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Mauritania’s 2007 Transition to Democracy: Lecture, Discussion & Lunch
Speaker: His Excellency Ibrahima Dia, the new Mauritanian Ambassador to the U.S.
Location: 3307 M St., Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Peace and World Affairs, Third Floor Conference Room.
Date and time: October 24, 2007, 1 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
RSVP: Free to the public. RSVP's appreciated at rsvp@maghrebcenter.org or 202-470-2050.
On
April 19, 2007, Mauritania ushered in an era of democracy with the
swearing-in of its new 69-year-old President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh
Abdallahi, in what some have referred to as the “gentle revolution.”
This had been preceded by a successful referendum in June 2006 to see
if the people wanted to transition to democracy, following a
“democratic” coup d’etat in summer 2005, which many outside observers
felt would fail. Since that time, a series of unpredicted and
remarkable changes have taken place, including new legislative measures
to eradicate slavery and a call for the return of Mauritanians exiled
during the tragic 1989 conflict with Senegal.
We are
honored that Ambassador Dia has chosen the Maghreb Center Speaker
Series at Georgetown for his first public appearance to discuss
Mauritania’s transition and status as the Islamic world’s newest
democracy. Ambassador Dia personally witnessed the historic events and
invites discussion on what the transition means to Mauritania and the
region and how to bolster U.S. engagement there. We hope you can
participate in this unique, timely discussion.
The
Maghreb Center is an independent, Washington DC based non-profit
created to increase understanding of the Maghreb in the United States.
In accomplishing its educational mission, the Center organizes
Maghreb-related conferences, seminars, lectures, round-tables, and
offers a series of publicly available publications. The Center sponsors
numerous programs open to the public featuring U.S. and regional
experts, development practitioners, foreign policy specialists, and
representatives of Maghrebi governments, and civil society. This
lecture series is made possible with the generous support of the
Moroccan American Cultural Center.
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