BFF-38 C.Africa football boss and ‘Rambo’ deny war crimes

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CAFRICA-UNREST-ICC-TRIAL

C.Africa football boss and ‘Rambo’ deny war crimes

THE HAGUE, Feb 16, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – A former top Central African Republic football official and a militiaman nicknamed Rambo pleaded not guilty to war crimes charges as their trial began on Tuesday at the International Criminal Court.

Ex-sports minister Patrice-Edouard Ngaissona was allegedly a senior leader
of mainly Christian anti-Balaka militias as the country slid into civil war
in 2013, while Alfred Yekatom, an MP, is accused of commanding them on the
ground.

The anti-Balaka, which means anti-machete, formed as vigilante self-
defence groups after mainly Muslim rebels called the Seleka stormed the
capital and removed then-president Francois Bozize, a Christian.

“I don’t recognise myself in the charges brought against me, I am not
guilty,” Ngaissona, 53, speaking through a coronavirus mask, told the court
in The Hague when asked by the chief judge to enter a plea.

Yekatom, 46, gave a similar response, saying: “I categorically state that
these counts are not correct. I reject all the charges that you laid against
me.”

The trial comes against a backdrop of continuing unrest in the CAR, with
rebels waging an offensive against the government of current President
Faustin Archange Touadera.

– ‘Important day for justice’ –

The two men face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity
including murder, torture, mutilation, persecution and the conscription of
child soldiers from 2013 to 2014.

Ngaissona also faces charges of rape and attempted rape.

“This day is an important day for justice,” prosecutor Kweku Vanderpuye
told the court.

“The evidence in this case will establish Ngaissona’s and Yekatom’s
criminal responsibility beyond any reasonable doubt.”

Ngaissona was arrested in France in December 2018 and then extradited to
The Hague. At the time he was head of the CAR football association and a
board member of the Confederation of African Football (CAF).

FIFA has banned him from football for six years after finding him guilty
of charges including “discrimination and of failing to protect, respect or
safeguard integrity and human dignity” related to the CAR conflict.

He was a key supporter of Bozize, whose ousting after a decade in power
sparked vicious intercommunal fighting. He rose to become the “national
general coordinator” of the anti-Balaka movement, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors said he “enhanced the capacity of the anti-Balaka to commit
the charged crimes, their preparedness to commit those charged crimes and
their willingness to do so.”

Yekatom was extradited to The Hague in late 2018.

Styling himself as Commander Rambo — after the Vietnam War veteran played
by actor Sylvester Stallone in a series of movies — Yekatom led an anti-
Balaka force of around 3,000 people including child soldiers, prosecutors
say.

“Yekatom trained, structured and armed his elements” and was a “key part
of the anti-Balaka’s widespread attack,” Vanderpuye said.

– History of unrest –

Human Rights Watch said the pair were the highest ranking anti-Balaka
leaders to face trial, and the first at the ICC.

“The opening of the Yekatom and Ngaissona trial is a milestone for justice
for victims of brutal crimes,” said Elise Keppler, associate international
justice director at HRW.

Another Central African Republic war crimes suspect, Mahamat Said Abdel
Kani, an alleged leader of the Seleka, was sent to the ICC by the authorities
in Bangui in January.

The CAR is one of the world’s poorest countries despite its rich natural
resources, with a history of unrest since independence from France, including
the despotic rule of self-proclaimed emperor Jean-Bedel Bokassa in the 1960s
and 1970s.

Despite a 2019 peace deal, militia groups which emerged during the conflict
were recently in control of around two-thirds of the country, and Touadera
depends heavily on UN forces, as well as military personnel sent by Russia
and Rwanda.

A counter-offensive has seen pro-government forces retake a series of
towns from the rebels in recent days.

Touadera won a presidential election in December from which Bozize was
banned but barely a third of the potential ballots were cast.

BSS/AFP/RY/1825hrs