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The fight against impunity progresses in 2023!
Dear friends,
The last three months have seen many developments related to universal jurisdiction and the fight against impunity. These developments contribute to TRIAL International's fight to have the voices of victims and survivors heard and to punish those responsible for atrocities.
Here is a look at the latest progress...
On April 17, 2023, TRIAL International, in partnership with Civitas Maxima, Center for Justice and Accountability, ECCHR, FIDH and REDRESS, published the 2023 edition of the Annual Report on Universal Jurisdiction. The report highlights the growing use of the principle of universal and extraterritorial jurisdiction to reduce impunity for international crimes, a trend partly driven by the mobilization of many national prosecuting authorities in response to the atrocities committed on Ukrainian territory following the Russian invasion, as well as by new investigations targeting economic actors.
On the same day, more than six years after his arrest in Switzerland following the filing of a denunciation by TRIAL International, the Office of the Attorney General indicted Ousman Sonko, former Gambian Minister of the Interior, to the Federal Court (FC). Mr. Sonko will soon be tried for crimes against humanity allegedly committed during the dictatorship of former President Yahya Jammeh. It will be the second case tried by the FC under universal jurisdiction and the highest-ranking official to be tried in Europe on the basis of this principle. The upcoming trial also marks a milestone in the transitional justice process in The Gambia, where efforts to bring Jammeh-era officials to justice are also underway.
During the past three months, several cases have developed in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in part thanks to the assistance of TRIAL International. On March 1, 2023, three militiamen from the Raia Mutomboki Bralima armed group were convicted by the Tribunal Militaire de Garnison in Bukavu, South Kivu, for crimes against humanity. The three defendants were sentenced to between ten and twenty years in prison for murder, rape, sexual slavery, torture and other inhumane acts. Another case, the Kitindi case, also in South Kivu, went the other way, with the main defendant being acquitted. This is a disappointment for TRIAL International, which intends to appeal this decision in order to continue the fight against impunity and to make the voices of the victims heard.
In Bosnia-Herzegovina, a proposal by TRIAL International to abolish the practice of redeeming under one year-long prison sentences in war crimes cases will be debated during the next session of the Parliamentary Assembly. We hope to see this proposal approved in the coming months.
All this would not have been possible without your support... Thank you for making our actions possible and allowing us to continue our fight against the most serious crimes and to reduce impunity!
The TRIAL International team
PS: Do you know that by subscribing to a monthly donation of just 10 CHF your impact is doubled? You become a crucial player in ending impunity for international crimes and you enable us to accompany victims in the long run!
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