Deputies in Senegal’s parliament were to meet yesterday to consider the postponement of presidential elections announced by Senegalese President Macky Sall, a move that has plunged the country into crisis.
They were to meet after a day of violent street protests in the capital, Dakar — during which at least one senior opposition figure was arrested — and growing international concern.
On Sunday, the government ordered a private television broadcaster off the air for “incitement to violence” over its coverage of the protests, another sign of the mounting political tension in the country.
Photo: Reuters
Opposition leaders have used the term “constitutional coup” to describe the current situation, which they say is an assault on democracy.
Deputies were to vote on the proposal to postpone the presidential poll — previously set for Feb. 25 — for up to six months. The text before them would need the support of three-fifths of the 165 deputies to pass.
Given the political row that Sall’s decision has caused and the street protests on Sunday, the proposal did not appear to be a done deal.
Sall on Saturday said he delayed the vote because of a dispute between the National Assembly and the Constitutional Court over the rejection of candidates.
“I will begin an open national dialogue to bring together the conditions for a free, transparent and inclusive election,” Sall added, without giving a new date.
The dispute Sall blamed for the delay to the election arose out of a decision by the Constitutional Court to exclude Karim Wade, son of former Senegalese president Abdoulaye Wade, from running for the presidency. He was barred because he allegedly also holds French citizenship — a decision he denounced as “scandalous.”
Karim Wade’s supporters in the National Assembly called for a parliamentary inquiry into the partiality of two judges on the Constitutional Court.
To the surprise of some observers, members of Sall’s party were among those who voted for its passage on Tuesday last week. Sall had designated Senegalese Prime Minister Amadou Ba from his party as his would-be successor, but with the party split over his candidacy, he faced possible defeat at the ballot box.
He is not the only candidate the Constitutional Court has excluded from the vote. Also barred from running is firebrand anti-establishment figure Ousmane Sonko, who has been jailed since July last year. His surrogate, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, has been approved to run and emerged as a credible contender to win — a nightmare scenario for the president’s camp.
The international community has reacted with concern to Sall’s decision to put off the vote.
The US, EU and former colonial ruler France have all appealed for the vote to be rescheduled as soon as possible.
African Union Commission Chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat urged Senegal to resolve its “political dispute through consultation, understanding and dialogue.”
It is the first time since 1963 that a presidential vote has been postponed in Senegal, one of the few African countries never to have experienced a coup.
Some protesters on the streets said they feared the worst.
“Macky Sall wants to make us slaves,” 44-year-old trader Ousmane Biteye said. “He dares to come up with such fallacious reasons for postponing the election, and what’s more just a few hours before the start of the campaign.”
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