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Former French peacekeepers convicted of Ivorian man's murder

Three former French soldiers given suspended sentences for their roles in murder of Ivorian man during peacekeeping operations in the African state.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Three French ex-soldiers have been given suspended sentences for their role in the murder of Ivorian Firmin Mahé, while a fourth former serviceman was acquitted, reports BBC News.

Mr Mahé, a suspected gang leader, was killed in the back of a military vehicle in Ivory Coast in 2005.

The former peacekeepers admitted to being involved in his murder but said they acted under orders.

France sent a 4,000-strong force to its former colony after it descended into a civil war in 2002.

Mr Mahé, whom the French accused of being a murderer and a rapist, was arrested near the western town of Bangolo in May 2005.

He was then suffocated with a plastic bag in the back of a military vehicle.

Col Eric Burgaud has been handed a suspended five-year jail sentence for ordering the murder, AFP news agency reports.

The court also gave suspended prison sentences to Sgt-Maj Guy Rauge and Corp Johannes Schnier, both found guilty of suffocating Mr Mahé to death with a plastic bag.

The vehicle's driver, Corp Lianrifou Ben Youssouf, has been acquitted.

Although the murder case "gravely violated the Republic's values", judges said they also had to take into account the mitigating circumstances of the "exceptional situation" faced by ex-peacekeepers in Ivory Coast at the time.

Cries of protest erupted in the Paris courtroom when the verdict was read out, with people shouting "shame on France", AFP reports.

Mr Mahé's family has always insisted that he was innocent, and has been campaigning for the former peacekeepers to stand trial for his murder.

On Thursday, prosecutors called for prison terms of between two and five years for the accused.

Chief prosecutor Annie Grenier said the ex-soldiers had been involved in a "cold-blooded murder" in a country where they were supposed to help protect civilians.

She said even if they acted on orders, it was their "duty to refuse to carry out an illegal order".

Col Burgaud said the force commander at the time, Gen Henri Poncet, had ordered the killing with the phrase: "Drive slowly, you understand me?"

He understood this to mean that it would be "best if Mahé arrived dead" and he relayed the instruction to his co-accused, Col Burgaud said.

Read more of this report from BBC News.