A Mauritanian court has remanded in custody two men accused of keeping women and children as slaves, rights campaigners say.
"The
two (slave) masters were sent to prison," the SOS Esclaves (SOS Slaves)
charity said in a statement, adding that the court hearing last week
confirmed the existence of slavery, despite official denials.
The
statement criticised an initial decision to release the men on bail,
which was overturned by the appeals court on the grounds that it had
impeded justice in a case involving crimes against humanity against two
women and their children.
No more details on the allegations was
available, but a judicial source confirmed that the hearing had taken
place and a trial date was yet to be set.
Mauritania
was the last country in the world to abolish slavery...in 1981 and
since 2007 keeping slaves has been officially designated a crime, but
the practice remains deeply entrenched, according to rights campaigners.
Anti-slavery activists
Earlier in December, the government ordered the creation of three special courts to try slavery cases.
The
announcement followed the passing of a new law in August that declared
it a "crime against humanity", criminalised a raft of new forms of
slavery, such as forced marriage and doubled maximum prison terms to 20
years.
A week later, however, a Mauritanian court upheld a
two-year prison sentence against three anti-slavery activists who were
arrested during a protest against the practice.
Slave status is
often passed on from generation to generation, according to the
Australia-based Walk Free Movement, which estimates that there are 156
000 slaves in Mauritania, around 4% of the population.

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