May 6, 2019
BBC News Africa


[image: Protesters barricade the streets of Cadjehoun the stronghold of
former president of Benin Thomas Boni Yayi on 2 May 2019, in Cotonou.]Image
copyrightAFPImage captionProtesters (pictured on Thursday) have been
cleared from the streets of Cotonou by a heavy security presence[image:
Presentational white space]

The small West African country of Benin was in the vanguard of a new wave
of multiparty democracy which spread across the continent since 1991 but
its most recent elections have tarnished its image, analysts say, after the
opposition were barred, and the military opened fire against protesters.
What happened?

The army is still patrolling the streets of Benin's main city, Cotonou,
days after deadly force was used against protesters who had gathered close
to the home of opposition leader and former President Thomas Boni Yayi.

No official death toll has been given but the opposition says seven
civilians were killed.

Their anger was sparked by the exclusion of all opposition parties from
parliamentary elections on 28 April. Turnout was at a record low, at only
27%.

Internet access was restricted on the day of the polls, a move that rights
groups and civil society organisations roundly condemned.

"A blunt violation of freedom of expression," is what Amnesty International
called it
<https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2019/04/benin-internet-shutdown-on-election-day-is-a-blunt-attack/>,
adding it showed an "alarming level of repression".

"This situation did not start with the elections," Adeline Van Houtte of
the Economist Intelligence Unit told the BBC. "Over past year we have seen
the constraining of civil liberties and crackdowns on protests."

"Democracy has been planted in minds of citizens and has been for a long
time, so this was a final blow. It has ruined Benin's image at the national
and international level."
What does it mean for democracy in Benin?

After a Marxist-Leninist regime and a series of coups d'etat, Benin along
with Zambia became one of the first African countries to introduce
multiparty elections in 1991.

Those polls saw Benin's former President Mathieu Kerekou become the first
West African leader to admit defeat in an election
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-34537057>.
[image: A woman arrives to vote at the Agla East State primary school in
Cotonou on 28 April 2019 - Bein]Image copyrightAFPImage captionVoters were
given ballots which featured no opposition parties

Since then Benin has been regarded as a democratic model, said the BBC's
Rachida Yénoukunmè Houssou in Cotonou, with several African nations
replicating its reconciliation body, the National Conference of Active
Forces of the Nation.

But new electoral laws introduced this year mean that a political party had
to pay about $424,000 (£328,000) to field a list for the 83-seat parliament.

"What's happening doesn't honour the democratic image of Benin," the
president, Patrice Talon, admitted on state TV in April.

"This situation brings discredit on our democracy and on me."

Yet the presidency last week dismissed calls from the opposition to
invalidate the results and start again - calls which they repeated at the
weekend.
[image: A map showing the locations of Cotonou and Porto-Novo in Benin.]

   - Is Africa going backwards on democracy?
   <https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-46971250>
   - Find out more about Benin
   <https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-13037572>

Presidential spokesman Wilfried Léandre Houngbedji had labelled their
actions "fear-mongering" and said the polls were conducted in line with the
law, RFI reports
<http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20190429-benin-legislatives-opposition-appelle-arret-processus-electoral>
.

Analysts say this is a turning point for Benin.

Gilles Yabi of Dakar-based think-tank Wathi, said Benin was in a "deadlock"
that was tarnishing its image.

"We're tipping over into violence," the Beninese analyst said. "It damages
the image of the country, where political dialogue meant violence was
avoided in the past.

"With high numbers of people not turning out to vote, the National Assembly
will lack legitimacy."

It is also likely to see the government "ruling without checks and
balances," Ms Van Houtte of the Economist Intelligence Unit said, "opening
the way for further weakening of Benin's democratic credentials".

"President Talon will have a free a hand now to pass through the
constitutional changes that he has wanted to make over the past two years.
Policy-making will be faster but on the other hand his cherished image of a
modern president will be damaged."
Why has it come to this?

Five years ago voters in Benin could chose from 20 parties for the 83 seats
in parliament, AFP news agency reports.

The number of political parties has since risen to more than 200, which
President Patrice Talon has sought to reduce ostensibly as part of a
reformist agenda.

MPs loyal to the president initiated two laws to this end - a new electoral
code and a new charter for political parties.
[image: A polling official cuts the seal of a ballot box at a polling
station during the elections for a new parliament in Cotonou on 28 April
2019.]Image copyrightAFPImage captionThe AU says the opposition ban is to
blame for low voter turnout

Under these new terms, all political parties have had to file
administrative documents in order to be approved by the Interior Ministry.

Only two parties met the criteria - Republican Bloc and the Progressive
Union - both of which are loyal to the president.

All the others were deemed inadmissible and so excluded from the
legislative elections.

Opposition figures said it showed that President Talon simply wanted
control over parties and institutions.

The African Union observer mission concluded that the "apathy of the
Beninese people"
<https://au.int/sites/default/files/pressreleases/36552-pr-conclusions_preliminaires_de_la_moeua_pour_des_elections_legislatives_du_28_avril_2019_au_benin.pdf>
was
a result of the opposition ban.

US Ambassador Patricia Mahoney said the polls were "neither fully
competitive nor inclusive and do not reflect the Benin that we know".
Who are the political rivals?

Former President Thomas Boni Yayi and President Patrice Talon are old
friends, said the BBC's reporter in Benin.

Nicknamed the "king of cotton" thanks to the wealth he amassed in that
sector, former businessman Mr Talon financed Mr Boni Yayi's successful 2006
and 2011 presidential campaigns.
[image: Former Beninese president Thomas Yayi Boni (L) embraces Benin's
newly elected President Patrice Talon following a reconciliation meeting
hosted by the Ivory Coast at the presidential residence in Abidjan, on 18
April 2016.]Image copyrightAFPImage captionPresident Talon (right) and
former President Boni Yayi have had a roller-coaster relationship[image:
Presentational white space]

But relations between the two men had soured by the time of President
Yayi's second term in office.

First, a corruption scandal saw Mr Talon accused of misappropriating more
than 18.2m euros ($20.4m; £15.5m) in 2011, then a year later, the
businessman fled to France and was linked to a plot to poison President Yayi
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-20043189>.

France resisted an extradition order. But Mr Talon was later pardoned by
the president in 2014, paving the way for his return to Benin.

However, Mr Talon harboured political ambitions and their apparent
reconciliation didn't last long.

There were fears that Mr Yayi would defy constitutional term limits and
stand for a third term in office.

But in the end he didn't, and the 2016 presidential election saw Mr Talon
defeat Mr Yayi's preferred candidate Lionel Zinsou.

Now in opposition, Mr Yayi has been at the forefront of the demands to
re-run the latest parliamentary elections, along with another former
President, Nicéphore Soglo.
What does the future hold?

With the election results validated by the constitutional court, MPs are to
be formally sworn in on 15 May.

The opposition maintains that the results should be annulled and the
elections re-organised. But so far their calls have been ignored by Mr
Talon's government.

"According to the courts in Benin they [the polls] were in conformity with
electoral law," said Ms Van Houtte of the the Economist Intelligence Unit.

"That's not something anyone outside the country can do anything about -
other than condemn the use of force against protesters and the internet
shutdown.

"Anything else would be seen as interference."






-- 
Ann Marie

"The art of living consists of knowing what to pay attention to and what to
ignore."  -- Mardy Grothe

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