THE HAGUE: Nearly 50,000 victims of Ugandan militia commander Dominic Ongwen should get a total of over 52 million euros ($56 million) in compensation, International Criminal Court judges ruled on Wednesday, in a record reparations order.
Judges said Ongwen, a former child-soldier who rose through the ranks to become one of the top commanders of the notorious Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), did not have the resources to pay the compensation himself.
Instead they asked the tribunal’s own Trust Fund for Victims to help cover the cost.
The reparations will be in the form of a symbolic individual payment of 750 euros per victim and additional collective reparations like rehabilitation programs and memorial sites. Ongwen was convicted to 25 years in prison in 2021 on 60 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including rape, murder and child abduction. He is currently serving his sentence in Norway. Led by fugitive warlord Joseph Kony, the LRA terrorized Ugandans for nearly 20 years as it fought the government of President Yoweri Museveni from bases in northern Uganda and neighboring countries.
U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar. — AFP FileWASHINGTON: U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar and his wife were...
US President Joe Biden presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to US swimmer Katie Ledecky in the East Room of the...
A representational image showing migrants waiting to be disembarked from a British border force vessel in Dover,...
Smoke billows from a vehicle allegedly burned by the Meitei community tribals protesting to demand inclusion under the...
The collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge lies on top of the container ship Dali in Baltimore, Maryland, on March 29,...