Senegal to close senate to save cash
President Sall (L) is seen with his Nigerian counterpart Goodluck Jonathan. AFP photo
“I have decided to immediately put forward a constitutional reform in order to disband the Senate. The resources which would have been used by this institution, close to $1.6 million, will instead be consecrated to finding a solution to the flooding,” Sall said, according to the Senegalese Press Agency.
Sall, a former head of the National Assembly, was elected this April, promising to stem the corruption which had characterized the former regime.
According to a U.S. Embassy cable, published by WikiLeaks, the senators each receive a monthly salary of around $2,000, a new car and a monthly gasoline allowance. Most of Senegal’s 12.7 million people live on $158 a month, according to U.S. State Department statistics. Because none of the senators were directly elected by the people, they were seen as not being accountable to the population and as a rubber stamp for the ruling party.
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