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Senegal jails teachers over baccalaureate exam fraud | Senegal jails teachers over baccalaureate exam fraud |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A teacher in Senegal has been given a five-year prison sentence and another has been fined $32,000 (£24,300) for selling exam papers. | A teacher in Senegal has been given a five-year prison sentence and another has been fined $32,000 (£24,300) for selling exam papers. |
French, English, history and geography baccalaureate tests had to be scrapped last year after the question sheets circulated on social media and WhatsApp. | French, English, history and geography baccalaureate tests had to be scrapped last year after the question sheets circulated on social media and WhatsApp. |
Several other teachers and dozens of pupils have also been punished. | Several other teachers and dozens of pupils have also been punished. |
Their sentences range from two-month suspended terms to two years in jail. | Their sentences range from two-month suspended terms to two years in jail. |
The headmaster of Lycée de Kahone in Senegal's capital city, Dakar, admitted selling exam papers but said he was not motivated by the money. | The headmaster of Lycée de Kahone in Senegal's capital city, Dakar, admitted selling exam papers but said he was not motivated by the money. |
"I wanted to help someone vulnerable who was struggling to get their baccalaureate," Mamadou Djibril Dia is quoted by news site La Vie Senegalaise as telling Dakar's Correctional Court. | "I wanted to help someone vulnerable who was struggling to get their baccalaureate," Mamadou Djibril Dia is quoted by news site La Vie Senegalaise as telling Dakar's Correctional Court. |
"[She] asked me to help her because she had already failed twice... If I had wanted to make money I would have sold the tests to wealthier people," he added. | "[She] asked me to help her because she had already failed twice... If I had wanted to make money I would have sold the tests to wealthier people," he added. |
In addition to his five-year prison sentence, Dia was fined 500,000 CFA francs ($886; £676). | |
'A lesson for teachers' | |
Teachers from at least two secondary schools have also been sentenced for "criminal conspiracy, fraud and fraudulently obtaining undue material benefits". | Teachers from at least two secondary schools have also been sentenced for "criminal conspiracy, fraud and fraudulently obtaining undue material benefits". |
The heaviest of these was a fine of $32,000 and a two-year prison sentence handed to French teacher Abdoulaye Ndour of Lycée Yalla Suren. | The heaviest of these was a fine of $32,000 and a two-year prison sentence handed to French teacher Abdoulaye Ndour of Lycée Yalla Suren. |
Senegalese news site Le Soleil says the court heard evidence that Ndour had placed $12,000 of proceeds from exam paper sales in his bank account. | Senegalese news site Le Soleil says the court heard evidence that Ndour had placed $12,000 of proceeds from exam paper sales in his bank account. |
A total of 32 pupils received suspended sentences for their involvement, ranging from six months to two years in jail. | A total of 32 pupils received suspended sentences for their involvement, ranging from six months to two years in jail. |
"We were shocked by the magnitude of the fraud," said Saourou Sène, of Senegal's national union of middle and secondary school teachers (SAEMS). | |
"This verdict should serve as a lesson to anyone who might be tempted to sabotage or scuttle the baccalaureate in Senegal." |
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