Sport
Dollar
38,8058
-0.01 %Euro
43,6775
0.45 %Gram Gold
3.965,4800
0.11 %Quarter Gold
0,0000
%Silver
0,0000
%An appeals court has sentenced Mauritania's former President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz to 15 years in prison for abuse of office and illicit enrichment, an increase from the original five-year term.
An appeals court sentenced Mauritania's former President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz to 15 years in prison on Wednesday for abuse of office and illicit enrichment.
Aziz, who came to power in a 2008 coup, had appealed his original five-year sentence after his conviction two years ago of using his power to amass a fortune.
The former leader, who has been in custody since his original trial began in January 2023, appeared alongside several former top officials and advisers also facing charges of abuse of office, illicit enrichment, influence peddling and money laundering.
The court in the capital Nouakchott also upheld the confiscation of Aziz's assets and the stripping of his civic rights.
Assets worth $70m
Aziz, 68, remained impassive when the decision was announced, an AFP journalist saw.
Investigators estimate that Aziz, who led the northwest African country of 4.5 million people for more than a decade, accumulated assets and capital worth $70 million during his presidency.
He was found guilty and sentenced to five years in jail in December 2023.
Aziz was excluded from the 2019 presidential election, won by his former right-hand man, Mohamed Ould Cheikh El Ghazouani, who had been at his side for the coup and acted successively as his chief of staff then defence minister.
Claims accusations are political conspiracy
Aziz led the country linking the Maghreb and Sub-Saharan Africa until 2019, returning to general stability a nation once prone to coups and insurgent activities.
He groomed Ghazouani as his successor and handed over to him after elections in 2019 in what was the first peaceful transition of power in a country that proclaimed independence from France in 1960 but then saw decades of political unrest.
At the time of his indictment, investigators estimated that Aziz, the son of a merchant, had amassed wealth and capital of 67 million euros ($75 million) over his time in power.
Although not denying his wealth, Aziz has always strenuously contested the accusations against him, seeing a conspiracy to oust him from political life.
Implicated Ghazouani
His successor has always denied any interference in the case. After remaining discreet about where he had obtained his wealth, Aziz surprised everyone towards the end of his trial by implicating his successor.
He claimed that, the day after the 2019 election, Ghazouani had handed him two suitcases filled with several million euros.
Comments
No comments Yet
Comment