A court in Ivory Coast sentenced former first lady Simone Gbagbo on Tuesday to 20 years in prison for her role in a 2011 post-election crisis in which around 3,000 people were killed, her lawyer said.
Gbagbo, who is also wanted by the International Criminal Court, was tried alongside 82 other allies of former president Laurent Gbagbo in a case that has reopened divisions in a nation still recovering from years of political turmoil and conflict.
General Bruno Dogbo Ble, who headed the elite republican guard, and former navy chief Admiral Vagba Faussignaux were also each jailed for 20 years, their lawyer said, while others including the ex-president's son got shorter sentences.
Supporters of Laurent Gbagbo, whose refusal to acknowledge his defeat by Alassane Ouattara in elections in 2010 sparked a brief civil war, claimed the trial was politically motivated.
Simone Gbagbo's lawyer Rodrigue Dadje told Reuters she had been found guilty of crimes including disturbing the peace, organizing armed gangs and undermining state security.
"We have five days to appeal, which we will do before the end of the week," he said. "She is keeping her morale up since she was more or less expecting this."
Her sentence, handed down by a six-member jury, was longer than the 10 years requested by the state prosecutor. Her civil rights will also be suspended for 10 years, Dadje said.
Laurent Gbagbo is awaiting trial at the ICC accused of crimes against humanity. Ivory Coastrefused to transfer Simone Gbagbo to The Hague to face similar charges, arguing that she could receive a fair trial in a domestic court.
The trial verdicts were announced in the early hours of Tuesday morning after around nine hours of deliberations by the jury, with the former president's son, Michel Gbagbo, also convicted and sentenced to five years in prison, Dadje said.
"PREPARED TO FORGIVE"
Pascal Affi N'Guessan, president of Gbagbo's Ivorian Popular Front (FPI) party and seen as a potential candidate to challenge President Ouattara in elections this year, was handed an 18-month sentence.
He was credited with time served and released, as were nine former government ministers and four journalists who had been among dozens of Gbagbo's allies arrested after the violence in 2011.
As the trial drew to a close on Monday, Simone Gbagbo said prosecutors had insulted and humiliated her while failing to prove her guilt.
"I'm prepared to forgive. I forgive because, if we don't forgive, this country will burn," she said. "I am satisfied with this trial. I told my part of the truth."
Though praised for his stewardship of Ivory Coast's post-war recovery, President Ouattara has been accused by human rights groups of pursuing one-sided justice against his former rivals while ignoring abuses committed by his own supporters.
In the commercial capital Abidjan, reaction was divided.
"They should have freed them and given reconciliation a boost," said Salif Bakayoko, a marketing agent, outside a newspaper kiosk.
But others welcomed the verdict as a sign there would be no impunity for the acts that plunged the country into turmoil.
"Everyone responsible for what happened in 2011 must pay," said Gilbert Kouakou, an auditor.