Tag: Laurent Gbagbo

  • Breaking: ICC releases Ivory Coast Ex-President Gbagbo

    The International Criminal Court, (ICC) has released former Ivory Coast President, Laurent Gbagbo from prison.

    The former president was released on bail to Belgium pending a possible prosecution appeal against his 15th of January acquittal.

    Details later…

  • Laurent Gbagbo’s trials

    Seven years after being dragged before the International Criminal Court (ICC) for alleged crimes against humanity, former Ivoirian leader Laurent Gbagbo briefly set sight last week on the high road to freedom. But he slipped on a last-ditch appeal by prosecutors to have him kept behind bars pending appellate trial.

    Judges at The Hague had on Tuesday acquitted the ex-president and ordered his immediate release because the prosecution failed to prove charges that he masterminded murder, gang rape, persecution and other inhumane acts during the 2010-2011 post-election violence that wracked his country. Following that poll, which was held on 28th November 2010, Gbagbo had refused to cede power to Alassane Ouattara, the current president who was believed to have won. A brutal civil war then ensued, in which some 3,000 people died and 500,000 got displaced.

    Gbagbo was prised out of presidential palace bunker and captured along with his wife, Simone, on 11th April 2011 after French troops and United Nations (UN) peacekeepers backed up assaulting pro-Ouattara forces. He was held under house arrest for seven months before his extradition to face international justice. Simone was kept back, however, to face trial in Cote d’Ivoire.

    The ICC on Tuesday ruled that there was no need for further arguments by the defence “as the prosecutor has not satisfied the burden of proof” on the charges filed. It ordered immediate release of the ex-president and henchman Charles Blé Goudé, nicknamed Gbagbo’s “Street General,” who was standing trial along with his former boss.

    But prosecutors on Wednesday challenged Gbagbo’s pending freedom, arguing that he could abscond and might not show up in court if his acquittal were to be overturned on appeal. He was consequently retained in ICC custody until appellate proceedings commencing in February.

    Gbagbo’s faltering case at the ICC has raised fresh doubts about the relevance of that institution in delivering international justice to state actors accused of mass atrocities, who may not readily fit in for trial by their own country’s judicial system. In 2014, the court’s prosecutor dropped charges of crimes against humanity against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta. Some time later, his deputy, William Ruto, as well got off the hook. And last year, former Congolese Vice President Jean-Pierre Bemba was acquitted on appeal over crimes allegedly committed by his militia in the Central African Republic in 2002-2003. As the first former head of state to stand trial before the court, Gbagbo was a glittering trophy for its prosecutors. But his slipping through, at least for now at the trial stage, suggests the court’s prosecution may simply be inadequate for the task of holding top guns to account.

    The acquittal of Gbagbo by the ICC last week elicited bitter protests by his opponents, especially victims of the 2010-2011 violence in Cote d’Ivoire. But it as well sparked jubilant celebrations by his supporters.

    What is our business, you may ask, in 2019 election season Nigeria with the ‘trials of Brother Gbagbo?’ Well, it is this moral: there is no sure remedy after-the-fact for ruinous injuries a people may incur on themselves in maddening moments of nationhood. The only certain remedy is to altogether avoid going the heady road of ruination, no matter how compelling inducements may be to the contrary.

    The 2010 election in Cote d’Ivoire was meant to unite that country after an impunitous civil war in the early 20s that split the world’s largest cocoa producer between the north and south. Although Gbagbo had won the first round by a narrow margin, he lost the run-off to his bitter rival, Ouattara, but he refused to accept defeat and led the country into another round of civil war. Frontline watchdog, the Human Rights Watch (HRW), argued that a major problem was: principal actors in the impunities of the 2002 civil war were not called to account, and they later emerged lead players in the 2010-2011 violence by which the country again morphed into killing fields. The rights group detailed the atrocities of the post-election rage in a 2011 report from which I surmise as follows.

    With Gbagbo having refused to accept defeat in the run-off poll, a targeted campaign of violence by forces loyal to him evolved into an armed conflict in which they faced off combat troops loyal to Ouattara. That conflict was largely waged along political, ethnic and religious lines. According to HRW, elite security forces linked to Gbagbo dragged Ouattara supporters away from restaurants or out of their homes into waiting vehicles, only for family members to later find the victims’ bodies in morgues, riddled with bullets. “Women who were active in mobilising voters – or who merely wore pro-Ouattara t-shirts – were targeted and often gang-raped by armed forces and militia groups under Gbagbo’s control, after which the attackers told the women to ‘go tell Alassane’ their problems. Pro-Gbagbo militiamen stopped hundreds of real and perceived supporters of Ouattara at checkpoints or attacked them in their neighborhoods and then beat them to death with bricks, executed them by gunshot at point-blank range, or burned them alive,” the group said in its report.

    Pro-Ouattara combat troops, who came to be known as Republican Forces, matched up with similar impunities when they launched an offensive in March 2011 to take over the country. “In Duékoué, the Republican Forces and allied militias massacred hundreds of people, pulling men they alleged to be pro-Gbagbo militiamen out of their homes and executing them unarmed. Later, during the military campaign to take over and consolidate control of Abidjan, the Republican Forces again executed scores of men from ethnic groups aligned to Gbagbo – at times in detention sites – and tortured others…Human Rights Watch found that armed forces on both sides committed war crimes and likely crimes against humanity…” it reported.

    There has been some clamour that Ivoirian justice since the end of the post-election conflict has been ‘the victor’s justice,’ because Ouattara supporters were not substantially brought to book for their own atrocities. But the whole crisis had in the first place stemmed from Gbagbo’s poor electoral sportsmanship. And so, when Republican Forces swept into Abidjan in March 2011 to seize control, civilians came in direct line of hostilities, prompting the UN Security Council to authorise a peacekeeping force “to use all necessary means … to protect civilians under imminent threat of physical violence.” It was with that mandate that UN peacekeepers and French forces attacked the presidential palace on 11th April and arrested Gbagbo along with his wife and a number of other allies, following which he was delivered to the ICC.

    But in acquitting the ex-president last Tuesday, the court ruled that prosecutors failed to demonstrate “the existence of a common plan” to keep him in power that included crimes against civilians. The court also held that prosecution as well “failed to demonstrate that public speeches by Mr. Gbagbo constituted ordering or inducing the alleged crimes.”

    The experience of Cote d’Ivoire – just like that of Kenya, among others – showed that responsibility to stave off ruinous tendencies of nationhood largely reposes with followers who must stay stubbornly restrained, and not necessarily with political leaders who may be recklessly inciting in their desperation for power. That is one lesson that must be applied to differing intensities of acrimony in political contestation, even here in our country Nigeria. If the combat troops and militias in Cote d’Ivoire had resisted incitement to arms by power hounds, for instance, there wouldn’t have been such humongous toll in the post-election conflict, of which the suspected instigator now seems set to walk free!

     

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  • ICC orders release of former Ivorian President, aide

    The International Criminal Court ( ICC ) on Wednesday ordered the immediate release of former Ivorian President, Laurent Gbagbo, a day after acquitting him of charges of crimes against humanity.

    Gbagbo walked free after seven years in prison. The 73-year-old former politician was acquitted due to lack of evidence.

    The court, based in The Hague, rejected a demand by the prosecution to keep Gbagbo imprisoned pending a possible appeal of the verdict.

    Calling the prosecution case “exceptionally weak”, the judges said Gbagbo had given assurances he would return to the Hague-based court if ordered to do so.

    Prosecutors said they would appeal the decision and that there could be a retrial, but the panel of judges said the defendants could no longer be held in custody following their acquittal.

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    Presiding Judge Cuno Tarfusser said two out of three judges believed the case against Gbagbo and his co-defendant to be so weak that it was unlikely their acquittals would be overturned on appeal.

    The two men will be released after “logistical and diplomatic arrangements” have been made, Tarfusser added. Discussions were continuing with court member states.

    Gbagbo had been charged with human rights violations committed after the West African nation’s disputed 2010 presidential election, which saw 3,000 people killed and about half a million others displaced.

    Gbagbo, who said the charges against him had been politically-motivated, has been defending himself before the ICC since 2016.

    He was the first former head of state to have been tried by the ICC.

    Gbagbo’s co-defendant, former youth minister Charles Ble Goude, 47, was also acquitted of all charges on Tuesday.

  • Gbagbo’s wife goes on trial for war crimes

    Ivory Coast’s former first lady, Simone Gbagbo, went on trial on Tuesday, accused of crimes against humanity and war crimes for her alleged role in a civil war that followed a 2010 presidential election and killed around 3,000 people.

    The trial, the West African nation’s first for crimes against humanity, is being held in a domestic court after the government rejected her extradition to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, Reuters reported.

    It has already drawn criticism from Gbagbo’s supporters, who claimed it is politically motivated, as well as from rights groups, who accused the prosecution of rushing the investigation.

    Her husband, ex-president Laurent Gbagbo, is already before the ICC on charges linked to the brief conflict, which was sparked by his refusal to accept defeat to Alassane Ouattara in an election run-off.

    Flanked by policemen, Simone Gbagbo, a key figure in her husband’s regime, greeted several dozen cheering supporters gathered at the entrance of the court in the commercial capital Abidjan with waves and smiles.

    The prosecution said she was part of a small group of party officials from Gbagbo’s Ivorian Popular Front (FPI) that planned violence against Ouattara’s supporters to keep him out of power.

    “The FPI put in place a crisis cell in January 2011 that met at the presidential residence and constituted the organ charged with planning and organising the repression,” an indictment read in court stated.

     

  • Gbabgo’s trial in Hague begins Thursday

    Former Ivory Coast President, Laurent Gbagbo, goes on trial at the International Criminal Court on Thursday, the most senior politician to do so since the global war crimes tribunal was set up 13 years ago.

    Accused of unleashing a civil war that killed 3,000 people after he refused to accept defeat in a 2010 election, Gbagbo remains an influential figure at home and his trial could rekindle tensions in the world’s largest cocoa grower, Reuters reported.

    It is also a test for the ICC, seen in much of Africa as a neo-colonial institution that does the bidding of its European financial backers. Its last attempt to try an African president, Kenya’s Uhuru Kenyatta, failed amid diplomatic lobbying and allegations of witness intimidation.

    Gbagbo, 70, and his co-accused, youth leader Charles Ble Goude, 44, face four counts, including a campaign of rape and murder aimed at hanging onto power. Both men denied the charges, which carry maximum sentences of life imprisonment.

    Gbagbo’s supporters said he is a victim of collusion between France and current Ivory Coast President, Alassane Ouattara, who won the election and took office after a military intervention by the former colonial power, ended the four-month civil war.

    Ouattara, who was re-elected last year, is accused by his opponents of using the ICC to silence opposition. Gbagbo and Ble Goude – known as the “general of the streets” – were handed over to The Hague after the ICC issued arrest warrants.

    A lawyer representing victims of the violence, Habiba Toure, said the ICC risked “losing credibility” as it had failed to pursue anyone from the other side of the conflict.

  • ICC rejects bid to stall Gbagbo’s trial

    ICC rejects bid to stall Gbagbo’s trial

    The Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC) on Wednesday rejected a challenge to the admissibility of the case against former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011 and transferred to the ICC to face charges of alleged crimes against humanity in Cote d’Ivoire between December 16, 2010 and April 12, 2011.

    A statement released by the ICC in New York, stated that Gbagbo’s defence team challenged the admissibility of the case before the ICC in February.

    It said a challenge to the admissibility of the case was granted if the case was being investigated or prosecuted by a State which had jurisdiction over it, or the State was unwilling or unable to genuinely carry out the investigation or prosecution.

    According to the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the ICC, the parties had the possibility to appeal a decision on admissibility.

    The statement, however, said that the ICC ruled on Tuesday there was no a national case under way against Gbagbo.

    “Therefore, according to the pre-trial chamber, the case The Prosecutor vs. Laurent Gbagbo is still admissible before the ICC,” it noted.

    “The decision on the admissibility of the case is distinct from the decision made on June 3 by the same Chamber regarding whether or not to send the case against Mr. Gbagbo’s to trial.

    “On June 3, Pre-Trial Chamber I had indeed adjourned the hearing on the confirmation of charges and requested the Prosecutor to consider providing further evidence or conducting further investigations with respect to the charges presented against Laurent Gbagbo,” it stated.

     

  • Gbagbo’s wife in poor state of health, says lawyer

    Rodrigue Dadje, lawyer to Simone Gbagbo, the wife of former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo, said yesterday that his client’s health is deteriorating.

    He told journalists in Abidjan that the former Ivorian first lady had become very weak and emaciated.

    “We visited her on Wednesday, she is conscious but she is in a situation that gives us serious concern,’’ he said.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Simone is said to be currently receiving medical attention at an international clinic in Abidjan.

    The former first lady, who has been in detention in the northern part of Cote d’Ivoire, was on Tuesday transferred to Abidjan on health grounds after many requests from her lawyers.

    The arrest of the former president and Simone on June 11, 2011 ended the Ivorian post-electoral crisis which led to the loss of more than 3,000 lives.

    She is accused of crime against humanity, including murder, rape and other forms of sexual violence committed between Dec. 16, 2010 and April 12, 2011.

    But the UN Independent Expert on the Human Rights situation in Cote d’Ivoire, Mr Doudou Diene, said Simone was in good health condition.

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) on Feb. 29, 2012 issued an arrest warrant on Simone Gbagbo for crimes against humanity.

    The Ivorian government also said it had not responded to ICC’s call as it was still awaiting the recommendation of its justice ministry.