Cape Times

Rights group says killers let off the hook

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DAKAR: Three Congo Republic peacekeepe­rs were given sentences of just three years in jail for murdering civilians and are now already free, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday, describing the sentences as inadequate and unlikely to discourage future abuse.

A court in the Congolese capital Brazzavill­e sentenced each of the soldiers in April for the killings of 11 civilians committed in 2014 while the soldiers were serving in an African Union peacekeepi­ng mission in Central African Republic (CAR). HRW said it secured a copy of the written judgment only last month.

The three men are now free, having already served most of their sentences, HRW said. Although the court found the soldiers guilty of war crimes which can carry the death penalty under Congolese law, its judgment cited unspecifie­d extenuatin­g circumstan­ces.

“The authoritie­s in Congo missed an opportunit­y to provide justice for the murders of civilians and to show that no peacekeepe­r is above the law,” Lewis Mudge, a senior researcher at HRW, said.

“The soldiers who committed murder got little more than a slap on the wrist.

“This sent a damaging message to other peacekeepe­rs that they risk little if they commit such crimes.”

Congo’s government spokespers­on did not respond to a request for comment. The government of President Denis Sassou Nguesso has previously rejected claims that it has ignored allegation­s of human rights abuses against its soldiers.

Failure to hold peacekeepe­rs accountabl­e for crimes committed on foreign soil is a recurring complaint of rights activists.

The responsibi­lity to prosecute falls on troop-contributi­ng countries that are often unwilling or unable to press charges against their troops.

According to HRW, the Congolese peacekeepe­rs killed an unarmed boy and arrested at least 12 other civilians in the CAR town of Boali in March 2014 after a peacekeepe­r was killed in a fire fight with a local militia leader.

The bodies of the 12 people were found nearby in a mass grave in February 2016. The remains of a 7-month-old baby who was also killed were never found, HRW said. The Congolese court judgment referred only to 11 of the victims.

Congo Republic’s hundreds of peacekeepe­rs in CAR later became part of a UN mission. They were repatriate­d last year following multiple allegation­s of sexual abuse and exploitati­on.

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