BusinessMirror

Senegal votes in tightly contested presidenti­al race amid uncertaint­y

- By Jack Thompson, Jessica Donati & Babacar Dione

DAKAR, Senegal—senegalese headed to the polls Sunday in a tightly contested presidenti­al race that followed months of uncertaint­y and unrest that has tested the West African nation's reputation as a stable democracy in a region that has experience­d a wave of coups in recent years.

The election takes place after President Macky Sall’s unsuccessf­ully tried to call off the February 25 vote until the end of the year. Sall is barred from running for a third term due to constituti­onal term limits. As a result, the vote is taking place during Ramadan, the holy month when observant Muslims fast from dawn until dusk.

The roads were largely deserted early in the morning in the capital Dakar and the nation's elite police force were stationed all over the city in armored vehicles. Outside polling centers, police checked voters cards as men and women in formal dress lined up. Results are expected next week.

The election is set to be the nation's fourth democratic transfer of power since Senegal gained independen­ce from France in 1960. The process has been marred by violence and unrest, and hundreds of opposition protesters have been arrested and jailed.

There are 19 candidates in the race, including one woman, the highest number in the nation's history.

“This is poised to be the most competitiv­e election since the introducti­on of multiparty politics,” Tochi Eni-kalu, Africa analyst at the Eurasia Group, told The Associated Press.

Analysts say no candidate is expected to win more than 50 percent of the vote, which means a runoff between leading candidates is widely expected. They include Amadou Ba, a former prime minister, and Bassirou Diomaye Faye, who is backed by popular opposition figure Ousmane Sonko.

Sonko, who came third in the previous election, was barred from running in January because of a prior conviction for defamation. He has faced a slew of legal troubles in recent years that supporters say are part of a government effort to derail his candidacy.

Other potential frontrunne­rs are Khalifa Sall, a former mayor of Dakar unrelated to the president, and Idrissa Seck, a former prime minister from the early 2000s that was the runner up in the 2019 presidenti­al race.

Two candidates dropped out this week to back Faye's candidacy, a sign of the start of coalition-building that could determine the outcome of the race, according to analysts.

At the forefront of concerns for many Senegalese voters is the economy, which has been squeezed by high food and energy prices partly driven by the war in Ukraine. Unemployme­nt among the nation's youth is widespread, driving thousands to risk their lives on dangerous journeys in search of jobs in the West.

“Jobs are really, truly the priority. Everyone can see that unemployme­nt is taking over,” said Oumy Sarr, a political activist. “The second priority is the high cost of living in Senegal today. What is to be done to improve people's living conditions? Inflation is rising, everyone is tired.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MOSA'AB ELSHAMY ?? A banner encouragin­g people to vote in the upcoming presidenti­al elections is displayed in dakar, senegal on Wednesday, March 20, 2024. senegalese are heading to the polls sunday to vote in a tightly contested presidenti­al race marred by months of unrest that threatened democracy in one of West Africa’s most stable nations. Words in French read: “My Card, My Vote.”
AP PHOTO/MOSA'AB ELSHAMY A banner encouragin­g people to vote in the upcoming presidenti­al elections is displayed in dakar, senegal on Wednesday, March 20, 2024. senegalese are heading to the polls sunday to vote in a tightly contested presidenti­al race marred by months of unrest that threatened democracy in one of West Africa’s most stable nations. Words in French read: “My Card, My Vote.”

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