Detained prominent Senegalese journalist and government critic, Pape Ale Niang, who has been on a hunger strike to protest charges against him, has been moved to a hospital, his attorney said on Monday.
Niang’s lawyer, Moussa Sarr, who addressed a press conference, told journalists that the activist was taken to a hospital in Dakar on Saturday evening after his health deteriorated as a result of his latest hunger strike.
Niang was arrested on November 6 and charged with “divulging information likely to harm national defence,” in a case that sparked international concerns and caused protests in the capital by his supporters.
Following the pockets of protests, Niang was given provisional release, but arrested again on December 20, when he started another hunger protest.
To protest his detention and the charges against him, Niang went on a hunger strike and was later admitted to a clinic after his health deteriorated, the lawyer said.
Niang who is the head of Dakar’s Matin online news site, is widely followed in Senegal for his regular columns on current affairs and the case against him arose after he wrote about rape charges being faced by the country’s main opposition leader, Ousmane Sonko.
Niang is accused of describing confidential messages about security arrangements for Sonko’s interview with investigators on November 3, according to the lawyer.