id 5296 Url https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/5296 Modèle de ressource Journal article Classe de ressource bibo:AcademicArticle Titre Jihadist Violence Grows in Benin Editeur https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/25140 Date 2023-02-09 Type https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/8475 Identifiant https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q119472045 Q119472045 iwac-reference-0000154 Langue https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/8322 Résumé On January 8, voters in Benin went to the polls to select the new Parliament. The overall turnout was not particularly high at 38.66 percent, but it was still higher than the last parliamentary election held in 2019, where only 23 percent of the country voted. This number was low in part due to opposition parties boycotting the election. Four out of the seven parties that ran for this most recent election failed to clear the national 10 percent threshold. The two parties linked to President Patrice Talon, the Progressive Union for Renewal (Union Progressiste pour le Renouveau, or UPR) and the Republican Bloc (Bloc Républicain, or BR) obtained 37 percent and 29 percent of the vote, respectively. The main opposition party, the Democrats (Les Démocrates), whose current honorary president is Thomas Boni Yayi—Benin’s president from 2006 to 2016—entered the parliament with 24 percent of the vote. Out of 109 seats, the movement behind the incumbent president obtained 81 seats, in contrast with the opposition’s 28 (ORTB, January 12). Couverture spatiale https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/283 Liste des auteurs https://islam.zmo.de/s/afrique_ouest/item/1679 Numéro 3 Volume 21 --