Man accused of killing cell mate goes on trial

Joshua French, already sentenced to death in 2010 for the murder of a Congolese man, which he always denied, appears on January 10, 2014 in front of the Ndolo court in Kinshasa for the murder of his cell companion Norway's Tjoslov Moland. Picture: STRINGER

Joshua French, already sentenced to death in 2010 for the murder of a Congolese man, which he always denied, appears on January 10, 2014 in front of the Ndolo court in Kinshasa for the murder of his cell companion Norway's Tjoslov Moland. Picture: STRINGER

Published Jan 11, 2014

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Kinshasa -

A Norwegian national accused of killing his cell mate in a prison in the Democratic Republic of Congo, went on trial on Friday in Kinshasa, his lawyer said.

Joshua French, who also holds British citizenship, is accused of murdering his friend and fellow Norwegian Tjostolv Moland, whose body was found at Kinshasa's Ndolo military prison on August 18.

French's lawyer Marie-Andre Mwila said her client appeared in front of the Ndolo military court in the capital on Friday.

“He is depressed. I need time so that he can get himself together a bit,” she told AFP, adding that she had evidence proving that Moland had committed suicide.

Mwila said she feared if French continued to be held under current conditions “he will lose it too”.

Moland, 32, and his friend French, 31, were arrested in DR Congo in 2009 and sentenced to death in June 2010 after being convicted of killing the Congolese driver of a car they had rented.

The men, both former soldiers, denied the charge and said the driver was killed by bandits. They said they had come to DR Congo to set up a security firm.

Oslo, which had tried in vain to get the two men transferred to Norway, expressed its incomprehension at the charges against French, saying in December a joint investigation between Congolese and Norwegian forces had concluded there was a lack of evidence against him.

No executions have been carried out in DR Congo since President Joseph Kabila came to power in 2001, and death sentences have regularly been commuted to life imprisonment.

Penal facilities in the vast country date from Belgian colonial times and are decrepit and overcrowded.

Inmates are exposed to disease, dehydration and starvation. Rights groups report that prisoners can die of hunger or torture. - Sapa-AFP

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