Former President’s trial underway
Publish date: 22 June 2026
Issue Number: 1182
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: CAR
A UN-backed court in the Central African Republic (CAR) has begun the trial in absentia of former President Francois Bozize over crimes against humanity, including murder, enforced disappearances, torture and rape, reports Al Jazeera. Bozize, who seized power in a coup in 2003 and was overthrown 10 years later by rebels, has lived in exile in Guinea-Bissau since March 2023. Three of his former senior military officers, Eugene Ngaikosset, Vianney Semndiro and Firmin Danboy, are all in pre-trial detention in CAR. The trial is being held in the capital Bangui by a Special Criminal Court (SCC), a hybrid jurisdiction with CAR and foreign judges. In 2024, the SCC issued an international arrest warrant for the former President as part of an investigation into crimes against humanity committed by Bozize’s Presidential Guard in a civilian prison and a military training centre in the central town of Bossembele. The judges concluded that there was ‘serious and consistent evidence against Bozize, likely to incur his criminal liability, in his capacity as hierarchical superior and military leader’. Bozize’s 2013 overthrow by a coalition of mostly Muslim rebels, the Seleka, triggered civil war in the CAR, one of the poorest countries in the world. Bozize set up armed groups dominated by Christians and animists, known as Anti-balaka, to try to regain power.