This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/africa/8418952.stm
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Guinea leader 'should face trial' | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Guinea's military leader Capt Moussa Dadis Camara could be held responsible for the massacre of 157 protesters in in September, a report says. | |
The Human Rights Watch report says the killings were designed to silence opposition to military rule. | |
The authors say Guinea's presidential guard fired into the crowd until they ran out of bullets. | The authors say Guinea's presidential guard fired into the crowd until they ran out of bullets. |
Capt Camara has previously blamed the deaths on "out of control" elements in the military. | |
The junta has said that 57 people died - and most of these were trampled underfoot, rather than shot. | |
I saw the soldier who had been raping her get up, take his gun, and shoot her in the head Unnamed eye-witness | |
Human Rights Watch report | |
The Human Rights Watch report says the military tried to cover up the massacre by removing bodies from hospital for secret mass burials. | The Human Rights Watch report says the military tried to cover up the massacre by removing bodies from hospital for secret mass burials. |
They say this was a crime against humanity, coming under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. | |
The report names several military officers, including the current head of state, Capt Camara, who it says should be investigated further and face trial. | |
He is currently undergoing hospital treatment in Morocco after being shot by one of his aides. | |
The aide, Lt Toumba Diakite, on Wednesday said he had shot Capt Camara, because the military leader was trying to blame him for the massacre. | |
Premeditated | |
The report accuses the officers of direct involvement in the killings, or for having command responsibility for the actions of their juniors. | |
Human Rights Watch Emergencies Director Peter Bouckaert said: "The serious abuses carried out in Guinea on September 28 were clearly not the actions of a group of rogue, undisciplined soldiers, as the Guinean government contends. | |
Human Rights Watch says Guinea's leader should face trial | |
"They were premeditated, and top-level leaders must at the very least have been aware of what was being planned, our investigation shows." | |
The report was based on interviews with 240 people - including victims, witnesses, members of the military and diplomats. | |
The New York-based rights group says between 150 and 200 people were killed and 1,400 were injured during the massacre. Dozens of women were raped. | |
Information Minister Idriss Cherif rejected attempts to apportion blame for the deaths, saying Guinea and the UN had begun investigations. | |
"We must wait until they have completed their work," he said. | |
The Human Rights Watch report includes harrowing first-hand accounts from eye-witnesses of the events of 28 September. | |
A 29-year-old hairdresser told how she was repeatedly beaten and trampled as she tried to escape from the stadium, suffering severe burns when she fell on top of a tear-gas canister and lost consciousness. | |
"I was under 10 dead people, piled on top of me. They moved the bodies to get me out, and I saw I was burned all over my body," she said. | |
A 30-year-old businesswoman who says she was herself raped by two soldiers on the stadium field described seeing a young woman, named in the report as K, raped and then shot point-blank in the head. | |
"In between the first one raping me and the second, K was killed. I saw the soldier who had been raping her get up, take his gun, and shoot her in the head." | |
The military took over in Guinea after the death of long-time leader Lansana Conte last December, but their rule has been characterised by instability and violent crackdowns on dissent. |
Previous version
1
Next version