Communiqué de presse Quatre organisations non gouvernementales (ONG) congolaises et internationales publient aujourd’hui un nouveau rapport qui atteste de failles et d’irrégularités importantes dans le procès de neuf militaires congolais accusés de crimes de guerre, et de trois employés d’Anvil Mining accusés de complicité dans des crimes de guerre commis à Kilwa, en République démocratique
Category Archives: Statement
Press Release Four Congolese and international nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) today published a new report documenting serious flaws and irregularities in the trial of nine Congolese soldiers for war crimes, and three employees of Anvil Mining for complicity in war crimes, committed in Kilwa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Déclaration Le 28 Juin 2007, la cour militaire de Lubumbashi a rendu son verdict sur le procès de Kilwa, acquittant le Colonel Ademar Ilunga et huit autres soldats, principaux accusés de crimes de guerre liés aux événements d’octobre 2004 dans une localité reculée du Katanga près de la mine Anvil Mining de Dikulushi. Une investigation
Statement A military court in Lubumbashi on 28 June 2007 delivered its verdict in the Kilwa trial and acquitted the principal defendants Colonel Ademar Ilunga and 8 soldiers of war crimes in connection to the events that occurred in October 2004 in a remote part of Katanga province near Anvil Mining’s Dikulushi mine. A UN
Detailed economic arguments for renegotiation of key mining contracts in Katanga, DRC (French)
Detailed economic arguments for renegotiation of key mining contracts in Katanga, DRC (Executive Summary, French)
“New Report Proposes Economic Rationale for Renegotiating Key Mining Contracts in the DR Congo”
“International appeal for a revision of the DRC’s mining contracts”
Recommendations on public-private partnerships with a view to giving the DRC a fair share in the exploitation of its resources
Press Release Five Congolese and British non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have denounced the transfer of Colonel Eddy Nzabi Mbombo, the military prosecutor in the Kilwa trial, as an obstruction of the judicial process. “The Kilwa trial represents a litmus test of the new government’s resolve to end impunity. The big question is will the trial be