News Article(permalink)
Two parties close to President Patrice Talon scored a crushing majority in Benin's municipal elections on Sunday, which were controversially held despite the coronavirus threat. Of 1,815 council seats at stake in the West African country, 1,555 were won by the Progressive Union and the Republican Bloc, the electoral commission CENA announced late Wednesday. Turnout was around 50 percent, according to its figures. The outcome had been widely expected in the context of Benin's political crisis. The only opposition party that was able to field candidates, the Cowry Forces for an Emerging Benin (FCBE), formed by supporters of former president Boni Yayi, picked up 260 seats. Two other parties, the PRD and UDBN, failed to reach a threshold of 10 percent entitliing them to a share of the seats. Talon, a former business magnate who came to power in 2016, has been accused of engineering a crackdown that has tarnished Benin's reputation as a vibrant multi-party democracy. Parties allied to the president won all the seats at legislative polls last year after opposition groups were effectively banned from standing, but turnout was only 25 percent. Thousands of protestors, many of them supporters of the former president, took to the streets, where police dispersed them using live rounds. Sunday's municipal elections were for seats on 77 councils across the country. Many parties were barred from voting because they did not meet conditions set down by a new electoral code. Their leaders urged the public not to cast their vote, given what they called a "parody" of an election and the risk from coronavirus. "Nothing has fundamentally changed. We are virtually in the same scenario as in the last legislative elections, because most of the municipal councils are made up of councillors belonging to Patrice Talon's two political parties," political commentator Ambroise Hountondji said. str/spb/ri/ach
Author:
Factors
Political Leaning
Emotion
Sentiment
Date published
2020-05-21

