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Sonko excluded as Senegal releases final list of presidential candidates

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A final list of 20 candidates for Senegal’s February presidential election has been released by the constitutional council, with controversial opposition figure, Ousmane Sonko, missing.

Karim Wade, the son of former president, Abdoulaye Wade, and Khalifa Sall, who both saw their aspirations of participating in the most recent presidential race dashed by legal convictions, were also left off the list. Both have since been granted presidential pardons; however, Wade is said to be ineligible this time around because he held dual citizenship at the time of his campaign.

The statement by the council claimed that opposition firebrand Sonko’s bid was invalid because of a suspended sentence related to a case of slander. Sonko, 49, has been involved in a number of legal battles since 2021; the government refutes his claims that the lawsuits are politically driven, but discontent has been stoked by the public’s outrage at his treatment.

The final list also includes Bassirou Diomaye Faye, who was nominated in November by members of Sonko’s now-dissolved Pastef party as a fallback candidate in case Sonko is found ineligible. Faye is in detention, just like Sonko, but he is still able to run because the case against him has not yet been decided. Defamation and contempt of court are two of the counts against him.

Prime Minister Amadou Ba, former mayor of Dakar, Khalifa Sall, and former prime minister Idrissa Seck are among the candidates approved by the council. Macky Sall, the outgoing president, will hand over power in July after ruling out a third term, putting an end to months of speculation that contributed to some of the deadliest violence in the normally stable West African nation’s modern history.

Since Sall declared that he would not use a constitutional revision to seek a third-term mandate—a strategy common among other African leaders to extend their reign—concerns about the possibility that Sonko’s expulsion would spark additional protests have subsided as his trial has triggered deadly demonstrations.

The February 25 election will mark the first time since Senegal’s independence that the current president will not run for office again after serving two terms in office.

A presidential candidate needs to secure the signatures of 0.8% to 1% of the voting public. At least 2,000 sponsors must be secured for each of Senegal’s fourteen regions, where a minimum of seven signatures are required.

Politics

Mass protest in Tunisia for release of political prisoners, fair elections

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Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Tunisia’s capital on Sunday to demand the release of imprisoned journalists, activists, and opposition members, as well as the date for fair presidential elections.

Local and international human rights groups have criticised the decline in civic freedoms in Tunisia since President Saied’s reign began. Local and international human rights groups have criticised the decline in civic freedoms in Tunisia since President Saied’s reign began.

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Tunisia’s capital on Sunday to demand the release of imprisoned journalists, activists, and opposition members, as well as the date for fair presidential elections. The demonstration comes amid an economic and political crisis, as well as a wave of arrests of journalists, attorneys, activists, and opponents.

Tunisian police invaded the Deanship of Lawyers building on Saturday, arresting Sonia Dahmani, a lawyer known for her harsh criticism of President Kais Saied. Two more journalists were arrested on the same day.

The opposition claims that the political atmosphere is unsuitable for holding elections, citing press restrictions and the detention of key opponents and activists. They appealed on Sunday for a clean political climate in preparation for a vote that would end the press and political constraints.

“Today there is no climate for fair elections and there is no date… the authorities are repressing politicians, lawyers and journalists,” said Imed Khemiri, a senior official in the Ennahda party, a member of the Salvation Front, which is organizing the protest.

“The storming of the lawyers’ headquarters yesterday is a dangerous precedent that perpetuates the authoritarian regime,” he added.

One of the most notable candidates, Abir Moussa, has been imprisoned for months, and Mondher Zanaidi announced his candidacy for a prospective election from France, despite fears that he would be detained if he returned to Tunisia.

Saied, without clarifying who he was referring to, accused possible candidates of being traitors seeking refuge abroad.

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Civil society organizations sue Nigerian’s central bank over new cybersecurity levy

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The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, a non-profit organization, BudgIT, and 136 concerned Nigerians have sued the Central Bank of Nigeria “over its failure” to rescind the recently announced controversial cybersecurity levy.

In what was described as an “unlawful circular,” the plaintiffs in the suit number FHC/L/CS/822/2024 filed last Friday at the Federal High Court, Lagos State,  asked the court to determine “whether the CBN circular dated 6th May 2024, directing financial institutions to deduct from customers’ accounts a cybersecurity levy is unlawful and therefore ultra vires the CBN.”

SERAP’s Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, revealed the lawsuit in a statement on Sunday following the apex bank’s circular last Monday, ordering all commercial, merchant, non-interest, and payment service banks in the country to charge a cybersecurity levy on transactions.

“The levy shall be applied at the point of electronic transfer origination, then deducted and remitted by the financial institution. The deducted amount shall be reflected in the customer’s account with the narration, ‘Cybersecurity Levy.” the circular stated.

The announcement of the levy has been greeted with widespread condemnation, leading to President Bola Tinubu asking the CBN to suspend the implementation of the controversial cybersecurity levy policy and order a review; however, the plaintiffs asked the court to determine whether the apex bank’s directive “is not in breach of sections 14(2), 44(1), and 162(1) of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended], and thus unconstitutional, null, and void.”

They insisted that the “CBN, its office, agents, privies, assigns, or any other persons acting on its instructions from enforcing the circular dated 6th May 2024, pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice filed contemporaneously in this suit,” be restrained.

The plaintiffs’ lawyer, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN, filed the complaint, which stated, in part, that “the CBN circular is unlawful and an outright violation of the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution and the country’s international obligations.”

“Unless the reliefs sought are granted, the CBN will enforce its circular directing banks to deduct from customers’ accounts a cybersecurity levy. Millions of Nigerians with active bank accounts would suffer irreparable damage from the unlawful deduction of cybersecurity levies from their accounts.

“The provisions of the Cybercrimes Act on payment of cybersecurity levy strictly apply only to businesses listed in the Second Schedule to the Act. These provisions do not refer bank customers, contrary to the CBN circular to all banks and other financial institutions.”

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s Vice President, Kashim Shettima, on Saturday allayed fears of citizens over the tax reforms being implemented by the current administration, stressing that the tax reforms are targeted at revitalizing the country’s economy and not to frustrate and impoverish Nigerians.

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