Tiébilé Dramé (9 June 1955 – 12 August 2025) was a Malian politician and diplomat who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1991 to 1992 and again from 2019 until the 2020 Malian coup d'état. Born in Nioro du Sahel, he became a student activist in Bamako against the regime of dictator Moussa Traoré and was elected secretary general of the National Union of Students and Pupils of Mali in 1978. He was arrested and imprisoned several times between 1977 and 1980, and went into exile in Europe in 1981. He earned a degree in African history at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University and worked for Amnesty International in London as a researcher investigating human rights abuses in West Africa.
After Traoré's overthrow in the 1991 Malian coup d'état, Dramé returned from exile and served as Mali's foreign minister from 1991 to 1992 in the transitional government of President Amadou Toumani Touré. In 1992, he founded ', a leading independent daily newspaper. In 1995, he founded the Party for National Rebirth, which he would lead until his death. Between 1996 and 1997, he served as Minister of Arid and Semi-Arid Zones, and in 1997 was elected to the National Assembly for his home constituency of Nioro du Sahel. He ran unsuccessfully in the 2002 and 2007 presidential elections.
In the 1990s and 2000s, Dramé led diplomatic and human rights missions to Haiti, Burundi, Madagascar on behalf of the United Nations. Following the 2012 Tuareg rebellion, Dramé was appointed to lead negotiations between the Malian government and separatist rebels in the north, resulting in a ceasefire that enabled the 2013 Malian presidential election to proceed. In 2019, following a political agreement between the Malian government and opposition groups, Dramé was named foreign minister in Prime Minister Boubou Cissé's cabinet under President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta. He served until Keïta's overthrow in the August 2020 coup d'état. Dramé was a leading advocate for democracy and human rights in Mali, and was known for his attentiveness to the issues of Mali's underdeveloped and restive north.
Early life, education, and activism
Tiébilé Dramé was born on 9 June 1955 in Nioro du Sahel, to a Soninke-speaking family in what was then the colony of French Sudan. He was the son of Sékou Dramé, a long-haul truck driver, and Fatoumata Traoré. Dramé recalled of his school years at Badalabougou, "We wrote pamphlets, points of view that we displayed at school... It was the time of the struggle for independence of the peoples of southern Africa, particularly the Portuguese colonies." In 1980, after the death by torture of his successor as UNEEM leader, , Dramé was arrested and imprisoned in the country's north. At one point, he was tortured while imprisoned in Bamako, according to his son. Between 1988 and 1991, he worked in London as a researcher for Amnesty International, where he investigated human rights violations in West Africa. From 27 December 1991 until 1992, Dramé served as foreign minister in the transitional government that was set up following the coup. In 1992, he founded ', an outspoken, independent newspaper that soon became one of Mali's leading dailies. According to the official results, incumbent president Amadou Toumani Touré won in a landslide, while Dramé placed third with 3.04% of the vote. Though the election was described as "free, fair, and credible" by the ECOWAS observer mission, Dramé, along with the Front for Democracy and the Republic, a coalition that included him and three other presidential candidates, alleged fraud and called for the results to be annulled. Dramé claimed that polls were flooded with pre-marked ballots in support of Touré, and that government officials "were ordered" to travel to their home communities to influence votes in favor of Touré.
Separatist negotiations and 2013 ceasefire
Dramé became a United Nations envoy to Madagascar during the country's 2009 political crisis. Dramé, recognizing the weakness of the Malian Armed Forces, supported the French Army's intervention to rout the advancing Islamist rebels, putting him at odds with growing anti-French sentiments in the region at the time. He strongly criticized France for pressuring Mali's government not to delay the vote, despite insufficient preparation. He specifically highlighted the situation in Kidal, a town recently recaptured from rebels, where an updated electoral roll had not yet been prepared, despite the election being only days away—a violation of Malian electoral law. In 2017, he was a leading figure in the Antè Abana movement, a coalition of political and civil society groups opposed to President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta's constitutional reform efforts. On 5 May 2019, the new prime minister, Boubou Cissé, formed a new cabinet following a political agreement signed three days earlier between the ruling party and some segments of the opposition. Dramé served as foreign minister until President Keïta was overthrown in the 18 August 2020 coup d'état by elements of the Malian army.
Following the 2020 coup, Dramé initially withdrew from a public role in politics, but his party, PARENA, was highly critical of transitional government's leadership in the areas of security and institutional reform. Dramé denounced the new regime's "establishment of a climate of intolerance and attacks of fundamental democratic freedoms", and called for the government to reform the electoral system and hold elections. It was attended by Dramé's family, his former political comrades, diplomats, and journalists. Among those present were former president (and Dramé's father-in-law) Alpha Oumar Konaré and former transitional president Dioncounda Traoré, former prime ministers Ousmane Issoufi Maïga and Modibo Sidibé, and foreign delegations from Burkina Faso, Niger, and Senegal, including Senegalese former minister Abdoulaye Bathily. He was particularly noted for his expertise in and attentiveness to the issues of Mali's north.
