The Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) is a clear failure. With eight months left until its scheduled end, it embodies impotence and a squandered historic opportunity.
Paralyzed by internal divisions, power struggles, and a lack of shared vision, it has failed to stabilize the country, prepare credible elections, or restore order. The population sees only a sterile coexistence of conflicting interests, incapable of serving the nation. Its promises have remained empty, and its results are nonexistent.
It is therefore imperative that its mandate ends as planned, without illusory extensions. This dissolution must mark the end of a painful chapter. But above all, it must pave the way for a radically different new beginning: an inclusive process involving civil society and the vibrant forces of the regions, urgently defining key steps (security, elections, humanitarian crisis) with transparency and a commitment to overcoming personal divisions.
The decline of the CPT is tragic; its dissolution is an opportunity only if it immediately leads to this refoundation.
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