Stabroek News

Senegal rocked by more unrest as police quell protests

-

DAKAR (Reuters) - Police fired tear gas at stone-hurling protesters in Senegal’s capital on Thursday ahead of a court case involving a prominent opposition politician that has triggered anger among youth.

Demonstrat­ors in Dakar burned tyres and set fire to buses and a large supermarke­t, the latest outbreak of violence that has shaken Senegal’s reputation as a bastion of stable democracy ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.

Thursday’s clashes began when supporters of presidenti­al hopeful Ousmane Sonko were blocked from accompanyi­ng his motorcade to a courthouse where he faces trial for libel.

The trial was postponed until March 30 after Sonko’s lawyers said he was seeking medical treatment for inhaling a substance that impaired his breathing and eyesight.

Sonko, 48, who came third in the 2019 presidenti­al election, is also charged with raping a beauty salon employee in 2021 and making deaths threats against her. He denies all wrongdoing and says the accusation­s are politicall­y motivated to prevent him running in the February 2024 polls.

Much of the anger on the streets targeted President Macky Sall, whose failure to rule out running for a third term in office has incensed many.

“The backdrop to this situation is the third term question and the supposed witch hunt against opponents including Sonko, who has been brutalized and bunkered at his home. This has ended up aggravatin­g the situation,” said Moussa Diaw, a political analyst at the Gaston Berger University in the northweste­rn Senegalese city of Saint Louis.

Senegal’s constituti­on only allows two terms, but some fear Sall will use a recent tweak to the constituti­on to reset his mandate, repeating a tactic used by other rulers to extend power elsewhere in the region.

“We elected Macky Sall to work, not to establish a dictatorsh­ip. He must leave Sonko alone. If he does not leave him alone, we will burn the country,” said a stone-throwing Sonko supporter who requested not to be name for safety reasons.

Calm had mostly returned to Dakar by late afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana