Comoros President, Azali Assoumani, on Thursday, chaired a cabinet meeting in his first public appearance since being wounded in a knife attack last week, government footage showed.

Assoumani is seen in the video with a thick bandage on the left side of his forehead, smiling as he got into a car and arriving at the presidential compound.

He greeted advisors and ministers before sitting at the end of the cabinet table where he looked through files.

The president’s motorcade was sighted entering the presidential compound, but reporters were not allowed in.

The 65-year-old president had not been seen since September 13 when he was wounded by a soldier during the funeral of a religious leader in Salimani-Itsandra on the outskirts of the capital Moroni.

The government said his wounds were “not serious”, saying that he is fine.

But his unusual absence from the Mawlid religious celebrations in Moroni, an important event in the small Indian Ocean archipelago of around 870,000 people who mostly practise Islam, raised questions.

One of Assoumani’s advisors and a diplomat told reporters, on condition of anonymity, that the Comoros leader had cancelled his attendance at the UN General Assembly, due to begin in New York on September 22 — an event he rarely misses.

The president “has regained his full form, as proof he chaired the council of ministers”, government spokesperson Fatima Ahamada told reporters outside the presidential palace on Thursday after the meeting.

It was “on the recommendation of his doctor” that he had not taken part in the Mawlid festivities, she added.

“I can assure you that he is doing very well physically and mentally. It’s the bandage on his head that’s bothering him aesthetically,” Msaidie Houmed, Assoumani’s political adviser, had told AFP on Wednesday when asked about the reasons for his absence.

“It’s the same Azali we had before” the attack, he said.
The government previously declined to detail the president’s injuries, saying only that he had needed “stitches to his scalp”.

A witness to the attack, who declined to give his name, told AFP: “The assailant was like a madman, he threw himself at the head of state”, who was on a terrace in the home of the deceased religious leader.