Senegalese teacher jailed for five years for leaking exams
A Senegalese court has sentenced a teacher to five years in prison, with another fined $32,000 for selling national exam papers before students sat them.
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.
Their sentences range from two-month suspended terms to two years in jail.
“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.
In addition to his five-year prison sentence, Dia was was fined $886.
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.
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.