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Senegal: Wade can run for third term

Posted on January 30, 2012 Back to news home

Abdoulaye Wade
Senegal President

 

Senegal: Wade can run for third term

 

Senegal's top legal body early on Monday confirmed its approval of incumbent President Abdoulaye Wade's bid to seek a third term in a February 26 presidential election.

The Constitutional Council said the 85-year-old president was not bound by a two-term limit because his first term began before the rule was introduced.

The Constitutional Council, in the same ruling, rejected an appeal by world music star Youssou N'Dour and two other candidates against a decision on Friday, blocking their presidential bids.

The court rejected several other appeals including some by Wade's camp against a number of opposition candidates, declaring them unfounded.

Opposition

The council's decision on Friday to validate the candidacy of 85-year-old Wade sparked violent protests. The opposition has vowed to make the country ‘ungovernable’ if Wade insists on running for a third term.

Wade's rivals say the constitution sets a limit of two terms on the president.

But Wade, who came to power in 2000 and was re-elected in 2007, has argued that his first term pre-dated the 2001 amendment establishing the limit.

Meeting in a Dakar hotel on Sunday before the council's final decision, Senegal opposition parties and the umbrella opposition activist group M23 vowed to continue ‘national resistance’ against Wade's bid, calling the council's decision a "constitutional coup".

Relative calm

After violent protests on Friday, calm returned to the capital Dakar over the weekend, but around the presidential palace truckloads of police in full riot gear were deployed, armed with tear gas, grenade launchers and truncheons.

Senegal's influential Mouride Muslim brotherhood has urged for calm, while Wade has appeared on state television to promise free and fair polls.

Senegal is the only country in West Africa that has not experienced a coup since the end of the colonial era.

February's polls, and a possible run-off a few weeks later, are seen as a test of social cohesion in the predominantly Muslim country.

 

Reuters/Ehimen/Cokey

 

 

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