Charity Workers Jailed in Chad to Be Sent Home

French charity workers sentenced to eight years' hard labor for trying to fly children out of Chad to France will be sent home today
Six French charity workers sentenced to eight years' hard labor for trying to fly more than 100 children out of Chad to France will be sent home today, officials in Chad said.

The members of Zoe's Ark, a charity set up by a former firefighter, were found guilty of attempted child kidnap and fraud on Wednesday for trying to remove the children, who they claimed were Darfur war orphans.

They were to be sent back to France on a special flight, an official from Chad's justice ministry said.

France had asked Chad to send home the four men and two women so they could serve their jail terms in France under the terms of a bilateral judicial agreement. France's justice minister, Rachida Dati, formally requested this yesterday.

Zoe's Ark had said it was helping to rescue orphans from Darfur across Chad's eastern border.

But most of the 103 children were found to have come from families in Chadian border villages who were persuaded to give up the infants with promises of education at local centers.

The operation had not been approved by any government, and its discovery created a scandal which threatened diplomatic relations between France and Chad, a former French colony, as well as complicating the work of bona fide aid workers in Sudan's war-torn Darfur region.

Zoe's Ark insisted during the trial that its workers had acted out of humanitarian concern and wanted to give the children of Darfur a better life. Celine Lorenzon, a lawyer for the six, called the sentence "a judicial masquerade."

UN agencies established that most of the 103 children Zoe's Ark was planning to fly out were not Darfur orphans, but came from villages in Chad where they lived with at least one parent or close adult relative.

While transported by the group, some of the fit and healthy children had been dressed with fake bandages to look ill. Families from villages on Chad's border with Sudan said they entrusted their children to the charity workers because they had no local schools and were told their children would be educated at a project in a nearby Chad town.

When the workers and the children were stopped by police near a freight airport in eastern Chad, more than 300 members of would-be "foster families" were waiting at an airport in France to collect the children. All of the eight convicted were ordered to pay a combined 4.12bn CFA francs (€6.3m, or £4.6m) to the families of the 103 children in the affair.

The group's charismatic leader, Eric Breteau, recruited the French "foster families" online and had delivered rousing speeches to them in regional meetings. On the last day of the trial he continued to insist he had done no wrong nor broken any law.

By Guardian Unlimited © Copyright Guardian Newspapers 2008
Published: 12/28/2007

 
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