SENEGAL ELECTION: ELECTION PROTESTS TURN DEADLY IN SENEGAL

At least two people were confirmed dead after protests were held across Senegal on Friday, February 9, 2024. Demonstrators were not allowed to gather, and groups were dispersed by security forces.
The victims confirmed so far, two men in their twenties, were killed in Saint-Louis and in Dakar, according to local media reports.
The victim in Saint-Louis was a student. He was killed on a school campus following demonstrations in the northern city, according to a statement from the public prosecutor. Anger has mounted since President Sall last week postponed presidential elections scheduled for this month.
The delay came hours before official campaigning was due to begin. Parliament backed a delay until December and voted to keep Sall in power until his successor takes office, which is unlikely to be before
early 2025. Sall’s second term was due to end on April 2nd.
The president said he postponed the vote because of a dispute between parliament and the Constitutional Council over aspiring candidates who were not allowed to stand.

In an interview on Friday, February 9, 2024, he said he wants to rapidly organize a national dialogue that will pave the way for a peaceful electoral process.
Opposition lawmakers have filed an appeal at the Constitutional Court, while presidential candidates have appealed to the Supreme Court.
A new round of protests is planned for Tuesday, February 13. Senegalese in the diaspora have also taken to the streets. In France where a large community of Senegalese live, crowds gathered last
Saturday in major cities, including Paris, Bordeaux (southwest) and Nice (south).

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