Before the Arab Spring: Democratic Transition in Mauritania
MASSACHUSETTS
The Center for Middle Eastern Studies
is pleased to present
Former president of Mauritania
Mauritania became independent from French colonial rule in 1960. In the past five decades or so of nation building, Mauritania faced a variety of developmental challenges, including poverty, drought, ethnic strife, political instability, and above all authoritarian rule. In August 2005, the Mauritanian military staged a coup that toppled President Mouawiyya Ould Ahmed Taya, the longest serving president in post–colonial Mauritania, who single-handedly ruled the country between 1984 and 2004. Led by Eli Ould Muhammad Vall, the emerging Military Council for Justice and Democracy committed to supervise the transition to democratic. In March 2007, the military organized the first fully democratic elections in the country’s post-colonial history and handed over power to elected president Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallah. After a short rule, Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallah was toppled by the military under the leadership of Muhammad b. Abd Aziz who succeeded him as a civilian-elected president. Former President Eli Vall will offer a broad overview of politics in Mauritania and answer all questions related to postcolonial challenges that the Mauritanian state is facing, including security issues, religious extremism, ethnic conflicts, and slavery.
This event is open to the public; no registration required.
Please note: This event may be photographed and videotaped by representatives of CMES for record keeping and for use on the CMES website and in other CMES publications. The use of personal recording devices is strictly prohibited.
April 27, 2015 – 5:00pm – 6:30pm