Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Representative to West Africa and the Sahel region, has called for credible and inclusive elections in Mali.
Chambas made the call in an interview with Reuters in the Senegalese capital, Dakar.
NAN reports that Presidential elections are scheduled to be held in Mali on Sunday.
He said: “Mali has demonstrated the capacity over the years to deliver credible and peaceful elections, among the best in the region.
“My plea is that candidates again show high responsibility.
“We cannot afford a political crisis in Mali on top of the security crisis the country is already facing.”
NAN reports that eight million people are registered to vote, with polls opening at 8 a.m. (0800 GMT) and closing at six (1800 GMT).
Ibrahim Keita, 73, is running for re-election amid a mounting death toll from jihadist attacks, ethnic killings and armed forces abuses that have become a defining feature of his presidency, in spite of thousands of French troops deployed since 2013 to contain the violence.
He faces two dozen candidates of which only one, Soumaila Cisse, 68, is seen as having a strong chance
of ousting him.
Both men are from the Saharan nation’s political elite, and IBK beat Cisse in a run-off at the 2013 poll.
All candidates have promised to reverse Mali’s decline and help impoverished villagers and urban youths.
Mali is 14th from the bottom on the UN Human Development Index, in spite of being Africa’s third biggest
gold exporter and a major cotton grower.
A billboard near the banks of the Niger river in the exhaust fume-choked capital Bamako depicts Keita in flowing
white robes and a skull cap, urging Malians to “consolidate the peace.”
Yet since he has been in power, violence has worsened. Civil society website Malilink recorded 932 attacks in the first half of 2018 — almost double that for all of 2017 and triple 2015.
In the north, where French troops stepped in to halt a Tuareg rebellion and jihadi takeover before the last poll, jihadists have killed more than 160 UN peacekeepers.
Timbuktu, once a Sahara desert tourist spot, is unstable, hit by Islamist militants as well as tensions between Arab and Tuareg traders and black Malians from the south.
Islamist violence has also spread to central Mali, where militants have attacked the pan-regional G5 Sahel force.
Killings have begun to take on an ethnic tone, as the Islamists exploit tensions over access to land and water,
while Malian troops allied with vigilante groups retaliate.
Human Rights groups have unearthed evidence that Malian troops were implicated in mass graves in central Mali.
The Defence Ministry pledged to investigate.
Keita has played down the country’s security woes.
“Today there is no warmongering in Mali,” he said after a tour of Mali’s diaspora, one of about 150 costly foreign trips that have been criticised by opponents since he took office.
“There are pockets of violence, residues of terrorism that even (French forces) … haven’t managed to vanquish from Malian soil. Are you going to blame all that on IBK?” he said.
Whoever is to blame, the violence could deter many from voting in a nation with consistently the lowest turnout in West Africa — about 40 per cent on average.
“Violence in the Mopti region and northern region is really going to depress turnout. Voters are going to stay away in the conflict ridden areas,” said U.S. researcher Bruce Whitehouse.
Thousands protested against him in Bamako in June.
Source: NAN