Senegal Defamation Laws: Civil, Criminal & Defences

Defamation in Senegal is both a crime and a civil wrong. The Penal Code (Code penal) defines and punishes diffamation (defamation) and injure (insult) in Articles 258 to 266, with prison terms and fines, and a victim can also bring a civil claim for damages for the harm to their honour.
Is defamation civil or criminal in Senegal?
Defamation in Senegal is both criminal and civil. The criminal offences sit in the Penal Code (Code penal), in the section on offences committed through means of public diffusion. Article 258 defines diffamation (defamation) and injure (insult), and Articles 259 to 266 set the penalties for different targets and circumstances. Alongside the criminal route, a person whose honour or reputation has been harmed can bring a civil action for damages under the general rules of civil liability, since defamation is also a fault that causes harm. In practice, complaints in Senegal are frequently pursued through the criminal courts, and the offences carry both imprisonment and fines, but the civil avenue for monetary compensation remains available, including as a claim joined to the criminal proceedings.
What counts as defamation?
Article 258 of the Penal Code provides the core definitions. Diffamation is any allegation or imputation of a fact that harms the honour or standing (la consideration) of the person or body to whom the fact is imputed. When made by one of the means of public diffusion listed in Article 248, it is punishable even if expressed in a doubtful form, or if it targets a person or body not expressly named but whose identification is made possible by the words used. Article 258 also defines injure (insult) as any outrageous expression, term of contempt or invective that contains no imputation of a specific fact. The distinction matters: defamation involves a concrete factual allegation, while insult is abuse without a factual claim. Article 248 lists the relevant means of diffusion, including broadcasting, television, cinema, the press, posters, the distribution of writings or images, and generally any technical process designed to reach the public.

Criminal defamation: penalties
The Penal Code grades the penalties by who is targeted. The table summarises the main provisions.
| Target / offence | Provision | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Defamation of courts, army or public administrations | Article 259 | Imprisonment 4 months to 2 years and fine 200,000 to 1,500,000 CFA, or one of them |
| Defamation of government members, parliamentarians, officials | Article 260 | Same penalty as Article 259 |
| Defamation of a private individual | Article 261 | Imprisonment 3 months to 2 years and fine 100,000 to 1,000,000 CFA, or one of them |
| Defamation of a group on grounds of race or religion (to incite hatred) | Article 261 | Imprisonment 2 months to 2 years and fine 50,000 to 500,000 CFA |
| Insult (injure) against private persons | Article 262 | Imprisonment up to 2 months and fine 20,000 to 100,000 CFA, or one of them |
Watch out: Senegal also criminalises offence (offense) against foreign heads of state and government under Article 265, and offences against the President are addressed elsewhere in Senegalese law. These special offences carry their own penalties and are separate from ordinary defamation of a private person.
What defences are available?
The principal defence is the proof of truth (exceptio veritatis), under which a defendant who establishes the truth of the imputed facts can avoid liability, subject to limits the law places on certain subjects such as private life. Good faith is also central: a defendant who pursued a legitimate aim, acted without personal animosity, was prudent in checking the facts and stayed measured in expression may escape liability even without full proof of truth. Senegalese law treats the reproduction of an imputation harshly: Article 264 provides that any reproduction of an imputation that has been judged defamatory is presumed to be made in bad faith, unless the author proves the contrary. Article 263 limits actions over statements about the dead to cases where the authors intended to harm the honour of living heirs, spouses or legatees, who in any event keep a right of reply.
Remedies and damages
On the criminal side, conviction can result in imprisonment and a fine within the ranges set by Articles 259 to 262, and the court may order publication of the judgment. On the civil side, the victim can claim damages to compensate the harm to reputation and feelings, either in a stand-alone civil action or as a partie civile joined to the criminal case. The amount of civil damages is assessed by the court according to the seriousness of the allegation, how widely it was spread and the loss proven; there is no fixed statutory cap stated in the Penal Code provisions. Because the offences allow either imprisonment or a fine in several articles, and because a civil claim can run alongside, a defamed person in Senegal often combines a criminal complaint with a claim for monetary compensation.

Online and social media defamation
Online statements fall within Senegalese defamation law. Article 248 defines the means of public diffusion to include generally any technical process designed to reach the public, which covers websites, social networks and messaging where content is made public. In addition, the Cybercrime Law of 2008 (Loi n. 2008-11 of 25 January 2008) inserted a Title on offences relating to information and communication technologies into the Penal Code. Among these, Article 431-40 punishes insult committed through a computer system against a person on grounds such as belonging to a race, ethnicity, nationality or religion, with significant prison terms and fines. General personal defamation online continues to be handled under the ordinary rules of Articles 258 to 266, while the cybercrime provisions add specific ICT offences. Senegalese authorities have used both the ordinary and the cyber provisions in cases involving online speech.
How a defamation claim is brought
A criminal defamation case is typically started by a complaint, which may be lodged with a prosecutor or pursued by the victim as a partie civile, and is heard by the criminal courts (the tribunal correctionnel for these delits). The complaint must identify the precise words, their meaning, the means of publication and the person targeted. Because defamation through the press and public diffusion is subject to specific procedural rules, including short time limits that apply to press-related actions under Senegalese law, prompt action is important and local legal advice should be obtained on the exact deadline. A purely civil claim for damages is brought before the civil courts under the general law of civil liability, or joined to the criminal proceedings so that the same court can rule on both guilt and compensation.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Senegal?
Yes. Articles 258 to 266 of the Senegal Penal Code make diffamation (defamation) and injure (insult) criminal offences. Defaming a private individual under Article 261 is punishable by three months to two years imprisonment and a fine of 100,000 to 1,000,000 CFA francs, or one of those penalties.
What is the difference between diffamation and injure in Senegal?
Under Article 258, diffamation is the imputation of a specific fact that harms a person's honour or standing. Injure (insult) is any outrageous or contemptuous expression that imputes no particular fact. Insult under Article 262 carries lower penalties than defamation.
How much is the fine for defamation in Senegal?
For defamation of a private individual, Article 261 sets a fine of 100,000 to 1,000,000 CFA francs, alongside or instead of imprisonment of three months to two years. Defamation of courts, the army or public officials (Articles 259 to 260) carries a fine of 200,000 to 1,500,000 CFA francs.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Senegal?
Generally yes. The proof of truth (exceptio veritatis) and good faith are the main defences. A defendant who proves the imputed facts true, or who acted in good faith pursuing a legitimate aim with due care, may avoid liability, subject to limits on matters such as private life.
Can you be sued for defamation on social media in Senegal?
Yes. Article 248 treats any technical process designed to reach the public as a means of diffusion, which covers online and social media posts. The 2008 Cybercrime Law also added ICT offences, including Article 431-40 on insult targeting someone for belonging to a group.
Can I claim money damages for defamation in Senegal?
Yes. Besides the criminal penalties, a defamed person can claim civil damages under the general law of civil liability, either in a separate civil action or as a partie civile joined to the criminal case. Courts assess the amount by the gravity and spread of the statement and the loss proven.
Does reposting a defamatory statement create liability in Senegal?
It can. Article 264 of the Penal Code provides that reproducing an imputation already judged defamatory is presumed to be in bad faith unless the author proves otherwise, so resharing previously condemned content carries real risk.
Which court hears defamation cases in Senegal?
Criminal defamation is heard by the criminal courts (the tribunal correctionnel for these delits), usually after a complaint. A purely civil claim for damages is brought before the civil courts, or joined to the criminal case so one court rules on guilt and compensation.
Sources and References
- Code penal du Senegal, arts 248, 258 to 266 (diffamation, injure, penalties, reproduction presumed bad faith)(vertic.org)
- Senegal Code penal (1965, consolidated), defamation and insult provisions(droit-afrique.com)
- Loi n. 2008-11 du 25 janvier 2008 relative a la cybercriminalite (WIPO Lex; ICT offences inserted into Penal Code, incl. art 431-40)(wipo.int).gov
- Loi n. 2008-11 du 25 janvier 2008 relative a la cybercriminalite (Vie Publique Senegal)(vie-publique.sn).gov
- Loi sur la cybercriminalite, Senegal (full text, Senegal Numerique SA)(senegalnumeriquesa.sn).gov