Porto-Novo – A special court in Benin on Tuesday sentenced one of the country’s opposition figures, Joel Aivo, to 10 years in prison after a treason trial critics dismissed as a politically-motivated sham.
Several opposition leaders were detained before or just after an April election that saw President Patrice Talon win a second term with more than 86% of the vote.
Another opposition leader, Reckya Madougou, who was detained just before that election, will go on trial on Friday, accused of plotting to prevent the ballot and destabilise the country.
Aivo, an academic who had been held for eight months, had pleaded not guilty to the charges of plotting against the state and money laundering.
“It is not for criminal justice to arbitrate on political differences,” Aivo told the judge before he was sentenced.
“I have decided to give myself to this country. You are also children of this country. Do as you will with me.”
When the verdict was given at around 3 am on Tuesday after a 16-hour trial, a few Aivo supporters were still in the court, wearing T-shirts that read, “Professor Aivo, the people of Benin are with you.”
It was “a sham of a trial, to sideline him from politics,” Sosthene Armel Gbetchehou, a former student of the condemned opponent, told AFP.
Slipping away
Once praised for its thriving multi-party democracy, critics say Benin has slipped steadily into authoritarian rule under Talon, a 63-year-old cotton magnate first elected in 2016.
Some opposition figures have fled the country while others were disqualified from running in elections, or targeted for investigation.
Aivo was among the opposition figures who had been barred from running in the presidential election.
Aivo was arrested on April 15, four days after the elections that saw Talon returned to power.
He was tried at a special tribunal, the Economic Crime and Terrorism Court (CRIET), in the West African country’s administrative capital, Porto-Novo.
The CRIET, set up in 2016, has often been accused by critics of being used by Talon’s regime to crack down on the opposition.
“Given the overall trends of this court, this (sentence) was expected. But we did have a glimmer of hope in what we saw in the facts and substance of the case,” said Robert Dossou, one of Aivo’s attorneys.
He said they would discuss details of any appeal later.
Government officials dismiss charges the CRIET is a political tool and say the country’s justice system is independent.
“More proof of the judicial persecutions going on in Benin against the political opposition,” tweeted Julien Bensimhon, a French lawyer to another Benin opposition leader convicted by the court.
“CRIET has once more been used to politically kill off anyone who opposes Patrice Talon.”
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture: Getty Images
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com