Hundreds march in Senegal’s capital over broken government promises and rising costs
Hundreds demanded rehiring and lower taxes as unions said the government has broken wage promises and layoffs topped 700 at Dakar’s port.
- On Wednesday, hundreds of workers and opposition supporters marched in Dakar to protest broken government promises and rising living costs, organized by the National Confederation of Senegalese Workers and the FDR coalition.
- President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko's government inherited a $13 billion debt from the previous administration, pushing the nation's debt-to-GDP ratio to roughly 132%, stalling International Monetary Fund negotiations.
- Labor leader Mody Guiro said the administration betrayed a deal from last year that froze strikes in exchange for better wages, while more than 700 employees have been laid off from the port of Dakar since early 2025.
- Protesters demanded authorities rehire laid-off public sector workers and lower income taxes; Pape Laobe Samb, a port worker of more than 12 years, stated, "This is not what they promised people."
- Authorities claim the inherited debt necessitates institutional overhauls, while roughly 75% of Senegal's population is under 35 as the ruling PASTEF party's reform agenda encounters growing obstacles.
12 Articles
12 Articles
Hundreds of workers, trade unionists and opposition supporters marched on Wednesday in Dakar, Senegal's capital, to denounce what they consider to be unfulfilled promises by the government and an increase in the cost of living, while the country is facing a serious debt crisis. [...]
Hundreds march in Senegal's capital over broken government promises and rising costs
Hundreds of workers, union members and opposition supporters march in Senegal's capital, Dakar, protesting broken government promises and a worsening cost of living.
Hundreds of workers, trade unionists and opposition sympathizers marched on Wednesday in Dakar to protest what they say are unfulfilled promises from the government and an increase in the cost of living while Senegal is affected by a serious debt crisis.
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