Senegal's former PM Aminata Toure arrested: opposition
By Agency |
Opposition party supporters and police clashed in Dakar after President Macky Sall announced the indefinite postponement of a presidential election set for February 25, sparking a wave of international concern.
Senegal's former Prime Minister Aminata Toure, now a leading opposition figure, was arrested Sunday in Dakar at a protest against the postponement of the presidential election, opposition deputy Guy Marius Sagna told AFP.
"I confirm that Aminata Toure has been arrested by the gendarmes," he said. Toure was appointed prime minister by President Macky Sall before joining the opposition.
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Opposition party supporters and police clashed in Dakar after President Macky Sall announced the indefinite postponement of a presidential election set for February 25, sparking a wave of international concern.
Just a day before official campaigning was due to begin, Sall plunged the nation into the unknown, saying he intervened because of a dispute between the National Assembly and the Constitutional Court over the rejection of candidates.
Lawmakers are investigating two Constitutional Council judges whose integrity in the election process has been questioned.
"I will begin an open national dialogue to bring together the conditions for a free, transparent and inclusive election," Sall said, without providing a new date.
Heeding the call of some opposition candidates, hundreds of men and women of all ages, waving Senegalese flags or wearing the jersey of the national football team, converged in the early afternoon at a roundabout on one of the capital's main roads.
Police responded with tear gas and then pursued the fleeing protesters through adjoining streets, while some demonstrators responded by throwing rocks.
Under Senegal's election code, at least 80 days must pass between the publication of the decree setting the date and the election, so the earliest a vote could now be held is late April.
Presidential candidates said they would launch their campaigns on Sunday in defiance of the official postponement.
The RFM opposition party said it "systematically" rejects the postponement.
"We will see all Senegalese people this Sunday for a march," said party spokesperson Cheikh Tidiane Youm.
Habib Sy, one of the 20 candidates, said opposition parties had met and agreed to launch their election campaigns together.
Another opposition figure, former mayor of Dakar Khalifa Sall, called for pro-democratic forces to unite.
"All of Senegal must stand up," he told journalists.
Sall, who is not related to the president, denounced "a constitutional coup" by a leader who "dreams of eternity".
Story by AFP
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