Int'l Court Sentences Ugandan to 25 Years for War Crimes

The International Criminal Court sentenced a Ugandan former child soldier who turned into a brutal rebel commander to 25 years' imprisonment Thursday, with judges saying that his own abduction as a schoolboy and history as a child soldier prevented him being sentenced to life.
Dominic Ongwen was convicted in
February of a total of 61 war crimes and crimes against humanity including
murder, rape, forced marriage, forced pregnancy, and using child soldiers as a
commander in the shadowy Lord´s Resistance Army. His lawyers have said they
will appeal the conviction.
Presiding Judge Bertram Schmitt
said that judges had to weigh Ongwen´s brutality and victims´ wishes for
justice against his own tortured past when deciding on a sentence.
"The chamber is confronted in the present case
with a unique situation. It is confronted with a perpetrator who willfully
brought tremendous suffering upon his victims," Schmitt said.
"However, it is also confronted with a
perpetrator who himself had previously endured extreme suffering himself at the
hands of the group of which he later became a prominent member and leader."
Ongwen, wearing a face mask and
headphones, showed no emotion as he heard that the three-judge panel had given
him a sentence five years longer than the 20 years prosecutors requested.
Ongwen´s defense lawyers have
always cast him as a victim of the LRA´s brutality who was traumatized after
being abducted as a 9-year-old schoolboy and turned into a child soldier in the
group´s violent insurgency.
But judges in February ruled that
he committed the crimes "as a fully responsible adult, as a commander of
the LRA in his mid-to late 20s."
Schmitt underscored that on
Thursday, saying Ongwen could have fled the LRA, was not always in a position
of total subordination to its leader Joseph Kony and committed some of the
crimes in private.
Ongwen abducted children and women
and "distributed" them among his fighters, the judge said.
"He also kept women and girls for his own
household, forcing the youngest to be his domestic servants, while those that
were deemed old enough were forced to be his so-called wives, obliged to have
sex with him, and bear his children," Schmitt added.
Ongwen is the first commander of
the LRA to face justice at the global court and his convictions for
gender-based crimes are significant for prosecutors keen to punish such
atrocities.
Founded by Kony, himself a
fugitive from the ICC, the Lord´s Resistance Army began in Uganda as an
anti-government rebellion. When the military forced the group out of Uganda in
2005, the rebels scattered across parts of central Africa.
Kony gained international
notoriety in 2012 when the US-based advocacy group Invisible Children made a
video highlighting the LRA´s crimes that went viral. By that time, the group
had already been weakened by defections. Uganda´s military estimated in 2013
that the group comprised no more than a few hundred fighters.
Reports over the years have
claimed Kony was hiding in Sudan´s Darfur region or in a remote corner of
Central African Republic, where LRA fighters continued to kill and abduct in
occasional raids on villages, and where Ongwen was arrested in 2015.
Judges said Ongwen's role in a
litany of brutal crimes would have merited a life sentence had it not been for
his own childhood.
They said he was an intelligent
child who could have grown up into a valuable member of society had he not been
abducted on his way to school.
"All these possibilities, all his positive
potential, all his hopes for a bright future came to a brutal halt on the day
when he was abducted," Schmitt said.