Senegal readies for fresh protests, violence fears
Senegal braced for fresh protests yesterday, stoking fears of further violence following the deaths of three people in riots over octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade’s plans to seek a third term.
The country’s opposition has launched a campaign of popular resistance to force Wade to step aside, and is planning a rally yesterday afternoon in the seaside capital Dakar which government says is “not authorised”.
Interior ministry spokesman Abdoulaye Thiam told AFP the June 23 Movement (M23) of opposition and civil society groups had “not declared their intention to protest” according to the law.
Security forces on Monday shot dead a 60-year-old woman and a teenager at a rally in the northern city of Podor, while a policeman was killed on Friday in riots over Wade’s controversial plans.
Amnesty International urged authorities “to refrain from using live bullets against peaceful protesters” ahead of yesterday’s rally in the country which is typically seen as a beacon of democracy among often troubled neighbours.
Salvatore Sagues, the global rights body’s West Africa researcher, said Monday’s bloodshed “marks a dramatic escalation in the violence that has plagued Senegal in the run-up to its elections.”
Meanwhile Washington urged 85-year-old Wade to allow power to pass “to the next generation”.
“While we respect the process... our message to him remains the same: that the statesmanly-like thing to do would be to cede to the next generation,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told journalists.
But El Hadj Amadou Salla, minister of state and a senior Wade campaign official, said it was “too late” and the president’s candidacy has already been validated.
The constitutional council on Monday dismissed all appeals against Wade’s candidacy, leaving no legal recourse for opponents who accuse him of carrying out a constitutional coup.
The opposition argues that the constitution allows a president to serve only two consecutive terms.
However term lengths were amended in 2008 and Wade says the law does not apply retroactively, which theoretically allows him to serve two seven-year terms from 2012.
Music icon Youssou Ndour, who was rejected as a candidate, has urged the world to protest what he called a “constitutional coup d’etat”.
Dakar was rocked by riots on Friday night when the council of five judges first made its ruling, and a policeman was killed during running battles with youths who torched cars and shops, erected barricades and burned tyres.
On Monday a 17-year-old protester and 60-year-old female bystander were shot dead by paramilitary police who “opened fire on a crowd demonstrating against the constitutional council decision” in Podor, said Amnesty.
Senegal’s presidential spokesman Serigne Mbacke Ndiaye called for peace: “The real combat is the one we must lead to hold a transparent election... being a candidate means nothing,” he told journalists.
“We deplore the will (of the opposition) to lead the country into chaos... we don’t want Senegal to go up in flames.”
Wade said in a recent interview with a local news website that he needs three more years to complete his projects, fueling speculation that he wants to line up a successor.
He has long been accused of trying to position his 44-year-old son Karim Wade – already a super-minister in his cabinet – to fill his shoes.
Aside from Wade, the council approved 13 other candidates including three former prime ministers and main opposition leader Ousmane Tanor Dieng.
AFP
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