Ibrahima Sarr

Ibrahima Moctar Sarr (Arabic: إبراهيما مختار صار; Pulaar: Ibrahima Muktar Saar; born in 1949) is a Mauritanian journalist and politician of the Fulani ethnicity.[1] Running as an independent candidate, he placed fifth in the March 2007 presidential election, and he has been the President of the Alliance for Justice and Democracy/Movement for Renewal (AJD/MR) party since August 2007.[2]

Ibrahima Moctar Sarr
إبراهيما مختار صار
President of the AJD/MR
Assumed office
5 August 2007
Leader of the FLAM
In office
November 1983  November 1989
Preceded byParty established
Succeeded byParty abolished
Personal details
Born1949 (age 7374)
Boghé, Colony of Mauritania
Political partyAJD/MR (2007 - present)
Other political
affiliations
FLAM (1983 - 1989)
Mauritanian Workers Party
OccupationJournalist, Politician

After studying in Cesti, Senegal, Sarr trained as a teacher before working in insurance. He became politically active in 1972, being a co-founder member of the Mauritanian Workers Party. Increasingly active as a journalist, he appeared regularly on radio and television. In 1983 he was a co-founder of the African Liberation Forces of Mauritania (ex-FLAM; Force pour la Liberation Africaine de Mauritanie), and in 1986 he was a communication specialist with FLAM when they published the second edition of the Manifesto of the oppressed black Mauritanian. Following this anti-racist publication, which highlighted alleged "racial practices" by the Mauritanian Government, many black leaders were arrested and thrown to jail. Ibrahima Moctar Sarr was sentenced to four years in jail.

In 1989, after being released from jail, Sarr left and resigned from FLAM and ceased all his political activities until the democratization process was started in 1992 by President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya. Sarr then joined the Popular Progressive Alliance (APP) under Messaoud Ould Boulkheir, becoming a leading member of the party. He later left the APP.[3]

Sarr stood in the March 2007 presidential election on an anti-racist platform. In order to facilitate his candidacy, he founded the "Movement for National Reconciliation", although he stood as an independent. Claiming that "I am the candidate of the oppressed", he called for equal rights for Pulaar, Soninké and Wolof people alongside Moors, and the return of Mauritanian refugees from Senegal. Sarr came in fifth place with 7.95% of the vote in the election,[4] and he backed Ahmed Ould Daddah for the second round.[5]

Sarr's Movement for National Reconciliation subsequently merged with the Alliance for Justice and Democracy (AJD), and at an extraordinary congress to ratify the merger on August 1819, Sarr was elected as the leader of the new party, the AJD/MR.[3]

Sarr said on May 10, 2008, that the AJD/MR would not participate in the government of Prime Minister Yahya Ould Ahmed El Waghef due to many policy differences.[6][7]

Following the August 2008 military coup, Sarr and the AJD/MR expressed support for the military junta,[8] and Sarr announced on April 11, 2009, that he would be a candidate in the controversial June 2009 presidential election, which was being organized by the junta and which opposition parties were planning to boycott. Sarr then said that "the conditions are there for a free poll" and that Mauritania did not have democracy under Abdallahi's presidency.[9] The Constitutional Court approved four candidacies, including Sarr's, on April 28.[10][11]

References

  1. Mwakikagile, Godfrey, "The Gambia and Its People: Ethnic Identities and Cultural Integration in Africa", p.141, New Africa Press (2010), ISBN 9789987160235
  2. Mohamed (2022-09-24). "Qui est Ibrahima Moctar Sarr, président de AJD/MR ?". A La Une - Rapideinfo - Infos- Mauritanie - Rapidinfo.mr (in French). Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  3. Birome Guèye, "IBRAHIMA SARR, LEADER DE l’AJD/MR : En quête d’ouverture", Africanglobalnews.com, August 24, 2007 (in French).
  4. "Le conseil constitutionnel proclame les résultats du premier tour de l'élection présidentielles du 11 mars 2007", Agence Mauritanienne d'Information, March 15, 2007 (in French).
  5. "Mauritania : Ould Daddah gets support of fifth place holder for presidential runoff", African Press Agency, March 20, 2007.
  6. "L'AJD/MR annonce qu'il ne participera au nouveau gouvernement" Archived 2008-05-14 at the Wayback Machine, AMI, May 10, 2008 (in French).
  7. "Mauritania's former PM arrested, again". France 24. 2008-08-21. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
  8. "Mauritania's coup in the making". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  9. "Pro-coup leader to stand in Mauritania presidential poll", AFP, 11 April 2009.
  10. "Four cleared to run in Mauritania presidential poll", AFP, 29 April 2009.
  11. "Aziz wins presidential election, opposition dismisses 'charade'". France 24. 2009-07-19. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
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