Dakar Must Move Quickly
to Prosecute Chad’s Ex-Dictator
(Banjul, July 2, 2006) –
Senegal’s decision to prosecute the
exiled former dictator of Chad, in
response to a request by the African
Union, is a turning point in the long
campaign to bring Hissène Habré to
justice, Human Rights Watch said today.
“It’s a great day for
justice in Africa, because the
continent’s leaders have shown that no
one, not even an ex-president, can
escape the law,” said Reed Brody,
special counsel to Human Rights Watch.
“Senegal must now act quickly. It has to
pass the laws needed to allow Habré’s
trial, and take account of the years of
investigation already carried out.”
Habré, who fled to Senegal in 1990 after
an eight-year rule marked by widespread
atrocities, was first indicted in 2000
in Senegal on charges of torture and
crimes against humanity. After
Senegalese courts ruled that Habré could
not be tried there, his victims turned
to Belgium, which indicted Habré last
September after a four-year
investigation and requested his
extradition from Dakar. It was refused
by the Senegalese government, which
instead asked the African Union (AU) to
decide where Habré should be tried.
After hearing the report of a panel of
legal experts, the AU today asked
Senegal to reverse itself and prosecute
Habré. President Abdoulaye Wade of
Senegal announced that his government
had agreed to the request.
Habré’s victims and their supporters
hailed the decision, but called on
Senegal to act swiftly. They warned that
if Senegal dragged its feet, they would
seek other recourse.
“After fighting for justice for 16
years, it looks as if we may get our day
in court,” said Ismael Hachim Abdallah,
president of the Chadian Association of
Victims of Crime and Political
Repression. “But survivors of Habré’s
regime are dying, and we can’t wait
forever. Senegal has betrayed us twice
and we aren’t taking anything for
granted.”
In asking Senegal to take the case, the
African leaders cited Senegal’s
obligations under the 1984 U.N.
Convention against Torture to either
prosecute or extradite alleged torturers
who enter its territory. In May, the
U.N. Committee Against Torture condemned
Senegal for failing to bring Habré to
justice and requested that Senegal
ensure Habré’s trial or extradition.
Belgium has warned that if Senegal did
not abide by its legal commitments,
Belgium would seek a binding ruling from
the International Court of Justice.
The AU panel of legal experts called on
Senegal to adopt legislative reforms
extending the jurisdiction of Senegalese
courts to cover Habré’s alleged crimes.
The U.N. Committee Against Torture had
made a similar request.
Human Rights Watch also said that to
avoid even more years of delay, Senegal
should make the necessary legal
arrangements to allow its courts to use
of the fruits of Belgium’s pretrial
investigation. These include police
reports, witness interviews, and
thousands of documents recovered from
the former headquarters of Habré’s
secret police.
The victims’ Chadian lawyer praised
Belgium’s role in the case, and called
on it to remain attentive to the case.
“Belgium gave the victims hope for
justice and forced Senegal to act,” said
Jacqueline Moudeina, president of the
Chadian Association for the Promotion
and Defense of Human Rights. “We hope
that Belgium remains ready to take the
case to the International Court of
Justice if Senegal doesn’t live up to
its word.”
Background
Habré ruled Chad from 1982 until 1990,
when he was deposed by current President
Idriss Déby and fled to Senegal. His
one-party regime was marked by
widespread atrocities. Habré
periodically targeted various ethnic
groups, killing and arresting group
members en masse when he believed that
their leaders posed a threat to his
regime. Files of Habré’s political
police, the DDS (Direction de la
Documentation et de la Sécurité),
discovered by Human Rights Watch in
2001, reveal the names of 1,208 persons
who died in detention. A total of 12,321
victims of different abuses were named.
In these files alone, Habré received
1,265 direct communications from the DDS
about the status of 898 detainees.
In February 2000, a Senegalese court
charged Habré with torture and crimes
against humanity and placed him under
house arrest. But in March 2001,
Senegal’s highest court said that Habré
could not stand trial in Senegal for
crimes allegedly committed elsewhere.
Habré’s victims immediately announced
that they would seek his extradition to
Belgium, where 21 of Habré’s victims had
filed suit. Wade then stated that he
would hold Habré in Senegal and that “if
a country capable of organizing a fair
trial – there is talk of Belgium – wants
him, I do not foresee any obstacle.”
Last September, after a four-year
investigation including a mission to
Chad, a Belgian judge issued an
international arrest warrant charging
Habré with crimes against humanity, war
crimes and torture. Pursuant to the
arrest warrant and a Belgian extradition
request, Senegalese authorities arrested
Habré on November 15. After a Senegalese
court refused to rule on the extradition
request, Senegal announced that it had
asked the January summit of the African
Union to recommend “the competent
jurisdiction” for the trial of Habré.
That summit set up a Committee of
Eminent African Jurists to consider the
options for Habré’s trial and to report
back at the AU summit.