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President Abdoulaye Wade Making His Way To Voting Area
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Sunday, 26 February 2012
News Report: Voters Cast Ballots In Critical Senegal Election
Credit: Associated Press
After weeks of riots, Senegalese
voters began casting their ballots Sunday in an election that threatens the
country's image as one of the oldest and most robust democracies in Africa.
This normally unflappable nation on
the continent's western coast has been rocked by back-to-back protests
following the decision of its 85-year-old leader to seek a third term. The
opposition has vowed to render the country ungovernable if President Abdoulaye
Wade wins Sunday's poll.
By running for re-election, Wade is
violating the term limits he himself introduced into the constitution. The
deadly riots began last month, when the country's highest court ruled that
these restrictions should not apply to Wade since he was elected under an
earlier constitution that didn't include term limits.
Moussa Signate, a security guard,
sat against the cement wall of an elementary school that had been transformed
into a polling station on a downtown boulevard, watching others line up to
vote. Lines snaked outside the doors of the classrooms, but Signate said he was
so discouraged that he was considering not voting at all.
"I am thinking about the future
of my country," said the 47-year-old. "People have had enough. If you
earn, like me, 80,000 francs ($160) a month, and a bag of rice costs 25,000
($50), how are you supposed to live? We are a peaceful people, but you can't
push us and expect nothing. If Wade wins, it will be chaos."
First elected 12 years ago, Wade was
once hailed as a bright hope for Africa. He spent 25 years as the opposition
leader of this nation of 12 million, fighting the excesses of the former
socialist regime that ruled Senegal from 1960 until 2000 when Wade was finally
elected.
Many of the people lining up to vote
had initially supported Wade in the 2000 election. The landmark vote marked one
of the first peaceful transfers of power from one party to another in the
region, which is better known for coups and strongman rule.
And many said they voted for him a
second time in 2007. It's when he decided to run for a third, seven-year term
that voters here said they lost faith, both because of the perceived violation
of the constitution and because of his advanced age. If Wade wins the poll, he
will be in office past his 92nd birthday in a nation where the average person
doesn't live past 59.
The anger is combined with the fact
that one in two people in Senegal still live below the poverty line, according
to the World Bank.
For days before the vote, Olusegun
Obasanjo, the former president of Nigeria who has made a career as a mediator
of African conflicts, shuttled between the presidential palace and the 13
opposition candidates in an effort to find a solution.
Late Saturday, Obasanjo proposed a
roadmap that was accepted by neither side, and which would have called for Wade
to step down after two years, instead of after seven, if he were to win
Sunday's election.
"We believe this country is so
beautiful, so great, so important to the people of this country, to our sub-region
of West Africa, to Africa - and indeed to the world. And nothing should be done
to undermine its greatness and its beauty," Obasanjo said. "We
believe it is in the interest of this nation that unity should be
maintained."
Senegal is unlike any other country
in the region, and its immediate neighbors are a sobering reminder of what
could lie in store if the election sparks further conflict. To the south in
Ivory Coast, people are still unearthing mass graves from the postelectoral
conflict that engulfed that nation following the 2010 election.
Unlike its neighbors which began
experimenting with democracy in the 1960s after independence, Senegal has been
holding regular elections since the mid-1800s, when the citizens of this former
French colony were given the right to elect a deputy to the French parliament.
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