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Congo 'warlords' deny atrocities | |
(about 8 hours later) | |
Two alleged Congolese militia leaders have denied war crimes at the start of their trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. | |
Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui are accused of directing an attack on the village of Bogoro in 2003 in which more than 200 people were killed. | |
They face charges of ordering attacks on civilians, sexual slavery, rape, and enlisting child soldiers. | They face charges of ordering attacks on civilians, sexual slavery, rape, and enlisting child soldiers. |
Both deny the allegations and have expressed sympathy for the victims. | |
'Defending his people' | |
Chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo opened the case against them saying they had tried to wipe out the village of Bogoro. | |
ICC TRIAL Germain Katanga: Born 28 April 1978 in Mambassa, Ituri District. Alleged commander of Patriotic Resistance Force of Ituri (FRPI)Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui: Born 8 October 1970 in Bunia, Ituri District. Alleged leader of National Integrationist Front (FNI)ICC charges: Seven war crimes, including wilful killing, sexual slavery, attacking civilians, pillaging and using child soldiersThree crimes against humanity | ICC TRIAL Germain Katanga: Born 28 April 1978 in Mambassa, Ituri District. Alleged commander of Patriotic Resistance Force of Ituri (FRPI)Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui: Born 8 October 1970 in Bunia, Ituri District. Alleged leader of National Integrationist Front (FNI)ICC charges: Seven war crimes, including wilful killing, sexual slavery, attacking civilians, pillaging and using child soldiersThree crimes against humanity |
"Some [villagers] were shot dead in their sleep, some cut up by machetes to save bullets," he said. | |
"Others were burned alive after their houses were set on fire by the attackers." | |
He described the two defendants as "the top commanders of the troops that killed, raped and pillaged". | |
"They used children as soldiers, they killed more than 200 civilians in a few hours, they raped women; girls and the elderly, they looted the entire village and they transformed women into sex slaves," he said. | |
The two men listened to all the charges against them and pleaded not guilty to each one. | |
Mr Katanga's lawyer claimed that his client was "merely defending his own people" and played no part in the Bogoro attack. | |
Mr Ngudjolo's counsel also said his client had not been involved at Bogoro and that he had a "clear conscience". | |
Continuing unrest | |
It is only the second trial at the ICC in The Hague. The first case - of Congolese militia leader Thomas Lubanga - began in 2008 but has been delayed by legal argument. | |
Mr Lubanga's Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC) militia had controlled Bogoro until the other militias attacked. | |
Mr Katanga and Mr Ngudjolo are accused of leading ethnic Lendu and Ngiti fighters against the UPC. | |
Prosecutors says their goal was to "erase" the village, mainly populated by ethnic Hema, in the mineral-rich Ituri province of the Democratic Republic of Congo. | |
Prosecutors plan to call 26 witnesses, although 21 of them will testify hidden from public view for fear of reprisals. | Prosecutors plan to call 26 witnesses, although 21 of them will testify hidden from public view for fear of reprisals. |
The trial is expected to take several months. | The trial is expected to take several months. |
The conflict in Ituri was part of a war that raged in DR Congo following the 1994 genocide in neighbouring Rwanda and involved troops and fighters from several neighbouring countries. | The conflict in Ituri was part of a war that raged in DR Congo following the 1994 genocide in neighbouring Rwanda and involved troops and fighters from several neighbouring countries. |
Militia leaders from all sides have been accused of using the conflict to profit from the region's mineral reserves, especially gold. | Militia leaders from all sides have been accused of using the conflict to profit from the region's mineral reserves, especially gold. |
Campaign group Human Rights Watch has called on the ICC to also investigate officials from DR Congo, Rwanda and Uganda, accusing them of arming rival militias in Ituri. | Campaign group Human Rights Watch has called on the ICC to also investigate officials from DR Congo, Rwanda and Uganda, accusing them of arming rival militias in Ituri. |
The Ituri conflict ended after the intervention of European Union peacekeepers. | The Ituri conflict ended after the intervention of European Union peacekeepers. |
The wider DR Congo conflict officially ended in 2003 but much of the east remains unstable. | The wider DR Congo conflict officially ended in 2003 but much of the east remains unstable. |