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Soldiers receive death sentences to ‘improve discipline’

Publish date: 06 January 2025
Issue Number: 1107
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: DRC

A Congolese military tribunal has sentenced 13 soldiers to death on charges including murder, looting, and cowardice in what military authorities said was a drive to improve army discipline after territorial losses due to soldiers fleeing, reports News24. The soldiers were sentenced last Tuesday in the town of Lubero in the DRC’s eastern North Kivu province, where Congolese forces have been fighting the Rwanda-backed M23 insurgency for nearly three years, as well as facing other militia violence. Fighting has flared in Lubero territory, and cases of soldiers abandoning their positions have helped the enemy advance, said local army spokesperson Mak Hazukay. ‘Some of the soldiers who are supposed to be fighting the enemy at the front have shown a kind of indiscipline,’ he said. ‘We had to organise this educational trial to set things right.’ Overall, 24 soldiers stood trial. In addition to those handed death penalties, four received 2-10 year sentences, six were acquitted, and one's case was deferred for further investigation. Military prosecutor Kabala Kabundi told Reuters the hearings were intended ‘to help restore trust between the military and the population’. All those convicted pleaded not guilty had five days to appeal their sentence, Kabundi said. A lawyer for one of the defendants said they would appeal.

Full News24 report

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