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ICC Convicts Former Uganda Child Abductee-Turned Rebel Commander

ICC Convicts Former Ugandan Rebel Commander for War Crimes

The International Criminal Court convicted victim-turned-perpetrator Dominic Ongwen of war crimes committed during two decades of insurgency in northern Uganda.

Ongwen, 46, was found guilty of 61 of 70 charges, including abductions, sexual slavery, murder, rape and torture, ICC Judge Bertram Schmitt said in the verdict delivered Thursday in The Hague. The crimes relate to Ongwen’s time as a commander of the Lord’s Resistance Army rebel group that began a rebellion in northern Uganda in the 1980s.

The group, led by Joseph Kony, still operates in parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic. The conviction brings some closure to families of the more than 50,000 children reported to have been abducted by the LRA and used as soldiers, sex slaves or sold into slavery.

The court will sentence Ongwen after reviewing submissions by the prosecutor, the defense and representatives of some victims. He faces a life term.

Child Soldier

The LRA abducted Ongwen at the age of about 10 and transformed him into a child soldier. He rose through the ranks and become one of the most brutal commanders the group accused of atrocities including abducting, killing and cutting off of victims’ hands, lips and ears.

Ongwen has been on trial since 2015, when he was arrested by U.S. troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo. His lawyers argued that because he was abducted when he was a child, he should be exonerated.

The court disagreed, saying he was fully responsible for the crimes he committed as an adult. “The Chamber did not find evidence that supported the claim that he suffered from any mental disease or disorder during the period relevant to the charges or that he committed these crimes under duress or under any threats,” it said in statement.

Activists, including New York-based Human Rights Watch, are now pressing for authorities to revive the search for Kony.

“Ongwen’s trial and conviction are major developments, but they should not obscure the need for Joseph Kony’s arrest and surrender,” Elise Keppler, associate international justice director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “Countries should recommit themselves to seeing Joseph Kony face the ICC once and for all.”

Kony, who claims to be inspired by the Bible’s 10 commandments and has also been indicted for war crimes, hasn’t been captured. Of those indicted, Oti Vincent, Raska Lukwiya and Okot Odhiambo have reportedly died.

The Ugandan army forced the LRA to flee to bases in Congo, South Sudan and the Central African Republic amid failed peace talks with President Yoweri Museveni’s administration in 2006 and 2008.

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