US Says Working on Sending Bosco Ntaganda to the ICC
Congolese warlord Bosco Ntaganda remains at large. He should also face arrest.
© 2010 Reuters
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The US State Department confirmed that Ntaganda was in
the embassy and that it was consulting with other governments to facilitate
what it said was his request to be transferred to The Hague. For several years,
the US has called for Ntaganda’s arrest and transfer to the ICC. In early 2013
it added Ntaganda to its “War Crimes Rewards Program,” which offers monetary
rewards for information leading to the arrest of suspects wanted by the ICC and
other international tribunals.
“Bosco Ntaganda has for more than a decade led troops
that have murdered, raped, and pillaged across eastern Congo,” said Ida Sawyer,
Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The United States has long been a
strong voice for Ntaganda’s arrest. Now it can ensure that he finally faces
justice, as the victims of these abuses have waited far too long.”
It is unclear why Ntaganda suddenly turned himself in to
the US embassy and asked to be transferred to the ICC. A recent outbreak of
hostilities between two factions of the M23 rebel group, headed by Ntaganda and
other commanders, resulted in the faction opposed to Ntaganda apparently
gaining the upper hand.
The ICC issued an arrest warrant in 2006 against Ntaganda
for the war crimes of recruiting and enlisting children under 15 as soldiers
and using them in hostilities when he commanded military operations for the
Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), another rebel group, in the Ituri district
of northeastern Congo in 2002-2003. His former ally Thomas Lubanga faced
similar charges and was the first person convicted by the ICC. In July 2012 the
ICC issued a second warrant against Ntaganda for war crimes and crimes against
humanity, including murder, rape and sexual slavery, pillage, and persecution
allegedly committed during the same period.
In the years after the 2002-2003 hostilities, Ntaganda
joined other armed groups and continued to lead troops responsible for grave
abuses in the Kivu provinces of eastern Congo. In January 2009, under a peace deal
ending a previous rebellion, the Congolese government named him a general in
the Congolese army. He remained in that post until he and others led a mutiny
and created a new rebel group, the M23, in April 2012. The armed group has
received significant support from Rwandan military officials since its
inception, according to Human Rights Watch research. Over the past year, M23
rebels have been responsible for numerous war crimes, including killings, rape,
and recruitment of children.
The ICC does not have a police force and relies on the
cooperation of governments to carry out pending arrest warrants. The United
States is not a member state of the Rome Statute of the ICC and is therefore
not legally obligated to cooperate in executing the court’s orders. However, it
may do so.
The integration into the Congolese army of former
warlords, many of whom are known human rights violators, has fostered a culture
that encourages, rather than deters, serious abuses. In the context of ongoing
peace talks with the M23 in Kampala, Uganda, the Congolese government should
honor its commitment not to reintegrate known human rights abusers into the
army.
“Ntaganda’s appearance in the dock at a fair and credible
trial of the ICC would send a strong message to other abusers that they too may
face justice one day,” Sawyer said. “The Congolese government needs to play its
part by investigating war crimes by the army and fairly trying those
responsible.”
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