Yahoo – AFP,
Coumba Sylla, 20 July 2015
Dakar (AFP)
- Chadian dictator Hissene Habre went on trial Monday in Senegal, a quarter of
a century after his bloodsoaked reign came to an end, in a prosecution seen as
a test case for African justice.
Once dubbed
"Africa's Pinochet", the 72-year-old has been in custody in Senegal
since his arrest in June 2013 at the home he shared in an affluent Dakar suburb
with his wife and children.
Dressed in
white robes and a turban, Habre pumped a fist in the air and cried "God is
greatest" as he was escorted by prison guards into the Extraordinary
African Chambers in the Senegalese capital.
He refused
legal representation, having consistently said he did not recognise the court's
jurisdiction and vowing not to cooperate with the trial.
![]() |
Rights
groups say 40,000 Chadians wer
e killed during Hissene Habre's reign of
terror
from 1982-1990 (AFP Photo/
Dominique Faget)
|
"These
chambers that I call an 'extraordinary administrative committee' are illegitimate
and illegal. Those who preside here are not judges but simple
functionaries," Habre said in a statement read out by the chief judge.
He said he
had been "kidnapped" and "illegally detained" and therefore
had no case to answer.
The court
adjourned for the day, ruling that Habre would be conducted by force to the
dock for the second day of the trial on Tuesday.
Habre --
backed during his presidency by France and the United States as a bulwark
against Libya's Moamer Kadhafi -- is on trial for crimes against humanity, war
crimes and torture in Chad from 1982 to 1990.
'Trial
for Africa's future'
He was
overthrown by rebel troops in December 1990 and fled to Senegal.
Chief
prosecutor Mbacke Fall paid tribute to the survivors of the Habre era "who
had the virtue to pursue the fight against impunity".
Rights
groups say 40,000 Chadians were killed under a regime by brutal repression of
opponents and the targeting of rival ethnic groups Habre perceived as a threat
to his grip on the Sahel nation.
"This
trial is staged for our people, for our future, for the future of Africa. And
it is being staged to reconcile us with ourselves," said Chadian Justice
Minister Mahamat Issa Halikim.
Delayed for
years by Senegal, the trial sets a historic precedent as until now African
leaders accused of atrocities have been tried in international courts.
Senegal and
the African Union (AU) signed an agreement in December 2012 to set up a court
to bring Habre to justice.
The AU had
mandated Senegal to try Habre in July 2006, but the country stalled the process
for years under former president Abdoulaye Wade, who was defeated in 2012
elections.
"This
is the first case anywhere in the world -- not just in Africa -- where the
courts of one country, Senegal, are prosecuting the former leader of another,
Chad, for alleged human rights crimes," Reed Brody, a lawyer at Human
Rights Watch (HRW), told AFP.
Brody
described the trial as a "test case for African justice" that had
come as a result of 25 years of campaigning by the victims.
Justice
in Africa
The
Extraordinary African Chambers indicted Habre in July 2013 and placed him in
pre-trial custody while four investigating judges spent 19 months interviewing
some 2,500 witnesses and victims.
Around 100
witnesses will testify during hearings expected to last around three months,
although 4,000 people have been registered as victims in the case.
"When
we began this case, when we started working with the victims -- I started in
1999 -- one of the victims said to Human Rights Watch 'since when has justice come
all the way to Chad?'," Brody told AFP.
"The
African Union saw the importance of being able to show that you can have
justice in Africa," he added.
The UN
described the opening of the trial as a "milestone for justice in
Africa" while France issued a statement welcoming the opening of a process
it said it had helped establish.
France sent
3,000 paratroopers with air support to support Habre when Libyan-backed
supporters of his political rival Goukouni Weddeye launched an offensive in
northern Chad in 1983.
Rights
groups say the US, too, provided a variety of support to Habre -- including
training, intelligence and arms for his feared secret police -- despite being
aware of the regime's atrocities.
US State
Department spokesman John Kirby hailed "an important step toward
justice" for those who suffered under Habre's rule.
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In approximately 70 years, there will be a black man who leads this African continent into affluence and peace. He won't be a president, but rather a planner and a revolutionary economic thinker. He, and a strong woman with him, will implement the plan continent-wide. They will unite. This is the potential and this is the plan. Africa will arise out the ashes of centuries of disease and despair and create a viable economic force with workers who can create good products for the day. You think China is economically strong? China must do what it does, hobbled by the secrecy and bias of the old ways of its own history. As large as it is, it will have to eventually compete with Africa, a land of free thinkers and fast change. China will have a major competitor, one that doesn't have any cultural barriers to the advancement of the free Human spirit.. ...."


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