
The mandate of the Transitional Presidential Council (TPC) is coming to an end amid deep disillusionment and a loss of institutional bearings. The body exits the stage without having fulfilled its central mission, weakened by internal crises, repeated scandals, and widespread public distrust.
The formal transfer of power to the Prime Minister, scheduled for February 7, seals the failure of a model of governance lacking clear popular legitimacy. This unfinished transition gives way to an uncertain continuity, at a time when insecurity and political instability are worsening.
Last-minute initiatives and attempts at political repositioning underscore the absence of a coherent vision and the inability to forge a national consensus. The general interest has been pushed aside in favor of political calculations and competing agendas.
The TPC leaves behind a weakened state and a nation in limbo, on the brink of a major rupture. Responsibility is now collective, and urgency demands the opening of a credible path toward elections in order to rebuild what this transition has left in ruins.
