Nominations Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, the President of the National Assembly, was nominated as the presidential candidate of the
Rally for Mali on 28 January 2007. On 18 February former Foreign Minister
Tiébilé Dramé was nominated as the candidate of the
Party for National Rebirth (PARENA), and on 24 February
Oumar Mariko was nominated as the candidate of
African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence.
Sidibé Aminata Diallo, a female professor, announced on 12 March that she intended to stand as the candidate of the
Rally for Sustainable Education and Development. The former ruling party, the
Alliance for Democracy in Mali (ADEMA), opted to support the incumbent president, Amadou Toumani Touré. Former Defense Minister
Soumeylou Boubèye Maiga, the Vice-President of ADEMA, was expelled from the party for opposing the decision as he intended to run for president himself. He was subsequently designated as the candidate of his movement,
Convergences 2007, on 24 March. President Touré announced he would run for re-election in the town of
Nioro du Sahel on 27 March. On the same day, the
Social Democratic Convention nominated
Mamadou Blaise Sangaré as its candidate. On 1 April the Constitutional Court issued a provisional list of eight candidates who would contest the election; Touré, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, Mamadou Blaise Sangaré, Tiébilé Dramé, Soumeylou Boubèye Maiga, Oumar Mariko, Sidibe Aminata Diallo, and Madiassa Maguiraga. Modibo Sangaré's candidacy was rejected by the court on the grounds that he had not paid the required bond of 10 million CFA francs. No requests were filed for the invalidation of any of the eight candidates on the provisional list, and therefore the Court confirmed the list as final on 3 April. Diallo was also the first-ever woman to run for president in Mali;
Voter registration Voter registration cards began to be distributed in Bamako on 30 March. However, by 7 April less than 3% of the voter cards had been distributed. On 14 April the cards were made easier to obtain, but by 25 April fewer than 50% were thought to have been distributed. The latter date had been made a public holiday in order to encourage voters to get the cards prior to the deadline at midnight, after which it was reported that about 63.78% had been distributed. The best rate of distribution was in
Mopti Region with 71.7%; it was worst in Bamako, with 30.6%. The total distribution percentage was subsequently raised to about 66.7%, apparently due to Malians abroad obtaining the cards. ==Campaign==