Photo: Nancy Palus/IRIN. Survivors of the 2009 stadium massacre wonder when justice will be done
Source: IRIN
CONAKRY, 30 August 2013 (IRIN) - Since 2012, in an unprecedented effort
in the country, top security officials in Guinea have been indicted for
alleged crimes against civilians. But the indictments have yet to lead
to trials or, in most cases, even arrests.
Guinea has seen a string of judicial firsts that sparked hope the
country could finally chip away at impunity, including military
officials long seen as untouchable being called before a court of law.
But they have retained their posts; Col Claude Pivi remains head of
presidential security; Lt Col Moussa Tiégboro Camara continues in his
role as director of the national anti-drug-trafficking agency; and Sékou
Resco Camara is still the Conakry governor.
“Every time there’s news of another indictment, [someone on the outside]
might think, ‘Ah, things are progressing well there’, but that’s not
the case,” said Thierno Madjou Sow, long-time human rights activist and
head of the Guinean Human Rights Organisation. “Things get started then
just stop. Look at Tiégboro, Pivi, and Resco - all still in their
government positions.”
Pivi and Tiégboro Camara are among eight people indicted to date over
the 28 September 2009 stadium attack, in which, according to an international inquiry,
soldiers killed, raped, or injured hundreds of people. One gendarme has
been arrested and detained on charges of rape in that case. Resco
Camara has been indicted for alleged involvement in the torture of
civilians by gendarmes in 2010.
Sow and other human rights advocates are quick to say the indictments themselves are significant considering the history of impunity among Guinea’s leadership. But the process must continue, they say.
“These indictments do carry some weight. People see that a top military official can be called before a judge - that reassures them,”
said Hamidou Barry, a Guinean lawyer and the coordinator of the judges
investigating stadium attack. “The problem is everything stops there.
Guinea’s judges are not free and independent.”
Doubts about judiciary
The stadium case - the latest but perhaps the most spectacular in a
string of military abuses against civilians - is in preliminary
examination at the International Criminal Court (ICC), which says the
prosecutor has a responsibility to intervene if it becomes clear that
national authorities are “unwilling or unable to genuinely carry out the
proceedings”.
But given what they see as a stalled process, survivors say they wonder
what it would take for the ICC to find the Guinean authorities
unwilling.
“The international community must understand once and for all that
Guinea’s judiciary is not ready to carry this out,” said Asmaou Diallo,
head of the Association of Victims, Relatives and Friends of 28
September (AVIPA), which assists survivors of the attack and other human
rights abuses.
“The victims are here, the assailants are here,” she said. “It’s
possible to hold trials. But the authorities can’t. They don’t dare. And
I don’t know at what level things are blocked. Meanwhile as long as
impunity reigns in Guinea, the country cannot move forward.”
Survivors and human rights activists in Guinea say coming out more
forcefully against impunity exposes them to threats and intimidation by
the accused and their supporters. But many say it is worth it.
“Sure, there is a risk. But I think it’s time Guinea’s human rights
community assume that risk,” said Mamady Mansare, a journalist who was
injured during the stadium attack. “Survivors must denounce the
authorities’ unwillingness to arrest suspects and proceed with this.”
Tamar Thiam, who was injured in the stadium attack and fled Guinea after
she was threatened for speaking out, said Guineans must push for more
pressure to be brought on the government. “We must raise our voices to
show the international community that the authorities lack either the
means or the will to bring perpetrators to justice,” she told IRIN. “If
this drags on for too long, the witnesses will be dead, the assailants
will be dead. What good would a trial do then?”
“This case is in the judges' hands,” said government spokesman Albert
Damantang Camara. “The government has never obstructed their work. To
date, several high-level officers have been indicted, and the procedure
is following its course with absolutely no interference from the
government.”
Cautious optimism
International justice experts say, while things are moving slowly in
Guinea, there has been progress. The ICC Office of the Prosecutor (OTP)
says the indictment of officials in the stadium massacre “is a serious
indication that they will be brought to account” and the office expects a
trial will take place.
“The competent national authorities have initiated proceedings, as it is
their primary responsibility to do,” the OTP told IRIN. “The OTP will
continue to encourage their efforts as long as we assess they go in the
right direction.”
Florent Geel, Africa desk director with the International Federation for Human Rights
(FIDH), says these cases must not be allowed to drag on for decades,
but that considering Guinea’s past, the indictment of top military
officials within a few years of the alleged crimes is remarkable.
“Guinea’s history is 40 to 50 years of impunity, so it’s difficult from
one day to the next make the justice system function normally,” Geel
told IRIN. “It’s not easy. It’s slow. It’s complicated, but little by
little there are positive moves.”
Rights expert Sow said since independence in 1958, Guinea’s judiciary
has been side-lined by the executive. Geel said he is confident there
will be trials in the stadium attack and the 2010 torture case by the
end of 2014.
FIDH has called for the suspension of indicted officials, particularly
the head of presidential security. “Clearly the accused are innocent
until proven guilty. We must respect this principle,” Geel said. “But
given Pivi’s position and the seriousness of the indictment, we think it
is reasonable to demand his suspension pending further judicial
proceedings.”
The ICC prosecutor’s office acknowledges that seeing those charged
remain in power is a blow to survivors. “The fact that two indicted
officials [in the 28 September case] have retained their post in
government is undoubtedly shocking and frustrating for the victims,” the
OTP said. “It is, however, insufficient for the office to determine
that the proceedings are not being conducted with the intent to bring to
justice the persons bearing responsibility for the crimes committed.”
So far in Guinea, “complementarity is working”, the prosecutor’s office
told IRIN, referring to the principle that sees the ICC stepping in only
as a last resort, when national jurisdictions fail to address crimes.
FIDH’s Geel said it would be best if Guinea’s judiciary were to work.
“The goal of international justice is to push the national judiciary to
prosecute. Otherwise what would ever be changed in the fight against
impunity in the country?”
For the four-year commemoration of the stadium massacre, survivors and
families of victims hope to hold a rally at the venue of the attack. The
past three Septembers, the government denied authorization to do so,
said AVIPA’s Diallo, whose son was killed in the crackdown.
“We hope this year we can at least go to the stadium and place flowers for our dead and missing.”