The Prague Post - ICC hears charges against Ugandan warlord Kony

EUR -
AED 4.355741
AFN 76.488686
ALL 96.399429
AMD 447.165416
ANG 2.122613
AOA 1087.601129
ARS 1656.90134
AUD 1.677975
AWG 2.137842
AZN 2.009372
BAM 1.954775
BBD 2.392345
BDT 145.273789
BGN 1.955945
BHD 0.447265
BIF 3520.952897
BMD 1.186043
BND 1.497614
BOB 8.20766
BRL 6.183081
BSD 1.187777
BTN 107.652525
BWP 15.57383
BYN 3.405214
BYR 23246.438843
BZD 2.388947
CAD 1.616019
CDF 2656.735855
CHF 0.913395
CLF 0.025738
CLP 1016.296018
CNY 8.184467
CNH 8.188831
COP 4352.112885
CRC 578.996257
CUC 1.186043
CUP 31.430134
CVE 110.206721
CZK 24.243011
DJF 211.519036
DKK 7.469576
DOP 74.470932
DZD 153.769332
EGP 55.604081
ERN 17.790642
ETB 184.925587
FJD 2.598735
FKP 0.868802
GBP 0.871825
GEL 3.190145
GGP 0.868802
GHS 13.024113
GIP 0.868802
GMD 87.172755
GNF 10426.618074
GTQ 9.110221
GYD 248.508584
HKD 9.270051
HNL 31.389533
HRK 7.534956
HTG 155.538404
HUF 379.081219
IDR 19986.007191
ILS 3.646604
IMP 0.868802
INR 107.614585
IQD 1556.083674
IRR 49962.053058
ISK 145.195079
JEP 0.868802
JMD 185.552658
JOD 0.840926
JPY 181.868396
KES 153.224566
KGS 103.719705
KHR 4779.492663
KMF 493.393947
KPW 1067.425249
KRW 1712.770355
KWD 0.363757
KYD 0.989881
KZT 587.711685
LAK 25473.636448
LBP 106192.430587
LKR 367.47722
LRD 221.523788
LSL 18.847013
LTL 3.502076
LVL 0.717426
LYD 7.49207
MAD 10.846664
MDL 20.127441
MGA 5245.248326
MKD 61.60768
MMK 2491.051331
MNT 4245.459433
MOP 9.564982
MRU 47.417125
MUR 54.427117
MVR 18.324675
MWK 2059.719465
MXN 20.425313
MYR 4.620228
MZN 75.785812
NAD 18.847013
NGN 1607.775609
NIO 43.707071
NOK 11.338392
NPR 172.24364
NZD 1.968422
OMR 0.456181
PAB 1.187877
PEN 3.986109
PGK 5.098325
PHP 68.820108
PKR 332.261395
PLN 4.214146
PYG 7820.897132
QAR 4.329084
RON 5.091564
RSD 117.291218
RUB 91.659389
RWF 1734.190238
SAR 4.448678
SBD 9.534205
SCR 16.391401
SDG 713.399875
SEK 10.607736
SGD 1.499128
SHP 0.889839
SLE 28.998958
SLL 24870.726024
SOS 677.644506
SRD 44.807545
STD 24548.69131
STN 24.487154
SVC 10.393548
SYP 13117.129154
SZL 18.855109
THB 36.941082
TJS 11.183233
TMT 4.16301
TND 3.425303
TOP 2.855707
TRY 51.874754
TTD 8.046779
TWD 37.301101
TZS 3048.130439
UAH 51.091097
UGX 4204.776435
USD 1.186043
UYU 45.546106
UZS 14622.329079
VES 462.327228
VND 30801.531468
VUV 141.5656
WST 3.215982
XAF 655.613063
XAG 0.01553
XAU 0.000239
XCD 3.20534
XCG 2.140777
XDR 0.815372
XOF 655.613063
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.663681
ZAR 18.978831
ZMK 10675.806651
ZMW 22.034441
ZWL 381.905297
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.16

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    -1.3500

    88.06

    -1.53%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.7

    0%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    25.83

    +0.7%

  • NGG

    0.5800

    91.22

    +0.64%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    204.52

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    97.91

    -1.64%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    58.54

    +0.09%

  • RELX

    1.0800

    28.81

    +3.75%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    60.61

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.87

    -0.36%

  • CMSD

    -0.1280

    23.942

    -0.53%

  • BP

    -1.3600

    37.19

    -3.66%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    15.62

    -0.38%

ICC hears charges against Ugandan warlord Kony
ICC hears charges against Ugandan warlord Kony / Photo: Stuart Tibaweswa - AFP

ICC hears charges against Ugandan warlord Kony

The International Criminal Court opens war crimes hearings Tuesday against Joseph Kony, a brutal Ugandan rebel chief whose Lord's Resistance Army was responsible for murdering and kidnapping tens of thousands.

Text size:

Kony was the first suspected war criminal indicted by the ICC in 2005 and the hearing itself is the first ever held in absentia at the court, after decades of fruitless efforts to find him.

He faces 39 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including murder, rape, torture, enslavement and sexual slavery, allegedly committed between July 2002 and December 2005 in northern Uganda.

The former Catholic altar boy headed the feared LRA whose marauding insurgency against the Ugandan government saw more than 100,000 killed and 60,000 children abducted, according to the United Nations.

The group became a byword for brutality, with escapees recounting horrors such as being forced to hack or even bite others to death, cannibalism, and drinking blood.

LRA fighters attacked Everlyn Ayo's school when she was five years old. Now 39, she plans to listen to proceedings on her radio from the city of Gulu, a world away from the sterile ICC courtroom in the Hague.

"The rebels raided the school, killed and cooked our teachers in big drums and we were forced to eat their remains," Ayo told AFP.

She became a so-called "night commuter", one of thousands of children who trekked every night to shelters in an effort to avoid the horrors of the LRA.

"Many times, on our return to the village, we would find blood-soaked bodies. Seeing all that blood as a child traumatised my eyes," Ayo told AFP.

"For many years now, I do not see well. All I see is blood."

- 'We cannot lose hope' -

At Tuesday's "confirmation of charges" hearing -- the first of three days -- prosecutors will lay out the charges against Kony, born in September 1961.

After the hearing, ICC judges will then decide whether the charges merit a trial -- a process that occurs within 60 days.

In the Kony case, a trial is not possible as the ICC statutes do not allow a suspect to be tried in absentia.

Kony's defence team, also participating in the hearing, has described the process as an "enormous expense of time, money and effort for no benefit at all".

But prosecutors say that holding a hearing would mean a quicker trial if Kony were ever to be found and brought to the Hague.

According to a UN panel of experts in June 2024, Kony is thought to have left Sudan due to the civil war there, relocating to a remote part of the Central African Republic.

His last-known appearance was in 2006 when he told a Western journalist he was "not a terrorist" and that stories of LRA brutality were "propaganda".

It is not known whether he is even still alive.

Prosecutors also hope a hearing will allow victims a sense of justice, a feeling shared by Stella Angel Lanam, captured by the LRA aged 10 and forced to become a child soldier.

"Even though we have passed through a lot, we cannot lose hope," said the 38-year-old, now director of a group offering counselling to victims.

"Will the government or Kony repair me back to the way I was? No. But at least I will get justice."

burs-ric/srg/rh/phz/tym

I.Horak--TPP