Tag: Senegalese

  • Senegal: Presidential candidates demonstrate against delay of election

    Senegal: Presidential candidates demonstrate against delay of election

    On Sunday, Senegalese presidential candidates participated in a symbolic vote arranged by a civil society organization to protest the delayed presidential election, originally scheduled for that day.

    Candidates discreetly placed their ballots in a box marked with the words “RIP 25 February.”

    Presidential contender and former Dakar Mayor Khalifa Sall voiced strong opposition, stating, “we cannot accept, with the stroke of a pen, being deprived of what is essential to us, that is to say, our freedom and democracy, and above all our ability to elect our leaders,” said presidential candidate and former Dakar Mayor Khalifa Sall.

    “It hurts me a lot to see that our rights have been trampled on to bring us back today to an uncertain process,” said protester Ibrahim Deme.

    Despite a ban on their demonstration, some young Senegalese protesters gathered in Dakar, expressing discontent over the postponement.

    Protester Ibrahim Deme lamented, “It hurts me a lot to see that our rights have been trampled on to bring us back today to an uncertain process.”

    Senegalese President Macky Sall announced the vote’s postponement on February 3, triggering opposition-led protests, clashes with security forces, arrests, and mobile internet cuts.

    These events intensified political tensions in one of Africa’s historically stable democracies.

    This year’s election, marred by controversies, included deadly protests leading President Sall to announce he wouldn’t seek a third term and the disqualification of two opposition leaders.

  • Senegalese opposition MPs detained in anti-poll row raid

    Senegalese opposition MPs detained in anti-poll row raid

    Three members of the Senegalese opposition were taken into custody after the parliament decided to delay the presidential election by 10 months.

    The spokesperson for the former opposition party Pastef, El Malick Ndiaye, told Reuters that three lawmakers from the Yewwi Askan Wi opposition group were arrested on Tuesday.

    On Monday, the government decided to delay the vote until December and allow President Macky Sall to stay in office longer.

    Many opposition MPs were taken out of the room against their will after arguing loudly.

    The wait has caused many people to protest and other countries to worry about Senegal’s democracy, which is usually strong.

    The US government said that Senegal’s actions go against its history of democracy.

    Ecowas, a group of West African countries, is asking politicians to quickly set up a new schedule for elections that follows the country’s laws.

  • Discover newest Senegalese filmmaker busting through barriers at Cannes

    Discover newest Senegalese filmmaker busting through barriers at Cannes

    French-Senegalese director, Ramata-Toulaye Sy, who is competing for this year’s Palm d’Or at the age of 25, debuted her first film, “Banel & Adama,” on Saturday May 20, 2023.

    Born in France to Senegalese parents, she brought out this romance as a tribute to her African culture and also to fill a gap in the film landscape.

    “All I wanted, little by little, was to really deconstruct, deconstruct this vision of Africa that we have, even on the place of women in relation to Banel. And that’s why she’s an unsympathetic character. She’s not the smooth, oppressed, black African woman who seeks help, who we expect. Banel, I know she’s very unsympathetic and a lot of people can’t like her and so much the better. It’s completely assumed and that’s also why we wanted to deconstruct all the codes we knew about cinema and Africa,” said  Ramata-Toulaye Sy, a French-Senegalese director.

    Banel & Adama is the story of a young couple whose love is put to the test by the traditions of their village, located in northern Senegal, on the border with Mauritania. 

     Ramata is now hoping that her film at this years Cannes festival will position her for better recognition.

    “The competition, we didn’t expect it. We are in Cannes. We’re in competition, it’s a first film, it’s an African film, it’s an unexpected film. I know that in the articles, people always say “Who is she? We don’t know her”. But I know myself, I have been here for a long time. I work and have worked to be here. I didn’t just end up here yesterday, in fact. I studied film, I was at university, I went to La Fémis, I co-wrote features. So you didn’t know me. But today, you know me,” said Ramata-Toulaye Sy, a French-Senegalese director.

    The daughter of Senegalese immigrants, Ramata-Toulaye Sy was born in the Paris region where she spent her entire childhood. It was on the benches of the Fémis, the prestigious film school, that she had the idea for Banel and Adama, the script of which she presented at her graduation competition in 2015. 

    She wrote it as a tribute to her family culture. But also to fill a glaring lack of representation in the film landscape.

  • Clashes ahead of Sonko’s trial over death of police officer in Senegal

    Clashes ahead of Sonko’s trial over death of police officer in Senegal

    Authorities said that a police officer died during riots in the southern town of Ziguinchor between Senegalese security personnel and followers of opposition leader Ousmane Sonko.

    The clashes occurred on Monday near Mr Sonko’s home, where he has been staying while vowing to defy any summons to appear in court for a rape trial.

    Supporters have surrounded his home since last week, fearing police would move to arrest him and bring him to court.

    A statement from the Senegalese interior ministry said the police officer was “accidentally hit by a vehicle”, during the Monday violence.

    Reports say security has been tightened in the capital Dakar ahead of the resumption of Mr Sonko’s rape trial on Tuesday. He was charged based on a woman’s accusations that he assaulted her when she worked at a massage salon two years ago.

    Mr Sonko and his allies deny the charges and say they are a ploy to bar him from contesting the 2024 presidential election.

    He was handed a six-month suspended sentence on 8 May for defaming Tourism Minister Mame Mbaye Niang in a review of the initial two-month term.

  • Senegalese president goes into quarantine

    Senegal’s President Macky Sall has quarantined himself after coming in contact with someone who tested positive for coronavirus.

    The president tested negative but will self-isolate for two weeks as a precaution, his office said in a short televised statement.

    A Senegalese lawmaker, Yeya Diallo, announced earlier on Wednesday that she had tested positive for the virus.

    She called on people to take essential personal measures such as maintaining hygiene and social distancing.

    Senegal has so far confirmed 6,129 cases including 93 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Senegals engineering students design machines to fight coronavirus

    Senegalese engineering students are throwing themselves at the West African state’s growing coronavirus problem with inventions such as automatic sanitiser dispensers and medical robots.

    Youngsters from a top engineering school in the capital Dakar have turned their technical skills toward easing pressure on the wards and they are already in talks with hospitals over some of their innovations.

    One example is a small robot, dubbed ‘Dr. Car’, which will be able to measure patients’ blood pressure and temperature, according to students from Dakar’s Ecole Superieure Polytechnique (ESP).

    The university is considered one of West Africa’s best for engineering and technology, and is highly selective, with 28 nationalities represented among its 4,000 students.

    Lamine Mouhamed Kebe, one of the students who conceived the robot, said the machine would reduce the exposure of doctors and nurses to infected patients and use of expensive protective gear.

    “At a certain point … we realised that medical equipment was limited,” the 23-year-old added. “We can do something”.

    Guided by a mounted camera and controlled via an app, doctors will also be able to communicate with patients through the robot, Kebe said, potentially allowing them to treat people isolated in hard-to-reach rural areas.

    Confirmed Covid-19 cases rising

    Senegal’s coronavirus outbreak pales in comparison to the situation in virus-stricken Europe and the United States.

    But after a slow start, confirmed cases in the nation of some 16 million people are increasing.

    And as with other poor countries in the region, there are fears that Senegal is ill equipped to handle a large outbreak.

    Authorities have recorded more than 1,700 cases to date, including 19 fatalities. Hospital staff in Dakar are also beginning to contract Covid-19.

    Faced with an increased threat, frontline Senegalese doctors are taking the young engineers seriously.

    An initial prototype designed by the students was essentially a small mobile trolley, designed to carry equipment or meals to patients.

    But Abdoulaye Bousso, the head of an emergency ward in a Dakar hospital, asked to redesign it to include mechanical arms capable of conducting medical tests an upgrade the students are working on now.

    “It’s a whole process,” Bousso said, adding that the robot could cut down on their use of expensive bibs and gowns, which must be thrown away.

    Focus on practicality

    Ndiaga Ndiaye, an ESP professor in charge of marketing the inventions, said that the university has long emphasised practical projects and entrepreneurship, which meant students were poised to act when the virus broke out.

    The robot is “far from being a gadget,” he said, and could be produced at a larger scale once ready.

    “We are a public institution. There is one concept that binds us all together, and that is service to the community,” he said.

    Other students have devised simpler devices that they also hope will battle the disease in Senegal.

    Gianna Andjembe, a masters student in electrical engineering, has designed an automatic hand-sanitiser dispenser that he said could reduce the need for staff in schools and hospitals to supervise hand-washing.

    “It’s very simple, it’s basic,” said the 26-year-old.

    “As scientists, as engineers, we have to meet the challenges and really take our destiny into our own hands,” Andjembe added.

    The coronavirus has upended ESP students’ lives.

    Lectures are now held over video and students who used to tinker in labs until late at night must now rush home owing to a dusk-to-dawn curfew.

    But the crisis has also given the young engineers a sense of purpose.

    “What has changed is the responsibility,” robotmaker Kebe said before adding that the students also felt “much more patriotism”.

    Source: france24.com