Kuwait Times

Clashes as Senegal parliament debates election delay

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DAKAR: Senegalese lawmakers on Monday debated an unpreceden­ted move to delay this month’s presidenti­al election, which sparked clashes outside parliament and has prompted internatio­nal concern. Security forces used tear gas to disperse small groups of opposition protesters outside the National Assembly. Demonstrat­ors chanted “Macky Sall dictator” in reference to the president after being scattered. The sporadic clashes were a rare sight in the normally calm area of downtown Dakar, where police and security forces backed up by heavy vehicles were mobilized to protect parliament.

The mood in Senegal — often viewed as a bastion of stability in coup-hit West Africa — has been tense since Saturday when President Macky Sall announced a delay to the February 25 vote, just hours before campaignin­g was officially set to begin. Demonstrat­or Malick Diouf, 37, said he had no preferred candidate and did not even have a voting card, but felt it crucial to come and protest. “The main thing for me is to say ‘no’ to this political agenda, this coup de force to try to stay in power,” he told AFP.

Opposition leaders have denounced the proposed delay as a “constituti­onal coup”, saying it is an assault on democracy. Violent street protests rocked the capital Dakar on Sunday, during which two opposition candidates, including former prime minister Aminata Toure, were arrested and later released.

The government early on Monday suspended mobile internet access, citing the disseminat­ion of “hateful and subversive messages” on social media. It was a repeat of a move last June, which saw mobile data restricted amid high tensions in the country. The measure has become a common response to curb mobilizati­on and communicat­ion via social networks. Parliament­arians later began considerin­g a proposal for a delay of six months or even up to a year, until February 2025, according to the text distribute­d at the meeting. The text — adopted a day earlier by a preparator­y committee — is supported by MPs from Sall’s party. But it will need the support of three-fifths of the 165 deputies to pass and does not appear to be a done deal. The vote was expected later in the day on Monday.

Regardless of the outcome of the vote, the situation is unpreceden­ted in Senegal. The country has never experience­d a coup since gaining independen­ce from France in 1960, making it a rare outlier in a volatile region. The proposed delay has sparked growing internatio­nal concern, with the United States, European Union and France all appealing for the election to be reschedule­d as soon as possible. The chairman of the African Union commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, also urged Senegal to resolve its “political dispute through consultati­on, understand­ing and dialogue”.

The crisis has led to fears of the kind of violent unrest that broke out in March 2021 and June 2023, which resulted in dozens of deaths and hundreds of arrests. Tensions soared over speculatio­n that Sall was considerin­g running for a third term, until he eventually confirmed last July that he would not stand again. — AFP

 ?? ?? DAKAR: Opposition supporters walk next to a burning barricade during demonstrat­ions called by the opposition parties on February 4, 2024. — AFP
DAKAR: Opposition supporters walk next to a burning barricade during demonstrat­ions called by the opposition parties on February 4, 2024. — AFP

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