Friday
Sep 03rd
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home News International Justice Lubanga Trial Lubanga Chronicle #1 Witness 213: “One of my relatives cried day and night”

Lubanga Chronicle #1 Witness 213: “One of my relatives cried day and night”

E-mail Print PDF

Read Lubanga Chronicle #1 24 February 2009

The silence of the public gallery is interrupted only by the slow rise of the blinds. Behind the soundproof glass, a little courtroom appears in front of us. The wood and the black of gowns colour the place in homogeneous shades....

lubangalr

Produced in partnership with 3 Generations

generations

 

Lubanga Chronicles

The 'Lubanga Chronicles' document the first ever trial at the International Criminal Court. On 26 January 2009, the Chief Prosecutor announced to the Judges that his team would prove that between 2002 and 2003, Thomas Lubanga Dyilo recruited children under the age of 15 as soldiers for his political military movement, the Union des Patriotes Congolais (UPC), and its armed militia the Forces Patriotiques pour la Liberation du Congo (FPLC). On this day the ICC made a powerful statement: recruiting children to fight is a war crime which will be prosecuted and punished. 

Since the trial started, thirty witnesses have testified before this Court: former child soldiers, experts, military commanders, social workers, UN staff. All of them came to The Hague with the purpose of telling this Court what happened in Ituri, a remote North-Eastern province of the Democratic Republic of Congo. They told of how children were abducted and transported to military camps; how they were trained to kill; how they were punished; how they were raped. This trial presents tales of human suffering but also stories of survival and hope. 

Created by Sheila Vélez of the Aegis Trust, together with 3 GenerationsRead more...
donate

First ICC trial hangs in the balance

See more Aegis films.

Read about the Lubanga and Katanga / Ngudjolo trials.

Latest report

enforcement Ever wondered why so few suspected war criminals are ever brought to justice? The Enforcement of International Criminal Law, by Justice Richard Goldstone and others, sets out a plan for how to reform both the 'architecture' (e.g. new treaties) of international criminal law and its 'plumbing' (e.g. specialist war crimes units).

Sign up to the Aegis Trust newsletter

First name
Last name
Country
Email address
Submit