Dominic Ongwen

Dominic Ongwen was born in 1975 in the village of Choorum, Kilak County, Amuru district, Northern Uganda.[2] He is a former child abductee and child soldier, and the former commander of the Sinia Brigade of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a guerrilla group that formerly operated in northern Uganda. As the head of one of the four LRA brigades, Ongwen was a member of the "Control Altar" of the LRA that directs military strategy. He was detained by the ICC in 2014 and charged with 70 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity.[3] On 4 February 2021 he was convicted on 61 counts including murder and attempted murder; rape; sexual slavery; forced marriage; torture; enslavement; outrage upon personal dignity; conscription and use of children under the age of 15 to participate actively in hostilities; pillaging; destruction of property and persecution.[4]

Dominic Ongwen
Born1975 (age 4546)[1]
Coorom, Kilak County, Amuru district, Northern Uganda[2]
Other namesWhite Ant
Known forFormer commander in the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)

Origins and name

Dominic Okumu Savio (his birth name) was born around 1975, the fourth son of Ronald Owiya and Alexy Acayo, two schoolteachers living in Paibona.[5][6] His parents, like most others in Acoliland at the time, gave him a false name and trained him to use if ever he was abducted, to protect the rest of the family. This name, Ongwen, means "born at the time of the white ant".[7] It was later to become his nom de guerre.[8]

Abduction

Ongwen was abducted by the LRA as he walked to Abili Primary School in Koro. According to his own testimony this happened in 1988 when he was fourteen.[9] However it has often been reported that he was nine or ten,[10] and also that he was carried by other captives all the way up to the LRA’s main military bases because he was ‘too little to walk’.[7]

When Ongwen's mother heard that he had been kidnapped, she refused to run away with the other villagers saying she was ready to face the rebels. On their return, they found her dead and his father was later found dead too.[11]

Once abducted, he underwent initiation ceremonies which included torture and being forced to watch violent rituals of people being killed.[12] He was subsequently indoctrinated under the tutelage of Vincent Otti, while still a child, as an LRA fighter.[13] He then rose within the ranks becoming a major at the age of 18 and brigadier of the Sinia Brigade, one of the four LRA brigades by his late twenties. [14][15]

Family

During his time with the LRA, Ongwen had at multiple wives, including Jennifer, Santa (Min Tata), Margaret, Florence Ayot, Agnes Aber (Min Ayari), Fatuma and Nancy Abwot. It was in 1993 that Florence Ayot, herself an abductee, was "transferred" to Ongwen after her own husband died. He also fathered at least eleven children,[16] four of them with Florence Ayot.[17] Some sources claim he had "more than 20 children".[18] Ayot later testified to the ICC that Ongwen, along with two other commanders and herself, had plotted to escape but their plan was discovered and Ongwen was demoted, disarmed and imprisoned for more than two weeks.[19]

Charges

Ongwen was the lowest ranking of the five LRA leaders for whom the ICC issued their first ever warrants in June 2005. He is the only one who the court succeeded in detaining, and, with the exception of the leader, Joseph Kony, is the only one now left alive. He was initially charged with four counts of war crimes (murder, cruel treatment of civilians, intentionally directing an attack against a civilian population and pillaging) and three counts of crimes against humanity (murder, enslavement, and inhumane acts of inflicting serious bodily injury and suffering). The crimes were allegedly committed on or about 20 May 2004 at the Lukodi IDP Camp in the Gulu District, Uganda.[20][21] The charges all relate to an attack on a camp for internally displaced people in Uganda in 2004.[3]

On 21 December 2015, the ICC charged Dominic Ongwen with crimes in addition to those set out in the warrant of arrest: a total of seventy counts. The additional charges related to attacks on the Pajule IDP camp, the Odek IDP camp and the Abok IDP camp. The counts brought against the suspect in the context of these attacks include attacks against the civilian population, murder, attempted murder, torture, cruel treatment, other inhumane acts, enslavement, outrages upon personal dignity, pillaging, destruction of property, and persecution. The expanded charges against Dominic Ongwen also include sexual and gender-based crimes committed from 2002 to 2005 in Sinia Brigade – forced marriage, rape, torture, sexual slavery, and enslavement – and the conscription and use of children under the age of 15 to participate actively in hostilities from 2002 to 2005, in Sinia Brigade.[22]

The charges are based on evidence which included witness statements or transcripts of interviews of a total of 123 witnesses, records of intercepted LRA radio communications, and oral testimonies of seven witnesses in September and November 2015.[23]

Report of death

Ongwen was reported killed in combat with a unit of the Uganda People's Defence Force on 10 October 2005, and the identity of the body was confirmed by former LRA commanders.[24] However, in July 2006, the ICC reported that genetic fingerprinting of the body confirmed that it was not Ongwen's. News reports of the time put Ongwen in southwest Equatoria, Southern Sudan, attempting to rejoin LRA head Joseph Kony in Garamba, Ituri Province, northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. Ongwen and a former wife featured in a film Picking up the Pieces by IRIN and released in October 2007.[25] Uganda People's Defence Force spokesperson Maj. Felix Kulayije commented, "Unfortunately, the bastard is still alive."[26]

Capture and arrest

In 2013, US offered a $5m (£3.3m) reward for information leading to his arrest.[27] At the end of 2014, Ongwen escaped detention by Joseph Kony for having disobeyed Kony's orders and having refused to answer Kony's radio messages. Having escaped the camp near Songo, in Kafia Kingi, Ongwen came across nomadic cattle herders who took him to a Seleka rebel group near Sam Ouandja in CAR. The former Seleka group commander reached out to a merchant in Mboki, who in turn called an NGO worker in Obo. The latter reached out to the American Special Forces in Obo, CAR. An American helicopter dispatched to Sam Ouandja picked up Ongwen and brought him to Obo. The Seleka were initially unaware of Ongwen's identity but learned about it after the case became public in the media. The Seleka commander told the RFI he hoped to receive the promised reward of $5m.[28] However, the reward was never paid, and the Americans never publicly acknowledged the Seleka rebels' role in the capture.[29] Ongwen was then transferred successively to the Ugandan forces,[30] the Central African Republic forces, and ultimately to the ICC.[31]

During the time between his arrest and his transfer to the ICC Ongwen participated in several media activities including a radio broadcast, meetings with journalists and a video recording in which he claimed that he had surrendered because he had come to realize that he was "wasting his time in the bush" as "the LRA has no future". He urged other insurgents to resume their civilian lives.[32][33][34]

Detention and trial

On 26 January 2015, Ongwen made his first appearance before the ICC,[35] but the commencement of the confirmation of charges hearing was postponed in order to allow the Prosecutor to prepare adequately for the hearing and to comply with the Chamber's instructions.[36]

On 6 February 2015, ICC severed the proceedings against Dominic Ongwen from the case of The Prosecutor v. Joseph Kony, Vincent Otti, Okot Odhiambo and Dominic Ongwen. As the three other suspects in the case had not appeared or had not been apprehended, the Chamber deemed this necessary so as not to delay the pre-trial proceedings against Mr Ongwen.[2]

The trial lasted from 6 December 2016 to 12 March 2020.[37] 2026 victims were granted the right to participate in the proceedings[2] though few were able to do so, choosing rather to participate in the trial through legal representation.[38] On 26 January 2016, Ongwen appeared for a pre-trial hearing.[3] On 23 March 2016, the ICC confirmed the 70 charges brought against him and committed him to trial.[23] Ongwen denied all the charges against him.[37][39] [40] On 4 February 2021 the ICC pronounced its verdict, finding Ongwen guilty for a total of 61 crimes, comprising both crimes against humanity and war crimes.[4][41]

During his detention, he has been visited by family members. He became father to another child following the visit of one of his wives.[42] He has also been visited by four Acholi leaders, including the Paramount chief, His Highness David Onen Achana II, and the Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Gulu John Baptist Odama. During this visit he asked for a rosary, a hymn book and a prayer book [43]

Ongwen's case is unique because he himself was abducted by the LRA and forced to be a child soldier before rising to leadership. So this is the first ICC case in which an inductee is being charged with the same crimes as those done to him.[44]According to one commentator, "In no other ICC trial have case narratives been so opposite, morally complex and riddled with paradoxes".

Opposition to the ICC trial

On 20 January 2015, The Acholi Religious Leaders' Peace Initiative (ARLPI), an interconfesionnal organisation whose goal is to pursue peaceful resolution to the LRA conflict, issued a statement opposing Ongwen's detention and trial at the ICC. Seeing him as a victim, they recommend that he should be bought back to Uganda to undergo "the rituals of 'Mato Oput' (Reconciliation) for all that he went through during his time in "LRA captivity". The signatories contrast this traditional approach, which promotes restoration, transformation, healing and new life, with the ICC approach which they consider to be punitive and retributive.[45][46]Geoffry Omony, programme director of YOLRED, an organisation that supports former soldiers, supports this point of view.[47]

Other commentators consider that the ICC indictments directly contradict the Ugandan Parliament's blanket amnesty which has led to the demobilisation and reintegration of tens of thousands of rebels.[48]

Family members, including his wife Florence Ayot and his brother Charles Ojar also pleaded for Ongwen not to be tried at the ICC.[49]

Victims, however, have expressed hope in the ICC trial, claiming that without it there would be no justice in their lifetime for the grave violations they had endured during the conflict.[50] Others have pointed to the failure of the Uganda government to protect Ongwen from abduction when he was a child.[51]

See also

Notes and references

  1. "Uganda: Q&A on Dominic Ongwen at the ICC". fidh.org.
  2. https://www.icc-cpi.int/uganda/ongwen/Documents/OngwenEng.pdf
  3. "LRA commander Dominic Ongwen appears before ICC in The Hague". 26 January 2015 via www.bbc.com.
  4. Ssebwami, Javira (2021-02-05). "ICC conviction of LRA commander provides overdue justice for victims of decades-long campaign of abuses". UgStandard. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  5. "Dominic Ongwen: born at the time of the white ant, tried by the ICC - By Thijs B. Bouwknegt". African Arguments. 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXoT2I27oMU
  7. http://justiceandreconciliation.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/JRP_FN7_Dominic-Ongwen.pdf
  8. "Dominic Ongwen: born at the time of the white ant, tried by the ICC - By Thijs B. Bouwknegt". African Arguments. 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  9. "Dominic Ongwen and the Search for Justice". warscapes.com. 2 March 2016.
  10. "Dominic Ongwen: born at the time of the white ant, tried by the ICC - By Thijs B. Bouwknegt". African Arguments. 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  11. "Dominic Ongwen: a Tyrant or Victim of Circumstances?". Kata Kata. 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  12. Burke, Jason (27 March 2016). "Child soldier to war criminal: the trial of Dominic Ongwen" via The Guardian.
  13. "The complex story of a child soldier," by Ledio Cakaj, Washington Post, 12 January 2015
  14. "Dominic Ongwen: born at the time of the white ant, tried by the ICC - By Thijs B. Bouwknegt". African Arguments. 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  15. "Profile: Dominic Ongwen of Uganda's LRA". BBC News. 2015-01-26. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  16. "DNA Expert Says Tests Show Ongwen is the Father of 11 Children". International Justice Monitor. 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  17. "Florence Ayot, "My children are always reminded that their father is a notorious rebel commander"". The New Humanitarian. 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  18. "Dominic Ongwen Fathers Child In ICC Custody :". Uganda Radionetwork. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  19. "A Former "Wife" to Ongwen Says They Wanted to Escape the LRA in 2003". ChimpReports. 2019-10-02. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  20. Arrest Warrant for Dominic Ongwen (public and redacted PDF) Archived September 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, International Criminal Court, 8 July 2005
  21. "Statement on Dominic Ongwen's initial appearance before the ICC - Women's Initiatives for Gender Justice". 4genderjustice.org. 26 January 2015.
  22. "The Prosecutor v. Dominic Ongwen". icc-cpi.int.
  23. "item". icc-cpi.int.
  24. Submission of Information Regarding Dominic Ongwen (PDF) Archived October 24, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, ICC, 5 October 2005
  25. Picking up the Pieces IRIN documentary, October 2007
  26. ICC Unseals Results of Dominic Ongwen DNA Tests Archived July 11, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, ICC Press release, 7 July 2006 and ‘Dead’ LRA chief alive Archived July 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, New Vision, 10 July 2006
  27. "Profile: Dominic Ongwen of Uganda's LRA". BBC News. 2015-01-26. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  28. «Fin de cavale pour le chef de guerre ougandais Dominic Ongwen» sur Libération
  29. «LRA's Dominic Ongwen 'capture': Seleka rebels want $5m reward» sur le site de la BBC
  30. LRA commander Dominic Ongwen 'in Ugandan custody' BBC News, Africa, Retrieved 14 January 2015
  31. "Ugandan LRA rebel commander Dominic Ongwen to be tried at ICC: army," Daily Nation, 13 January 2015
  32. Dominic Ongwen reveals why he left Joseph Kony retrieved 6 March 2015
  33. Ongwen urges LRA comrades to surrender New Vision, 13 January 2015, retrieved 6 March 2015
  34. Surrendered LRA Commander Dominic Ongwen Says He Didn’t Want to Die in Bush Archived 2015-01-29 at the Wayback Machine TIME, 19 January 2015, retrieved 6 March 2015
  35. First Ugandan suspect, LRA Commander Dominic Ongwen, appears before the ICC Women's initiatives for gender justice 6 March 2015
  36. Ongwen case: Confirmation of charges hearing postponed to 21 January 2016 Archived 21 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine ICC 6 March 2015
  37. "Ongwen case". icc-cpi.int.
  38. "Who Will Stand for Us?". Human Rights Watch. 2017-08-29. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  39. "item". icc-cpi.int.
  40. "Dominic Ongwen: the ICC's Poster and Problem Child". www.justiceinfo.net. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  41. "Ongwen Case: summary of the verdict" (PDF). www.icc-cpi.int. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
  42. "Dominic Ongwen Fathers Child In ICC Custody :". Uganda Radionetwork. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  43. https://ugandaradionetwork.net/story/dominic-ongwen-fathers-child-in-icc-custody
  44. "The Dominic Ongwen Trial - Enough Project". enoughproject.org.
  45. "ARLPI's Statement on Dominic Ongwen.pdf". Google Docs. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  46. https://www.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1754-9469.2011.01101.x
  47. "Victim, perpetrator, son? The other side of the ICC's Ongwen trial". African Arguments. 2018-09-18. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  48. "Dominic Ongwen and the Search for Justice". Warscapes. 2016-03-02. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  49. "Dominic Ongwen: a Tyrant or Victim of Circumstances?". Kata Kata. 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  50. "Lawyers Say Victims Had Given Up Hope for Justice Until Ongwen's Trial Began". International Justice Monitor. 2020-03-11. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  51. "Victim, perpetrator, son? The other side of the ICC's Ongwen trial". African Arguments. 2018-09-18. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
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