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Subject:
From:
Malanding Jaiteh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 31 Jul 2008 13:12:36 -0400
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Its said that in the land of blind, one eye-man is a king but in Africa 
a "double PhD, President" is PATHETIC!

Malanding


    Senegalese MPs Approve Presidential Term Extension


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Thursday, July 31, 2008

APA-Dakar (Senegal) Senegal’s National Assembly late on Monday adopted a 
non-retroactive constitutional bill adding two years to the current 
five-year presidential term of office, APA reports here.

The amendment concerns the first paragraph of Article 27 of the 22 
January 2001. According to Senegalese officials, the bill does not apply 
to the present term of office.

Defending the text on behalf of the government, Senegal’s Justice 
Minister, Mr. Madicke Niang said the rationale of the constitutional 
bill is to give to the next president, “enough time” to put in place his 
vision of society and implement his development programme.

“We need to build and manage our country, the minister said, dismissing 
the argument that any such modification of the Constitution should be 
made through a referendum.

“It is almost impossible to discuss this issue”, he said, in response to 
opposition MPs who refused to vote this bill.

According to those MPs, the government should have consulted with the 
opposition, before tabling it before the parliament.

“At a certain point in time, you need to take responsibility and to move 
on”, in line with “the vision and choices of the incumbent government”, 
and I think that time has come’’, Madicke Niang explained.

Since the country’ independence in 1960, the duration of the 
presidential term of office has been changed several times, especially 
since the advent of the unlimited multiparty system in 1981.

It was limited to five years between 1988 and 1993 and to seven from 
1993 to 2000.

Abdoulaye Wade, who was elected president in March 2000 for a seven-year 
term, decided to trim it down to five years, with no retroactive effect.

Meanwhile, he also decided that the president would be re-elected once.

The bill adopted on Monday does not change this latter provision, but 
incumbent President Wade can, if he wants, seek re-election in 2012, as 
his first seven-year term preceded the Constitution adopted on 22 
January 2001, in a referendum.

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