Antananarivo - A Madagascar court handed four men the maximum sentence on Friday of hard labour for life over the mob lynching in 2013 of two Europeans and a local man, who were beaten and then burned on a beach.
The sentencing came as the court tried 37 people over the October 2013 murders, which were committed by a mob acting on false rumours of foreign involvement in the death of an eight-year-old local boy and a paedophile connection.
Among them, 25 suspects were given the benefit of the doubt and released, while another was formally acquitted.
One was sentenced to seven years of hard labour, while the rest were handed prison sentences ranging from three months to six years.
On the morning of October 3, 2013, French tourist Sebastien Judalet and Franco-Italian resident Roberto Gianfalla were attacked by a mob who brutally killed them.
Hours later, the uncle of the eight-year-old boy whose death sparked the attack on Nosy Be - the idyllic Indian Ocean island off Madagascar - was also murdered.