Senegal's
President Macky Sall.
Senegalese President Macky Sall presented plans to scrap the country’s upper house of parliament to raise funds
needed to fight annual flooding which killed six and left several neighborhoods under water last weekend.
Mr Sall, who won March elections on a ticket to cut excessive
spending on state institutions, said the abolition of the 100-seat
Senate would free up eight billion CFA francs a year for urgently needed
infrastructure improvements.
The measure is likely to be welcomed in poor suburbs of the capital
Dakar which suffer flooding every rainy season because of shoddy urban
planning. It will be discussed in cabinet on Thursday and is set to be
voted in the lower house within weeks.
“I am insisting more than ever on what I have called the new order of
priority: the primacy of the nation over political parties and the
reduction of government spending for the benefit of the population,”
said Mr Sall, who earlier this week cut short a private visit to South
Africa because of the flooding.
“That is why in this spirit, I have decided to submit as a matter of
urgency, a constitutional amendment bill aimed at abolishing the
Senate,” he said.
Senatorial elections were expected in the coming weeks.
The measure would be the second time the Senegalese Senate was
abolished since its creation in 1999. Mr Sall’s predecessor Abdoulaye
Wade abolished it in 2001 to save money but later re-instituted it in
2007.
In common with many former French colonies, Senegal has a
presidential system modeled closely on France’s. Political commentators
complain that the Senate, with over half if its members appointed by
the president, has tended to be used mostly as a reward for political favors.
Can this happen in Nigeria?
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