Monday, December 15, 2025 - Chabi Yayi, son of former Beninese president and current opposition figure Thomas Boni Yayi, was arrested early Sunday, December 14, at his home, according to several of his relatives.
No reason was given for the arrest, which comes just a week
after a foiled coup attempt in the country. “At this time, we don’t know what
he is accused of,” one relative told AFP. Another close friend, who is a member
of the Democrats party, the main opposition party led by Boni Yayi, said,
“We don’t know if it is linked to the events of last Sunday.”
Former president Thomas Boni Yayi had condemned the abortive
coup in a video address two days after the failed attempt.
Several arrests have been made since the December 7 putsch
attempt. Among those detained is a former minister of defence and prominent
opposition figure, Candide Azannai.
Azannai was placed in police custody on allegations of
“conspiracy against the authority of the State and incitement to rebellion”.
Authorities have also issued an international arrest warrant
against pan-Africanist and anti-Western influencer Kemi Seba.
On Sunday, Seba released a defiant video response to the
warrant. In the seven-minute statement, he said he had taken precautions since
the arrest order was issued, although he did not disclose his location.
“You can never stop us,” he said. “We will go to the end of
our fight.”
Benin issued the warrant on Friday, December 12, accusing
Seba of “inciting rebellion” over his public support for the failed coup
attempt, which he described as the country’s “day of liberation”.
Seba, whose real name is Stellio Gilles Robert Capo Chichi,
is the head of the NGO Pan-Africanist Emergency and is widely known for his
hostility towards France and African governments aligned with Paris.
The 44-year-old influencer has more than 1.5 million
followers on social media. Born Franco-Beninese, he was stripped of his French
nationality in 2024.
Seba supports the military juntas that came to power through
coups in the Sahel region, governments that are hostile to France and maintain
close ties with Russia. He now travels on a passport issued by the military
regime in Niger, which shares a border with Benin.
Meanwhile, several individuals involved in the failed coup
attempt, including its alleged leader, Lieutenant Colonel Pascal Tigri, remain
at large.

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