Posts Tagged ‘ The Hague ’

CLE on International Criminal in Minneapolis, April 18, 2012

CLE on International Criminal in Minneapolis, April 18, 2012

John L. Fossum, along with former U.S. Ambassdor Robert Flaten, United States District Court Judge John Tunheim, Assistant United States Attorney John Docherty and Professor Barbara Frey of the Human Rights Program at the Institute for Global Studies at the University of Minnesota.  Details of the program, registration information, and bios of the speakers are…

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Appeals Judge Recuses Herself from Lubanga Appeal

International Criminal Court Appeals Judge Akua Kuenyehia has removed herself from hearing the appeal of the trial court decision suspending the case against Thomas Lubanga of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  Judge Kuenyehia sat on the pre-trial chamber that approved the warrant and initial indictment against Lubanga.  Another judge who has not been involved…

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Trial Chamber I Orders the Release of Thomas Lubanga

Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has ordered the release of Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, based on the court’s order last week to stay the proceedings.  That order, blogged about here, found that the prosecutions refusal to obey court orders to disclose the identity of witnesses to the defense prevented a fair trial…

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Lubanga Trial Suspended Again

Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, Netherlands, has suspended proceedings in the trial of Thomas Lubanga Dyilo.  Lubanga was the first accused to appear before the court in 2007.  In January 2009, the trial began, in January 2010, the defense began presenting its case.  The defense has presented witnesses…

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ICC Pre-Trial Chamber Notifies Security Council of Sudan's Failure to Cooperate

Pre-Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague has issued a document titled “Decision informing the United Nation’s Security Council about the lack of cooperation by the Republic of Sudan.“  The decision gives notice to the Security Council that the one situation referred to the ICC by the Security Council has…

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Lubanga Defense Witnesses Testify by Video Link

Two witnesses in the International Criminal Court (ICC) case against Thomas Lubanga testified by video link because they were unable to travel to The Hague.  The defense asserts they were unable to travel because prosecution witnesses, who are also participating as victims in the case, had stolen their identities and they could not obtain proper…

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Lubanga Defense Claims Witnesses Stole Identities

The defense team for Thomas Lubanga at the International Criminal Court (ICC) has claimed that a witness testified under a false name.  The witness, who testified as Dieudonné Tonyfwa Urochi, and is participating in the case as both a witness for the prosecution and as a victim seeking reparations before the court.  The testimony, report…

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Lubanga Defense Again Raises Concerns About Translation Errors

Thomas Lubanga Dyilo’s defense team again raised concerns about the accuracy of the translations and transcripts of the proceedings.  Defense counsel Catherine Mabile reported to the chamber that the defense had found “extremely important discrepancies” in the testimony of some witnesses.  It is unclear what the discrepancies were.  The Open Society Institute blogged the report…

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ICC Appeals Chamber Rejects Prosecution Appeal

The office of the prosecutor appealed the decision of the pre-trial chamber declining to confirm charges again Bahar Idriss Abu Garda.  The trial chamber decision, originally blogged here,  found that the office of the prosecutor had not produced enough evidence to continue the case for trial.   The standard of proof at the confirmation of charges…

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Lubanga Prosecutor Offers Evidence of the Age of Child Soldiers

The Office of the Prosecutor in the Thomas Lubanga Case has offered additional evidence that the witnesses who testified in the prosecution case were child soldiers.  The defense had offered evidence that at least some of the witnesses were not young enough to be considered child soldiers under international law, and that others were not…

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