Édition en Français | French Edition
Friday, September 3, 2010
Make Congo Planet Your Home Page | Contact Us
Congo Planet DRC - Congo
News
Video, Music, from the Congo
Videos
Kaysha
Music
Congo Kin Web TV
TV Radio
Friends
Friends
Congo pictures - photos
Pictures
Home Newsletter Podcasts RSS Facebook Twitter Mobile Downloads Links
Lubanga Witness Says He Was Paid US$200 To Tell Lies

Share

lubangatrial.org - February 8, 2010

Thomas Lubanga
A witness today told the war crimes trial of Thomas Lubanga that intermediaries of the International Criminal Court (ICC) gave him US$200 as payment for convincing his nephew to give false testimony against the accused.

The boy subsequently testified as a prosecution witness and claimed that he was a former child soldier in Lubanga’s militia group, according to evidence heard today and last week. The boy’s father was the first witness called by the defense, and he told court that his son who never served in any armed group had lied to court that he was a fighter with the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), the group Lubanga is alleged to have led. 

Today’s witness, who started giving evidence last week, said that for the US$200 he was given, he also had to give ICC officials permission to take x-ray images of the boy to help determine his age. In addition, he had to lie to the court’s officials that he knew Lubanga, and that he was aware that UPC had used child soldiers. 

Describing himself as a farmer in the eastern Congolese town of Bunia, the witness told the trial presided over by Judge Adrian Fulford that the ICC officials whom he met during 2007 did not realize that their intermediaries had paid him.

He said he met the ICC officials and their intermediaries on two occasions, in the town of Beni in Ituri province in eastern Congo, and in the country’s capital Kinshasa. “They were three white persons, and one black person. The second time it was two white persons and two black persons,” he said of the meetings.

Defense counsel Catherine Mabille asked the witness why he told them he knew Lubanga yet in court he said he did not know him.

“I was acting, saying what had been concocted [by the intermediaries]. It was a money issue. The white people didn’t know this, but we the blacks knew. I was told what to tell them,” he said.

The boy who would later testify as a prosecution witness also met these officials, the witness said. He added that by the time he met the ICC officials, he had already agreed with the intermediaries that the boy would consent to whatever ICC officials requested him to do. 

This witness testified without protective measures such as face and voice recognition, and provided his name to the court. But he gave some of his testimony in closed session. The first defense witness asked for protective measures although at first he had indicated that he would testify in public view.

The evidence given by these first two defense witnesses has supported Mabille’s claim that she would provide evidence to show that all witnesses who testified as former child soldiers were bogus, and that intermediaries of the Office of The Prosecutor (OTP) fabricated evidence and coached prosecution witnesses.

Today’s witness said while the ICC’s intermediaries initially promised that they would relocate him to neighboring Tanzania or move him to another Congolese town, they subsequently threatened to imprison him if he “betrayed” them.

Life had got harder for him when his family and neighbors learnt about his dealings with ICC officials and threatened to harm him, he said. He said his wife deserted their home and he himself fled his house and took refugee in the bush for fear of being attacked.

“People wanted to hurt me, people from my own family,” he said. “What we did was not right because we almost sold someone’s child… they gave us 200 dollars but that was for food. It wasn’t even enough to buy him clothes.”

Prosecutor Nicole Samson asked who in his family wanted to harm him.

“Even my big brothers put pressure on me…  I was told that I was selling people, or that I was taking money to betray people,” he said.

The witness said he subsequently went to the village chiefs to ask for forgiveness. The chiefs put him in touch with the UPC secretary-general, who then advised him to talk to Lubanga’s lawyers.

Samson asked the witness whether UPC officials had paid him money to testify as a defense witness.

 ”They categorically said no,” the witness replied. “Personally I asked for money and they said no… They said they were not thieves and were not wishing to buy my testimony.”



Send this article to a friend
Newsletter

News by email




Related articles


  1. Report: Uganda LRA rebels 'on massive forced recruitment drive' (August 12, 2010)
  2. ICC suspends release of Thomas Lubanga (July 23, 2010)
  3. ICC orders the release of Thomas Lubanga (July 15, 2010)
  4. ICC rejects Germain Katanga's motion to suspend trial (July 12, 2010)
  5. ICC suspends Thomas Lubanga trial (July 8, 2010)
  6. ICC: Jean-Pierre Bemba trial postponed (July 7, 2010)
  7. The ICC signs enforcement agreements with Belgium, Denmark, and Finland (June 1, 2010)
  8. ICC: Jean-Pierre Bemba trial postponed (March 8, 2010)
  9. ICC: Thomas Lubanga Defence Questions Witness Credibility (January 30, 2010)
  10. Ugandan rebels murder, rape, mutilate, displace thousands in DR Congo, Sudan - UN (December 21, 2009)
  11. ICC reverses decision on the interim release of Jean-Pierre Bemba (December 2, 2009)
  12. ICC: Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui trial starts on Tuesday (November 23, 2009)
  13. Amnesty International: more prosecutions should follow for war crimes in the Kivus (November 19, 2009)
  14. ICC: Germain Katanga's appeal dismissed (September 25, 2009)
  15. UN mission in DR Congo denies Ntanganda's role in military operation (September 10, 2009)
  16. ICC: Jean-Pierre Bemba interim release suspended pending final decision on appeal (September 3, 2009)
  17. ICC: Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo trial postponed (August 31, 2009)
  18. ICC Prosecutor appeals decision to release Jean-Pierre Bemba (August 25, 2009)
  19. International Criminal Court gives Jean-Pierre Bemba conditional release (August 14, 2009)
  20. More work remains to ensure justice for war crimes victims, says head of ICC (July 17, 2009)
  21. Jean-Pierre Bemba Allowed to Attend Mass for His Father in Brussels (July 7, 2009)
  22. Senator Jeannot Bemba Saolona Dies at 67 (July 3, 2009)
  23. Congo Denies Instigating ICC Charges Against Former VP Bemba (June 16, 2009)
  24. ICC Orders War Crimes Charges Against Former Congo Vice President (June 15, 2009)
  25. Witness Claims Lubanga Visited Training Camp (June 5, 2009)
  26. Congo ex-rebel 'working with UN' (April 29, 2009)
  27. Negotiations between Kinshasa and CNDP Rebels to End Friday (February 20, 2009)
  28. Thomas Lubanga will remain under custody of the ICC pending final decision on appeal (July 7, 2008)
  29. Ituri warlord faces first trial at ICC in The Hague (March 21, 2006)




Live TV Congo Radio en ligne Radio

Congo DRC Live Radio Congo DRC TV Live
Congo Planet RadioCongo Planet TV

Congo DRC TV Live Congo DRC Live  Music Radio
Congo Planet Radio IICongo Planet TV II




 


Make Congo Planet Your Home Page | Refer Us | Contact Us | About Us | Version en Francais | French Edition

© 2010 CongoPlanet.com. All rights reserved.