Senegal: President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, the Temptation of Comfort and the Forgetting of Struggles
Power has a cruel way of revealing men—sometimes by unmasking them. President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, elected as an alternative to the neocolonial establishment, is now becoming the very embodiment of what he once denounced. Brought to power by a rebellious youth and a majority weary of diplomatic and economic submission, the Senegalese president seems, just a few months into his term, already afflicted by the classic syndrome of renunciation.
This is not blind criticism, nor an unfounded accusation. It is a factual observation: the actions taken in Paris and Lomé during the 2nd session of the WAEMU Council of Ministers no longer reflect the words passionately proclaimed in Dakar and Ziguinchor during the campaign. Instead of a discourse of rupture, we are witnessing a return to traditional diplomatic mechanisms—mechanisms all too often designed in France’s favor.
In this new posture, President Bassirou Faye appears to be drifting further each day from the man with whom he once shared prison cells, political rallies, and dreams: Ousmane Sonko. The Prime Minister, steadfast in his sovereignist stance, is not backing down. He continues to champion the voice of pan-Africanists and committed patriots. And it is precisely this that is unsettling.
The differences between the two heads of the Senegalese executive are no longer just a matter of strategic debate. It has become an ideological rift. On one side, a president extending a hand to Paris, even at the cost of trampling popular expectations. On the other, a Prime Minister standing firm, refusing to compromise on principles of sovereignty, social justice, and structural reform.
The real danger for Senegal lies not only in this division but in the growing sense of betrayal among the population. For when hope collapses, the streets awaken. And history teaches us that betrayed peoples do not forgive easily.
Africa no longer needs compliant leaders. It yearns for destiny-builders. President Diomaye Faye now stands at a crossroads: to align or to embody. He cannot do both.
