Senegal’s Sall seeks to unite opposition against Wade

thwart the veteran leader’s efforts to secure a third mandate.
“Wheeling and dealing between two rounds,” headlined Le Populaire newspaper, as the country’s media examined possible strategies and alliances available to the two contenders — former allies before a bitter falling out.
La Tribune played up the former links between the president and his ex-prime minister: “Master and apprentice face off on March 18”, the most likely date for the run-off election.
Provisional results put Wade (85)in the lead with 34,97 percent and credited Sall with 26,21 percent, a humiliating blow to the incumbent who had promised a crushing victory in Sunday’s election.
Sall (50), is a member of the opposition June 23 Movement (M23) against Wade’s third term candidacy which sparked a month of riots in the run-up to the election, leaving six dead and some 150 injured.
Another former prime minister Moustapha Niasse came in third with 13,24 percent and has already vowed not to support the incumbent, while other members of M23 are also most likely to rally around the younger candidate.
“The M23 message is that Wade must get out. The fundamental objective is that Wade’s third term mandate does not happen,” M23 co-ordinator Alioune Tine wrote in the Quotidien newspaper.
The leader is seeking a new seven-year term after circumventing a two-term limit he introduced into the constitution. He says changes extending term lengths from five to seven years made in 2008 allow him a fresh mandate.
The country’s highest court upheld his argument, sparking the riots in late January which threatened the country’s reputation for stability and peace.
Wade has said his party “and its allies will naturally explore all the possibilities of understanding with other political forces” ahead of the run-off.
His rival Sall speaks on his website of an “expanded government” which could include members of M23.
However another view evoked in the media is that some opposition candidates may choose to gamble on a few more years under the leadership of Wade which would give them another shot, than a possible 14 years, or two terms, under Sall.
Wade was first elected in 2000 on a wave of euphoria and his supporters praise him for overseeing a development boom.
However, he is accused of focusing on prestige projects and being out of touch with the needs of the people, battling high unemployment and crippling power cuts.
In a sign of his growing unpopularity, Wade was roundly booed as he cast his ballot and was trounced in his home polling station.
The younger Wade was at the centre of the storm which saw Sall — himself once tipped as successor — fall from grace after a meteoric rise which took him through several ministerial portfolios. — AFP.

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