Senegal's ousted PM Ousmane Sonko says his party will not participate in new government

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Senegal's Pastef party will not participate in the next government and will not be represented by any ministers, said Ousmane Sonko, the country's recently ousted prime minister and leader of the party said on Monday.

Sonko said in a post on ⁠X that he met on Monday with President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, his ally-turned-rival, ‌and that "points of disagreement" emerged about the role ⁠of Pastef, which holds a large parliamentary majority, within the executive branch.

Therefore Pastef "will not participate in the next government ​and will not be represented by any ‌ministers," Sonko said. "We wish the new team every success."

Senegal's Pastef political party will not participate in the country's new ​government, party leader and ousted prime minister Ousmane Sonko said in a post on X on June 1, 2026. Senegal's Pastef political party will not participate in the country's new ​government, party leader and ousted prime minister Ousmane Sonko said in a post on X on June 1, 2026. © Screengrab X @SonkoOfficiel

Faye sacked Sonko and dissolved the government on May 22, then appointed seasoned economist ‌Ahmadou Al Aminou Lo as a replacement.

Read moreSenegal's President Faye names economist as prime minister after Sonko ouster

Lawmakers rebelled against Faye's decision last week ​by reinstating Sonko as a member of parliament and overwhelmingly backing him as speaker with the support of 132 lawmakers in ​the 165-member assembly.

The upheaval, following months of mounting tensions ​between Faye and Sonko, comes as Senegal tries ​to navigate economic woes stemming from the discovery in 2024 of misreported debt by ​the previous government.

The International Monetary Fund froze its $1.8 billion lending program with Senegal following the discovery of the debt, which pushed the country's end-2024 debt level to 132% of its economic output.

Senegal ⁠expects to resume talks with the IMF next week and hopes to ⁠reach agreement ​on key points by June 30, the finance minister said last month.

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)

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