logo
Congo moves to lift ex-President Kabila's immunity, accusing him of war crimes

Congo moves to lift ex-President Kabila's immunity, accusing him of war crimes

Reuters01-05-2025

KINSHASA, May 1 (Reuters) - Democratic Republic of Congo has launched a bid to strip former President Joseph Kabila of immunity so he can face trial on charges of supporting the M23 insurgency in the country's east, where the government is seeking to draft a peace deal this week.
Kabila, who agreed to step down in 2018 after almost two decades in power, has been out of the country since late 2023, mostly in South Africa. He said last month he would return to help find a solution to the crisis in the east, where Rwandan-backed M23 rebels have seized large areas this year.
A return to Congo by Kabila, who has denied supporting the rebels, could complicate a U.S.-backed bid to end the rebellion in eastern Congo, which contains valuable minerals that U.S. President Donald Trump 's administration is keen to help mine.
Justice Minister Constant Mutamba told reporters in Kinshasa on Wednesday evening that the Congolese army's attorney general has asked Congo's Senate to revoke the immunity from prosecution Kabila enjoys as a senator for life.
Congo has amassed clear evidence of "war crimes, crimes against humanity and massacres of peaceful civilians and military personnel," Mutamba said, adding that Kabila should return to Congo to face justice or risk being tried in absentia.
Congo and Rwanda have pledged to come up with a draft peace deal by May 2 and refrain from providing military support to armed groups, according to an agreement signed in Washington on April 25.
It was unclear on Thursday whether anything would be ready for signature by Friday and what the terms would be.
Kabila came to power in 2001 after his father's assassination. He refused to stand down when his final term officially ended in 2016, leading to deadly protests, before agreeing to leave office following an election in 2018.
Last month, the interior ministry suspended his political party, while the justice ministry said it would seize Kabila's assets and the assets of party leaders.
Ferdinand Kambere, permanent secretary of Kabila's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy, said the attempt to lift Kabila's immunity showed the government feared Kabila's return. He blamed President Felix Tshisekedi, a Kabila rival, for causing the crisis in the east.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Controversial FIA statute voted through to make Mohammed Ben Sulayem's re-election bid ‘harder to challenge'
Controversial FIA statute voted through to make Mohammed Ben Sulayem's re-election bid ‘harder to challenge'

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Controversial FIA statute voted through to make Mohammed Ben Sulayem's re-election bid ‘harder to challenge'

The FIA have approved statute changes that critics say will make it harder to challenge FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem's bid for re-election. A spokesman for Formula 1 's governing body, whose world championships also include rallying and Formula E, said a "resounding majority" voted in favour at the General Assembly meeting in Macau. He gave no figures and there was no immediate reaction from Ben Sulayem, an Emirati who will be standing for a second four-year term in December and is currently unopposed. The Paris-based FIA also groups national motoring associations and campaigns for road safety. Austria's Automobile Association (OAMTC) earlier urged FIA members to vote against the proposed changes in a letter seen by Reuters ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal. The unsigned letter emailed to the mobility section of the FIA's world council said the FIA risked lasting damage to its reputation. "There is no urgency regarding these proposed changes,' it added. 'They risk further contributing to the erosion of the FIA's reputation for competent and transparent governance. "It cannot be - and is not - a coincidence that changes relevant to the FIA's elections have been promoted by the FIA's leadership at the same time as the FIA's incumbent president has announced an intention to run in those elections. "Where there is even a risk of these changes appearing to benefit the current FIA administration, and not the FIA itself, the changes should not be adopted." Ben Sulayem told Reuters last month, when he confirmed he was standing, that he welcomed competition in the name of democracy. Ben Sulayem recognised he had enemies but said he was confident of the support of a majority of FIA members. "I only have to answer to my members. And they are happy. Actually, they are very happy. They are extremely happy," he said. The former rally driver has been involved in several controversies since being elected in 2021 as the first FIA president from the Middle East. He has been at loggerheads with drivers as well as drawing criticism from FIA insiders, while some senior employees have left the organisation. Briton Robert Reid, a former close ally who quit as an FIA deputy president in April, wrote in his resignation statement of a "fundamental breakdown in governance standards" at the governing body. Reid and Motorsport UK head David Richards had opposed other statute changes approved by the General Assembly last December that they said limited the powers of audit and ethics committees.

GOP senator floats moving 2028 Olympics from LA after riots
GOP senator floats moving 2028 Olympics from LA after riots

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

GOP senator floats moving 2028 Olympics from LA after riots

A Republican is calling for the 2028 Olympic host city of Los Angeles to be stripped of the honor of hosting the games after anti-ICE riots have engulfed the liberal city in flames. Senator Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) said he is unsure of LA's ability to host matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup in light of the violence and distress rocking the city. Moreno pointed to the realities of current political leadership at the state and local levels in California as the causes for his concern. Moreno suggested that LA's liberal leadership, who will still be in place in 2028, are 'incapable of handling two big, high-profile' event like the Olympics. 'Won't we be better off as a nation, just to make an acknowledgement of that and move it to someplace that actually will have law and order, that will have the proper amount of protections for American citizens and the tens of millions of visitors that are going to come to both of those events?' Moreno added during a Senate hearing. Oklahoma Senator James Lankford, who serves as the chair of the subcommittee during which Moreno's exchange took place, noted that President Donald Trump was the one who pushed for the United States to host the Olympics in Los Angeles during his first term. 'We're going to continue to welcome the world to the United States,' Lankford said Tuesday. 'We want to make this the most secure, and demonstrate the freedom that happens here in the United States, and literally invite the world to come enjoy that freedom with us,' Lankford also noted. Moreno's Tuesday exchange came one day after California Democratic Rep. Linda Sanchez told CNN Monday that the rioters participating in the fiery Los Angeles ICE protests were no different than sports fans. The California lawmaker also used the appearance to blast the Trump administration for sending both Marines and California National Guard members to the Golden State to deal to rioters who have set vehicles on fire and hurled bricks at law enforcement officers. 'It's no different than when a team wins a national championship and people get overexcited,' Sanchez said, adding that the 'vast majority of protestors have been peaceful.' 'We have been calling for protestors to protest peacefully, that is their constitutional right. The vast majority of protestors have been peaceful. There are always a few bad actors.' 'And yes, we think anybody who commits property damage ought to be arrested and ought to be prosecuted,' Sanchez noted. Sanchez condemned Trump's decision to deploy federal troops to handle civilian unrest as 'authoritarian flexing' that does not enhance anyone's safety.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store