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From:
jawo abdoulie <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 4 Oct 2005 08:23:21 +0100
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The second Africa's Pinochet in the making should also take note that the Brodys of the world are watching. History has it that nothing is permanent except change. Apparently, big as the world is, it became too small for the Amins and the Sese Sekos to hide when the inevitable change came. It is common currency that during their reign, they turned their countries into human habitats of poverty, deprivation and degradation - they became the manufacturers of human humiliation and suffering in all its forms, dimensions and manifestations.

With all the "powers" that they wielded while in office, the world became a global prison for them while out of office because they were haunted by their gruesome economic and criminal deeds upto their graves. Instead of mourning their deaths, people celebrated and the graves of the Abachas became apparent dancing grounds of jubilations of ultimate triump of the power of the people.

Hissene Habre is also virtually living in prison - he has freedom of movement but he cannot move at will. The most unfortunate humiliation of a former president is to be a prisoner of his own actions. Fundamentally, the conscience of the world now does not accept human biengs lording it over their fellow human beings just because they incidentally happened to be enthrusted to perform certain duties. This is irrespective of geographical boundries and the hiding behind of national sovereignty and domestic affairs issues to perform such inhuman acts.

The fact that leadership is a service and not a "divine" right is what the Amins and Sese Sekos failed to accept. If they have digested this fact, they would not have ended up creating their own global prisons and digging their own graves. Essentially, we give Lawyer Reed Brody all the moral support to ensure that Habre answers for his deeds. The enlightened leaders should take note of this, and those who, because of their utter ignorance, think that they have a so-called divine rigth to rule should continue with their foolhardiness. Certainly, History always catches up with those who always try to make history appear murky.

Abdoulie Jawo


Gambia Talk <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Dictator-hunter homes in on "Africa's Pinochet"
Mon Oct 3, 2005 10:32 AM ET



By Pascal Fletcher

DAKAR (Reuters) - A U.S. human rights lawyer who campaigns to bring
ex-dictators accused of atrocities to justice has set his sights on
snaring a former U.S.-backed ruler of Chad he calls "Africa's Pinochet".

Reed Brody, special counsel for prosecutions for U.S.-based Human Rights
Watch, arrived in Senegal this weekend on a mission to persuade its
government to grant Belgium's request for the extradition of Hissene
Habre, who ruled Chad from 1982 to 1990.

A Brussels magistrate last month issued an international arrest warrant
for Habre, now 63, who has lived in exile in Senegal for the last 15
years. The Belgian warrant holds Habre responsible for mass murder and
torture carried out by his political police during his rule in Chad.

Brody, who was also involved in trying to obtain the extradition to Spain
of Augusto Pinochet during the former Chilean dictator's temporary arrest
in Britain in 1998, has been tracking Habre for several years.

He believes the Belgian extradition move may finally bring the former
Chadian president to prosecution.

"We have the law on our side, Belgian law, Senegalese extradition law, all
provide that he can be extradited to Belgium," Brody said in an interview
Sunday.

"We hope that through this case we can also break that cycle in which
African rulers brutalize their people, pillage the treasury and then just
go to some other country and live in a seaside villa," he told Reuters.

Brody recalled former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, who died in exile in
Saudi Arabia in 2003, and former Zairean president Mobutu Sese Seko, who
died in Morocco in 1997. Both faced accusations of human rights abuses
that went unpunished.

In 2000, a Senegalese court charged Habre with torture and crimes against
humanity but later ruled he could not be tried there.

"Having failed to prosecute him, it's now Senegal's legal international
obligation to extradite him to a country where he can be tried," said
Brody, who plans to meet Senegalese officials over the next week.

On Monday, Senegal's Foreign Affairs Minister Cheikh Tidiane Gadio said it
was up to the country's justice system to give its independent opinion on
the extradition request.

He told foreign journalists his government had no preconceptions but
added: "It is a very sensitive issue."

UNIVERSAL JURISDICTION

Brussels magistrate Daniel Fransen issued the September 19 arrest warrant
for Habre under the country's universal jurisdiction law which allows
Belgian judges to prosecute human rights violations no matter where these
were committed.

The law was watered down in 2003 but this case was allowed because at
least one of the plaintiffs is a Belgian citizen.

Habre's lawyer has in the past said that the former president denied the
accusations against him.

Brody, who says he unearthed abandoned political police files in Chad in
2001 detailing the deaths in detention of 1,208 individuals, plans to
bring to Senegal Chadians who suffered torture under Habre's rule.

"It's not going to be easy ... Hissene Habre is alleged to have stolen
millions of dollars from the Chadian treasury and he has used that money
and continues to use that money to buy influence and protection within
Senegalese society," Brody said.

But he added Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade had said on several
occasions he was willing to extradite Habre.

He justified the comparison of Habre with Pinochet by saying that, apart
from the human rights cases against both of them, the Chadian ruler
emulated his Latin American counterpart by also coming to power with U.S.
support.

"Hissene Habre was put into power by the United States, his regime was
backed to the very end by the U.S.," Brody said.

He says the administration of then U.S. President Ronald Reagan backed
Habre as a bulwark against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who was viewed
by Washington as a threat.

(additional reporting by Diadie Ba)



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