Warlord Thomas Lubanga was found guilty in 2012 at the International Criminal Court (ICC) of abducting boys and girls and press-ganging them into his Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC) in the eastern Ituri region of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
International war crimes judges will
hand down on Friday landmark
reparations to former child soldiers conscripted into a Congolese
militia about 15 years ago, who were left brutalised and stigmatised by
their horrific experiences.
Warlord Thomas Lubanga, 56, was found
guilty in 2012 at the International Criminal Court (ICC) of abducting
boys and girls and press-ganging them into his Union of Congolese
Patriots (UPC) in the eastern Ituri region of the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
He was jailed for 14 years, and has been transferred to a prison in the DR Congo to serve the rest of his sentence.
The
judges also ruled that Lubanga was personally liable for the
compensation due his victims, who at the time of the crimes in 2002-2003
were all under 15, with some as young as 11.
But the question of
how to calculate the value of a lost childhood, which descended into a
fog of violence, bloodshed and chaos, is one that has bedevilled the
courts.
With the passage of time, many of the victims are now in their 30s and have children of their own.
Lost childhoods
"How
do you calculate a lost youth? What it is worth? A million, half a
million, five thousand euros, a thousand euros?" lawyer Luc Walleyn
asked the tribunal in The Hague during hearings in 2016.
Many of the girls forced into the militia's ranks became sex slaves and returned home with babies.
The
nongovernmental organisation Child Soldiers International, which works
to stop children being used in conflicts, said girls they had
interviewed in DR Congo recounted "indescribable hardships, loneliness
and terror, including daily threats of death."
Many rehabilitation
projects have focused on helping victims to become independent
financially, by learning to sew or raise cattle. But they have not
always proved the most efficient.
Being able to finish their
schooling was "the most ardent wish of the girls, and the most powerful
factor in promoting their social acceptance," the group said in a court
submission.
"The main issue for these girls were the
stigmatisation and rejection when they came back home," Sandra Olsson,
project manager for Child Soldiers International, told AFP.
"The
first thing wasn't the fact that they needed to learn how to sew, to
earn a living. The main thing was that neighbours, family, old friends
would not talk to them."
A public apology by Lubanga, who has never admitted any responsibility, would go a long way towards their reintegration.
An
apology would "mean the perpetrators take on the blame," Olsson said,
highlighting the "huge guilt carried by the girls for what they had been
forced to do."
Scapegoat?
The judges will also decide on Friday on the number of victims entitled to reparations.
Estimates vary, but some say up to 3,000 children may have been recruited into Lubanga's militia.
But Lubanga's lawyer, Jean-Marie Biju-Duval, argues that his client should not pay anything.
He
says that it would be difficult to identify victims and that any
payouts risked reviving tensions in Ituri, which has been "overwhelmed
by the phenomenon of child soldiers."
Lubanga risked becoming "a scapegoat" for all child soldiers, Biju-Duval said.
The
Trust Fund for Victims, which administers the ICC reparations, has
proposed a three-year plan and set aside one million euros ($1.2
million) for projects aimed at "reconciling the victims with their
families and affected communities."
Lubanga's is the third
reparations case to be decided at the ICC. In March, judges awarded $250
each to 297 victims of another Congolese warlord, Germain Katanga.
And
in August, the court ruled that a Malian militant had caused 2.7
million euros in damage when he destroyed several shrines in Timbuktu in
2012.
But Liesbeth Zegveld, a legal expert who directs the War
Reparations Centre at the University of Amsterdam, questioned how
effective collective reparations could be.
"If you look at the applicants, almost all of them are after individual reparations," she told AFP.
"At
the end of the day, that's what is going to empower them. They can
decide for themselves about their lives, rather than being dependent on
some decision-maker far away."
Source: AFP
Source: AFP