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ICC Press Release: The Appeals Chamber reversed the decisions to stay proceedings and to release Thomas Lubanga Dyilo
08 Oct 2010
Dear all,

Please find below the latest press release issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) announcing that the ICC Appeals Chamber reversed the decisions of ICC Trial Chamber I to stay proceedings and to release Thomas Lubanga Dyilo. Thomas Lubanga Dyilo will remain in custody during the trial proceedings, which can now be resumed.

This document has been produced by the ICC. The CICC Secretariat distributes it as part of its mandate to keep member organizations and individuals informed about developments related to the ICC. The document does not reflect the views of the CICC as a whole or its individual members.

Please also take note of the Coalition's policy on situations before the ICC (below), which explicitly states that the CICC will not take a position on potential and current situations before the Court or situations under analysis. The Coalition, however, will continue to provide the most up-to-date information about the ICC.

Best regards,
CICC Secretariat
http://www.coalitionfortheicc.org/

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ICC PRESS RELEASE AND DECISIONS

1. "The Appeals Chamber reversed the decisions to stay proceedings and to release Thomas Lubanga Dyilo," ICC Press Release, ICC-CPI-20100810-PR579, 8 October 2010, http://www.icc-cpi.int/Menus/Go?id=ef99472d-4a81-400a-8688-a53b3f0ece4b&lan=en-GB

"On Friday, 8 October, 2010, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) reversed Trial Chamber I's decisions to stay proceedings in the case The Prosecutor v. Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, and to release the accused. In accordance with this decision, Mr Lubanga Dyilo will remain in the custody of the Court during the trial proceedings, which can now be resumed.

Trial Chamber I of the ICC had, on 8 July, 2010, ordered to stay the proceedings in the case against Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, considering that the fair trial of the accused was no longer possible because the Prosecution had failed to implement the Chamber's orders. Trial Chamber I had ordered the Office of the Prosecutor to confidentially disclose to the Defence the names and other necessary identifying information, of intermediary 143. The Prosecution, however, did not comply with these orders. Following the decision to stay the proceedings, Trial Chamber I ordered, on 15 July, the release of the accused. The ICC Prosecutor submitted two appeals against these decisions.

Judge Song, presiding judge in these appeals, delivered a summary of the judgments in open court, and explained that the Appeals Chamber rejects two arguments of the Prosecutor, namely that the Trial Chamber erred when it found that the Prosecutor refused to comply with the Chamber's orders and that the Trial Chamber misconstrued the Prosecutor's position with respect to his duties of protecting victims, witnesses and others.

In his oral summary of the judgments, Judge Song stressed that it is undisputed that the Prosecutor did not comply with the orders to disclose the identity of intermediary 143 while 'orders of the Chambers are binding and should be treated as such by all parties and participants unless and until they are suspended by the Appeals Chamber'. The presiding judge also highlighted that 'under the Statute, the Trial Chamber, subject only to the powers of the Appeals Chamber, is the ultimate guardian of a fair and expeditious trial'.

The Appeals Chamber considers, however, that the Trial Chamber erred by resorting immediately to a stay of proceedings without first imposing sanctions to bring about the Prosecutor's compliance with its orders. 'Sanctions are a key tool for Chambers to maintain control of proceedings within the trial framework and to safeguard a fair trial without having to have recourse to the drastic remedy of staying proceedings', stated Judge Song in the summary of the judgments.

Finally, the Appeals Chamber also finds that the decision to release Mr Lubanga Dyilo was predicated entirely on the decision to stay proceedings, which is reversed, thus the decision to release the accused must also be reversed.

Thomas Lubanga Dyilo is accused of having committed, as co-perpetrator, war crimes of enlisting and conscripting children under the age of 15 years into the Forces patriotiques pour la libération du Congo (Patriotic Forces for the Liberation of Congo) (FPLC), and using them to participate actively in hostilities in Ituri, a district of the eastern province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), between September 2002 and August 2003."

2. "Judgment on the appeal of the Prosecutor against the decision of Trial Chamber I of 8 July 2010 entitled "Decision on the Prosecution's Urgent Request for Variation of the Time-Limit to Disclose the Identity of Intermediary 143 or Alternatively to Stay Proceedings Pending Further Consultations with the VWU," ICC Appeals Chamber, 8 October 2010, http://www.icc-cpi.int/Menus/Go?id=c4615ef8-3a69-4f2c-a7ec-05150e86bf7e&lan=en-GB

3. "Judgment on the appeal of Prosecutor against the oral decision of Trial Chamber I of 15 July 2010 to release Thomas Lubanga Dyilo," ICC Appeals Chamber, 8 October 2010, http://www.icc-cpi.int/Menus/Go?id=8e9a6ac1-6da6-4f57-aba3-fa213e487811&lan=en-GB

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CICC's policy on the referral and prosecution of situations before the ICC:

The Coalition for the ICC is not an organ of the court. The CICC is an independent NGO movement dedicated to the establishment of the International Criminal Court as a fair, effective, and independent international organization. The Coalition will continue to provide the most up-to-date information about the ICC and to help coordinate global action to effectively implement the Rome Statute of the ICC. The Coalition will also endeavor to respond to basic queries and to raise awareness about the ICC's trigger mechanisms and procedures, as they develop. The Coalition as a whole, and its secretariat, do not endorse or promote specific investigations or prosecutions or take a position on situations before the ICC. However, individual CICC members may endorse referrals, provide legal and other support on investigations, or develop partnerships with local and other organizations in the course of their efforts.

Communications to the ICC can be sent to:

ICC
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