DAKAR, Senegal
Senegal prepared to inaugurate Bassirou Diomaye Faye as its new president on Tuesday, completing the previously little-known opposition figure’s dramatic ascent from prison to the palace in recent weeks.
Faye was released from prison
less than two weeks before the March 24 election, along with popular opposition
figure Ousmane Sonko, who backed him, following a political amnesty announced
by the outgoing president. It will be the former tax inspector’s first time in
elected office.
Presidents from across West
Africa and representatives from the U.S. and Europe are attending Tuesday’s
ceremony.
Faye, 44, campaigned on
promises to clean up corruption and better manage the country’s natural
resources. His victory was seen as reflecting the will of young people
frustrated with widespread unemployment and former colonial ruler France, seen
by critics to be using its relationship with Senegal to enrich itself.
In his first speech as
president-elect, Faye promised to fight corruption and reform the economy.
Sonko, who is expected to have a prominent role in the new administration,
named Faye to run in his place after being barred from the election for a prior
conviction.
“I think the first challenge
is the formation of his government,” said Alioune Tine, founder of the
Senegalese think tank Afrikajom Center. “This will be the first concrete
message he sends to the Senegalese people. The size, diversity and profiles
will be analyzed with a fine-tooth comb, to see if they meet the demand for a
break with the past.”
The
election tested Senegal’s reputation as a stable democracy in a region that has
experienced coups and attempted coups.
It followed months of unrest
ignited by the arrests last year of Sonko and Faye, and concerns that the
president would seek a third term in office despite constitutional
term limits. Rights groups said dozens were killed in the protests and about
1,000 people were jailed.
Faye was arrested for alleged defamation last year, while Sonko faced a number of charges, including 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. He was later disqualified from the ballot over a six-month
suspended sentence following a different conviction on
defamation charges.
Sonko’s supporters say his
legal troubles were part of a
government effort to derail his candidacy.
While Sall eventually ruled
out running for a third term, he then abruptly postponed the election in
February with only weeks to go, triggering another wave of protests. That move
was blocked
by the country’s constitutional court and the election was eventually
held weeks later in March.
Sall has since called the
outcome of the vote — which handed power to anti-establishment candidate Faye
over his former prime minister, Amadou Ba — a victory for democracy.
Faye comes from a small town
in central Senegal. He is a practicing Muslim and has two wives. Ahead of the
election, he released a declaration of his assets and called on other
candidates to do the same. It listed a home in Dakar and land outside the capital
and in his hometown. His bank accounts totaled roughly $6,600.
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