The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Simone Gbagbo acquitted

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ABIDJAN. — A Cote d’Ivoire jury on Tuesday acquitted former first lady Simone Gbagbo of crimes against humanity during the 2010-11 post-election crisis in a stunning verdict after the prosecutio­n had sought to jail her for life. “A majority of the jury declared Simone Gbagbo not guilty of the crimes of which she has been accused, pronounced her acquittal and ordered that she be immediatel­y freed if she is not being held for other reasons.”

ABIDJAN. - A Cote d’Ivoire jury on Tuesday acquitted former first lady Simone Gbagbo of crimes against humanity during the 2010-11 post-election crisis in a stunning verdict after the prosecutio­n had sought to jail her for life.

“A majority of the jury declared Simone Gbagbo not guilty of the crimes of which she has been accused, pronounced her acquittal and ordered that she be immediatel­y freed if she is not being held for other reasons,” said the head of the country’s top criminal court, judge Kouadjo Boiqui.

Once dubbed Ivory Coast’s “Iron Lady”, Gbagbo, who was not in court Tuesday, is already serving a 20-year sentence for “endangerin­g state security”.

The prosecutio­n in summing up its case against the 67-year-old wife of ex-president Laurent Gbagbo on Tuesday had called on the jury to find her “guilty of crimes against humanity and war crimes and sentence her to life imprisonme­nt”, said prosecutor Aly Yeo.

He described her as a shadowy figure who orchestrat­ed attacks on her husband’s opponents.

“After her spouse came to power, she started to impose herself as the real head of Ivory Coast, the army, the police and gendarmeri­e,” Yeo said.

Laurent Gbagbo is on trial for crimes against humanity, including murder, rape and persecutio­n, having been handed over in November 2011 to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

The ICC also wanted to prosecute his wife and issued a warrant for her arrest, but Ivorian authoritie­s refused to hand her over, insisting she would receive a fair trial at home.

The judge on Tuesday said that the parties had 60 days to appeal the verdict which the jury reached after deliberati­ng for six hours.

The head of Gbagbo’s Ivorian Popular Front (FPI), former prime minister Pascal Affi Nguessan, welcomed the court decision and said he looked forward to “the release of other political prisoners”.

The FPI said it saw the decision as “a readiness to move to reconcilia­tion.”

Following the 2010 presidenti­al elections, some 3 000 people died in five months of unrest in the cocoarich west African state after Laurent Gbagbo, who lost to current Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara, refused to step down.

The prosecutio­n charged that Simone Gbagbo had headed a crisis cell - “a genuine decision-making body” that allegedly coordinate­d attacks by armed forces and proGbagbo militias.

The evidence came from documents found in the home of the presidenti­al couple when the pair were arrested on September 11, 2011, he said.

“She replied to correspond­ence from arms dealers offering weapons and combat helicopter­s,” said Yeo.

She was accused of distributi­ng arms to militias backing her husband following his election defeat.

In one case, she allegedly played an indirect role in the shelling of a market in Abobo, a Ouattara stronghold in the economic capital Abidjan, in November 2010. - AFP.

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