Soumaïla Cissé
Soumaïla Cissé (20 December 1949 – 25 December 2020) was a Malian politician who served in the government of Mali as Minister of Finance from 1993 to 2000. He thrice stood unsuccessfully as a presidential candidate, in 2002, 2013 and 2018; on all three occasions he was defeated in a second round of voting. From 2014 until his death he was President of the Union for the Republic and Democracy, a political party. Life and careerBorn in Nianfuke, near Timbuktu,[2] on 20 December 1949,[1] Soumaïla Cissé studied at l'Institut des Sciences de l'Ingénieur de Montpellier in France to become a software engineer. He worked for several large French companies (IBM-France, le Groupe Pechiney, le Groupe Thomson and the aerospace company Air Inter) before returning to Mali in 1984 to work at the Compagnie malienne pour le développement du textile (CMDT).[3] Following the creation of the Alliance for Democracy in Mali (Alliance pour la démocratie au Mali - Parti africain pour la solidarité et la justice, ADEMA-PASJ) and the 1992 election of ADEMA candidate Alpha Oumar Konaré as President, Cissé became the Secretary-General of the Presidency. In 1993, he was named Minister of Finance,[4] then in 2000, Minister of Equipment, Management of Territory, Environment, and Urban Planning in the government of Mandé Sidibé.[3] Cissé was elected as the Third Vice-President of ADEMA-PASJ at the party's first extraordinary congress, held between 25 and 28 November 2000.[5] In January 2002, he resigned from the government to devote himself to preparation for the 2002 presidential election, and ADEMA-PASJ selected him as its candidate to succeed Alpha Oumar Konaré. Cissé took second place in the first round of the election with 21.31% of the vote,[6] but he lost to Amadou Toumani Touré in the second round, taking 34.99% of the vote.[7] Considering himself overthrown by a faction of ADEMA-PASJ,[8] Cissé left the party with a group of loyalists[8] to found the Union for the Republic and Democracy (Union pour la république et la démocratie, URD) in June 2003.[3] He subsequently served as President of the Commission of the West African Monetary Union (UEMOA) from 2004 to 2011.[9][10] Cissé spoke out against the 2012 Malian coup d'état and was badly wounded on 18 April when men attacked him at his house. He spent the following period in France and Senegal.[2] Cissé ran as a candidate in the 2013 Malian presidential election. He lost in the second round to Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta.[2] At the URD's Third Ordinary Congress in November 2014, Soumaïla Cissé succeeded Younoussi Touré as President of the URD.[11] Cissé ran as candidate in the 2018 Malian presidential election. He once again lost in the second round against to Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta and obtained 32% of the vote.[2] KidnappingOn 26 March 2020, while on a campaign trip in Timbuktu region, Cissé was taken hostage by an unknown jihadist group. A few days after his kidnapping he was elected to the National Assembly, but the government confirmed that there was no news of his whereabouts.[12] It was later confirmed that he had been abducted by Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin, and he was released, alongside Sophie Pétronin, on 6 October.[13] Personal lifeCissé was married to Astan Traore since 1978.[2] Cissé died in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France on December 25, 2020, five days after he turned 71, after contracting COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[14][15] See alsoReferences
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