Democratic Republic of Congo: President Kabila must prevent further
executions


AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE


AI Index: AFR 62/003/2003 (Public)

News Service No: 005


Amnesty, Fri 10 Jan 2003 - Fifteen people are reported to have been
executed in secret earlier this week in the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC). They are the first executions known to have taken place since
December 2000. The executions took place just hours before 30 people were
sentenced to death by the Cour d'ordre militaire (COM), Military Order
Court for their alleged role in the assassination of Laurent-Désiré Kabila
in January 2001.

Amnesty International is greatly concerned that they and many others who
are already on death row throughout the DRC may also be facing imminent
execution. "This is a dark day for human rights in the DRC," said Amnesty
International. "These executions reflect an appalling lack of respect on
the part of the DRC government for the most basic rights of Congolese
citizens, including the right to life and the right to fair treatment
before the courts."

The executions took place, by firing squad, on the morning of 7 January.
The bodies were buried in a common grave nearby.The 15 individuals had
been on death row at the capital Kinshasa's main prison, the Centre
pénitentiaire et de réeducation de Kinshasa (CPRK), Kinshasa Penitentiary
and Reeducation Centre. They were taken from their cells during the night
of 5 to 6 January and taken to a military camp close to Kinshasa's Ndjili
airport on the outskirts of the city.

These executions are the first which are known to have taken place since
the lifting on 23 September 2002 of a moratorium on executions, which
President Joseph Kabila had personally committed himself to respecting in
an address to the UN Human Rights Commission in March 2001.

"President Joseph Kabila must act now to prevent further senseless deaths
by immediately reimposing the moratorium on executions, which he has
publicly expressed his personal commitment to respecting," said Amnesty
International.

Background

Although Amnesty International does not yet have information on the crimes
for which the 15 were convicted, it is understood that some, if not all,
of those executed were sentenced to death by the COM . Since its creation
in 1997, the COM, which has consistently failed to meet standards of
fairness set out by international law, has been responsible for the
execution of some 200 individuals.

The 15 people executed this week will not have had the right to appeal
against their death sentences and will therefore have been entirely
reliant on President Joseph Kabila exercising his prerogative to commute
their sentences. It is not known if any formal petition for clemency was
submitted to, or considered by, the president, as is required under
Congolese law.

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all circumstances,
considering it to be a violation of the right to life and the right not to
be subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

Further information on the trial and sentencing of those accused of
involvement in the assassination of President Laurent-Désiré Kabila can be
found in the Amnesty International report From assassination to state
murder? (AFR 62/023/02) and press release of 7 January entitled DRC-
Thirty sentenced to death after unfair trial (AFR 62/001/03




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