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Democratic Republic of Congo:

 ICC Arrest First Step to Justice


Prosecutor Says First Accused Sent to Hague


(New York, March 17, 2006) – The International Criminal Court (ICC) announced today that it has issued its first arrest warrant in its investigation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and that the suspect is in custody en route to The Hague. The news is a welcome first step towards ending impunity in Congo, but more is needed, Human Rights Watch said today.  

 

Almost two years after the ICC prosecutor announced the opening of the investigation, the court last month issued a sealed arrest warrant against Thomas Lubanga, leader of the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), an armed group responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Ituri region of north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The warrant, unsealed today, charges Lubanga with the conscription and recruitment of child soldiers who were used to participate actively in the conflict.  

 

“Thomas Lubanga’s arrest offers victims of the horrific crimes in Ituri some hope of seeing justice done at last,” said Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice Program at Human Rights Watch. “Congolese civilians have already endured far too much terrible suffering. It is long past time to end the culture of impunity, and the ICC has taken its first step towards that goal.”

 

Ituri is one of the areas worst hit by Congo’s devastating war, which is still underway. A local conflict between Hema and Lendu ethnic groups that began in 1999 was exacerbated by Ugandan military forces and aggravated by a broader international armed conflict in the DRC. As the conflict spiraled and armed groups multiplied, more than sixty thousand civilians were slaughtered in Ituri, according to the United Nations. In addition to abuses committed by the UPC, serious human rights violations were committed by other groups, including the Nationalist and Integrationist Front (FNI), a Lendu militia led by Floribert Njabu.

 

“Forcing young children to participate in warfare is a serious crime, but the ICC prosecutor must also press additional charges against militia leaders for massacres, torture and rape,” said Dicker.  “It is vital that Thomas Lubanga, Floribert Njabu and others who committed crimes in this deadly conflict be held responsible and brought to justice. The ICC must send a strong signal that these crimes will be punished.”  

 

The Ituri conflict, as well as others in eastern DRC, highlights the participation of non-Congolese forces. Ituri in particular became a battleground between the governments of Uganda, Rwanda and the DRC. These governments have provided political and military support to Congolese armed groups despite abundant evidence of their widespread violations of international humanitarian law. The ICC prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, has repeatedly stated that he will bring to justice those who bear the greatest responsibility for serious crimes.

 

“Chief Prosecutor Ocampo should also investigate those who armed and supported militia groups operating in Ituri, including key players in power in Kinshasa, Kampala and Kigali,” said Dicker. “The crimes committed in Ituri are part of a broader conflict in the Great Lakes region, and the court should finally pierce the veil of impunity that stretches beyond Congo’s borders.”  

 

In April 2004, the transitional Congolese government referred crimes committed in the country to the ICC. On June 23, 2004, the prosecutor announced the beginning of the court’s investigation in the DRC.  

 

The International Criminal Court, based in The Hague, has broad international support. Currently, one hundred countries have ratified the Rome Statute establishing the court, and nearly 140 have signed the Rome treaty. In 2003, states elected the court's first eighteen judges and the prosecutor. On October 14, 2005 the court unsealed its first arrest warrants, for Joseph Kony, Vincent Otti and three other officers of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in Uganda. To date they have not been apprehended.  

 

Because the ICC will only prosecute those bearing the greatest responsibility for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed after July 2002, it will likely prosecute only a few high-ranking perpetrators. Human Rights Watch called on the authorities in the DRC to conduct meaningful national prosecutions to supplement the ICC’s investigation, and urged the international community to support Kinshasa in these efforts.

 

Background

 

Over the past five years, Human Rights Watch has gathered hundreds of testimonies documenting widespread human rights abuses by Lubanga and others in Ituri. Survivors told Human Rights Watch how the UPC, a predominately Hema militia group, carried out ethnic massacres, murder, torture, rape and mutilation, as well as the recruitment of child soldiers.

 

UPC combatants under the leadership of Lubanga slaughtered at least 800 civilians on the basis of their ethnicity in the gold mining region of Mongbwalu between November 2002 and June 2003. In another incident in August 2002, the UPC conducted a “man hunt” for persons of Lendu ethnicity and other political opponents, detaining them in two notorious prison areas where scores were tortured and summarily executed. 

 

In March 2003, the FNI, a militia opposed to the UPC, attacked the town of Kilo in Ituri and killed at least one hundred civilians, mostly women and children, whom they accused of helping the Hema. In another incident, FNI combatants tortured, raped and killed Hema women after accusing dozens of spying for their enemies. As one woman told a Human Rights Watch researcher, “They captured the [Hema] women from the surrounding countryside … put them in a house, tied their hands, closed the door and burned them.”

 

As a result of such attacks by the FNI, the UPC and other armed groups, hundreds of thousands of civilians fled their homes into the forest to escape their attackers. Many of them did not survive. One survivor described Ituri as being “covered in blood.”

 

Lubanga, Njabu and others were arrested by Congolese authorities after the killing of nine U.N. peacekeepers in the Ituri region in February 2005. They were charged with genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity but have not been brought to trial. Congolese authorities state they have been waiting for the ICC to complete its investigations before taking further action.

 

Please also see:

 

Ituri: Bloodiest Corner of Congo

http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/congo/ituri/armedgroups.htm

 

Ituri: Covered in Blood - Ethnically Targeted Violence in North-eastern DR Congo

http://hrw.org/reports/2003/ituri0703/

 

The Curse of Gold

http://hrw.org/reports/2005/drc0505/drc0505.pdf  

 

For Further Information, Please Contact:

 

In New York, Richard Dicker: +1 212 216 1248; +1 917 747 6731 (mobile)

In London, Steve Crawshaw: +44 20 7713 2766; +44 77 4702 1458 (mobile)

In Brussels, Geraldine Mattioli: +32-485-577-962 (French

 
 

Héritiers de la Justice (HJ) is a non governmental human rights organisation , specialized in matters concerning human rights protection and peace promotion in the Great Lakes Region.

 

Created in 1991, Héritiers de la Justice (HJ) is one of the first human rights  organisations born just after the liberalization of political activities  and beginning of the democratization process in the DR Congo (formerly Zaïre) in particular and in the Great Lakes Region in general.

 

Héritiers de la Justice was Founded in 1991 by three people touched by the repressive measures that civilians underwent during the President Mobutu’s dictatorship regime.

 

After a research carried out in more than 30 villages in South Kivu, Héritiers de la Justice came up to conclusions that people were absolutely  ignorant of their rights that they needed to know. Thus, it  determined its working approaches in two ways: promote and protect human rights in the Great Lakes Region in general, and in the province of South Kivu in particular.

 

Presently, Héritiers de la Justice works with more than 60 active grassroots communities in villages and towns of Kivu and the Great Lakes Region. Its actions are woven around 4 principal domains:

- Training of local leaders of the country communities,

- Dispatch of information aiming at educating the masses in the matters concerning human rights,

- Coexistence and mutual acceptance between tribal groups and communities, peace promotion via facilitation of an intercommunity dialogue and

- Formal teaching of peace and human rights in the primary and secondary schools  as well as the advocacy work on a local, regional and international scale.

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Service des Eglises protestante pour les Droits Humains et la Paix

heritiersdelajustice@yahoo.co.uk  P.O. Box 234 Cyangugu,Rwanda  P.O. Box 109 Bukavu, R.D. Congo

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