Authorities in Senegal have banned a nomination meeting for jailed opposition leader, Ousmane Sonko to run in the 2024 presidential election.
The 49-year-old has been at the centre of a stand-off with the state that has lasted more than two years and sparked several episodes of deadly unrest.
Sonko had submitted his candidacy with the constitutional council to contest the February election, despite the state’s refusal to provide him with the necessary documents.
Authorities said Saturday’s meeting was banned due to “threats of disturbance to public order, hindrance to the free movement of people and goods and risk of infiltration by ill-intentioned people”, according to a decree seen by AFP. It was signed by Dakar prefect Cherif Mouhamadou Blondin Ndiaye, who confirmed its authenticity.
“This is just another provocation, but we invite our comrades and supporters to stay tuned.”
El Malick Ndiaye, spokesman for Pastef
“This is just another provocation, but we invite our comrades and supporters to stay tuned,” El Malick Ndiaye, a spokesman for Sonko’s dissolved party Pastef, said on Facebook.
Authorities ordered that Pastef be disbanded in July.
The party’s back-up candidate Bassirou Diomaye Faye, who is also in prison, has also filed to run in February’s presidential election.
Although the state refused to provide Sonko with the necessary documents to run for election, his lawyers said they had filed anyway, hoping the justice system would be more receptive.
Sonko’s candidacy was filed on December 12.