France may deport Comoros leader

Comorian rebel leader Mohamed Bacar, wanted by the Comoros government for leading a separatist government on one of the archipelago…

Comorian rebel leader Mohamed Bacar, wanted by the Comoros government for leading a separatist government on one of the archipelago's islands, is likely to be deported from the French island of Reunion, French officials said today.

Comoros has demanded France send Bacar back to face trial there, but Reunion state prosecutor Francois Muguet said he had not been informed of any formal international arrest warrant from the Comoros authorities.

He said Bacar would be tried tomorrow for illegally entering French territory and importing weapons, and the trial "could result in deportation".

But he added that the hearing could be delayed by 10-15 days if Bacar appealed for time to prepare his defence. He also said he would not be able to sign an order while a decision on whether to grant asylum was pending.

READ MORE

Relations between the two countries are fraught, and Comoros has long been suspicious of what it sees as French meddling in its former colony, which became independent in 1975.

Bacar and 22 soldiers from the Indian Ocean island of Anjouan fled to the nearby French island of Mayotte this week to escape Comorian and African Union troops who toppled his renegade government. His presence on Mayotte provoked rioting and he was transferred to the larger island of Reunion on Thursday and immediately placed in detention.

Underlining the anger in Comoros over Bacar's escape, protests erupted again today in Moroni, capital of the biggest Comorian island, with demonstrators burning French flags and effigies of French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

French Overseas Territories Minister Yves Jego has said France will consider a request for asylum, but he indicated that Bacar and the soldiers with him were likely to be deported. "They should normally return to the Comoros," he told reporters.

Opens in new window ]