Africa › Senegal       01.06.2023

Senegal's opposition leader Ousmane Sonko sentenced to 2 years in prison

© SEYLLOU / AFP

Ousmane Sonko, a prominent opposition candidate in Senegal's 2024 presidential election, has been sentenced to prison on charges of "corrupting youth", in a case he maintains is intended to stop him running.

A court in Dakar sentenced Sonko to two years' imprisonment for the offence, but acquitted him of other charges of rape and issuing death threats.

The verdict was announced on Thursday morning at Darkar's main courthouse, following the trial on 23 May.

Sonko was not present at either.
The case, which Sonko's supporters maintain is politically motivated, has deeply divided Senegal and sparked repeated protests.

Controversial case

Sonko, 48, was accused of raping and threatening a woman who worked at a beauty salon in Dakar. The woman, 20, said she had been abused five times by the politician. 

Sonko claimed she was a "young girl who has been manipulated, promised a diplomatic passport and exile abroad, as well as large sums of money".

If he had been convicted of rape, Sonko would have been stripped of his electoral rights.

"Corrupting youth" – debauching or encouraging the debauchery of a person under the age of 21 – is a lesser offence than rape, lawyer Ousmane Thiam told AFP news agency.

But his conviction still threatens to rule him out of next year's vote.

"With this two-year sentence, Ousmane Sonko cannot be a candidate in the 2024 presidential election – it is a sentence of ineligibility," one of his lawyers, Bamba Cissé, told journalists outside the courtroom.

Arrest and unrest

The court also sentenced Sonko's co-accused, Ndeye Khady Ndiaye, the owner of the beauty salon where Sonko was accused of repeated abuse, to two years' imprisonment.

Sonko was detained on Sunday while leading supporters on a march from his hometown of Zighinchor, in the Casamance region, towards the capital. 

He has complained of being "kidnapped" by the security forces, which the government denies. 

Interior Minister Antoine Diome, speaking on Senegal's public broadcaster RTS, said that Sonko had not been arrested but rather "dropped off" at his home in Dakar, to avoid more unrest among his supporters.

He added that Sonko should have requested authorisation before organising his "freedom caravan". 

Rebels in Casamance, a region geographically separated from the rest of Senegal by the Gambia, have been seeking regional independence for more than 35 years.

Sonko is mayor of Ziguinchor, the capital of the region.

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