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DR Congo troops jailed for war crimes
KINSHASA - Thirteen Congolese army soldiers and four former militia fighters have been sentenced to life imprisonment in separate war crimes convictions by local military authorities, the United Nations said yesterday.
The sentences were handed down on Monday by military tribunals at
Bunia, the capital of Democratic Republic of Congo's northeast
Ituri district where government forces, backed by UN peacekeepers,
have fought for several years to subdue rebels and renegade
militias.
Ituri's military court jailed the 13 soldiers, members of the
First Integrated Brigade, for life after finding them guilty of the
massacre of about 30 civilians whose bodies were found late last
year buried in mass graves at Bavi, south of Bunia.
The victims, including women and children, had disappeared
during army operations against local militia in late August or
early September, during the run-up to Congo's October 29
presidential election run-off.
The elections, won by incumbent President Joseph Kabila, were
the first free polls in Congo in more than 40 years and were meant
to draw a line under a 1998-2003 war.
The other Ituri life sentences were imposed on four former
eastern militia fighters convicted of the 2003 killings of two UN
military observers, one Jordanian, the other from Malawi.
"These sentences send a strong signal that impunity will not be
tolerated," said Kemal Saiki, spokesman for the UN peacekeeping
mission in Congo.
The men sentenced have five days in which to appeal.
Nampa-Reuters
Ituri's military court jailed the 13 soldiers, members of the First
Integrated Brigade, for life after finding them guilty of the
massacre of about 30 civilians whose bodies were found late last
year buried in mass graves at Bavi, south of Bunia.The victims,
including women and children, had disappeared during army
operations against local militia in late August or early September,
during the run-up to Congo's October 29 presidential election
run-off.The elections, won by incumbent President Joseph Kabila,
were the first free polls in Congo in more than 40 years and were
meant to draw a line under a 1998-2003 war.The other Ituri life
sentences were imposed on four former eastern militia fighters
convicted of the 2003 killings of two UN military observers, one
Jordanian, the other from Malawi."These sentences send a strong
signal that impunity will not be tolerated," said Kemal Saiki,
spokesman for the UN peacekeeping mission in Congo.The men
sentenced have five days in which to appeal.Nampa-Reuters
