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Hissene Habre: Chad former president guilty of crimes against humanity, rape and sexual slavery

Samuel Osborne
Monday 30 May 2016 12:28 BST
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Ex-Chad president sentenced to life in prison for crimes against humanity

Former president of Chad Hissene Habre has been found guilty of crimes against humanity, rape and sexual slavery.

Habre has been sentenced to life in prison by an African Union-backed court in Senegal.

The Special African Chamber found him to be directly responsible for the executions that took place while he was president from 1982 to 1990.

Judge Gberdao Gustave Kam delivered the verdict and sentence Monday in a packed courtroom.

Chadian despot Hissene Habre's trial to begin in Senegal

The landmark trial is the first in which the courts of one country are prosecuting the former ruler of another for human rights crimes.

More than 90 witnesses came face-to-face with Habre, accusing him of war crimes.

The trial previously descended into chaos after the former president was dragged from court shouting that the trial was a "farce".

"This is not a trial, this is a masquerade!" the dictator shouted as he was taken away by prison guards before the trial began without him.

"There is no trial. There are no lawyers. This is a false trial. Down with colonialism."

A file photo taken on January 17, 1987 shows then Chadian President Hissen Habre in N'Djamena. (DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)

In 1992, the Chadian Truth Commission accused Habre's government of systematic torture, saying 40,000 people had died during his rule and placing particular blame on his political police force.

Habre was first indicted by a Senegalese judge in 2000, but legal twists and turns over a decade saw the case go to Belgium and then finally back to Senegal after unwavering pursuit by the survivors and their supporters.

The verdict marks the end of a 16-year battle by victims and rights campaigners to bring him to justice in Senegal, where he fled after being toppled in a 1990 coup.

A court in Chad sentenced him to death in absentia for crimes against humanity in 2013.

He has been given 15 days to appeal.

Additional reporting by agencies

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