The CNRDR representing all the elements of the armed forces, defensive forces and security forces has decided to assume its responsibilities and end the incompetent and disavowed regime of (President) Amadou Toumani Toure. All the institutions of the republic are dissolved until further notice. ... The objective of the CNRDR does not in any way aim to confiscate power, and we solemnly swear to return power to a democratically elected president as soon as national unity and territorial integrity are established.
The series  of events that culminated in  the coup began on Wednesday morning at a  military camp in the capital,  during a visit by Defense Minister Gen.  Sadio Gassama. In his speech  to the troops, the minister failed to  address the grievances of the  rank-and-file soldiers, who are angry over  what they say is the  government's mismanagement of a rebellion in the  north by Tuareg  separatists. The rebellion has claimed the lives of  numerous soldiers,  and those sent to fight are not given sufficient  supplies, including  arms or food. Their widows have not received  compensation.
Recruits  started firing into the  air Wednesday, and they stoned the general's car  as it raced away. By  afternoon, soldiers had surrounded the state  television station in  central Bamako, yanking both the television and  radio signals off the  air for more than 7 hours. By Wednesday evening,  troops had started  rioting at a military garrison located in the  northern town of Gao,  some 2,000 miles away.
A  freelance  journalist from Sweden who was driving to her hotel near the  TV  station at around 4 p.m. local time on Wednesday, said that trucks  full  of soldiers had surrounded the state broadcaster.
"We   saw a couple of trucks, with military on them. They came and started   setting up checkpoints. There were military in the streets, stopping   people," said Katarina Hoije. "When we reached our hotel which is just   in front of the TV station, there were lots of military outside, and   more cars kept arriving -- pickup trucks with soldiers on them."
She said that they set up two machine guns facing the building.
In   Washington, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said:   "The situation is currently unclear and unfolding quickly," she said.   "There are reports of military forces surrounding the presidential   palace and movement of vehicles between the palace and the military   barracks."
The Tuareg  uprising  that began in mid-January is being fueled by arms leftover from  the  civil war in neighboring Libya. Tens of thousands of people have  fled  the north, and refugees have spilled over into four of the  countries  neighboring Mali due to the uprising.
The  government has not disclosed  how many soldiers have been killed, but  the toll has been significant.  In February, military widows led a  protest. In an attempt to diffuse  tension, the Malian president allowed  himself to be filmed meeting the  widows, who publicly grilled him on his  handling of the rebellion.Source: Associated Press
