Bangkok Post

DR Congo’s Bemba acquitted

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>> Internatio­nal war crimes judges on Friday acquitted former Congolese vice-president Jean-Pierre Bemba on appeal, overturnin­g an 18-year sentence for war crimes committed in the Central African Republic (CAR).

“Mr Bemba cannot be held criminally liable for the crimes committed by his troops in the Central African Republic,” presiding judge Christine Van den Wyngaert told the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague.

“The Appeals Chamber in this instant reverses t he conviction against Mr Bemba … and in relation to the remaining criminal acts it enters an acquittal,” Ms Van den Wyngaert said.

Mr Bemba, 55, dressed in a blue-grey suit, light blue shirt and dark blue tie showed little emotion as the judge read the verdict, but his supporters exploded in cheers on the public gallery, prompting the judge to call them to order.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) capital of Kinshasa, Mr Bemba’s supporters erupted in joy as they watched the announceme­nt on live TV, and cheering was even heard at the National Assembly, reporters said.

In 2016, the ICC’s judges had unanimousl­y found Mr Bemba — nicknamed “Miniature Mobutu” — guilty on five charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for abuses committed by his troops during a five-month rampage in the neighbouri­ng CAR.

The heavy-set leader had sent his militia, the Congolese Liberation Movement (MLC) — a rebel force that Mr Bemba later transforme­d into a political organisati­on — into the CAR in October 2002 to quash a coup against the then president, Ange-Felix Patasse.

At his sentencing in 2016, trial judges blamed Mr Bemba for failing to stop a series of “sadistic and cruel” rapes and murders as well as pillaging by his soldiers.

The trial was the first of its kind before the ICC to focus on sexual violence as a weapon of war.

It was also the first to determine whether a military commander bore responsibi­lity for the conduct of troops under his control.

But in a scathing assessment, the Haguebased ICC’s appeal judges said Mr Bemba was “erroneousl­y” convicted for specific criminal acts.

Trial judges were also wrong in their finding that Mr Bemba could in fact prevent crimes being committed by his MLC troops, they ruled.

“The trial chamber ignored significan­t testimonia­l evidence that Mr Bemba’s ability to investigat­e and punish crimes in the CAR was limited,” judge Van den Wyngaert said.

Mr Bemba’s lawyer Peter Haynes told journalist­s afterwards his client had been “vindicated.”

The appeals judges’ decision was “particular­ly significan­t because it’s not some acquittal on a technicali­ty. They went to the very heart of a commander’s culpabilit­y,” Mr Haynes said.

But the ICC’s chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda called the acquittal “regrettabl­e and troubling”.

“Today’s judgement does not deny that Mr Bemba’s troops committed crimes which resulted in great suffering in the Central African Republic,” Ms Bensouda added.

Rights organisati­ons also regretted the decision, with Amnesty Internatio­nal calling it a “huge blow to victims of the ‘war against women’ waged in the CAR through a horrifying campaign of rape and sexual violence.”

 ??  ?? ON THE WAY OUT: Supporters of Jean-Pierre Bemba celebrate after learning the former Congolese vice president was acquitted.
ON THE WAY OUT: Supporters of Jean-Pierre Bemba celebrate after learning the former Congolese vice president was acquitted.
 ??  ?? Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo.
Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo.

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