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POLITICS

Senegalese opposition leader jailed for 2 years for ‘corrupting youth’

KIGALI, Rwanda

A court in Senegal’s capital Dakar on Thursday sentenced opposition leader Ousmane Sonko to two years in prison for “corrupting youth.”

Sonko, president of the PASTEF-Patriots party, was accused of rape and making death threats against Adji Sarr, an employee of a beauty salon in the capital in 2021.

But judges at the High Court in Dakar acquitted Sonko of rape charges and issuing death threats.

The prosecution had asked the court to hand Sonko 10 years jail term for rape or five years for moral corruption, and a fine worth over $3,300.

Sonko, who denied the charges, boycotted the trial twice on May 16 and on May 23 when the presiding Judge Issa Ndiaye decided to go ahead with the proceedings in his absentia.

Sonko, 48, has admitted to having gone for a massage in the salon to relieve chronic back pain but claims the “trial is politically motivated to foil his presidential bid in the 2024 elections.”

He emerged third in the 2019 election against incumbent president Macky Sall.

The court also sentenced the salon owner and co-defendant in the case Ndeye Khady Ndiaye to two years in jail for complicity. The two defendants were also ordered to pay a court fine of 600,000 FCFA (about $979).

Sonko’s PASTEF-Patriots party denounced the verdict, saying “never have the Republic of Senegal and the institutions of this country been so flouted, defiled.”

But last month Senegal’s Justice Minister Ismaila Madior Fall claimed that “despite insults, threats and attempts to discredit the judiciary, the trial was held in accordance with the principles governing fair trial.”

During the trial, salon owner, Ndiaye said Sarr had never told her that she had been raped.

But Sarr told the court she had been issued death threats by Sonko if she reported the case.

Sonko, who was in March sentenced to a six-month suspended prison sentence for defamation and insults against the country’s tourism minister, is the mayor of Ziguinchor city, several hundred miles from Dakar.

The court did not rule on his possible arrest.

One of Sonko’s lawyers, Djiby Diagne said the decision to arrest him or not depends on the public prosecutor, but the ruling “jeopardizes” his candidacy in presidential elections.

Senegal has witnessed violent protests since Sonko was first detained for alleged rape in 2021.

Ziguinchor area was the scene of clashes between police and the opposition leader’s supporters in May, which led to the death of three people ahead of the May 16 proceedings.

Since last Sunday, local media reports said the streets leading to the home of Sonko in Dakar have been barricaded by the police. Sonko’s supporters reportedly kept a vigil on Wednesday organizing a procession in his support.

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