Swiss to detain former Gambian minister until 2019
Switzerland’s Federal Criminal Court has ruled that Ousman Sonko, a former interior minister of Gambia suspected of human rights abuses, must remain in Swiss detention until January 2019.
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سويسرا تقرّر مواصلة احتجاز وزير غامبي سابق حتى عام 2019
In a decision published on Monday, the Bellinzona-based court rejected Sonko’s appeal challenging his detention.
According to the court, various people have been interviewed as witnesses or informants. Their statements confirmed the suspicions that Sonko was part of former Gambian president Yahya Jammeh’s alleged state-run torture squad.
The Attorney General’s Office has also questioned Juan Méndez, the UN Special Rapporteur on TortureExternal link, as part of its criminal investigation into Sonko. As the Federal Criminal Court states in its deliberations, Méndez stated that torture and ill-treatment is widespread and used systematically on persons arrested on grounds of national security in Gambia.
Sonko, who sought asylum in Switzerland last year, was arrested in January 2017. He allegedly commanded a special squad known for its brutality against citizens in the west African state.
Trial International, an international justice organisation, accused Sonko of having personally taken part in what it described as torture between 2006 and 2016. Sonko served under ousted Gambian leader Yahya Jammeh.
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Will Switzerland seize opportunity in Sonko and Kosiah cases?
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Human rights NGOs question the political will of Switzerland to prosecute former Gambian minister Ousman Sonko and former Liberian rebel Alieu Kosiah.
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Sonko is currently in detention in Switzerland having sought asylum late last year. In an exclusive interview with Swiss public television, SRF, the new Gambian President Adama Barrow as well as Interior Minister Mai Fatty called for Sonko to be released into Gambian custody. The West African country is investigating claims of torture and killings under…
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By delving into an ex-Gambian minister’s past, Swiss prosecutors have bucked a trend to undercut the work of the International Criminal Court.
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