The warlord responsible for mass murder, rape and abduction in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been sent to prison for 30 years – the longest sentence the International Criminal Court has ever given out, The Guardian reports.
The punishment handed to Bosco Ntaganda, 46,
on Thursday was immediately welcomed by human rights activists.
Ida Sawyer, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Africa division, said the sentence sent a strong message that even people considered untouchable might one day be held to account. “While his victims’ pain cannot be erased they can take some comfort in seeing justice prevail,” Sawyer said.
Ntaganda, whose cruelty and violence earned him the nickname the Terminator was found guilty in July on 18 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for acts committed when he was a key militia leader in DRC’s restive Ituri province in 2002 and 2003. The atrocities included a mass killing at a village where people, including children and babies, were “disembowelled or had their heads smashed in”, the court said.
Ntaganda, whose cruelty and violence earned him the nickname the Terminator was found guilty in July on 18 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for acts committed when he was a key militia leader in DRC’s restive Ituri province in 2002 and 2003. The atrocities included a mass killing at a village where people, including children and babies, were “disembowelled or had their heads smashed in”, the court said.
Ntaganda was also found responsible for the
rape and sexual slavery of underage girls, for recruiting troops under the age
of 15 and for personally killing a Roman Catholic priest.
The conviction for sexual slavery is the first
in the ICC’s history, The Guardian reports.
Prosecutors focused on two specific attacks
involving Ntaganda’s militia, one in late 2002 and another early in 2003.
In one attack directed by Ntaganda, judges
said soldiers killed at least 49 captured people in a banana field behind a
village using “sticks and batons as well as knives and machetes”.
The presiding judge, Robert Fremr, said: “Men,
women, and children and babies were found in the field. Some bodies were found
naked. Some had hands tied up. Some had their heads crushed. Several bodies
were disembowelled or otherwise mutilated.”
Ntaganda was also implicated in violence in
2008 that led to the deaths of at least 150 people, and he was a founding
member of the M23 rebel group, which was eventually defeated by Congolese
government forces in 2013 in bloody battles around the city of Goma, in North
Kivu province.
Anneke Van Woudenberg, executive director of the corporate watchdog RAID (Rights and Accountability in Development) said Ntaganda was a brutal warlord who led from the front, often killing, raping and torturing civilians himself.
“I interviewed hundreds of victims of the
brutal crimes in Ituri whose lives were shattered. I hope that today they will
have a small measure of relief knowing that Ntaganda will be behind bars for a
very long time,” Van Wouderberg said.
Ntaganda, born in Kinigi, Rwanda, had his first
taste of combat in Uganda, where he joined the Rwandan Patriotic Front in 1990
at the age of 17 and fought alongside Paul Kagame to overthrow Rwanda’s
genocidal regime in 1994.
The first suspect ever to voluntarily surrender to the ICC, Ntaganda walked into the US embassy in the Rwandan capital, Kigali, six years ago and asked to be sent to the court, based in the Netherlands. Experts believe he gave himself up because he feared assassination after the collapse of the M23 movement, a rebel militia group which Ntaganda was accused of leading.
The ICC had issued its first arrest warrant
against Ntaganda for war crimes in Ituri in 2006 and the warlord became a
symbol of impunity in the region.
Known for his pencil moustache, tailored
uniforms and penchant for fine dining, Ntaganda wore a dark blue suit and red
tie to hear the verdict. He told judges during his trial that he was a “soldier
not a criminal” and that the Terminator nickname did not apply to him.
The time Ntaganda had spent in detention at the ICC from 2013 would be deducted from the sentence, the court said in a statement.
The ICC was set up in 2002 as an independent
international body to prosecute those accused of the world’s worst crimes where
national authorities are incapable of bringing perpetrators to justice.
Prosecutions have not always been
straightforward. In February the former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo
was acquitted by the ICC of charges of crimes against humanity. The convictions
of the former Congolese vice-president Jean-Pierre Bemba for war crimes and
crimes against humanity were overturned last year. The ICC has also been
criticised for mainly trying African suspects.
The east of the DRC remains violent and
unstable. Armed attackers killed 10 people and kidnapped two others during a
raid on a village near Beni in the east of the country, a local official said
on Tuesday.
Six Congolese soldiers were also killed in
clashes with rebels on Monday night, according to sources cited by the Kivu
Security Tracker, a website that monitors violence in the region.
The violence has severely hampered efforts to
contain an Ebola epidemic, which has infected more than 3,000 people and killed
more than 2,000 in the region since August 2018. Ren Sparevoll






