Daily Dispatch

Row simmers over Bemba’s freedom after acquittal by court

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JEAN-PIERRE Bemba’s lawyers were set to argue yesterday for his immediate release after internatio­nal judges acquitted him of war crimes, as the former Congolese vice-president edged closer towards freedom following a decade behind bars.

Bemba was acquitted on appeal Friday by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, who said he could not be held criminally liable for crimes committed by his troops in the Central African Republic in 2002-2003.

Bemba’s lawyer Peter Haynes told journalist­s after his acquittal that his client “should be released without delay”.

He should be gone. Having acquitted him the court has a duty to release him or act with expeditiou­sness,” said Haynes.

The stocky former rebel leader however for now remains behind bars. Bemba is currently awaiting another sentence in a separate case in which he was handed one year in jail and fined à300 000 (R4.6-million) for bribing witnesses during his main war crimes trial.

He lost an appeal against that sentence and the ICC is yet to decide on a new jail term, which carries a maximum of five years.

Haynes however argued his client had already spent a decade at the Hague-based ICC following his arrest in 2008 in Belgium, thus negating any possible change in sentence handed down by the court.

“The position is that he has spent 10 years in custody. I can’t imagine any circumstan­ces in which there will be a change from 12 months to five years,” said Haynes.

Yesterday’s hearing before judge Bertram Schmitt is in the form of a so-called status conference “to discuss the matter of the continued detention of Mr Bemba in this case”, the judge said in a court document.

Although it is highly unlikely that Schmitt will order Bemba’s immediate release, a second hearing or written order to that effect, may soon follow, legal experts say.

The ICC in a statement said “a decision on this matter will be made subsequent­ly in due course”.

“I would be very surprised if he was not immediatel­y released,” former US ambassador for war crimes issues Stephen Rapp said.

“The most obvious would be to release him tomorrow [Tuesday],” added Thijs Bouwknegt of the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies.

“It’s a simple mathematic­al equation,” Bouwknegt said.

Friday’s surprise decision came after Bemba, 55, was sentenced unanimousl­y to 18 years in 2016 by ICC trial judges.

Then, judges found Bemba – nicknamed “Miniature Mobutu” – guilty on five counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by his private army during a fivemonth rampage in the neighbouri­ng Central African Republic.

Bemba was likely to join his family in Belgium as soon as he is freed, Haynes told journalist­s last week. —

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