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Home News International Justice Lubanga Trial Lubanga Chronicle # 73 Defence Witness 14 testifies via video link from Ituri, DRC

Lubanga Chronicle # 73 Defence Witness 14 testifies via video link from Ituri, DRC

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Tuesday, 30 March 2010 - Defence Witness 14 testifies via video link from Ituri, DRC

The hearing resumes after a tedious week during which the Defence presented most of its evidence in private. Today, Lubanga´s lawyers call the thirteenth witness, Witness 14. But there is nobody in the witness box. Witness 14 testifies via video link from Ituri, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The Defence argued that this is an "extremely vulnerable" witness and her travel to The Hague would cause her great prejudice and harm.  Witness 14 is in her mid forties and lives in extreme poverty in a remote, rural area. She has never travelled before.

Witness 14´s evidence is important for the Defence's case. She is the mother of a Prosecution witness who claimed his mother was dead. She maintains, on the contrary, that she was living with her child until he was 3 years old and that they met after the war in Ituri.

After consultation with the Victims and Witness Unit, the three judges allowed the Defence to use the remote facility. The Chamber believes this is a reasonable option to protect the witness´s psychological well-being.

Presiding Judge Fulford says that Witness 14 will be accompanied by a psychologist during the course of her evidence. "She needs to be treated very carefully," he warns the trial teams. "Counsels must put short questions in a way which must be understandable. The witness must not be upset."

The Court connects with Ituri. The pixilated image of Witness 14 appears on the public screens. But it only lasts for a few seconds; soon after it vanishes. Judge Fulford greets the woman, looking at his monitor. "Can you hear me?" asks the smiling Judge. Immediately he asks to proceed in closed session. The blinds go slowly down.

 

 

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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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