ICC court launches fund for CAR victims of Bemba militia

File picture.

File picture.

Published Jun 13, 2018

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The International Criminal Court (ICC) has launched a one-million-euro ($1.18-million) fund for victims of a militia once run by former Congolese vice president Jean-Pierre Bemba, it said on Wednesday.

The fund -- announced after Bemba was acquitted on war-crimes charges -- will be dispensed to people who suffered at the hands of Bemba militia in the Central African Republic (CAR), the ICC's director in CAR, Mike Cole, told a press conference.

The serious crimes committed in CAR "have not been forgotten," he said.

The violence took place over five months in 2002-2003, at a time when the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) was in the grip of a war that sucked in neighbouring countries.

Bemba at that time was leader of a militia called the Congolese Liberation Movement (MLC) -- a 1,500-strong force backed by neighbouring Uganda and opposed to DRC President Joseph Kabila.

READ: Acquitted of war crimes, Congo's Bemba seeks release

He sent his men into CAR in October 2002 to quash a coup against the then president, Ange-Felix Patasse.

There, they committed murder, rape and looting -- crimes for which Bemba was later convicted at the ICC in The Hague. His sentence was overturned on appeal last Friday.

Bemba, 55, left the ICC detention centre "yesterday evening," his lawyer in The Hague, Peter Haynes, said on Wednesday. 

He had been granted provisional release pending sentencing in a different case involving witness tampering.

"Mr Bemba will remain within the ICC's sphere until he is released into the care of a state willing to accept him," most probably Belgium, the source familiar with the matter told AFP. 

The ICC's Trust Fund for Victims in the CAR was initially unveiled in 2013 but failed to become operational because of the "security situation" there, its board said on Wednesday.

It said it now planned to "accelerate the launch" of the programme, and appealed for voluntary commissions to boost coffers.

Aid will take the form of "physical and psychological rehabilitation, as well as material support," for victims and their families.

"You are not forgotten. The harms you have suffered are recognized and urgently call for a meaningful response," the Trust Fund for Victims said in a message to victims.

AFP

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