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Home News International Justice Lubanga Trial Lubanga Chronicle #53 Defence examines participating victims away from public ears

Lubanga Chronicle #53 Defence examines participating victims away from public ears

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Tuesday, 26 January 2010 - Defence examines participating victims away from public ears

The two participating victims recalled by the Defence are scheduled to come into the Court once again to answer additional questions. Because of the strong protective measures in place to hide the identity of the witnesses, the public is not privy to the hearing.

There are not enough rooms in the ICC so the court has had to change the hearing schedule.  Trial Chamber I sat today in the afternoon, immediately after the trial of the Congolese warlords Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo. Both the accused are charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes allegedly committed during the attack on Bogoro, the Hema village in Ituri, on 24 February 2003.

Lubanga's defence team has raised its concerns about the nature of the trial.  In previous interviews the Lead Counsel, Ms. Catherine Mabille has vented her frustrations.  "We are currently judging, thousands of miles away from Ituri, the drama, or part of the drama that was experienced by Iturians. I wished Iturians were more involved in this judicial process than they currently are. Here you go, my message is that they cannot do much about it but I wish things had unfolded slightly differently - that they had been more involved and in a better way," she said to a  local radio  in DRC. She also argued that the Defence´s work is barely understood by the affected communities because much of it is conducted in private session.

Once again the lawyers of Mr. Thomas Lubanga must examine the witnesses in private.

The Defence case is expected to commence on Wednesday.

 

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Produced in partnership with 3 Generations

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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...
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