UN court orders Uganda to pay $452 million in reparations to DR Congo

The International Court of Justice has ordered Uganda to pay $452 million in compensation to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

A Congolese man looks at the destruction of the Tshopo neighborhood of Kisangani, where Rwandan and Ugandan armies had battled for a week in 2000.

A Congolese man looks at the destruction of the Tshopo neighborhood of Kisangani, where Rwandan and Ugandan armies had battled for a week in 2000. Source: AAP

The International Court of Justice has ruled that Uganda must pay US$325 million (A$452 million) in reparations to the Democratic Republic of Congo for its role in conflicts in DR Congo's resource-rich Ituri province.

"The court sets out the total amount of compensation awarded to the Democratic Republic of Congo which is US$325 million," presiding judge Joan Donoghue said.

Uganda must pay the sum in five yearly instalments of US$65 million to start in September of this year, she added.
The long-running dispute was first brought before the United Nations' highest court in 1999.

After lengthy proceedings, the court ruled in 2005 that Uganda had violated international law by occupying parts of the eastern DR Congolese province with its own troops and supporting other armed groups during a war that raged from 1998 to 2003.
Mario Herabo-Munganga, 13, shows drawings from his fellow students who were abducted by a Ugandan-supported Congolese rebel group  Congo in 2002.
Mario Herabo-Munganga, 13, shows drawings from his fellow students who were abducted by a Ugandan-supported Congolese rebel group Congo in 2002. Source: AAP
The court ordered the African neighbours to negotiate reparations but in 2015 DR Congo returned to the tribunal, saying the talks had stalled.

The total award is far short of the more than US$11 billion DR Congo had asked for but the court dismissed several claims including all the claims for macroeconomic damage, saying there was insufficient evidence to support Congo's calculations.

Awarding DR Congo less than one-thirtieth of what it had demanded, the court acknowledged that Uganda was to blame for a "significant part" of the casualties in the war due to its "wrongful international acts".
But judges said there was "insufficient evidence to support the DRC's claim of 180,000 civilian deaths for which Uganda owes reparation" by being directly responsible.

"The court considers that the evidence presented to it suggests that the number of deaths for which Uganda owes reparations falls in the range of 10,000 to 15,000 persons," said justice Donoghue.

On Wednesday the court ruled on the final compensation amount.

Rulings by the International Court of Justice, which deals with disputes between countries, are final and without appeal.

With AFP.


Share
2 min read
Published 10 February 2022 7:06am
Updated 10 February 2022 8:38am
Source: AAP, SBS


Share this with family and friends