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    Senegal rushes to fix election mess before Sall exits

    Opalim LiftedBy Opalim LiftedMarch 7, 2024No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Macky Sall of Senegal
    Macky Sall of Senegal
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    Senegal scheduled elections for this month, even though the nation’s apex court and the government set different dates for the vote as the country rushes to elect a new president before incumbent Macky Sall’s term ends.

    The plan to hold the vote before Sall’s mandate expires on April 2 removes the risk of a power vacuum in the West African nation. A panel of Senegalese leaders had proposed that the ballot be held on June 2 and that Sall remain in power until a successor is appointed, even after the Constitutional Council ruled that Sall’s term in office can’t be extended.

    The exact date of the election remains unclear: while the government proposed a first round of voting take place on March 24, the Constitutional Council said in a separate statement on Wednesday that it should take place on March 31. Under the constitution, there must be 21 days of campaigning before an election takes place.

    The West African nation has been in political limbo since Sall called off elections originally scheduled for Feb. 25. He sought a 10-month delay to allow for an inquiry into the process of selecting presidential candidates after some opposition leaders, who were barred from taking part, questioned the vetting process. The move sparked violent protests and a crackdown by the government on the opposition and the media.

    “This is the reason why we were fighting for these past weeks and days, because we knew that it was possible to actually hold these elections before April 2,” presidential candidate Anta Babacar said by phone from Dakar, the capital.

    The sparring over the election date has scarred Senegal’s reputation as one of Africa’s most stable democracies and weighed on investor sentiment—its bonds have been among the worst emerging-market performers this year. The country is on the verge of becoming an oil and gas producer, and the International Monetary Fund expects its economy to expand more than 8% in 2024.

    • Senegalese opposition leader Ousmane Sonko in intensive care after hunger strike

    S&P Global Ratings warned last month that prolonged political uncertainty in Senegal risked undermining the implementation of the country’s so-called Plan Senegal Emergent, which seeks to boost private investment and stabilise government finances. The company rates the country’s long-term debt at sub-investment grade B+, with a stable outlook.

    Senegal’s dollar bonds due in 2033 climbed 0.6% to 84.54 cents on the dollar on Wednesday, while its 2037 securities gained 0.4% to 72.28 cents.

    As the election date was announced on Wednesday night, Sall dissolved the government and appointed Sidiki Kaba prime minister. The president’s chosen successor, Prime Minister Amadou Ba, “was relieved from his duties to focus on the election campaign,” presidency spokesman Yoro Dia said by text message.

    Senegalese lawmakers on Wednesday also adopted a proposed bill that grants amnesty to people who’ve committed offences or crimes “relating to demonstrations or having political motives” since February 2021. It wasn’t immediately clear whether an amnesty would apply to the imprisoned opposition leader Ousmane Sonko and his chosen presidential candidate, Bassirou Diomaye Faye.

    The amnesty plan has been criticized by human-rights groups and victims because they say it denies justice to those detained or killed. At least 60 people have died in clashes between protesters and security forces, according to Amnesty International, and hundreds more have been injured and detained, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.

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    WHO recognises Tunisia for eliminating trachoma as a public health problem.

    WHO declares Tunisia free of Trachoma as public health problem

    May 14, 2026
    Olusegun Mimiko announcing resignation from PDP amid shifting political alliances in Ondo State

    Mimiko joins APC, drums support for Tinubu’s re-election

    May 14, 2026
    Obi queries Tinubu’s N3.3tn power debt payment plan

    Presidency slams Obi over ‘gun to my head’ single-term promise

    May 14, 2026
    UN declares slave trade greatest injustice, backs reparations push

    UN seeks probe of civilian deaths in Nigerian airstrikes

    May 14, 2026
    DHQ denies claims of leniency towards repentant terrorists

    DHQ denies civilian casualty claims in Zamfara strike

    May 14, 2026
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