Amnesty International (London)
October 8, 1999
London - The trial of three people sentenced to life imprisonment -- and some
30 others sentenced to prison terms of up to 20 years -- before a military
tribunal in Yaounde was fundamentally flawed, Amnesty International said today
"The military tribunal which convicted these prisoners was neither
independent nor impartial. The trial was also flawed from the outset since many
of the defendants were tortured during interrogation and some died as a result."
"These people should be allowed a retrial before a civilian court and in
accordance with international standards of fair trial", Amnesty International
added.
Those convicted, all civilians from Cameroon's English-speaking minority, had
been charged with offences, including murder, attempted murder, grievous bodily
harm, attempted destruction, illegal possession of firearms, arson and robbery,
in connection with armed attacks in North-West Province in March 1997 during
which 10 people, including three gendarmes, were killed. The authorities blamed
the attacks on the Southern Cameroons National Council (SCNC), which supports
independence for Cameroon's two English-speaking provinces, North-West and
South-West Provinces, and the affiliated Southern Cameroons Youth League (SCYL).
Most of the defendants had been held for more than two years before finally
being brought before the military tribunal in Yaounde to be charged on 14 April
1999. The trial began on 25 May and there were further hearings during the
following months before a verdict was reached during the early hours of 6
October 1999.
An Amnesty International representative observed the trial proceedings in
July. A law passed in April 1998 extended the jurisdiction of military tribunals
in Cameroon to offences involving firearms. The military tribunal which tried
these cases operates under the authority of the Minister of Defence and the
prosecution is under the direction and supervision of the Minister of State in
charge of Defence.
The defendants in this trial were tried by the same military force which
detained and charged them. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which
monitors compliance of states with the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, which Cameroon ratified in 1984, has recommended that the
jurisdiction of military tribunals should not extend beyond military
disciplinary matters.
It has also recommended that all trials concerning civilians should be held
before civilian courts. "The Cameroon government should explain both why this
trial was not held before a civilian court and why it has extended the
jurisdiction of military courts to cases involving firearms," Amnesty
International said.
The defendants had no access to defence lawyers throughout the period of pre-
trial detention and even after the start of the trial had little opportunity to
communicate with their lawyers. They had no access to the indictment against
them.
They were therefore unable to prepare their defence adequately or to
challenge the charges against them. Some 70 defendants were represented by 12
lawyers.
Prosecution witnesses before the tribunal -- members of the security forces
who had conducted preliminary investigations -- claimed that the defendants had
confessed to their guilt. Some of the defendants, however, alleged before the
tribunal that they had been tortured and ill-treated during interrogation. At
least 10 prisoners of this group have died since March 1997, either as a result
of torture and ill-treatment at the time of arrest or as a result of lack of
medical care while in detention.
Although prosecution witnesses said that written evidence was seized, proving
that members of the SCNC and the SCYL had planned and coordinated the attacks in
North-West Province, no such documents or other evidence are reported to have
been produced in court. Defence lawyers have said that appeals against
conviction and sentence will be lodged with the Court of Appeal in Yaounde.
Some 40 of the defendants were acquitted by the military tribunal. ENDS. . ./
Amnesty International, International Secretariat, 1 Easton Street, WC1X 8DJ,
London, United Kingdom.
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London WC1X 8DJ,+44-71-413-5500 ,+44-71-956-1157. Email: amnesty@amnesty.org.
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