Ivory Coast Ex-President Gbagbo Acquitted at ICC Court in The Hague
The
International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague has acquitted Ivory Coast
ex-President Laurent Gbagbo.
He had been
charged with crimes against humanity in connection with violence following a
disputed 2010 election that left 3,000 dead and 500,000 displaced.
Mr Gbagbo
was captured in 2011 in a presidential palace bunker by UN and French-backed
forces supporting his rival, Alassane Ouattara.
He was the
first former head of state to go on trial at the ICC.
The violence
in Ivory Coast, the world's biggest cocoa producer, came after Mr Gbagbo
refused to accept that he had lost a disputed election run-off to Mr Ouattara
in 2010.
The five
months of violence that followed were described as some of the most brutal
clashes the country had ever seen.
During the
political stand-off there were bloody clashes and targeted killings in Abidjan
in the south, and several hundred were massacred in the western town of
Duekoue.
Prosecutors
said Mr Gbagbo clung to power "by all means" and charged him with
four counts of crimes against humanity, murder, rape and other forms of sexual
violence, persecution and "other inhuman acts".
He denied
the charges, which he said were politically motivate
ICC judges
ruled on Tuesday that he had no case to answer and ordered his immediate
release.
Prosecutors
had failed to demonstrate "the existence of a 'common plan' to keep Mr
Gbagbo in power" which included crimes against civilians, or a
"policy to attack a civilian population", the ICC said.
Presiding
Judge Cuno Tarfusser said the prosecution had also "failed to demonstrate
that public speeches by Gbagbo constituted ordering or inducing the alleged
crimes".
Prosecutors
can appeal after the court files its decision in writing.
Mr Gbagbo's
supporters whooped, cheered and threw their firsts in the air in the public
gallery following the announcement, the BBC's Anna Holligan reports from the
court.
One of his
supporters, Gragbayou Yves, who had travelled to the court from Paris, told AFP
news agency: "I am very, very happy. Finally there is some justice."
However,
victims of the violence are opposed to his release.
"If
Laurent Gbagbo is released, we victims will not see justice," Karim
Coulibaly, who was shot in the violence and had to have his arm amputated, told
AFP earlier.
"I was
a driver but now I am unemployed. I'm not against reconciliation but first you
have to look after the victims."
Paolina
Massidda, a lawyer representing the victims said she "deeply regrets"
the decision.
"The
victims participated in this trial in the hope that an impartial tribunal could
one day give them justice. That hope is today in vain," she added.
"Whenever
a case involving mass atrocities essentially collapses at the ICC, it does
damage to the perception of the court as a credible and effective institution
of international justice," Mark Kersten, author of Justice in
Conflict, told the BBC's Anna Holligan.
"Many
are concerned that the court is emerging as an institution where only rebels
can be successfully prosecuted," he added.
The
prosecution at the ICC has also failed in its attempts to build successful
cases against former DR Congo Vice-President Jean-Pierre Bemba, and Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta.
On the other
hand, the ruling demonstrates the judges' independence and impartiality and
makes it harder to push the narrative, popular among those who fear the long
arm of the ICC, that the court is a biased weapon of neo-colonial justice used
purely to convict African leaders, our correspondent says
.
Janet
Anderson, a writer for the Justice Tribune, told the BBC: "It's important
also to find people not guilty or to find there isn't a case to answer if there
isn't one."
FROM bbc.com/news/world-africa
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