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Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Senegal’s Ex-prime Minister Charged With Questioning The President About France’s Le Pen

According to his Lawyer, Cheikh Hadjibou Soumare, Senegal’s former prime minister, was charged with libel on Friday after asking President Macky Sall if he had given funds to French far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

Soumare, who served as budget minister and then prime minister under former President Abdoulaye Wade from 2007 to 2009, was detained by police on Thursday.

Soumare’s lawyer, Mame Adama Gueye, told AFP that he was charged with libel and spreading “false information” before being released on bail.

In an open letter to Sall last weekend, Soumare asked the president whether he had donated 12 million euros ($12.7 million) to a “French political figure” whose party is distinguished “by hatred and rejection of others”.

On January 18, Le Pen, the leader of France’s National Rally, formerly known as the National Front, paid a visit to Sall in Dakar.

Soumare did not specify Le Pen by name, but the Senegal government did so in its rebuttal to his question.

In its statement on Tuesday, the government said it “rejects and strongly condemns such insinuations”, which it described as “cowardly and unfounded”.

Soumare had also challenged Sall to say whether he intended to delay presidential elections due next February.

Sall was elected in 2012 and re-elected in 2019 but has remained silent on whether he intends to seek a third term in 2024, something that critics say would breach the constitution.

In a brief statement to reporters, Soumare said that one of the conditions of his bail was that he could not comment publicly on his case.

Rights defenders and Sall’s opponents say civil liberties in Senegal are coming under pressure in the run-up to the presidential vote.

The government refutes any regression and says that laws are being applied fairly.

Two journalists have been charged with spreading false information since November.

Soumare, in 2007, succeeded Sall as prime minister.

After leaving that office, he became president of the commission of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), which brings together eight countries under a common currency.

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