Semitropical in the south; arid in the
north.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Malian(s).
Population (2006 est.): 12.5 million.
Annual growth rate: 2.4%.
Ethnic groups: Manding (Bambara or Bamana,
Malinke) 52%, Fulani 11%, Saracolé 7%, Mianka
4%, Songhai 7%, Tuareg and Maur 5%, other 14%.
Religions: Islam 90%, indigenous 6%, Christian
4%.
Languages: French (official) and Bambara (spoken
by about 80% of the population).
Education: Attendance--64.3%
(primary). Literacy--31%.
Health: Infant
mortality rate--121/1,000. Life
expectancy--47 yrs.
Work force (4 million): Agriculture--70%; services--15%; industry
and commerce--15%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: September 22, 1960.
Constitution: Approved by referendum January 12,
1992.
Branches: Executive--president
(chief of state and commander in chief of the
armed forces), prime minister (head of
government). Legislative--National
Assembly is the sole legislative arm of the
government; currently consisting of 147 members. Judicial--Supreme
Court with both judicial and administrative
powers.
Political parties: Mali is a multiparty
democracy. Fifteen political parties are
represented in the National Assembly; others are
active in local government.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Administrative subdivisions: Eight regions and
capital district.
Central government budget (2007): Revenues--$1,770
million; expenditures--$1,947
million; $177 million deficit.
Economy
GDP (2006 est.): $5.847 billion.
Avg. annual growth rate (2006 est.): 5.1%.
Per capita income (2006 est.): $470.
Annual skilled worker's salary: $1,560.
Avg. inflation rate (2005): -1.1%.
Natural resources: Gold, phosphate, kaolin,
salt, and limestone currently mined; deposits of
oil, bauxite, iron ore, manganese, lithium, and
uranium are known or suspected.
Agriculture, livestock, and fishery (36% of
GDP): Products--millet,
sorghum, corn, rice, livestock, sugar, cotton,
groundnuts (peanuts), and tobacco.
Industry (24% of GDP): Types--food
processing, textiles, cigarettes, fish
processing, metalworking, light manufacturing,
plastics, and beverage bottling.
Services (40% of GDP): Telecommunications,
construction.
Trade (2004): Exports--$1,078
million: cotton and cotton products, animals,
fish, tannery products, groundnuts, diamonds,
and gold. Major
markets--France, Switzerland, Italy,
Thailand, Cote d'Ivoire, and Algeria. Imports--$1,084
million: food, machinery and spare parts,
vehicles, petroleum products, chemicals and
pharmaceuticals, textiles. Major
suppliers--France, Cote d'Ivoire, Belgium,
Luxembourg, U.S. ($43 million), Germany, and
Japan.
PEOPLE
Mali's population consists of diverse
Sub-Saharan ethnic groups, sharing similar
historic, cultural, and religious traditions.
Exceptions are the Tuaregs and Maurs, desert
nomads, related to the North African Berbers.
The Tuaregs traditionally have opposed the
central government. Starting in June 1990, armed
attacks in the north by Tuaregs seeking greater
autonomy led to clashes with the military. In
April 1992, the government and most opposing
factions signed a pact to end the fighting and
restore stability in the north. Its major aims
are to allow greater autonomy to the north and
increase government resource allocation to what
has been a traditionally impoverished region.
The peace agreement was celebrated in 1996 in
Timbuktu during an official and highly
publicized ceremony called Flamme
de la Paix--peace flame.
Historically, good inter-ethnic relations
throughout the rest of the country were
facilitated by easy mobility on the Niger River
and across the country's vast savannahs. Each
ethnic group was traditionally tied to a
specific occupation, all working within close
proximity. The Bambara, Malinke, and Dogon are
farmers; the Fulani, Maur, and Tuareg are
herders; the Soninkés or Saracolés are traders;
while the Bozo are fishers. In recent years,
this linkage has shifted as ethnic groups seek
diverse, nontraditional sources of income.
Although each ethnic group speaks a separate
language, nearly 80% of Malians communicate in
Bambara, the common language of the marketplace.
Malians enjoy a relative harmony rare in African
states.
HISTORY
Malians express great pride in their ancestry.
Mali is the cultural heir to the succession of
ancient African empires--Ghana, Malinké, and
Songhai--that occupied the West African
savannah. These empires controlled Saharan trade
and were in touch with Mediterranean and Middle
Eastern centers of civilization.
The Ghana Empire, dominated by the Soninke or
Saracolé people and centered in the area along
the Malian-Mauritanian frontier, was a powerful
trading state from about A.D. 700 to 1075. The
Malinke Kingdom of Mali had its origins on the
upper Niger River in the 11th century. Expanding
rapidly in the 13th century under the leadership
of Soundiata Keita, it reached its height about
1325, when it conquered Timbuktu and Gao.
Thereafter, the kingdom began to decline, and by
the 15th century, it controlled only a small
fraction of its former domain.
The Songhai Empire expanded its power from its
center in Gao during the period 1465-1530. At
its peak under Askia Mohammad I, it encompassed
the Hausa states as far as Kano (in present-day
Nigeria) and much of the territory that had
belonged to the Mali Empire in the west. It was
destroyed by a Moroccan invasion in 1591.
Timbuktu was a center of commerce and of the
Islamic faith throughout this period, and
priceless manuscripts from this epoch are still
preserved in Timbuktu. The United States and
other donors are making efforts to help preserve
these priceless manuscripts as part of Mali's
cultural heritage.
French military penetration of the Soudan (the
French name for the area) began around 1880. Ten
years later, the French made a concerted effort
to occupy the interior. The timing and resident
military governors determined methods of their
advances. A French civilian governor of Soudan
was appointed in 1893, but resistance to French
control did not end until 1898, when the Malinké
warrior Samory Touré was defeated after 7 years
of war. The French attempted to rule indirectly,
but in many areas they disregarded traditional
authorities and governed through appointed
chiefs. As the colony of French Soudan, Mali was
administered with other French colonial
territories as the Federation of French West
Africa.
In 1956, with the passing of France's
Fundamental Law (Loi Cadre), the Territorial
Assembly obtained extensive powers over internal
affairs and was permitted to form a cabinet with
executive authority over matters within the
Assembly's competence. After the 1958 French
constitutional referendum, the Republique
Soudanaise became
a member of the French Community and enjoyed
complete internal autonomy.
In January 1959, Soudan joined Senegal to form
the Mali Federation, which became fully
independent within the French Community on June
20, 1960. The federation collapsed on August 20,
1960, when Senegal seceded. On September 22,
Soudan proclaimed itself the Republic of Mali
and withdrew from the French Community.
President Modibo Keita--whose party Union
Soudanaise du Rassemblement Democratique
Africain (US/RDA)
had dominated preindependence politics--moved
quickly to declare a single-party state and to
pursue a socialist policy based on extensive
nationalization. A continuously deteriorating
economy led to a decision to rejoin the Franc
Zone in 1967 and modify some of the economic
excesses.
On November 19, 1968, a group of young officers
staged a bloodless coup and set up a 14-member
Military Committee for National Liberation
(CMLN), with Lt. Moussa Traore as President. The
military leaders attempted to pursue economic
reforms but for several years faced debilitating
internal political struggles and the disastrous
Sahelian drought.
A new constitution, approved in 1974, created a
one-party state and was designed to move Mali
toward civilian rule. However, the military
leaders remained in power. In September 1976, a
new political party was established, the
Democratic Union of the Malian People (UDPM),
based on the concept of democratic centralism.
Single-party presidential and legislative
elections were held in June 1979, and Gen.
Moussa Traore received 99% of the votes. His
efforts at consolidating the single-party
government were challenged in 1980 by
student-led, anti-government demonstrations,
which were brutally put down, and by three coup
attempts.
The political situation stabilized during 1981
and 1982 and remained generally calm throughout
the 1980s. The UDPM spread its structure to cercles and arrondissements (administrative
subdivisions) across the land. Shifting its
attention to Mali's economic difficulties, the
government approved plans for cereal marketing
liberalization, reform in the state enterprise
system, and new incentives to private
enterprise, and worked out a new structural
adjustment agreement with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). However, by 1990, there was
growing dissatisfaction with the demands for
austerity imposed by the IMF's economic reform
programs and the perception that the President
and his close associates were not themselves
adhering to those demands.
As in other African countries, demands for
multiparty democracy increased. The Traore
government allowed some opening of the system,
including the establishment of an independent
press and independent political associations,
but insisted that Mali was not ready for
democracy. In early 1991, student-led,
anti-government rioting broke out again, but
this time government workers and others
supported it. On March 26, 1991, after 4 days of
intense anti-government rioting, a group of 17
military officers arrested President Traore and
suspended the constitution. Within days, these
officers joined with the Coordinating Committee
of Democratic Associations to form a
predominantly civilian, 25-member ruling body,
the Transitional Committee for the Salvation of
the People (CTSP). The CTSP then appointed a
civilian-led government. A national conference
held in August 1991 produced a draft
constitution (approved in a referendum January
12, 1992), a charter for political parties, and
an electoral code. Political parties were
allowed to form freely. Between January and
April 1992, a president, National Assembly, and
municipal councils were elected. On June 8,
1992, Alpha Oumar Konare, the candidate of the
Alliance for Democracy in Mali (ADEMA), was
inaugurated as the President of Mali's Third
Republic.
In 1997, attempts to renew national institutions
through democratic elections ran into
administrative difficulties, resulting in a
court-ordered annulment of the legislative
elections held in April 1997. The exercise,
nonetheless, demonstrated the overwhelming
strength of President Konare's ADEMA Party,
causing some other historic parties to boycott
subsequent elections. President Konare won the
presidential election against scant opposition
on May 11. In the two-round legislative
elections conducted on July 21 and August 3,
1997, ADEMA secured more than 80% of the
National Assembly seats.
General elections were organized in June and
July 2002. President Konare did not seek
reelection since he was serving his second and
last term as required by the constitution. All
political parties participated in the elections.
In preparation for the elections, the government
completed a new voter's list after a general
census was administered a few months earlier
with the support of all political parties.
Retired General Amadou Toumani Toure, former
head of state during Mali's transition
(1991-1992) became the country's second
democratically elected President as an
independent candidate in 2002, and was reelected
to a second 5-year term in 2007.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Under Mali's 1992 constitution, the president is
chief of state and commander in chief of the
armed forces. The president is elected to a
5-year term, with a limit of two terms. The
president appoints the prime minister as head of
government. The president chairs the Council of
Ministers (the prime minister and currently 28
other ministers, including 5 women), which
adopts proposals for laws submitted to the
National Assembly for approval.
The National Assembly is the sole legislative
arm of the government. It currently consists of
147 members. Representation is apportioned
according to the population of administrative
districts. Election is direct and by party or
independent list. The term of office is 5 years.
The Assembly meets for two regular sessions each
year. It debates and votes on legislation
proposed either by one of its members or by the
government and has the right to question
government ministers about government actions
and policies. Sixteen political parties,
aggregated into five parliamentary groups, are
represented in the Assembly. In legislative
elections held in July 2007, the ADEMA Party
regained the majority it lost in 2002, winning
51 seats, ahead of another party aligned with
President Toure, the Union for Republic and
Democracy (URD), which won 36. The former
majority party at the National Assembly, the Rassemblement
Pour le Mali (RPM) of
former Prime Minister Ibrahim B. Keita, won 11
seats. Other than the RPM, President Toure has
the support of most of the political parties
represented in the National Assembly.
Mali's constitution provides for a multiparty
democracy, with the only restriction being a
prohibition against parties based on ethnic,
religious, regional, or gender lines. In
addition to those political parties represented
in the National Assembly, others are active in
municipal councils.
Administratively, Mali is divided into eight
regions and the capital district of Bamako, each
under the authority of an appointed governor.
Each region consists of five to nine districts
(or cercles),
administered by prefets (commandants).
Cercles are divided into communes, which, in
turn, are divided into villages or quarters. The
decentralization process has started with the
establishment of 702 elected municipal councils,
headed by elected mayors. Election of local
officials took place; greater local control over
finances and the reduction of administrative
control by the central government are being
implemented.
Mali's legal system is based on codes inherited
at independence from France. New laws have been
enacted to make the system conform to Malian
life, but French colonial laws not abrogated
still have the force of law. The constitution
provides for the independence of the judiciary.
However, the Ministry of Justice appoints judges
and supervises both law enforcement and judicial
functions. The Supreme Court has both judicial
and administrative powers. Under the
constitution, there is a separate constitutional
court and a high court of justice with the power
to try senior government officials in cases of
treason.
Principal Government Officials
President--Amadou Toumani Touré
Prime Minister--Modibo Sidibe
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Moctar Ouane
Minister of Economy, Industry and Commerce--Ba
Fatoumata Nene Sy
Minister of Finance--Abou-Bakar Traoré
Minister of Defense--Natie Plea
Ambassador to the U.S.--Abdoulaye Diop
Ambassador to the United Nations--Cheick Sidi
Diarra
Mali maintains an embassy in the United States
at 2130 R Street NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel.
202-332-2249), and a permanent mission to the
United Nations at 111 E. 69th Street, New York,
NY 10020 (212-734-4150).
ECONOMY
Mali's per capita gross domestic product
(GDP) of $470 (2006 est.) places it among the
world's 10 poorest nations. Its potential wealth
lies in mining and the production of
agricultural commodities, livestock, and fish.
Agricultural activities occupy 70% of Mali's
labor force and provide 36% of the GDP. Cotton,
gold, and livestock made up 80%-90% of total
export earnings in Mali in 2006. Small-scale
traditional farming dominates the agricultural
sector, with subsistence farming--of cereals,
primarily sorghum, millet, and maize--on about
90% of the 1.4 million hectares (3.4 million
acres) under cultivation. The high cost of
petroleum products, the fall in the world market
price for cotton and gold, and corresponding
loss of customs revenues put pressure on the
economy and led the government to be very tight
on cash disbursements in recent years. In
addition, the 2002-2003 closure of the main
import/export route to the port of Abidjan
increased the pressure on the fragile Malian
economy. Nonetheless, a focus on quality cotton
production and double-digit increases in cereal
and gold production boosted real GDP growth from
2.2% in 2004 to 5.1% in 2005.
The most productive agricultural area lies along
the banks of the Niger River between Bamako and
Mopti and extends south to the borders of
Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire, and Burkina Faso. Average
rainfall varies in this region from 50
centimeters per year (20 in.) around Mopti to
140 centimeters (55 in.) in the south near
Sikasso. This area is most important for the
production of cotton, rice, millet, corn,
vegetables, tobacco, and tree crops.
Rice is grown extensively along the banks of the
Niger between Ségou and Mopti, with the most
important rice-producing area at the Office du
Niger, located north of Ségou toward the
Mauritanian border. Using water diverted from
the Niger, the Office du Niger irrigates about
80,000 hectares of land for rice and sugarcane
production. About one-third of Mali's paddy rice
is produced at the Office du Niger.
The Niger River also is an important source of
fish, providing food for riverside communities;
the surplus--smoked, salted, and dried--is
exported. Due to drought and diversion of river
water for agriculture, fish production has
steadily declined since the early 1980s. The
government has started plans to develop fish
breeding, mainly in the Niger delta, in order to
boost fish production.
Sorghum is planted extensively in the drier
parts of the country and along the banks of the
Niger in eastern Mali, as well as in the
lakebeds in the Niger delta region. During the
dry season, farmers near the town of Diré have
cultivated wheat on irrigated fields for
hundreds of years. Peanuts are grown throughout
the country but are concentrated in the area
around Kita, west of Bamako.
Mali's resource in livestock consists of
millions of cattle, sheep, and goats.
Approximately 40% of Mali's herds were lost
during the great drought in 1972-74. The level
was gradually restored, but the herds were again
decimated in the 1983-85 drought. The overall
size of Mali's herds is not expected to reach
pre-drought levels in the north of the country,
where encroachment of the desert has forced many
nomadic herders to abandon pastoral activities
and turn instead to farming. The largest
concentrations of cattle are in the areas north
of Bamako and Ségou extending into the Niger
delta, but herding activity is gradually
shifting southward, due to the effects of
previous droughts.
With the technical support of U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID)-funded
projects, private cooperatives developed a
regional border market in the southern city of
Sikasso. Livestock professionals contributed to
a steady increase in cattle exports. Sheep,
goats, and camels are raised to the exclusion of
cattle in the dry areas north and east of
Timbuktu.
Until the mid-1960s, Mali was self-sufficient in
grains--millet, sorghum, rice, and corn.
Diminished harvests during bad years, a growing
population, changing dietary habits, and, most
importantly, policy constraints on agricultural
production resulted in grain deficits almost
every year from 1965 to 1986. Production has
rebounded since 1987, however, thanks to
agricultural policy reforms undertaken by the
government and supported by the Western donor
nations. Liberalization of producer prices and
an open cereals market have created incentives
to production. These reforms, combined with
adequate rainfall, successful integrated rural
agriculture programs in the south, and improved
management of the Office du Niger, have led to
surplus cereal production over the past 5 years.
Except for 2002 and 2004, annual rainfall,
critical for Mali's agriculture, has been at or
above average since 1993. Cereal production,
including rice, grew annually until 2002, when
the country experienced a food production
deficit, alleviated by donors' massive
contributions to food security stocks. Locust
infestation during the 2004 agricultural
campaign prompted the government to seek
assistance from the donor community in order to
fill the gap in the regions that had a
significant production deficit. The government
anticipated a record harvest of 3.4 million tons
in 2006/2007 due to abundant rainfall, 16% more
than the average production of the previous 5
years. Mali’s cotton production grew from
500,000 tons in 1997 to a record 620,000 tons in
2003-2004, making Mali the largest cotton
producer on the African continent. In 2004-2005
and 2005-2006, cotton production retreated
respectively to 590,000 and 500,000 tons as the
parastatal cotton company CMDT focused on
quality of harvested cotton rather than
quantity.
Mining is still a growing industry in Mali, with
gold accounting for some 80% of mining activity.
There are considerable proven reserves of other
minerals not currently exploited. In 2002, gold
briefly became Mali's number one export, before
cotton and livestock. There are two large
private investments in gold mining:
Anglo-American ($250 million) and Randgold ($140
million), both multinational South African
companies located respectively in the western
and southern part of the country.
During the colonial period, private capital
investment was virtually nonexistent, and public
investment was devoted largely to the Office du
Niger irrigation scheme and to administrative
expenses. Following independence, Mali built
some light industries with the help of various
donors. Manufacturing, consisting principally of
processed agricultural products, accounted for
about 24% of the GDP in 2005.
Tourism remains a small part of Mali's economy;
it is a sector with significant potential.
Mali's national parks, its ancient cities and
archeological sites, Niger River cruises,
cultural festivals, and magnificent desert
landscapes are major attractions. Mali also is
home to a rare herd of elephants that continues
its unique annual migration to the edges of the
Sahara Desert in the northern part of the
country.
Economic Reforms
With the encouragement of the major donors and
international financial institutions, the
Government of Mali initiated a series of
adjustment and stabilization programs beginning
in 1982. Measures were introduced to reduce
budgetary deficits, public enterprise operating
losses, and public sector arrears.
Under the economic reform program signed with
the World Bank and the IMF in 1988, the
government has taken a number of steps to
liberalize the regulatory environment and
thereby attract private investment. For example,
applications for the establishment of business
enterprises now enjoy "one window"--guichet
unique--processing through a single
ministry, allowing a business to be established
in a matter of days. In addition, price controls
on consumer goods have been progressively
eliminated; the last price control, on petroleum
products, was removed on July 1, 1992. Import
quotas were eliminated in 1988, and export taxes
were dropped in 1991. The Commerce Code was
revised in 1991 to remove impediments to
commercial activity. The investment and the
mining codes also were revised in the early
1990s in order to present a good investment
climate. Also in 1991, a system of commercial
and administrative courts was established to
handle private trade complaints and claims
against the government.
During the period 1988-96, the government
implemented a large reform program of the public
enterprise sector, including the privatization
of 16 enterprises, the partial privatization of
12, and the liquidation of 20; others were
restructured. Among the 20 enterprises left,
eight were privatized, including the
largest--the electricity and water company
(Energie du Mali, or EDM), and the textile
company (Industry Textile du Mali, or ITEMA).
The privatization of EDM was initially
considered as a success, but the company
returned to the government portfolio in mid-2005
when the French concessionaire SAUR and the
Government of Mali agreed to end the 20-year
concession. The government completed the
concession of the railroad company to the Salt
Lake City-based Savage Corporation in 2005. The
privatization process for the cotton seed oil
factory (Huilerie Cotonniere du Mali, or
Huicoma), was completed in June 2005. The
privatization completion date for two major
companies--Societé de Telecommunications du Mali
(SOTELMA) and the Cotton Ginning Company
(CMDT)--is still uncertain, although target
dates are set for 2008.
In 1999, the executive board of the IMF approved
a 3-year loan for Mali under the enhanced
structural adjustment facility (ESAF) to support
the government's economic reform program, for a
total of $63 million. For the third ESAF
covering the period April 1999-March 2002, the
IMF board of directors urged the Malian
authorities to persevere with their policy of
fiscal consolidation, including the modernizing
of the tax system, and to deepen and accelerate
structural reforms and rehabilitate the judicial
system. Mali was selected in 1999 as an eligible
country to the Highly Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) program and has been benefiting from the
program since FY 2000 as a budgetary support. In
April 2003, Mali reached the HIPC completion
point with the result that former debt payments
will now be used to fund poverty alleviation
programs. Total debt relief under the original
and the enhanced HIPC initiative will amount to
about $539 million, representing a 37%
reduction. As one of 14 African nations that
have reached the HIPC completion point, Mali
will benefit from multilateral debt forgiveness
under the G8 Gleneagles debt forgiveness
agreement.
Foreign Aid
Mali is a major recipient of foreign aid from
many sources, including multilateral
organizations (most significantly the World
Bank, the African Development Bank, and Arab
Funds), and bilateral programs funded by the
European Union, France, United States, Canada,
Netherlands, and Germany. Before 1991, the
former Soviet Union had been a major source of
economic and military aid, including
construction of a cement plant and the Kalana
gold mine. Currently, aid from Russia is
restricted mainly to training and provision of
spare parts. Chinese aid remains high, and
Chinese-Malian joint venture companies became
more numerous during the period 1999-2002,
leading to the opening of a Chinese investment
center. The Chinese are major participants in
the textile and the sugar refinery industries
and in large-scale construction projects,
including irrigation infrastructures in the
Niger Valley Authority (Office du Niger), a
bridge across the Niger, a conference center, an
expressway in Bamako, a new national stadium in
Bamako, four regional stadiums completed for the
Africa Cup competition in 2002, and three
regional stadiums that were to be completed by
June 2007.
In 2003, U.S. assistance reached $44.2 million:
This included $40.7 million in sector support
made available through U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) programs; a
Peace Corps program budget of $2.8 million for
190 volunteers serving in Mali; Self-Help and
the Democracy Funds of $153,000; and State
Department Public Diplomacy Funds of $300,000
for educational opportunities and local
projects. Military assistance includes $100,000
for the International Military Education
Training (IMET) program, and $200,000 for the
Regional Defense Counter Terrorism Fellowship
(RDCTF) program. The Department of State
dedicated $1.05 million to train militaries of
the Pan Sahel countries, including Mali. Mali
was granted eligibility for funding from the
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) in 2004 and
2005. The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC)
and the Government of Mali signed a compact in
October 2006 for a U.S. $460 million grant to
support Mali’s proposal for an agro-business
development, airport modernization and
extension, and an industrial zone development.
Mali was also granted eligibility for funding
from the President’s Malaria Initiative for
about U.S. $75 million.
DEFENSE
Mali's armed forces number some 7,000
and are under the control of the Minister of
Defense and Veterans, as is the National Guard.
The Gendarmerie and local police forces are
under the Ministry of Security and Civil
Protection. The police and gendarmes share
responsibility for internal security; the police
are in charge of urban areas only. In the 1960s
and 1970s, Mali's Army and Air Force relied
primarily on the Soviet Union for materiel and
training. A few Malians receive military
training in the United States, France, and
Germany. Under the Pan Sahel Initiative, more
troops got training and equipment in 2003-2004
and in subsequent years. Military expenditures
total about 13% of the national budget.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Since independence in 1960, Malian governments
have shifted from an ideological commitment to
socialism and a policy alignment with communist
states to pragmatism that judges issues and
their merits, welcomes assistance from all
sources, and encourages private investment. The
present government, which assumed office in
2002, is committed to democracy, economic
reform, free market policies, regional
integration, and international cooperation on
peacekeeping and counter-terrorism activities.
Mali is a member of the UN and many of its
specialized agencies, including the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World
Bank; the International Labor Organization (ILO);
the International Telecommunications Union (ITU);
and the Universal Postal Union (UPU). It also
belongs to the African Union (AU); the
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC);
the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM); and the African
Development Bank (ADB). Mali also is an
associate member of the European Union (EU).
Mali is active in regional organizations. It
participates in the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) and the West African
Economic Monetary Union (UEMOA) for regional
economic integration; Liptako-Gourma Authority,
which seeks to develop the contiguous areas of
Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso; the Niger River
Commission; the Permanent Interstate Committee
for Drought Control in the Sahel (CILSS); and
the Senegal River Valley Development
Organization (OMVS).
U.S.-MALIAN RELATIONS
U.S.-Malian relations are excellent and
expanding. They are based on shared goals of
averting suffering and strengthening democracy.
The bilateral agenda is dominated by efforts to
increase broad-based growth, improve health and
educational facilities, promote the sustainable
use of natural resources, reduce the population
growth rate, counter the spread of highly
infectious diseases, encourage regional
stability, build peacekeeping capabilities,
institutionalize respect for human rights, and
strengthen democratic institutions in offering
good governance. Mali currently is a small
market for U.S. trade and investment, but there
is potential for considerable growth as its
economy expands.
Mali is a leading regional partner in the Global
War on Terrorism. Mali also serves as an
important laboratory for testing new
anti-malaria medicines for use by American
citizen travelers and for research that will
have an Africa-wide impact. USAID, Peace Corps,
and other U.S. Government programs play a
significant role in fostering sustainable
economic and social development. USAID programs
also strengthen efforts to consolidate the peace
process in northern Mali and the region's
socioeconomic and political integration. Defense
Department security assistance programs and
training support help permit Mali to achieve its
potential in international peacekeeping and
counter-terrorism efforts.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Gillian A. Milovanovic
Deputy Chief of Mission--Mary Beth Leonard
Director, USAID Mission--Alex Newton
Director, Peace Corps--vacant
Public Affairs Officer--Stephanie Syptak
Management Officer--Matthew Cook
Political/Economic Officer--Aaron Sampson
Consular Officer--Scott Reese
Defense Attaché--LTC Marshall Mantiply
The U.S.
Embassy is
located at ACI 2000 Rue 243, Porte 297, Bamako,
tel.: (223) 270 2300, fax: (223) 270 2479. The
mailing address is BP 34, Bamako, Mali. The
embassy website is http://mali.usembassy.gov/.
Embassy hours are 7:30 a.m-5:00 p.m., Monday
through Thursday and 7:30 am-11:30 am on Friday.