Saturday, September 7

Still reeling from a whirlwind marketing campaign, younger folks in Senegal threw jackets over their worn election T-shirts on Tuesday to attend the inauguration of an opposition politician who went from political prisoner to president in lower than three weeks.

Their new chief, Bassirou Diomaye Faye — at 44, Africa’s youngest elected president — took the oath of workplace promising “systemic change,” and paying homage to the many individuals killed, injured, and imprisoned within the yearslong lead-up to the West African nation’s election.

“I will always keep in mind the heavy sacrifices made so as to never disappoint you,” Mr. Faye mentioned, addressing an enormous auditorium through which African heads of state and dignitaries sat on the entrance. From the again, lots of of supporters of Mr. Faye and his highly effective backer, the opposition chief Ousmane Sonko, shouted for pleasure.

It was the fruits of months of drama, after the previous president, Macky Sall, canceled the election with simply weeks to go, citing irregularities on the constitutional council — after which, beneath intense home and worldwide strain, agreed to carry it in any case.

Mr. Sall’s handpicked candidate was resoundingly crushed by Mr. Faye, a tax inspector and political rookie who obtained greater than 54 % of the vote, regardless of having solely 10 days of freedom through which to marketing campaign. He had been jailed on expenses of defamation and contempt of court docket, and was awaiting trial when Mr. Sall introduced the adoption of an amnesty legislation and was launched.

“You’re Senegal’s uncontested and dazzling choice,” mentioned the president of the constitutional council, Mamadou Badio Camara, presiding over the inauguration.

But Mr. Faye was not the one politician that Senegal had successfully endorsed. Mr. Sonko, the person whose assist helped get Mr. Faye elected, was sitting within the second row.

“Thank you, Sonko, thank you,” yelled his supporters at key moments in Tuesday’s ceremony.

Mr. Sonko, till now Senegal’s foremost opposition chief, was additionally in jail till three weeks in the past, barred from working for president himself after convictions on expenses of defamation and “corruption of youth” in relation to accusations introduced by a younger therapeutic massage parlor worker.

When he was launched, he instantly went on the marketing campaign path with Mr. Faye, telling his supporters {that a} vote for Mr. Faye was a vote for him.

Mr. Faye made no point out in his speech of Mr. Sonko, who reduce a low profile in a black hat and tunic. But Mr. Sonko was a relentless presence. He hobnobbed with the African presidents who waited for the ceremony to start in an antechamber of a convention heart in Diamniadio, a brand new metropolis nonetheless beneath development and a pet challenge of Mr. Sall.

Then, within the hangar-like room the place Mr. Faye would take his oath, Mr. Sonko took his place within the second row, simply behind the 2 first women — wives of the polygamous new president. And Mr. Sonko obtained the most important cheers of the day, each time his face appeared on the big screens on the entrance of the auditorium.

Much cheering additionally rang out for the navy president of Guinea, and the representatives of Mali and Burkina Faso, three West African nations whose governments had been overthrown in coups lately and at the moment are dominated by juntas. The rhetoric of these juntas — centered on sovereignty from France, the previous colonial energy perceived by many West Africans as persevering with to meddle of their affairs — mirrors that of Mr. Sonko and Mr. Faye.

“The youth of Senegal is connecting with the youth of those countries, over these issues of sovereignty,” the president’s uncle, additionally named Diomaye Faye, mentioned in an interview on Tuesday.

Mr. Faye and Mr. Sonko have pledged to drop or change the phrases of the CFA, the regional forex backed by France, and renegotiate Senegal’s contracts with foreign-owned firms to extract newly-discovered oil and fuel.

In his speech, Mr. Faye harassed that Senegal would stay open to relations with different nations which might be “respectful of our sovereignty, consistent with our people’s aspirations, and in a mutually winning partnership.”

After the swearing-in, a motorcade carried him to the presidential palace. Last week, Mr. Sall had welcomed him and Mr. Sonko, his former arch-rivals, in a stiff however determinedly pleasant assembly — official images of which had been later given to the media.

On Tuesday, Mr. Sall, a two-term president who had served for 12 years, welcomed Mr. Faye as soon as extra, who arrived this time with a presidential guard.

After sitting chatting for some time and handing over the vital paperwork, Mr. Sall climbed right into a Toyota, pulling out of the palace gates and leaving for good.

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