The Borneo Post

Son of Senegal ex-president sentenced to 6 years for graft

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DAKAR: Karim Wade, the son of former Senegal president Abdoulaye Wade bidding to follow his father to the top office, was sentenced to six years in prison yesterday in a deeply divisive graft case.

The flamboyant former minister was found guilty of “illicit enrichment” and fined the equivalent of more than 210 million euros ( US$ 230 million). His assets are also to be confiscate­d.

He was however cleared of the main corruption charge – initially said to involve one billion euros but later whittled down to 105 million euros – by a special anticorrup­tion court in Dakar.

The ruling came just two days after the opposition Democratic Party of Senegal ( PDS) chose the 46-year- old as its candidate for the country’s next presidenti­al election, a date for which has yet to be set.

Sympathise­rs have long condemned the corruption case against the younger Wade as politicall­y motivated and when the verdict was read out it in court it was met with cries of dismay from dozens of opposition supporters, with some breaking down in tears.

Outside the courtroom, supporters overturned garbage bins and set fire to a tyre before being dispersed by police firing tear gas.

“This is a political sentencing. They have for a long time been trying to stop our candidate from contesting the presidenti­al election,” said Oumar Sarr, a senior official from Wade’s party.

But government spokesman Oumar Youm said the court’s decision must be respected.

“Justice has spoken,” he told the private RFM radio.

With tempers running high,

This is a political sentencing. They have for a long time been trying to stop our candidate from contesting the presidenti­al election.

Oumar Sarr, PDS senior official

Justice Minister Sidiki Kaba later told reporters that the conviction would not affect Wade’s civic rights, allowing him to pursue his presidenti­al bid.

The minister added that the judges had reached their decision independen­tly and the case was not part of a “political plan to bring down an adversary”.

Wade’s lawyer Mohamed Seydou Diagne told AFP he would appeal to the Supreme Court in a bid to have the ruling annulled.

Wade himself was not present in court but his father, who will soon turn 89, showed up for the verdict.

He dismissed the court’s ruling as a “charade”, according to local media.

There was tight security in the building with police and gendarmes deployed both outside and inside.

Senegal’s President Macky Sall, who beat Abdoulaye Wade in a tight election in 2012, had warned that his government would stifle any unrest provoked by the court ruling.

Karim Wade went on trial in July 2014 charged with illegally acquiring companies and real estate while serving in various government posts during his father’s 12-year presidency.

He has been in custody since April 2013, with prosecutor­s demanding a seven-year prison term. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Senegalese policemen block access to the courthouse in Dakar during the trial of Karim Wade. — AFP photo
Senegalese policemen block access to the courthouse in Dakar during the trial of Karim Wade. — AFP photo

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