Senegal elections: Sall poised to win re-election as polls open

Dakar, Senegal – Polls have opened in Senegal‘s presidential election, the first since a 2016 referendum approved a cut in presidential mandates from seven to five years.

At least 6.5 million Senegalese registered to take part in the poll, which will be open from 08:00 GMT until 18:00 GMT on Sunday.

The electoral commission has set up about 15,000 voting stations across the West African country of 15 million people.

President Macky Sall, who is seeking a second and final term in office, became the frontrunner after two of Senegal’s most well-known opposition leaders were barred from running in the election.

“Victory in the first round is indisputable,” Sall told a recent Dakar campaign rally.

The former mayor of the capital, Khalifa Sall, who is not related to the president, is serving a five-year jail term on corruption charges, while Karim Wade, son of the country’s former leader Abdoulaye Wade, has gone into exile in Qatar after serving half of a six-year jail term for corruption.

Both deny the charges, which they say are politically motivated.

Vote counting will start shortly after the polls close with provincial results released by February 26 and official final results not later than March 1.

A candidate must secure more than 50 percent of the votes to be declared the winner.

If no contestant has garnered that, a runoff between the two candidates that secured the most votes in the first round will be held on March 24.

The election period has been relatively peaceful but Amnesty International said at least two people have been killed in campaign-related incidents since February 4. 

In Dakar’s Medina neighbourhood, a short distance from the city centre, voters had started queuing up long before sun rise. 

At a polling station in the Alasane Ndiaye Allo primary school, Mousse Cisse said voting was proceeding smoothly. 

“Everything is going well. I will vote then go back home to wait for the result,” the 45-year-old trader added, as more people trickled into the polling station at Alasane Ndiaye Allo primary school.

Few steps away, dressed in a white traditional dress, Rosso Ba said she had waited for two hours to cast her ballot.

“I want a positive change in my country. I want change to happen without any violence after the election,” the 55-year-old told Al Jazeera. 

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