Malick
Noel Seck, an opposition youth activist in Senegal, was on January 11, 2012
given a presidential pardon, three months after his conviction on two counts of
“contempt of court” and “insulting” President Abdoulaye Wade.
Seck
was jailed for two years on October 20,2011
over
a protest letter he wrote to the country’s Constitutional Court asking it to
reject the third term candidacy of the incumbent, President Abdoulaye Wade, for
the 2012 presidential election.
The
Media Foundation for West Africa’s (MFWA) correspondent in Senegal reported that
Seck, General Secretary for Socialist Convergence, a youth movement linked to
the Senegalese Socialist party, served his sentence at the Tambacounda Prison in
the south of Senegal.
Before
the pardon, in the first week of January 2012, an Appeal Court in Dakar had
reduced Seck’s sentence to a one year, four months of which were to be
mandatory.
Seck
reportedly denounced the long silence of the Constitutional Court over attempts
by President Wade to contest next month’s election after serving his second term
in office.
According
to the correspondent, during his trial in October 2011, Seck told the court that
the letter he wrote was to sensitize the Constitutional Court and the Senegalese
people on the immorality of President Wade’s candidacy.
“When
we take to the streets, we will come in bigger numbers for you to account for
your actions. Life is expensive, and so is death. Facing up to the situation
requires dignity. No one will say we did not give you the opportunity to face up
to us,” the protest letter that Seck wrote to members of the Constitutional
Court said.
For Information, please contact: Kwame Karikari (Prof), Executive Director
MFWA, Accra., Tel: 233-302-24 24 70, Fax: 233-302-22 10 84
Email:mfwa@africaonline.com.gh /alerts@mediafound.org, Website: www.mediafound.org