A CONGOLESE warlord who recruited and used child soldiers has been jailed for 14 years by the international criminal court.
Thomas Lubanga was found guilty in March of abducting boys and girls under the age of 15 and forcing them to fight in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s eastern Ituri region in 2002-2003.
Lubanga (51) is the first person convicted by the permanent war crimes tribunal.
The prosecution had asked for a “severe sentence” of 30 years. Luis Moreno-Ocampo, then chief prosecutor, said it was seeking the punishment “in the name of each child recruited, in the name of the Ituri region”.
But the prosecution also said it would be willing to cut the sentence to 20 years if Lubanga offered a “genuine apology” to victims of his crimes.
Children as young as 11 were recruited from their homes and schools to take part in brutal ethnic fighting in 2002-03. They were taken to military training camps and beaten and drugged. Girls were used as sex slaves.
Lubanga had pleaded his innocence and said he had not supported the use of child soldiers by the Union of Congolese Patriots militia. But in a unanimous decision, the judges said Lubanga was responsible.
He showed no emotion as the presiding judge Adrian Fulford read out the sentence yesterday.
Lubanga is an “intelligent and well-educated” person, the judge said, adding that this was a relevant factor in finding him guilty.
Lubanga, who has been in the ICC’s custody since 2006 and went on trial in 2009, has the right to appeal.
Human Rights Watch estimates that more than 60,000 people were killed in the conflict between Hema and Lendu ethnic groups in Ituri. – (Guardian service)