RUNNING A MINORITY government is rarely easy. When your party has just one seat in parliament, it should be impossible. Yet Azali Assoumani, the president of the Comoros (pictured), has largely been given a free hand by mps. They did not demur when he dissolved the anti-corruption authority after returning to office in 2016, nor when he suspended the constitutional court in April. "Whenever there is a key vote, the government wins," says Ibrahim Soule, an MP for Juwa, an opposition party.
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