Featured post

Black Thursday

Rostrum The ancient narrow pathway had become so bad that they could not find their way to their destination as the three moved in a grey Honda Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) being piloted by Dayo who was very mindful of the steering. It was on a Thursday. The 35-year-old Misters Dayo, Emeka and Okon were old time friends who reunited just a few days ago at Nsukka in Enugu State having lost contacts about eight years back, or thereabouts, after their graduation from one of the reputable higher citadels of learning in Nigeria situated in the Eastern part of the country, precisely University of Nigeria Nsukka popularly known by its acronym ‘U.N.N’. What occasioned the long-awaited reunion was the convention of their alma-mater’s alumni body themed ‘The homecoming of UNN Alumni’, which usually held once in a blue moon. Though they never studied in the same department, they were conspicuously best of friends during their school days that people within bega...

Past Chadian Prime Minister, Masra Jailed for 20 Years

Frank Musa
Chadian Court has jailed erstwhile Prime Minister of the country and opposition leader, Succes Masra, for 20 years. The conviction occurred on August 9, 2025.

Masra was convicted of hate speech, xenophobia, and having incited a massacre.

The court in N’Djamena jailed Masra, one of President Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno’s fiercest critics, for his role in inciting inter-communal violence in which 42 people were killed on May 14, 2025. It also imposed a fine of one billion CFA francs (1.5 million euros) on him.

Most of the massacre victims were women and children in Mandakao, southwestern Chad, according to the court. On Friday, the state prosecutor had called for a 25-year jail sentence.

“Our client has just been the object of a humiliation,” opined the lead defence lawyer, Francis Kadjilembaye.

“He has just been convicted on the basis of an empty dossier, on the basis of assumptions and in the absence of evidence,” he added. He called it a weaponisation of the courts.

Activists with Masra’s Transformers Party gathered later after the sentence to protest the conviction and condemn Deby.

Appeal Court upholds 3-Year Jail Term for Ex-Imo Commissioner over #180m Fraud

Masra was arrested on May 16, two days after the violence, and charged with “inciting hatred, revolt, forming and complicity with armed gangs, complicity in murder, arson and desecration of graves”.

He stood trial with nearly 70 other men accused of taking part in the killings.

Originally from Chad’s south, Masra comes from the Ngambaye ethnic group and enjoys wide popularity among the predominantly Christian and animist populations of the south.

Those groups feel marginalised by the largely Muslim-dominated regime in the capital N’Djamena.

During the trial, Masra’s lawyers argued that no concrete evidence against him had been presented to the court. He went on hunger strike in jail for nearly a month in June, his lawyers said at the time.

Like other opposition leaders, Masra had left Chad after a bloody crackdown on his followers in 2022, only returning under an amnesty agreed in 2024.

Trained as an economist in France and Cameroon, Masra had been a fierce opponent of the ruling authorities before they named him prime minister five months ahead of the presidential election.

He served as premier from January to May in 2024, after signing a reconciliation deal with Deby.

Masra faced off against Deby in the 2024 presidential elections, winning 18.5 percent against Deby’s 61.3 percent, but claimed victory at the polls.