Bangkok Post

Protest death toll rises to 15

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Tensions remained high in Senegal on Saturday after clashes brought the death toll to 15 since a court convicted opposition leader Ousmane Sonko.

Mr Sonko’s ongoing legal woes have prompted rare flare-ups of violence in Senegal, typically a bastion of stability in West Africa, and foreign allies have urged a return to calm.

Disturbanc­es were reported on Saturday in the suburbs of the capital Dakar.

But several neighbourh­oods that had experience­d outbursts of violence on Thursday and Friday remained calm, said the minister of the interior, saying there had been “a drop in intensity” of the demonstrat­ions.

Antoine Diome said “about 500 arrests” had been made since the start of the protest movement. He added that the government suspected overseas involvemen­t.

“There is foreign influence and it is the country that is under attack,” he said, declining to elaborate.

Mr Sonko, a 48-year-old former tax inspector, was initially charged with rape but was on Thursday convicted on a lesser charge of morally “corrupting” a young woman and sentenced to two years in prison.

He claims the charges against him were a bid by the government to torpedo his political career ahead of the presidenti­al election next year. His conviction may take him out of the running for the 2024 poll.

Clashes between Mr Sonko’s supporters and police broke out after the ruling, leading to 15 deaths over two days, according to government figures.

Shops and businesses were ransacked. The army was deployed to the streets but scuffles erupted on Friday night in parts of the capital, Dakar, and in Ziguinchor.

Mr Diome accused protesters of trying to “destabilis­e the country”.

“These are irresponsi­ble people,” he said. “They called for demonstrat­ions. They called for public buildings to be burned. They called for the collapse of the state.”

Mr Sonko, who was tried in absentia, has yet to be taken into custody for his jail term, which is predicted to cause further tensions.

Mr Sonko is presumed to be at his Dakar home, where he has been blocked in by security forces since last weekend.

He alleges he is being “illegally held”. Sharp-tongued and charismati­c, Mr Sonko has drawn a strong following especially among Senegal’s youth, who love his barbs against a political elite he refers to as the “state mafia”.

He has spoken out against debt, poverty, food insecurity, under-funded health and education systems and corruption.

Mr Sonko, who has two wives, portrays himself as a devout Muslim and defender of traditiona­l values, and has called for harsher penalties for samesex relations.

Supporters of President Macky Sall, however, see him as a rabble-rouser who has poisoned political discourse and sown instabilit­y.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Security forces look at supporters of opposition leader Ousmane Sonko during clashes after Sonko was sentenced to prison in Dakar on Saturday.
REUTERS Security forces look at supporters of opposition leader Ousmane Sonko during clashes after Sonko was sentenced to prison in Dakar on Saturday.

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