Source: Human Rights Watch
Protect Judges, Witnesses, and Rights of Suspects
(Bamako) – The decision by a judge in Mali
to charge and detain three security force members and summon for
questioning 17 others for their alleged role in enforced disappearances
is an important step for justice in Mali and for the victims’ families.
Malian authorities should urgently ensure security for the judge and
other judicial personnel investigating the case, and witnesses, and
protect the rights of the accused.
The three suspects, a gendarme captain and two soldiers, were taken
into custody on October 23 and 30, 2013. They were charged with
complicity to commit abduction in the 2012 enforced disappearance of at
least 20 soldiers. On October 31, the judge issued mandatory summonses
for 17 other soldiers for their role in the same crime, including
General Amadou Haya Sanogo, who led a coup in March 2012, when he held
the rank of captain.
“The courageous work of Malian authorities investigating this prominent
case is a significant and encouraging advance for justice in Mali,”
said Corinne Dufka,
senior West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The families of
the ‘disappeared’ soldiers have endured terrible suffering and deserve
to know the fate of their loved ones.”
In the early morning hours of May 2, 2012, soldiers who had taken part
in the March 2012 coup against then-president
President Amadou Toumani Touré forcibly disappeared at
least 20 soldiers they had detained for their alleged involvement in an
April 30, 2012 counter-coup. Most of the disappeared formed part of an
elite unit of paratroopers known as the Red Berets. The then-authorities
did not acknowledge detaining the men or provide information on their
whereabouts, and they are feared dead. Numerous other soldiers who had
been apprehended were subjected to torture and inhuman treatment in
detention.
Human Rights Watch interviewed 32 people, including 10 victims and 13
relatives of victims, about the enforced disappearances and torture.
Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that members of the security services
loyal to Sanogo carried out the torture and other abuses. The 20
“disappeared” soldiers were last seen alive on May 2, inside Kati
Military Camp, 15 kilometers north of the Malian capital, Bamako, which
was then the headquarters of Sanogo and his loyalists.
The torture documented by Human Rights Watch and other national and
international organizations took place over several weeks in May 2012.
The victims described being handcuffed and hogtied, beaten with batons,
sticks, and gun butts, and kicked in the back, head, ribs, genitals, and
elsewhere. Others said they were stabbed in their extremities and
burned with cigarettes and lighters on their backs, hands, arms, and
ears.
Several witnesses saw the disappeared men at Kati camp, including one
who described seeing military personnel transfer the detainees to a
military truck. “They bound their hands and legs, ordered them onto a
truck, covered their eyes, and took them away,” the witness said.
Another witness provided Human Rights Watch a hand-written list of the
soldiers seen in the camp and now disappeared. The mother of one
disappeared soldier said that her son had gotten access to a cell phone
and told her that military personnel were arguing among themselves about
whether to kill him.
There are unconfirmed reports that the men were executed and buried
near the town of Diago, 12 kilometers from Kati. In 2012, Human Rights
Watch spoke with Diago residents who said rounds were fired on the night
of May 2, 2012, but they were too terrified to provide further details.
Mali’s donors, including the United Nations, should assist the
government with forensic expertise should possible graves of the men be
located.
Under international law, an enforced disappearance occurs when the
government or its agents take a person into custody but refuse to
acknowledge doing so or do not provide information about the person’s
whereabouts or fate. Among the rights an enforced disappearance may
violate are those to life, liberty, and security of the person,
including protection from torture and other ill-treatment. Family
members whose loss of their loved ones goes without explanation or
redress are also victims of enforced disappearance.
The Malian authorities should broaden their investigation into the
other alleged military abuses during this period, Human Rights Watch
said. For instance, in July 2012, two journalists writing about abuses
following the failed counter-coup were abducted. Abrahamane Kéïta,
editor of L’Aurore newspaper, and Saouti Labass Haidara, publisher of L’Independent were
taken away by armed, masked gunmen driving pickup trucks with no
license plates. The journalists were severely beaten and dumped on the
outskirts of Bamako after being warned to stop criticizing the
military. Haidara suffered a fractured arm and multiple contusions.
The Malian authorities are also investigating a spate of killings and
abductions allegedly carried out between September 30 and October 3,
2013, in and around Bamako by members of the security services who
remain loyal to General Sanogo. Sources investigating the case told
Human Rights Watch that the bodies of at least four soldiers have been
found and at least seven others have been reported missing.
Justice Ministry officials told Human Rights Watch in Bamako on October
30 that the 2013 abuses were under investigation and that they would
ensure that justice is done irrespective of the rank of the alleged
abusers.
“Respect for rule of law in Mali was grossly undermined by the often
outrageous and violent behavior of soldiers loyal to General
Sanogo,” Dufka said. “As a matter of urgency, the judge and other
judicial personnel working to investigate the abuses must be ensured
adequate protection.”