Daily Dispatch

ICC to rule on release of Ivory Coast’s Gbagbo

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WAR crimes judges were to rule yesterday whether former Ivorian president Laurent Gbagbo can be released from prison for the rest of his trial on charges arising from deadly election violence that rocked his nation in 2010.

Gbagbo, the first ex-head of state to be tried by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, has appealed a March decision that he must stay behind bars in a UN detention centre until the end of the legal process.

Both Gbagbo, now 72, and his former militia leader Charles Ble Goude, 45, have pleaded not guilty to four charges of crimes against humanity including murder, rape, and persecutio­n in five months of bloodshed that wracked the Ivory Coast.

About 3 000 people died in the turmoil that swept Abidjan in the aftermath of the November 2010 presidenti­al polls that Gbagbo lost to bitter rival Alassane Ouattara.

His highly divisive trial at the tribunal in The Hague opened in January last year, and is set to last three to four years.

ICC prosecutor­s accuse Gbagbo of trying to cling to power “by all means”, while his defence team has charged that Ouattara seized power by force with the help of former colonial master France.

Abidjan was turned into a warzone between late 2010 to 2011 as clashes flared between the rival forces. After a months-long standoff, Gbagbo was arrested by Ouattara’s troops aided by UN and French forces, and turned over to the ICC in 2011.

In March, his defence team made a new bid to win Gbagbo’s release, arguing he “has already been detained for almost six years and has pathologie­s that affect his physical and psychologi­cal wellbeing”.

The prosecutio­n said the former Ivorian strongman still enjoyed a strong network of support and if he were freed “could abscond to a territory out of the reach of the court”.

In a majority two-to-one decision, the judges ruled he had to stay in jail.

But in a dissenting opinion – which Gbagbo’s defence has seized on – judge Cuno Tarfusser said his detention “has exceeded the threshold of a reasonable duration and that, in light of his age and health, the risk that he might abscond from justice becomes increasing­ly unlikely”.

His lawyer, Emmanuel Altit, said they are urging the appeals chamber to “apply the law”, saying there are strict criteria about keeping people in detention and the initial judges had failed to prove he was a flight risk.

Rights activists thought it unlikely he would be freed. Carrie Comer of the Federation Internatio­nal for Human Rights said her organisati­on shared concerns that Gbagbo was a flight risk. — AFP

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