Mbour : téléviseur balancé à sa femme, fusil brandi et menaces de mort, la grosse colère du pilote en trouvant dans sa chambre…
Who is telling the truth between El HM Mbaye and AS Maheu? In the midst of divorce proceedings, this Franco-Senegalese couple was on trial in the Mbour court. The former, an airline pilot, is being sued by his wife for domestic violence, assault, and death threats. In court, the French woman declared: "He hasn't lived here [under their roof] for three years. He abandoned his children and the marital home. Since 2024, he has spent his time making death threats against me and our children." She is seeking 10 million CFA francs in damages from the man with whom she shared 20 years of marriage and had three children.
According to the report by L'Observateur, which attended the trial, the defendant refuted the accusations and asserted that he was simply defending his property rights on the day of the alleged events.
It was January 17th. Mbaye arrived at the family farm in Guéréo. Upon entering his room, he discovered that his soon-to-be ex-wife was there. The room had been made available to the couple's son, who was preparing for an exam. The pilot was furious. His wife implied that those who are absent are always wrong, pointing out that Mbaye hadn't been to the farm for years and demanding the right to occupy every room in their marital home.
"The discussion degenerated," recalls L'Observateur, which, relying on the Frenchwoman's complaint, reports that the pilot lost his temper: he "allegedly then seized his wife's furniture and personal belongings to throw them outside."
The complainant resisted, and the pilot escalated the situation: according to the daily newspaper of the Future Media Group, he "grabbed the television hanging on the wall and threw it towards his wife's face. The set was narrowly intercepted by their 17-year-old daughter, who had rushed over. But the father didn't stop there. He ransacked all of his wife's and children's belongings before making explicit death threats."
Witnessing the scene, the couple's housekeeper alerted the other household staff. They rushed to the scene. Among them was the woman's bodyguard. The pilot didn't want this person in the house. "I don't want to share my home with a stranger," he explained, ordering the man to leave, a rifle pointed in his direction, according to L'Observateur.
"This room is my property; my wife has hers. She took advantage of my absence to move in with the sole purpose of harming me," the defendant complained calmly in court, according to the newspaper of Groupe Futurs Médias.
The prosecutor requested the application of the law. The presiding judge granted the pilot provisional release before setting the verdict for April 28.
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