Senegal police surround opposition chief’s home over protest call

Senegal police surround opposition chief’s home over protest call

Senegal police surround opposition chief’s home over protest call

Senegal police surround opposition chief’s home over protest call

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  • Senegal’s opposition leader Ousmane Sonko called for protests on Friday.
  • Roads leading to his home were closed off by police in anti-riot gear.
  • Sonko angry over decision to bar list of candidates for legislative elections.
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Senegalese police restricted entry to opposition leader residence of Ousmane Sonko after he called for protests on Friday, during a period of high pre-election tension in the country.

Roads leading to home of Ousmane Sonko in an upmarket district of the capital Dakar were closed off by barricades and police in anti-riot gear, and supporters who tried to get near the building were firmly told to turn back, AFP reporters saw.

Sonko had called for demonstrations on Friday to protest at a decision to bar a list of candidates for Senegal’s legislative elections on July 31 — a move that also bans him and other opposition figures from contesting the ballot.

Read more: Senegal says arrested breakaway Casamance rebels

Sonko and his allies have vowed to push ahead with the protest on Friday, despite a ban on the rally announced by the prefect on the grounds of public order.

“The demonstration is on, it will definitely take place,” Ousseynou Ly, spokesman for Sonko’s PASTEF party, told AFP.

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Some figures have appealed for dialogue, recalling the violence that erupted in March last year, claiming around a dozen lives, after Sonko was accused of sexual assault.

The candidates’ list, put forward by an opposition coalition called Yewwi Askan Wi, was scratched on the orders of the interior ministry on technical grounds.

One of the names on the list had been accidentally put down for both as a first-choice candidate and as an alternate candidate.

The country’s highest court, the Constitutional Council confirmed the ministry’s decision.

Senegal has a long reputation as a beacon of stability in West Africa, where political turbulence is common.

Read more: Senegal’s president has fired his health minister following a hospital fire that claimed the lives of eleven babies

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The legislature has 165 seats. Of these, 53 are chosen on the basis of national lists and 97 on the basis of a majority vote among the country’s departments, while 15 are chosen by the Senegalese diaspora.

The ban on Yewwi Askan Wi’s list applies specifically to first-choice candidates for seats contested by national lists. The coalition can still compete using alternate candidates.

Sonko says the bar is the result of political interference, a charge rejected by the government.

Former Dakar mayor Khalifa Sall, who is not related to President Macky Sall, and former minister Karim Wade, the son of an ex-president, have both had their political careers cut short by court disputes.

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