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Home News International Justice Lubanga Trial Lubanga Trial to resume on Thursday 29 April

Lubanga Trial to resume on Thursday 29 April

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Monday, 26 April 2010 - Lubanga Trial to resume on Thursday 29 April

The Lubanga trial will commence following the spring judicial recess on Thursday 29 April.  Proceedings were originally scheduled to commence on the 21 April, but the flight chaos across Europe meant that two of the Trial Chamber I Judges were prevented from travelling back to The Hague in time for the reopening.  Though the hearing was expected to resume today, the assignment of Presiding Judge Fulford and Judge Odio Benito to the Bemba case has caused further delay.

Jean Pierre Bemba Gombo, the alleged President of the Movement for the Liberation of Congo (MLC), is accused of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Central African Republic.

On Thursday, the Lubanga Defence team will continue to present evidence in support of its argument that much of the trial has been based on false testimony.  Since the Defence team opened its case on 27 January 2010, fifteen witnesses have been called for Thomas Lubanga to demonstrate that a substantial part of the trial has been fabricated by intermediaries in collaboration with the investigators from the Office of the Prosecutor.  In the Defence´s view, the Prosecution has committed abuse of due process by relying on the statements of dishonest intermediaries when gathering evidence.  As a result, the Lead Defence Councel, Catherine Mabille, announced that after presenting the first twenty witnesses, her team would ask the Judges for a pause in proceedings. Ms. Mabille stated in an interview with Radio Netherlands that, "The trial cannot go on because the false evidence has been so massive that it is difficult for the judges to go on."

If the Judges decide to go on, the Defence will call another ten new witnesses to testify.

 

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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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