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Ivorian ex-minister convicted over attack that killed 18

By AFP
27 December 2017   |   10:39 am
A former Ivorian minister was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Tuesday for complicity in a 2012 attack in western Ivory Coast that killed 18 people, including seven UN peacekeepers.

Former Ivorian minister for labour and public service, Hubert Oulaye, accused of complicity in the assassination of UN soldiers, hears the verdict in his trial in at the Assize Court in Abidjan on December 26, 2017. Oulaye was sentenced on December 26 to 20 years in prison for complicity in the assassination of 18 people including 7 UN soldiers. / AFP PHOTO / Sia KAMBOU

A former Ivorian minister was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Tuesday for complicity in a 2012 attack in western Ivory Coast that killed 18 people, including seven UN peacekeepers.

Hubert Oulaye, 64, ex-public works minister under former president Laurent Gbagbo, “provided the financial means to establish a rebellion in the west” of the country, the attorney general said.

“The accomplice is sometimes more dangerous than the perpetrator,” she added.

Oulaye dismissed the verdict as a “political conviction” and returned home while his lawyers vowed to appeal the decision.

The attack happened as Ivory Coast was reeling from violence caused when Gbagbo refused to step down after losing presidential polls to current leader Alassane Ouattara.

Gbagbo is currently on trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague for alleged crimes against humanity committed during the crisis, in which 3,000 people were killed.

Oulaye’s lawyer Rodrigue Dadje called the verdict “a political decision” and warned it would create a dangerous and vindictive precedent.

“We are going to be in an unending cycle of vengeance. We need justice that is equitable and transparent, not one that hand down 20 year sentences without any proof,” he said.

Oulaye was arrested six months after his return from exile in Ghana, and several days after participating in a meeting of the “rebels” of Gbagbo’s party, the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI).

The “rebels” consider themselves the guardians of the Gbagbo legacy and boycott all polls.

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