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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Trial of ex-dictator in Chad decades in making

Carley Petesch Associated Press

DAKAR, Senegal – The bodies came daily. Sometimes 10, sometimes 20 lives lost to torture, malnutrition or sickness in prison in Chad, say survivors.

Clement Abaifouta, a prisoner himself, had to wrap them in sacks and bury them.

“There was a lot of suffering, a lot of pain,” he said about his time in jail until 1989. “What did I do to have gotten four years in prison? I want to know why.”

Abaifouta wants justice, like thousands of other political prisoners who were victims of torture during Chadian ex-dictator Hissene Habre’s rule from 1982-1990. On Monday Habre will go on trial in Senegal, fulfilling the work of many who say they suffered abuse under his rule and setting a bold precedent for justice in Africa.

For more than a decade after his overthrow, Habre lived freely in Senegal. His easy exile was a symbol of impunity in Africa until he was taken into custody and charged in 2013. Now his trial is a warning to other African dictators that they may be held accountable in Africa for their actions, say human rights experts.

Habre will be tried by the Senegalese courts’ Extraordinary African Chambers. It is the first trial in Africa of a universal jurisdiction case, in which a country’s national courts can prosecute the most serious crimes committed abroad, by a foreigner and against foreign victims, said Human Rights Watch. It is also the first time the courts of one country are prosecuting the former ruler of another for alleged human rights crimes, it said.

“It shows that you can actually achieve justice here in Africa,” said Human Rights Watch counsel Reed Brody, who has been working on the case against Habre since 1999.

Habre’s government was responsible for an estimated 40,000 deaths, according to a report published in May 1992 by a 10-member Chadian truth commission formed by Chad’s current President Idriss Deby. The commission particularly blamed Habre’s political police force, the Directorate of Documentation and Security, saying it used torture methods including whipping, beating, burning and the extraction of fingernails.

Defense lawyers have dismissed the tribunal as a political tool of Habre’s enemies, emphasizing that the government of Deby, who removed Habre from office, is the court’s largest donor.

Survivors of the abuse, however, have been the main proponents for justice that is now finally in reach, Brody said.

“The most important thing at end of day is the idea that victims with tenacity, perseverance and imagination can overcome obstacles and bring a dictator to justice,” he said.

The court prosecutor says 2,500 victims have registered as civil parties, and 100 will be called to testify during the trial that will last months. Human Rights Watch says 4,000 victims, or victims’ family members, will be registered by next week.

In 2001, Brody found the police force’s archives at its headquarters in Chad. The documents listed more than 12,000 victims of Chad’s detention network.

Habre was first indicted by a Senegalese judge in 2000, according to Human Rights Watch, but twists and turns over a decade brought the case to Belgium, and then finally back to Senegal. Under a new president, Senegal’s national assembly adopted a much-anticipated law to create the special tribunal to try Habre.

Souleymane Guengueng, a prisoner from 1987-1990 and founder of the victims’ association, has been anticipating the trial for 25 years.

“It’s been a long path,” said Guengueng. “It’s the impression of victory especially if Hissene Habre sits in front of us, facing us, and us facing him, and he hears the horrors of our times with his own ears.”