Daily Nation Newspaper

‘TERMINATOR’ SENTENCED TO 30 YEARS FOR CRIMES IN DR CONGO

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THE HAGUE -A former Congolese rebel leader has been sentenced to 30 years for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Bosco Ntaganda, nicknamed "Terminator," was convicted on 18 counts including murder, rape, sexual slavery and using child soldiers.

Judges at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) found in July that fighters loyal to Ntaganda had carried out gruesome massacres of civilians. The sentence is the longest the ICC has handed down.

As Ntaganda listened intently, dressed in a dark suit, Judge Robert Fremr ran through an extensive list of atrocities carried out by Ntaganda's men, including rape and sexually enslavemen­t of young children.

Judge Fremr highlighte­d the case of a 13-year-old rape victim who underwent years of surgery and developed a long-lasting fear that caused her to drop out of school.

He told the defendant there were no real mitigating circumstan­ce in his case, but said his crimes, "despite their gravity and his degree of culpabilit­y," did not merit a life sentence. Ntaganda has already appealed against his conviction.

Ntaganda was the first person to be convicted of sexual slavery by the ICC and overall the fourth person the court has convicted since its creation in 2002.

The Rwanda-born 46-yearold former rebel was involved in numerous armed conflicts in both Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. He surrendere­d at the US embassy in Rwanda in 2013.

Analysts said it was an act of self-preservati­on, motivated by the danger he was in after losing a power-struggle within his M23 rebel group.

Ntaganda fought under the command of Rwanda’s current president, Paul Kagame, when he was leader of the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) fighting to end the 1994 genocide against his ethnic group, the Tutsi.

 ??  ?? Bosco Ntaganda looks on in the courtroom of the ICC ahead of his verdict
Bosco Ntaganda looks on in the courtroom of the ICC ahead of his verdict

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