Former Congolese vice president Jean-Pierre Bemba and four associates
will be sentenced Wednesday for bribing witnesses during his war crimes
trial, in the first such case before the International Criminal Court.
Hoping
it will serve as a deterrent, prosecutors have asked for an eight-year
sentence against Bemba, already serving an 18 year-term behind bars for
crimes committed by his marauding troops in the Central African Republic
in 2002 to 2003.
"The type of sentence, whether heavy or light,
will send a clear message about the gravity of the crime," said Mariana
Pena, from the Open Society Justice Initiative, an international law
advocacy group.
Prosecutors have recommended that Bemba, 54, be handed a new jail term "consecutive to his sentence in the main case."
They
also asked judges to sentence Bemba's lawyer Aime Kilolo to eight
years, his legal case manager Jean-Jacques Mangenda to seven, Narcisse
Arido, a defence witness, to five years and Congolese lawmaker Fidele
Babala to three.
The feared former rebel leader and his four
associates were found guilty in October of bribing witnesses in what
judges at the world war crimes court described as "clear and downright
criminal behaviour".
The bribery verdict was the first of its
kind in the ICC's history, and the charges were brought after a tip-off
to the prosecutor's office.
Handing down their verdict, the
judges said Bemba had tried to skew his main trial and had "planned,
authorised, and approved the illicit coaching" of the witnesses.
Prosecutors said Bemba masterminded a network to bribe and manipulate at least 14 defence witnesses, persuading them to lie.
Set
up in 2002 to prosecute the world's worst crimes, the ICC goes to great
lengths to try to protect witnesses and its trials from any
interference.
No comments:
Post a Comment