Middle East & Africa | An interview with the president

Senegal’s president asks if democracy can work in Africa’s coup-belt

Macky Sall also warns that a “syndrome of chaos” threatens Senegal

Image: Sam Kerr
|DAKAR

Macky Sall, the president of Senegal since 2012, has had a closer view than anyone of the plague of coups in Africa since 2020 and the efforts to reverse them. Two of the first putsches were in Mali, Senegal’s biggest trading partner. Then came one in another neighbour, Guinea. A failed attempt in next-door Guinea-Bissau followed (see map). Mr Sall was chair of the African Union when putschists struck in Burkina Faso for the second time within 2022. And he has played a leading role in the response of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the regional bloc, to every coup, including one in Niger in July. It is worrying, then, that when asked what can be done to deter coups or return countries to democracy he is despondent. “It is difficult, I don’t know,” he says. “Sometimes we get lost.”

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Is democracy doomed in west Africa?”

From the October 28th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Middle East & Africa

Ahmed al Sharaa

Ahmed al-Sharaa declares himself president of Syria

But he has given no details of what kind of state he wants to build

People displaced by the fighting with M23 rebels make their way to the center of Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo,

The fall of Goma heralds more bloodshed in eastern Congo

Rwanda’s reckless invasion raises the risk of a wider war


Hamas fighters secure an area in a square before handing over four Israeli hostages to a Red Cross team in Gaza City on January 25, 2025

Hamas talks a big game but is in chaos

Look beyond the latest bravado and brutality and it is bitterly split


Iran’s alarming nuclear dash will soon test Donald Trump

There is no plausible civilian use for the enhanced uranium Iran is producing

Rwanda’s reckless plan to redraw the map of Africa

The fall of Goma could trigger another Congo conflict