This video illustrates how African nations, despite achieving democratic transitions, often remain trapped in cycles of economic dependency due to hidden debts from previous regimes. In Senegal's case, the new president Bassirou Diomaye Faye won a landslide victory and achieved a supermajority in parliament, yet his administration faces a paradox: while campaigning on economic sovereignty and breaking away from Western financial dictates, the hidden debt left by the previous Macky Sall regime forces continued dependence on the International Monetary Fund. This demonstrates that democratic political change alone cannot break the cycle of neo-colonial economic dependence without addressing the underlying fiscal realities.
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Why Senegal's New Leader Is Already TrappedAdded:
The same game is being played again. So, no African country never truly becomes independent of the West.
This time, the playground is Senegal.
From deadly street protests to the imprisonment of opposition leaders, from a canceled election to a constitutional showdown, Senegal has seen it all over the last few years. Hello and welcome.
You're watching Info Feed.
>> [music] >> For decades, Senegal was heralded as the poster child of democracy in West Africa. Since its independence, the country has never experienced a military coup. It witnessed peaceful transfers of power in 2000 and 2012. It was the anchor of stability in the Sahel.
But stability is not a permanent state.
It requires maintenance.
And under former President Macky Sall, that stability began to crack. Macky Sall came to power in 2012. For a long time, his tenure was defined by large-scale infrastructure projects, new airports, highways, and offshore oil and gas developments under the plan Senegal Emergent. But beneath this shiny new infrastructure, resentment was brewing.
Senegal has a massive youth population.
Over 60% of the country is under the age of 25. For them, highways and stadiums meant very little when 20% of the workable population was either unemployed or underemployed. The wealth was not trickling down. And when a young, charismatic former tax inspector named Ousmane Sonko began pointing this out, the government panicked. Sonko spoke of systemic corruption. He spoke of French neocolonialism and exploitation of Senegal's resources.
He resonated with the youth. So, what did the state do?
They targeted him.
So, here's a timeline of how the crisis escalated. March 2021 and June 2023, the state files charge against Sonko.
First, for corrupting the youth.
Then, for fomenting an insurrection. His arrest sparked the deadliest protests in Senegal's modern history.
Security forces fired into crowds.
Over 60 people were killed.
Thousands arrested. July 2023, Sonko's political party, PASTEF, is dissolved by the government.
Sonko is barred from running in the 2024 presidential elections. In February 2024, the ultimate red line is crossed.
Just 3 weeks before the February 25th election, President Macky Sall cancels the vote.
He pushes a law through the National Assembly without the opposition present to delay the election by 10 months. He claimed it was to resolve disputes over candidate lists.
The opposition called it what it was, a constitutional coup. The constitutional coup failed. This was the moment of truth for Senegal and many neighboring countries and many African countries. A delayed election is a first step toward a dictatorship, but Senegal's institutions held the line.
Civil society pushed back.
The youth refused to back down.
And most importantly, the judiciary proved its independence.
The country's top judicial body, the Constitutional Council, stepped in. They declared Macky Sall's delay completely unlawful and voided the decree.
They forced the government to hold the elections before Sall's mandate ended on April 2nd.
Well, think about this. A sitting African president, backed by state security, was forced to bend the knee to the constitution.
It is a rare and powerful precedent.
Under immense pressure, Macky Sall retreated.
He passed an amnesty law.
Thousands of political prisoners were released, including Ousmane Sonko and his second in command, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, who had been imprisoned for criticizing the judicial system. They were released just weeks before the rescheduled election of March 24, 2024.
Sonko could not run, so he pointed to Faye and said, "Diomaye is Sonko, and Sonko is Diomaye." From prisoners to presidents, what happened next was unprecedented.
Bassirou Diomaye Faye, running as an independent because his party was dissolved, went from a prison cell to the presidential palace in less than 3 weeks. He won the election in a landslide in the first round, securing nearly 54% of the vote.
At 44 years old, he became the youngest leader in Senegal's history. And true to his word, his first major act as president was to appoint Ousmane Sonko as his prime minister. Their mandate was clear. They promised a rupture with the Macky Sall era. This was not just a change of government. It was a total ideological shift. But winning the presidency was only half the battle.
When Faye took over in April 2024, the National Assembly was still controlled by Macky Sall's allies.
Governance was a gridlock. So Faye bided his time. In late 2024, he dissolved the parliament and called for a new legislative elections in November. The result, another political earthquake.
PASTEF won a staggering 130 out of 165 seats in the parliament, a supermajority. The people of Senegal did not just want a new president. They wanted to give him the absolute power to enact his vision. No more excuses, no more gridlock. The economic reality check came in 2025, which brings us to today. We are in 2026.
The protests are over, the political crisis is officially behind them.
The mandate is absolute, but the poetry of campaigning has now met the prose of governing. And the reality of governing is harsh. First, the numbers. Senegal's economy is actually growing. In 2024, the country officially started hydrocarbon production. Thanks to this new oil and gas revenue, GDP growth hit an estimated 6.7% in 2025.
Inflation has been wrestled down to around 1.4%.
But there's a catch.
And it is a big one. When Faye and Sonko took over, they ordered an audit of the state's finances. What they found shocked the international community. The Macky Sall government had reportedly hidden the true extent of Senegal's public expenditure and debt between 2019 and 2023. The fiscal deficit was far worse than previously reported. This discovery had immediate consequences. Senegal's credit ratings were downgraded, borrowing costs surged.
This presents a massive paradox for the current administration. The Ousmane Faye and Ousamane Sonko campaigned on economic sovereignty. They promised to break away from Western financial dictates. They promised to renegotiate the controversial fishing agreements with the European Union, which has decimated local fishing communities. But because of the hidden debt left by the previous regime, Senegal is more dependent on the International Monetary Fund more than ever. The all-too-familiar same game being played on African countries over and over and over again, so they never become sovereign and truly independent.
>> Mhm.
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