Post by Tukuler al~Takruri on Apr 19, 2012 3:25:02 GMT -5
Mali's new prime minister, Cheick Modibo Diarra, is an
accomplished astrophysicist who worked on five NASA missions
and became a US citizen, but said he never forgot the Malian
town of his birth.
He earned degrees from universities in France and the United
States, where he later taught mechanical and aerospace
engineering before returning to Mali to found a political party
ahead of an aborted presidential run.
He had planned on running in Mali's April 29 election, but that
vote was scrapped following a coup by junior army officers on
March 22.
On Thursday, he was named prime minister by interim president
Dioncounda Traore, charged with heading a transitional
government which aims to organise fresh elections and restore
civilian rule in a country where Tuareg and Islamist rebels now
control more than half the territory.
Before joining Malian politics, Diarra served as Microsoft's Africa
chairman.
Born in 1952 in the small western town of Nioro, Diarra
graduated from Pierre & Marie Curie University in Paris in 1976
and in 1987 earned a PhD from Howard University in Washington
DC, according to a biography on Microsoft's company website.
He taught at Howard, then joined the US space agency NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory and worked as an interplanetary
navigator on the Magellan mission to Venus and the Ulysses
mission to the poles of the sun, among others.
But, in his 2000 book "Interplanetary Navigator", Diarra wrote
that long before his prestigious career began, he was shaped by
the values of his ancestors in central Mali.
"I am an heir to hard workers of the land, who instilled in me a
work ethic and a love for the work of the countryside," he wrote.
The married father of three said he was driven to run for the
Malian presidency by his desire to better the lives of the
country's rural poor.
"I returned to my country to cultivate my land in Segou from 2003
to 2006.... I cultivated the land of my fathers until 2007, before
owning and cultivating my own land," he wrote on his campaign
website.
"My top concern today is the promotion of the rural world, the
development of agriculture and livestock and fisheries," the
former UNESCO goodwill ambassador further wrote.
While in Mali and working on his land, Diarra was approached by
Bill Gates to serve as Microsoft's Africa chairman, the Microsoft
biography said.
When he launched his political party, the Rally for Development in
Mali in the capital Bamako on March 2011, he said that "politics
must not only be a matter for professionals."
According to Mali's constitution, a fresh election must be
organised within 40 days.
But the West African bloc ECOWAS, which brokered the April 6
deal that forced the junta to quit power, recognised that it could
take longer to organise given Mali's persisting political and
military crises.
accomplished astrophysicist who worked on five NASA missions
and became a US citizen, but said he never forgot the Malian
town of his birth.
He earned degrees from universities in France and the United
States, where he later taught mechanical and aerospace
engineering before returning to Mali to found a political party
ahead of an aborted presidential run.
He had planned on running in Mali's April 29 election, but that
vote was scrapped following a coup by junior army officers on
March 22.
On Thursday, he was named prime minister by interim president
Dioncounda Traore, charged with heading a transitional
government which aims to organise fresh elections and restore
civilian rule in a country where Tuareg and Islamist rebels now
control more than half the territory.
Before joining Malian politics, Diarra served as Microsoft's Africa
chairman.
Born in 1952 in the small western town of Nioro, Diarra
graduated from Pierre & Marie Curie University in Paris in 1976
and in 1987 earned a PhD from Howard University in Washington
DC, according to a biography on Microsoft's company website.
He taught at Howard, then joined the US space agency NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory and worked as an interplanetary
navigator on the Magellan mission to Venus and the Ulysses
mission to the poles of the sun, among others.
But, in his 2000 book "Interplanetary Navigator", Diarra wrote
that long before his prestigious career began, he was shaped by
the values of his ancestors in central Mali.
"I am an heir to hard workers of the land, who instilled in me a
work ethic and a love for the work of the countryside," he wrote.
The married father of three said he was driven to run for the
Malian presidency by his desire to better the lives of the
country's rural poor.
"I returned to my country to cultivate my land in Segou from 2003
to 2006.... I cultivated the land of my fathers until 2007, before
owning and cultivating my own land," he wrote on his campaign
website.
"My top concern today is the promotion of the rural world, the
development of agriculture and livestock and fisheries," the
former UNESCO goodwill ambassador further wrote.
While in Mali and working on his land, Diarra was approached by
Bill Gates to serve as Microsoft's Africa chairman, the Microsoft
biography said.
When he launched his political party, the Rally for Development in
Mali in the capital Bamako on March 2011, he said that "politics
must not only be a matter for professionals."
According to Mali's constitution, a fresh election must be
organised within 40 days.
But the West African bloc ECOWAS, which brokered the April 6
deal that forced the junta to quit power, recognised that it could
take longer to organise given Mali's persisting political and
military crises.