Michael Otim, the Prime Minister of the Acholi Cultural Institution told Uganda Radio Network in an interview Thursday that the meeting was aimed at getting the institution’s perspective on how the community views the reopening of Kony’s case.
Joseph Kony defence Team pose for a photo moment with Acholi Paramount Chief David Onen Acana II and other cultural officials on Wednesday in Gulu City. Courstesy Photo
The Defence team of elusive Lord’s
Resistance Army (LRA) rebel leader Joseph Kony have arrived in Northern Uganda,
the epicentre of the two-decade LRA insurgencies to engage with key stakeholders on the case of Kony before the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Led by Peter Hayne, Kony’s lead
defence lawyer, the team visited Gulu City on Wednesday where they held a closed-door
meeting with the Acholi Paramount Chief David Onen Acana II at his Palace.
The defence team’s visit comes weeks
after the International Criminal Court (ICC) Pre-Trial Chamber III judges announced
late last month it will proceed to confirm charges against Kony in his absence.
Kony is facing 33 counts of
crimes comprising war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed in
2003 and 2004 in northern Uganda.
Wednesday’s visit by the defence
team of Kony is the first since November 2022 when ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan sought
to reopen the case against the LRA commander who has evaded arrest since 2005
when a warrant of arrest was issued against him.
Michael Otim, the Prime Minister
of the Acholi Cultural Institution told Uganda Radio Network in an interview Thursday
that the meeting was aimed at getting the institution’s perspective on how the
community views the reopening of Kony’s case.
He also noted that the defence
team wanted to understand how the victims of the LRA conflicts perceived the
court’s move to confirm charges against Kony in his absentia.
“They wanted to know the
relevance of this Kony’s case if it commences what would the people in Acholi think
about it since the suspect is absent? In most cases people would expect a
suspect to be physically in court so that they watch his demeanour,” says Otim.
Otim says the the visit is a good
gesture for the victims of LRA atrocities who have long yearned for justice
adding that their engagement highlighted the need to have the judicial process
give due consideration to victims.
“Because we believe that the
justice being pursued is being done on behalf of the victims of these crimes. And
as such, it must be relevant to them and it should deal with their justice
questions, and answer their justice questions for the harm they suffered,” he
said.
According to Otim, during their
engagement, they also emphasized the need for reparation, which is a crucial
aspect of the healing of the victims considering many lost valuable properties,
their loved ones and breadwinners in homesteads.
Kony’s defence team which
included Kate Gibson, Cecille Lerolle, and accompanied by Geoffrey Boris Anyuru, a Ugandan
Attorney specialist on International Crimes also yesterday visited the Gulu
High Court Circuit where they engaged with judicial officers.
Initially, the ICC had scheduled to
hear confirmation of charges against Kony on October 15, 2024, but postponed
it. It issued a notice late last month that it had met all conditions to hold
confirmation of charges hearing in the absence of the suspect, no new date has
been given.
Kony who founded the LRA waged a
bloody rebellion in Northern Uganda aimed at toppling the government of President
Yoweri Museveni. He remains the longest-standing suspect at large nearly two
decades later after an arrest warrant was issued against him by the ICC along with
three other commanders. He was indicted along with Raska Lukwiya, Okot
Odhiambo, and Vince Otti whose cases have since been dropped after confirmation
of their death.
Meanwhile, the former commander
of the LRA’s Sinia Brigade Dominic Ongwen was convicted by the ICC of 61 counts
of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to 25 years in jail in
May 2021.
Bureau Chief, West Acholi