Senegal’s new
president has appointed firebrand politician and key backer Ousmane Sonko as
prime minister in his first act as the West African nation’s leader.
Bassirou
Diomaye Faye made the announcement shortly after he was sworn into
office on Tuesday, pledging systemic change after years of deadly turmoil under
his predecessor, Macky Sall, a political opponent of Sonko.
Speaking after his
appointment, Sonko said he would present Faye with a full list of proposed
ministerial appointments for his approval.
“There will be no
question of leaving him (Faye) alone to assume this heavy responsibility”,
Sonko said.
Faye
took the presidential oath in front of hundreds of officials and
several African heads of state at an exhibition centre in the new town of
Diamniadio, near the capital, Dakar.
Faye, 44, has never
previously held elected office. He swept to a first-round victory on a promise
of radical reform just 10 days after being released from prison.
Lena Sene, an
economist based in Dakar, told Al Jazeera that Faye faces a “very difficult”
challenge as president.
“You cannot change an
entire administration in one day. He understands that he has to put systems in
place in order to fight corruption. He is ready for that,” she said.
Sonko, 49, was at the
centre of a two-year standoff with the state that triggered bouts of deadly
unrest.
Popular among
Senegal’s youth, he was disqualified from running in the March 24 presidential
race due to a defamation conviction, and picked Faye as his replacement on the
presidential ballot. He denied any wrongdoing.
Campaigning jointly
under the slogan “Diomaye is Sonko,” Sonko urged supporters to vote for his top
lieutenant, Faye, who ultimately won with more than 54 percent of the vote in
the first round.
Economic challenges
Faye, a former tax
inspector, is Senegal’s fifth president since independence from France in 1960.
Acknowledging the
country’s desire for “systemic change”, he pledged to strengthen the country’s
democracy and establish an independent judiciary.
Working with his
populist mentor, Faye now faces the challenge of carrying out national
reconciliation, while easing the cost-of-living crisis, fighting corruption and
appearing as someone not subservient to Sonko.
He has also promised
to restore national sovereignty over key assets such as the oil, gas and
fishing sectors.
The new government
also needs to create enough jobs in a nation where 75 percent of the 18 million
population is aged under 35, and the unemployment rate is officially 20
percent.
Source: Al Jazeera
Follow the African
Elections Project on Facebook and Twitter @Africanelection for more updates.
https://www.aljazeera.com/