By Jessica Donati, DAKAR
Senegal
Senegal’s top opposition leader, Ousmane Sonko, was released from jail late Thursday ahead of the presidential election later this month, triggering jubilant celebrations across the capital.
Sonko is widely seen as the
main challenger to President Macky Sall’s ruling party. He was greeted
outside the prison by crowds of supporters waving flags, chanting and holding
up posters.
Sonko had been in prison since
July and has fought a prolonged legal battle to run for president in the March
24 election. Sonko and his key ally, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, were both set free,
his lawyer Bamba Cisse told The Associated Press.
It wasn’t immediately clear
how their releases would impact the election. Faye was named the opposition’s
election candidate after Sonko was barred from running.
Supporters also gathered at
Sonko’s house and at other locations in Dakar to celebrate. Convoys of
supporters drove around the capital tooting their horns and yelling until late
at night.
Sonko, who finished third in
the 2019 presidential election, is popular among young people and his fiery
campaign to tackle corruption has resonated in a country with economic
hardship. The war in Ukraine has pushed up food and energy prices, further straining
the economy.
Sall himself ultimately
decided not to seek a third term in office after Sonko’s supporters launched
months of protests that at times turned deadly. The protests have rocked
Senegal’s image as a pillar of stability in West Africa, where dozens of coups
and attempted coups have taken place in recent decades.
Sonko’s
presidential bid has faced a prolonged legal battle that started when he was
accused of rape in 2021. He was acquitted of the rape charges but was
convicted of corrupting youth and sentenced to two years in prison
last summer, which ignited deadly protests across the country.
In January, he was
disqualified from the ballot because he faces a six-month suspended sentence
following his
conviction for defamation, Senegal’s highest election authority, the
Constitutional Council, said at the time.
Sonko’s supporters maintain
his legal troubles are part of a
government effort to derail his candidacy. His release follows Sall’s
decree to exonerate political prisoners, including hundreds that were arrested
in the violent protests last year.
Presidential candidates kicked
off their election campaigns on Saturday, following weeks of violent
protests after
the vote was delayed.
Sall tried to postpone the election last month, just weeks before it was to take place on February 25. His announcement that the vote would instead be held 10 months from now plunged Senegal into uncertainty and drew protesters to the streets again.
But
the Constitutional Council, rejected Sall’s postponement and ordered the
government to set a new date as soon as possible.
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