Senegal’s opposition figure Ousmane Sonko was nominated for the 2024 presidential election despite legal challenges and protests
usmane
Sonko, a prominent opposition figure in Senegal, has been nominated as a candidate
for the presidential election in 2024, according to an announcement made by his
party on Friday. This comes despite Mr. Sonko’s questionable eligibility and
shortly after the cancellation of a demonstration that was supposed to take
place in Dakar on Saturday to formally launch his candidacy.
In a case involving vice, Mr. Sonko was found guilty on June 1 and sentenced to two years in prison. His attorneys and other legal experts believe that this decision disqualifies him from running for office. On May 8, he was also handed a six-month suspended prison sentence in an appeal for defamation. This penalty, which was imposed in response to his claim that he was not able to run for president, is generally regarded as rendering him ineligible for the election. However, he has not yet used up all of his opportunities to appeal to the Supreme Court.
According to the information provided by his party, Mr. Sonko is scheduled to
deliver a speech on Friday. Since the 28th of May, he claims that security
personnel have prevented him from leaving his home in Dakar and have “sequestered” him
there. “This Thursday, July 13, 2023, at the end of a transparent and
democratic investiture process, Ousmane Sonko, enjoying his full civil and
political rights, is unanimously designated candidate of PASTEF-Les Patriotes
(his party) for the presidential election of February 25, 2024,” his
party said in a statement that was sent to AFP on Friday.
According
to the statement, the investiture of Mr. Sonko took place on Thursday during a
meeting of the party’s High Regulatory Authority (HARP), which is a Pastef
body. The conference’s purpose was to validate the decisions reached by
delegates from Senegal’s 46 departments and the diaspora. In this article,
Pastef condemns what it calls an “illegal ban” on a gathering
of its candidates that is set to take place on Saturday afternoon in a stadium
in Guédiawaye, which is located outside of Dakar. The government of Dakar
confirmed the rally’s prohibition in a press release that was distributed on
Thursday, citing the “risk of disturbing public order” as the
primary reason for the decision.
According
to the Pastef communiqué, “No one can prevent President Ousmane Sonko’s
investiture as well as his participation in the presidential election of
February 25, 2024.” In an interview that aired on the France 24
channel on July 6, Sonko made a threat that he would cause “indescribable
chaos” if he were to be blocked from running for president.
At the
beginning of June, his conviction prompted the most significant unrest that
Senegal had seen in years. According to the police, 16 people died as a result
of the turmoil, while the opposition estimates that approximately thirty people
lost their lives. At the beginning of July, President Macky
Sall, who
was first elected in 2012 and then re-elected in 2019, made the announcement
that he would not be a candidate for the presidential election in 2024.
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