DAKAR, Senegal
Senegal’s President Bassirou Faye dissolved the opposition-led parliament on Thursday, paving the way for a snap legislative election six months after he was voted in on an anti-establishment platform.
The new election will take
place Nov. 17, Faye said in a televised address Thursday evening in which he
asked voters to give his party a mandate so that he can carry out the “systemic
transformation that I promised.” Analysts say that Faye’s political party,
PASTEF, has a high chance of securing a majority, given his popularity and his
margin of victory in the March presidential election.
The Benno Bokk Yaakar
opposition platform led by former President Macky Sall condemned the move. They
said Faye had convened a legislative session under false pretenses in order to
announce the dissolution and accused him of “perjury.”
Faye, 44, won the vote in March to become Africa’s youngest elected leader, less
than two weeks after he was released from prison. His rise has reflected
widespread frustration among Senegal’s youth with the country’s direction — a
common sentiment across Africa, which has the world’s youngest population and a
number of leaders accused of clinging to power for decades.
During the presidential
campaign, he promised widespread reforms to improve the living standards of
ordinary Senegalese, including fighting corruption, reviewing fishing permits
for foreign companies, and securing a bigger share from the country’s natural
resources for the population. He was elected with 54% of the votes.
But six months later, these
pledges have yet to materialize.
Faye and Ousmane
Sonko, the country’s prime minister and a popular opposition figure who
helped catapult Faye to victory, have blamed the parliament. Their political
party, PASTEF, does not hold a majority in the assembly, which Faye says has
blocked him from executing the promised reforms.
In June, the opposition
coalition canceled a budgetary debate in a dispute over whether Sonko was
required to issue his government’s policy roadmap, with Sonko arguing that he
was not required to.
The tensions between the
government and the parliament are “unprecedented,” Alioune Tine, founder of
Afrikajom think tank, told The Associated Press. “It is all the result of the
dysfunctions of the electoral process of the 2024 presidential election,” Tine
said.
Faye’s decision to dissolve
the national assembly does not come without risks, Gilles Yabi, political
analyst and founder of WATHI think tank, told the AP.
The assembly has until the end
of December to vote on the budget for next year, but new legislative elections
might make it hard to meet this deadline.
The presidential election in
April tested Senegal’s reputation as a stable democracy in West Africa, a
region rocked
in recent years by coups and attempted coups.
Both Faye and Sonko were
released from prison less than two weeks before the vote following a political
amnesty announced by outgoing President Macky Sall. Their arrests had sparked
months of protests and concerns that Sall would
seek a third term in office despite term limits. Rights groups said
dozens were killed and about 1,000 were jailed.
Over 60% of Senegalese are
under 25, and 90% work in informal jobs. Senegal has been hit by skyrocketing
inflation in recent years, making it difficult for them to get by.
The country is also the major
source of irregular migration to Europe, with thousands leaving every year on
rickety, artisanal fishing boats in search of economic opportunities.
Thursday’s announcement came
days after one such boat carrying almost 90 people capsized, killing at least
39.
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