Posts Tagged ‘ICC’


May 27, 2010

Overview Of The Lubanga Case: What Witnesses Have Said And The Arguments Made By Prosecutors And The Defense

By Wairagala Wakabi

Thomas Lubanga is the first person to be tried by the International Criminal Court (ICC). The 49-year-old first appeared in court at The Hague on March 20, 2006, and faces the war crimes of conscripting, enlisting, and using child soldiers in armed conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) during 2002 and 2003. Prosecutors…

March 25, 2010

Today’s Lubanga Hearing Cancelled

By Wairagala Wakabi

Today’s hearing of the Thomas Lubanga war crimes trial was cancelled for unknown reasons. Earlier scheduled to kick off in the morning, the hearing was first re-scheduled for the afternoon before being cancelled altogether. It is expected that the trial will resume on Monday next week, with Mr. Lubanga’s defense calling their 13th witness. The…

February 23, 2010

Lubanga Lawyers Want ‘Vulnerable’ Witness To Testify Via Video Link

By Wairagala Wakabi

Thomas Lubanga’s attorneys have asked for permission for one of the defense witnesses to testify via video link from Ituri in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). They said traveling to The Hague would be cumbersome for the “extremely vulnerable” witnesses. Judges Adrian Fulford, Elizabeth Odio Benito, and René Blattmann ruled on February 10, 2010…

February 8, 2010

Lubanga Witness Says He Was Paid US$200 To Tell Lies

By Wairagala Wakabi

A witness today told the war crimes trial of Thomas Lubanga that intermediaries of the International Criminal Court (ICC) gave him US$200 as payment for convincing his nephew to give false testimony against the accused. The boy subsequently testified as a prosecution witness and claimed that he was a former child soldier in Lubanga’s militia…

February 1, 2010

Lubanga Witness Claims His Son Lied To The ICC

By Wairagala Wakabi

A defense witness told the Thomas Lubanga trial that his son appeared before the court as a prosecution witness and lied about serving as a child soldier in the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), the group which the International Criminal Court (ICC) says was led by Lubanga. Under cross-examination by the prosecution’s Manoj Sachdeva, the…

January 24, 2010

Lubanga’s Defense Case Starts This Week

By Wairagala Wakabi

Three years, 10 months, one week. That is how long for he has waited. This week, Thomas Lubanga gets to start telling judges at the International Criminal Court (ICC) why they should set him free. The 49-year-old psychology graduate has pleaded not guilty to the war crimes over which he first appeared in court at…

June 12, 2009

Court Hears Child Soldiers Wanted Revenge

By Rachel Irwin

Children joined Thomas Lubanga’s militia to avenge the murders of family and friends, a witness told prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC) this week. “They had just arrived from their homes,” explained the unnamed witness, identified as a former soldier in the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC) who also trained young recruits. “Many had…

March 6, 2009

Lubanga Trial, Week 6: Child Soldiers Tell of First Kill

By Wairagala Wakabi

Two former child soldiers in Thomas Lubanga’s militia this week told the International Criminal Court about the first time they killed in battle and how they are haunted by the memories. Testifying in Swahili, both said fear of being shot by their commanders stopped them from fleeing the gruesome conditions of their training and at…

February 10, 2009

When Witnesses Change Their Stories….

By Tracey Gurd

In a dramatic first week of Lubanga’s trial, the Prosecution’s first witness said he lied about being abducted by Lubanga’s forces and taken to a training camp for child soldiers.  He also told the court that he was coached by an aid group about what he should say on the witness stand.  He’s about to…

February 4, 2009

Father of Child Soldier Testifies

By Rachel Irwin

A witness told the International Criminal Court (ICC) Tuesday that his son was kidnapped on the way home from school by soldiers of Thomas Lubanga’s militia and taken to a training camp. “This made me very angry…. The child was only 11-years-old,” the father told the prosecutor, Manoj Sachdeva. “Being a soldier is very hard,”…