THE HAGUE,
Netherlands
The International Criminal Court on Thursday sentenced
Dominic Ongwen, a Ugandan child soldier who became a commander of the notorious
Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), to 25 years' jail for war crimes and crimes
against humanity.Dominic Ongwen, a senior commander in Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)
Dominic Ongwen, 45 --
whose nom de guerre was "White Ant" -- was found guilty in February
of 61 charges, including murders, rapes and sexual enslavement during a reign
of terror in the early 2000s by the LRA, led by the fugitive Joseph Kony.
Prosecutors had asked
for a 20-year prison term, saying Ongwen's own history as a schoolboy abducted
by the LRA justified a lower sentence than the maximum 30 years to life allowed
by the ICC.
But on Thursday he was
given a 25-year sentence by the Hague-based court.
The defence had sought
a 10-year prison term for Ongwen for attacks by his soldiers on refugee camps
in northern Uganda.
Victims of his crimes
had asked the court to impose a full life sentence.
Ongwen told the court
that the LRA forced him to eat beans soaked with the blood of the first people
he was made to kill as part of a brutal initiation following his own abduction
aged nine.
"I am before this
international court with so many charges, and yet I am the first victim of
child abduction. What happened to me, I do not even believe happened to Jesus
Christ," Ongwen said.
The LRA was founded
three decades ago by former Catholic altar boy and self-styled prophet Kony,
who launched a bloody rebellion in northern Uganda against President Yoweri
Museveni.
Its brutal campaign to
set up a state based on the Bible's Ten Commandments left more than 100,000
people dead and 60,000 children abducted, eventually spreading to Sudan, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Central African Republic.
Judges said in their
verdict in February that Ongwen personally ordered his soldiers to carry out
massacres of more than 130 civilians at the Lukodi, Pajule, Odek, and Abok
refugee camps between 2002 and 2005.
Civilians were locked
in their homes and burned to death or beaten during the massacres, while
mothers were made to transport the LRA's loot, forcing them to abandon their
infant children by the roadside.
Ongwen was also the
first person convicted by the ICC of the crime of forced pregnancy, for
abducting and raping so-called "wives", some of whom were underage.
Prosecution lawyer
Colin Black said that Ongwen's own history as a child soldier "does not in
any way diminish the gravity of the crimes, nor does it diminish his criminal
culpability."
"Nevertheless we
consider them to be exceptional individual circumstances of a kind that warrant
a significant reduction in sentence," he argued.
Ongwen surrendered to
US Special Forces who were hunting Kony in the Central African Republic in
early 2015 and he was transferred to the ICC to face trial.
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