
Witness History The L'Amicale Four
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Mar 17, 2026 Imran Samudhi, a Mauritian bakery owner who spent nearly two decades in prison as one of the L'Amicale Four, recounts his life before and after conviction. He describes the tense football match that sparked riots, the deadly gambling house fire, alleged police pressure and contested witness IDs. He talks about long imprisonment, family loss, a later legal review and ongoing questions about justice.
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Verdict Day Trauma In Court
- Imran Samudhi recounts the jury's quick guilty verdict after two hours and the life sentences handed to him and three others for arson causing death.
- He describes his family's immediate breakdown in court, with his sister fainting and parents crying because their solicitor had given false hope.
From Stadium Anger To Street Riots
- Imran describes attending the tense May 23rd 1999 match where Fire Brigade beat Scouts Club and riots began, spilling into Port Louis streets.
- He joined crowds throwing stones at the Football Association building and then drove home with his brothers.
Police Pressure And Family Arrests
- News spread that the L'Amicale gambling house had been burned with seven bodies recovered, prompting a police search of Imran's family home and arrests.
- Imran says police summoned him and his brother and pressured them to name others, which he refused.
