
The Senegal government on Friday vowed to use "all means necessary" to return order after police fired tear gas in clashes with supporters of opposition leader Ousmane Sonko as the interior minister said four people had died.
The clashes followed a court ruling that Sonko be held in custody. And following two days of protests, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged all sides to avoid any further escalation of the violence.
"The protests must remain peaceful, and the security and police forces must at all times operate... in line with international human rights standards," his spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters in New York.
"The government regrets the loss of four lives" in events "that are rooted in banditry and insurrection", Interior Minister Antoine Felix Abdoulaye Diome said on television on Friday, accusing Sonko of "issuing calls to violence".
In Dakar's working class district of Medina, hundreds of young people fought running street battles with riot police and smoke rose from burning tyres at makeshift barricades in the capital city.
Protesters chanted "Free Sonko" on the main Blaise Diagne avenue, the ground strewn with stones, grenade cartridges and burning debris.
The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) called in a statement on Saturday for "all parties to exercise restraint and remain calm".
It also urged the government "to take the necessary measures to ease tensions and guarantee the freedom to demonstrate peacefully".
Protests highlight poverty
A former French colony of 16 million people, Senegal is often touted as an oasis of stability in an otherwise volatile part of the world.
The protests this week have highlighted longstanding grievances over living standards and economic exclusion.
Around 40 percent of the population live below the poverty line, according to a World Bank benchmark.
On Saturday, a collective which comprises the leading opposition party Pastef meanwhile called for another three days of protests from Monday, urging Senegalese people to "massively descend on the streets".
Tensions high
The arrest of Sonko, popular with young people and seen as a key challenger to President Macky Sall, has sparked the worst unrest in years in a West African state often heralded as a beacon of stability.
His supporters had called for further protests to coincide with his hearing before a judge on Friday on charges of disturbing order.
"Sonko has been returned to custody over the matter of disturbing public order," attorney Etienne Ndione told reporters after the hearing.
Tensions were high in the city with hefty police deployments in place around the law courts, presidential palace and National Assembly in the heart of the city.
Clashes broke out on Wednesday between Sonko's supporters and police as he made his way to court for another case where he faced rape accusations -- allegations that he denies.
Sonko was then arrested on charges of disturbing public order, a development that sparked angry protests in the capital and other cities.
The custody order issued on Friday, which relates specifically to the public order case, expires on Sunday.
He was not charged on Friday in the rape case and returns to court on Monday for questioning over those accusations, his lawyers said.
Media targeted
One person died in the southern town of Bignona on Thursday, police said, during clashes there. It was not clear if that death was included in the four revealed by Abdoulaye Diome.
Protesters attacked the offices of the government daily Le Soleil and RFM radio station, which belongs to a press group owned by singer and former minister Youssou Ndour. Both media outlets are deemed pro-government.
Sonko, a 46-year-old devout Muslim who is leader of the opposition Pastef party, is popular with many young Senegalese because of his sharp-tongued attacks on the elite, especially President Sall.
He came in third to Sall in the 2019 elections.
But his political future was suddenly clouded last month when rape charges were filed against him by an employee at a salon where, he said, he went to receive back massages.
He denies the accusations and accuses Sall of conspiring to sideline him from politics.
The government warned "certain media" on Thursday against pursuing what it called "tendentious" coverage of events.
The regulatory authorities suspended two local television channels, Sen TV and Walf TV, for 72 hours, accusing them of relentlessly broadcasting images of the unrest.
In a statement, Amnesty International called on the Senegalese authorities "to immediately halt arbitrary arrests of opponents and activists, respect freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression."
It also urged the authorities to "shed light on the presence of men armed with clubs next to the security forces".
Netblocks, an organisation that monitors disruption to the Internet, said social media and messaging applications, including Facebook, YouTube and WhatsApp, had been affected by restrictions.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)