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Published 28th March 2024

Vol 65 No 7


Senegal

Faye's victory shakes up the region

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2024
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2024

In jail until ten days before the vote, a political outsider has been elected president on the first ballot

As detailed results from around the country trickled in, Amadou Ba, former Prime Minister and standard bearer for the ruling Benno Bokk Yaakaar (BBY) alliance, could draw only one conclusion. By the afternoon of 25 March, less than 24 hours after the polls had closed, it was clear that he had been decisively defeated by Bassirou Diomaye Faye of the radical opposition Patriotes africains du Sénégal pour le travail, l'éthique et la fraternité (Pastef).

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Team Anti-Système takes over the system

Pic: @DiomayeFaye
Pic: @DiomayeFaye

President Faye will have to balance the expectations on job creation with reassurance for investors

Withdraw from the French-backed Communauté Financière Africaine (CFA) monetary zone, restructure public debt and renegotiate the oil, gas and mining contracts – these are the policy imperatives that...


General Tiani swaps the US for Russia

Niger PM on official visit to Iran. Pic: Ahmad Moeini Jam/IRNA
Niger PM on official visit to Iran. Pic: Ahmad Moeini Jam/IRNA

Annulling its defence agreements with Washington, the Niamey junta strengthens ties with Moscow and Tehran

Severing military ties with the United States on 16 March, three months after France closed its embassy in Niamey, General Abdourahamane Tiani's Conseil national pour la sauvegarde de...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

Thirty years after the genocide in Rwanda, President Paul Kagame remains omnipresent on the national and regional political scene. He is certain to secure another term with a Soviet-style vote share in July's election. He has made no attempt to groom a successor and could serve two more five-year terms. Some in Rwanda and the region fear that the post-genocide reconciliation is far shallower than the government claims.

Though he has handed over his mantle as the African Union's de fac...

Thirty years after the genocide in Rwanda, President Paul Kagame remains omnipresent on the national and regional political scene. He is certain to secure another term with a Soviet-style vote share in July's election. He has made no attempt to groom a successor and could serve two more five-year terms. Some in Rwanda and the region fear that the post-genocide reconciliation is far shallower than the government claims.

Though he has handed over his mantle as the African Union's de facto leader on reform to Kenya's William Ruto, Kagame's diplomatic skills are as sharp as any rival's. The United States and France have stepped up criticism of Kigali's support for M23 in eastern Congo-Kinshasa but have done little to constrain it. Kigali has emerged as an investment hub and – to Kenya's chagrin – an alternative international conference host to Nairobi. Rwanda depends on aid flows for over 60% of its budget, but neither the US nor European states are prepared to use this to pressure Kigali on Congo-K.

The European Commission signed an agreement to import critical raw materials from Rwanda, much to the fury of Congo-K, just days after the dispute over M23 dominated February's AU summit. Kagame's government has been paid over £300 million by Britain to process asylum seeker claims. The scheme is yet to see a single person flown to Rwanda and is likely to be abandoned by an incoming Labour government.

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A one-man diplomatic mission

President Ruto has become an everyman of international summitry but is he leaving his top advisors sidelined?

For a politician whose skills were seen as being centred entirely on domestic politics before winning the presidency in August 2022, William Ruto has quickly established a reputation...


Bribes row rocks parliament

Speaker Among refuses to hear charges of misuse of public funds by her office as more evidence emerges of efforts to bribe the opposition

Parliamentary Speaker Anita Among has refused to answer charges that she has obtained millions of dollars' worth of expenses and allowances she was not entitled to that were...


Politicking hinders the war effort

Manoeuvring in Mogadishu for the elections is diverting focus from the war on Al Shabaab and the pirates are returning to the high seas

Analysis of recent security lapses in and around Mogadishu show the government in Mogadishu is in danger of losing much of the ground it gained in the fight...


Mobutu-style economic nationalism returns

State officials led by Kashal Katemb are bent on restructuring company ownership in favour of Congolese business people

Foreign companies in Congo-Kinshasa are increasingly alarmed at what they see as a wave of economic nationalism that revives the politics of 'Zaïreanisation' under the three-decade kleptocratic rule...


Ceasefire efforts resume as Burhan's forces go on offensive

After a year of the generals' war, the UN says the country is weeks away from a 'catastrophic hunger crisis'

International alignments on the Sudan civil war are shifting and there are multiple attempts to revive the stalled talks for a ceasefire ahead of a feared escalation in...


Historic vote could set a new economic path

Radical nationalism is on the ballot as the establishment candidate is challenged by a new generation of opposition activists

The presidential election on 24 March is the most important in Senegal's history offering voters a clear choice on economic policy at a time of heightened political tensions....



Pointers

A debt deal redux

Zambia has finally reached an agreement to restructure its US$3 billion of Eurobonds after more than three years in default, the government announced on 25 March. The three...


Re-opening the commission's wounds

The audit of the controversial August 2022 presidential elections and the scope of its mandate have been the most disputed topic facing the bipartisan National Dialogue Committee (NADCO),...


Court date for mine bosses

Two former executives and a business consultant from collapsed Sierra Leone iron ore developer London Mining PLC are set to stand trial in London on charges of making...