Ousmane Sonko

Ousmane Sonko (born 15 July 1974) is a Senegalese politician and former tax inspector who is serving as the Prime Minister of Senegal since 2024.

Ousmane Sonko
Sonko in 2023
16th Prime Minister of Senegal
Assumed office
3 April 2024
PresidentBassirou Diomaye Faye
Preceded bySidiki Kaba
Mayor of Ziguinchor
In office
2022–2024
Member of the National Assembly of Senegal
In office
2017–2022
Personal details
Born (1974-07-15) 15 July 1974 (age 49)
Thiès, Senegal
Political partyPASTEF
Children6
Parents
  • Khady Ngom
  • Mamadou Sonko
Alma materGaston Berger University
Occupation
  • Politician
  • tax inspector

Sonko was the PASTEF candidate in the 2019 presidential election, ultimately placing third. A major figure in the Senegalese opposition against former president Macky Sall, his arrest and subsequent investigation by authorities in 2019 following sexual assault accusations triggered mass protests and rioting across Senegal. In June 2023, he was sentenced to two years in prison, and in July 2023, his party PASTEF was dissolved by the Senegalese government.

Early life

Sonko was born in Thiès and spent his childhood in Sébikhotane and Casamance. His father was from Casamance and his mother was from Khombole.[1]

Sonko received his baccalaureate in 1993, and graduated with a masters degree in Juridical Science from Gaston Berger University in Saint-Louis in 1999. He subsequently attended the National School of Administration and the Judiciary.[2]

Prior to entering politics, Sonko worked for 15 years as a tax inspector in Pikine.[3][4] In 2016, he acted as a whistle blower, exposing the use of offshore tax havens including a $50 million mineral sands processing plants used by a Canadian company to avoid paying $8.9 million in taxes. Sonko's employment as a tax inspector was terminated as a result of his whistleblowing.[5][6] In 2018, he published Pétrole et gaz au Sénégal, a non-fiction book chronicling his findings.[7]

Politics

In 2014, Sonko founded the African Patriots of Senegal for Work, Ethics and Fraternity (French: Patriotes africains du Sénégal pour le travail, l'éthique et la fraternité, PASTEF). Between 2017 and 2022, he served as a member of the National Assembly.[8]

In 2018, Sonko published Solutions, a book in which he put forward his political manifesto.[9] He was a candidate in the 2019 presidential election, where he called for Senegal to replace the franc with a domestic currency. In the election, Macky Sall was re-elected, with Sonko placing third with 16% of the vote.[10] During the lead up to the election, Sonko reported being targeted with anonymous smears aimed at discrediting his character.[11]

In September 2021, Sonko launched the coalition "Free the People" (Wolof: Yewwi askan wi) with the aim of gaining seats in municipal and departmental councils controlled by parties within Macky's presidential coalition, United in Hope.[12] During the 2022 local elections, Sonko was elected as Mayor of Ziguinchor.[13] His coalition also managed to gain control of local councils from United in Hope, notably in Dakar, in addition to 56 of the 165 parliamentary seats in the National Assembly.[14][8]

2021 arrest

In February 2021, an employee of a massage parlour filed a complaint against Sonko for "repetitive rape and death threats".[15] On 3 March 2021, Sonko was arrested near Cheikh Anta Diop University and charged with disturbing public order; Sonko called the charges false and politically motivated.[16] Sonko's arrest led to protests; clashes between the police and student protestors in Dakar, Bignona and Diaobe led to 14 reported deaths.[17][18] Protests against Sonko's detainment also occurred internationally, with one outside the United Nations headquarters in New York City, United States, calling for Sonko's release from prison.[19]

Alioune Badara Cissé called on the Senegalese government to stop threatening and intimidating protestors, and also called upon demonstrators to end its violence and looting, warning that Senegal was "on the verge of an apocalypse". The Economic Community of West African States similarly called for restraint and calm, as well as for the government to guarantee citizens the right to protest.[20]

In February 2021, MPs voted by majority to remove Sonko's parliamentary immunity in a vote which was described as "flawed and illegal" by opposition politicians.[21] Sonko was released under investigation; in May 2021, a judge denied to authorise him leaving the country due to his indictment for rape.[22]

Criminal convictions

On 8 May 2023, following an appeal, Sonko received a six-month suspended prison sentence for defamation and insults against Mame Mbaye Niang.[23]

On 1 June 2023, following two years of investigations, Sonko was cleared of rape charges, but was sentenced to two years imprisonment for "corrupting youth".[24] Sonko had not attended the trial, calling the investigation politically motivated and evidence of malpractice.[25] His conviction made Sonko ineligible to stand as a candidate in the 2024 presidential election, which prompted protests to occur throughout Senegal.[26] Some supporters of Sonko have stated that due to "corrupting youth" being considered a misdemeanour rather than a crime under Senegal law, that Sonko was still able to run; in July 2023, he was named as PASTEF's presidential candidate for the 2024 presidential election.[27]

2023 arrest and protests

On 28 July 2023, Sonko was arrested again and accused of "disturbing the public order".[28] On 31 July 2023, PASTEF was dissolved by the Senegalese government, triggering national protests.[29] On 6 August 2023, Sonko was reportedly hospitalised following a week-long hunger strike in protest of his arrest.[30] The Senegalese government banned TikTok from the country in August, until it provides a way for the government to censor users who "threaten the stability of the country" by protesting Sonko's arrest.[31] In October 2023, the Ziguinchor court annuled the removal of Ousmane Sonko from the electoral lists. A decision contested by state lawyers, they announced an appeal to the Supreme Court.[32] On 14 December 2023, the verdict in the new trial on the eligibility of Sonko was rendered and Sonko was declared eligible and reinstated on the electoral lists.[33] On 15 March 2024, Sonko was released from prison.[34]

Prime Minister (2024–present)

Following the victory of his protégé, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, in the 2024 Senegalese presidential election, Sonko was appointed as Prime Minister of Senegal shortly after Faye's inauguration as president on 2 April 2024.[35] Sonko formally presented his government on 5 April, which he described as a "breakaway" government symbolising "a systemic transformation voted for by the Senegalese people".[36]

Political stances and criticism

Sonko's critics have accused him of having links to the Muslim Brotherhood and claim that he wishes to implement Salafi Islam in Senegal, citing his membership of the Association of Muslim Students of Senegal during his years at university. International media like France 24 or RFI regards the labels as tactics of demonisation from the government and the party in power to obtain an excuse to imprison him just like the treatment reserved to Karim Wade in 2013/16 and Khalifa Sall who was imprisoned right before the presidential elections in 2019.[37]

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Senegal
2024–present
Incumbent