Source: Human Rights Watch (HRW) |

Hissène Habré Trial: Witness Hearings Ending

Final Arguments, Decision Expected in Early 2016

NEW YORK, United States of America, December 14, 2015/APO (African Press Organization)/ --

The last witness is scheduled to testify on December 15, 2015, in the landmark trial in Senegal of the former Chadian dictator Hissène Habré, Human Rights Watch said today. The lawyers’ closing statements are expected to take place late January or early February 2016, with a verdict by the end of May 2016.
 

Habré, who ruled Chad from 1982 to 1990 before fleeing to Senegal, has stood trial since July 20, 2015, before the Extraordinary African Chambers in the Senegalese court system on charges of crimes against humanity, torture, and war crimes.

“For the first time, the courts of one country are prosecuting the former ruler of another for alleged human rights crimes,” said Reed Brody, counsel at Human Rights Watch, who has worked with Habré’s victims since 1999. “After a 25-year quest for justice, the survivors got their day in court, and Habré had an opportunity to defend himself.”

The Extraordinary African Chambers were inaugurated by Senegal and the African Union in February 2013 to prosecute the “person or persons” most responsible for international crimes committed in Chad between 1982 and 1990. The Trial Chamber, which will have sat for 52 days, is presided over by Gberdao Gustave Kam of Burkina Faso, who shares the bench with two senior Senegalese judges.

Altogether, 98 witnesses will have testified, the majority traveling from Chad to Senegal. The victims and witnesses were chosen from the more than 2,500 interviewed by the pre-trial investigating judges on the basis of the relevance of their testimony to the crimes committed or their alleged link to Hissène Habré.

Some of the most moving testimony came from the victims who described their experience in prisons and camps. Among the other witnesses were experts on that period in Chad; the president of the 1992 Chadian Truth Commission; former members of Habré’s political police; the Documentation and Security Directorate (DDS); the Belgian judge who carried out a four-year investigation into a complaint filed against Habré in Belgium; a French doctor who treated 581 torture victims; researchers from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch; and forensic, statistical, and handwriting experts.

The trial looked at various periods and issues in Chad under Habré: attacks against the Hadjerai ethnic group (1987); the Zaghawas (1989); southern populations, including the so-called “Black September” in 1984; the arrest of political prisoners; and the treatment of prisoners of war.

Habré has rejected the tribunal’s authority. After his lawyers failed to appear at the opening of the trial in July 2015, the court appointed three Senegalese lawyers to defend him and adjourned for 45 days so they could prepare. The first day back, on September 7, Habré was brought in to the court by force, kicking and screaming. After that, he was brought into the courtroom for each session before the doors to the public opened. The three court-appointed lawyers played an active role in questioning each witness and challenging the prosecution’s case. Habré has remained silent, as is his right, even when the prosecutor tried to question him.

Habré’s court-appointed lawyers have not directly challenged the accounts of criminal activity but have tried to show that Habré himself was not involved in committing the crimes. They have also challenged the credibility of a number of witnesses.

Some 4,500 victims joined the procedure as civil parties, represented by legal teams, most of whose members are Chadian lawyers. The victims’ lead lawyer, Jacqueline Moudeina, has been fighting on the victims’ behalf for 15 years to bring Habré to court.

The trial has been streamed live on the Internet and broadcasted on national television back in Chad. The woman who stated that she was raped by Hissène Habré reportedly received threats on her return to Chad. No measures are in place for witness protection.

The indictment does not include charges of rape, sexual enslavement, or other forms of sexual violence of comparable gravity. The victims’ lawyers have asked that these charges be added.

“Every day, the Chadian public watched their former president in the dock, as evidence of his alleged crimes was presented,” Brody said. “Habré was not put on trial because the current Chadian government particularly wanted him there, but because a group of brave Chadian survivors and activists fought to get him there.”

The parties – the prosecution, the civil parties and the defense – will present written conclusions. The lawyers’ final summations are scheduled late January or early February 2016. A verdict is expected by the end of May 2016. A final calendar will be decided at the end of the hearings on December 15, 2015.

Judge Kam has said that if Habré is found guilty, there will be a second set of hearings on damages for the civil parties.

Key information revealed through testimony includes:

Four women sent to a camp in the desert north of Chad in 1988 testified that they were used as sexual slaves for the army and that soldiers had repeatedly raped multiple women. Two were under 15 at the time. One testified that Habré himself had also raped her.
Other survivors testified that rape of women detainees was frequent in the main DDS prison in N’Djaména.
Ten witnesses testified that they had personally met Habré in prison or were sent to prison personally by Habré.
Prison survivors said that corpses were kept rotting in jail cells until there were enough to be taken away.
Survivors described the main forms of torture, in particular the “arbatachar,” which involved tying all four of a prisoner's limbs behind their back to interrupt the bloodstream and quickly induce paralysis.
Bandjim Bandoum, once a top DDS agent, testified about the agency’s inner workings. He explained that when reports on detainees were sent to the presidency, they came back with annotations: E for “execute”; L for “set free” or V for “seen.” “Only the president could request a release,” he said.
A court-appointed handwriting expert confirmed that it was Habré who responded to a request by the International Committee of the Red Cross for the hospitalization of certain prisoners of war by writing, “From now on, no prisoner of war can leave the Detention Center except in case of death.”
Patrick Ball, of the Human Rights Data Analysis Group, presented a study of mortality in Habré’s prisons, based on the DDS’s own documents, concluding that prison mortality was “hundreds of times higher than normal mortality for adult men in Chad during the same period” and “substantially higher than some of the twentieth century’s worst POW contexts” such as German prisoners of war in Soviet custody and United States prisoners of war in Japanese custody.
Experts from the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team carried out exhumations at a number of potential mass grave sites. In Deli, in southern Chad, the site of an alleged killing of unarmed rebels in September 1984, the experts located 21 bodies, almost all military-age men, most of whom were killed by gunshot. In Mongo, in the center of Chad, the experts uncovered 14 bodies from another 1984 massacre.
Clement Abaifouta, the president of the Association of Victims of the Crimes of the Hissène Habré Regime, testified that he was forced to bury the bodies of deceased detainees in mass graves.
Souleymane Guengueng, the founder of the victims’ association, showed the court crude eating utensils he had carved in jail.
Robert Hissein Gambier, who survived five years in prison, earning the nickname “The man who runs faster than death,” said that he counted 2,053 detainees who died in prison. He brought wooden sticks to demonstrate how his head was squeezed as torture.
Abdourahmane Guèye, a Senegalese merchant imprisoned in Chad, testified that his release was won through diplomatic negotiations between the Senegalese and Chadian governments. His Senegalese companion, Demba Gaye, died, he testified, after being placed in the notorious “cell of death” in the Locaux prison.
Mahamat Nour Dadji, the child of a close adviser to Habré, testified that the DDS director arrived at their home in Habré’s car saying, “The president needs you.” Dadji was detained with his father, who was never seen again.
Bichara Djibrine Ahmat testified that in 1983 he was taken with 149 other Chadian prisoners of war to be executed. Only he survived to take the Truth Commission 10 years later to find the mass grave.
The court also has before it thousands of DDS documents that were located by Human Rights Watch in 2001 in the abandoned offices of the DDS. These include lists of DDS prisoners, death certificates, interrogation reports, and identity cards. The documents mention 12,321 victims of abuse, including the death in detention of 1,208 of them. Among these documents were copies of 1,265 direct communications to Habré from the DDS about the status of 898 detainees.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Human Rights Watch (HRW).