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Sunday, 16 February 2014

[RwandaLibre] Me Christopher Black: Canadian lawyer wins legal battle over Rwanda charges

 

Canadian lawyer wins legal battle over Rwanda charges

HERWIG VERGULT / AFP/GETTY IMAGES file photo
Former Rwandan Gendarmerie General Augustin Ndindiliyimana, accused of
genocide in Rwanda in 1994, has been acquitted by a criminal tribunal
in Arusha, Tanzania, in February.

By: Olivia Ward Foreign Affairs Reporter, Published on Sun Feb 16 2014

When Christopher Black opened his eyes in the Tanzanian hospital, a
doctor was standing over him. "Are you a religious man?" he asked, and
offered to call a priest.

In 2000, the Toronto criminal lawyer had just begun defending a
high-profile suspect at a trial of the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda, when he collapsed from malaria.

"Friends found me on the floor, and I was wheeled into emergency,"
Black said in a phone interview last week from Arusha, Tanzania. "The
doctor told me, 'we'll try to keep you going until tomorrow, but
likely you'll die.' "

It might have ended there. Instead, the near-death experience was only
the beginning of a 14-year odyssey through the tangled thickets of the
international justice system, including threats on Black's life,
assassination of at least one witness, perilous political intrigue and
a torrent of personal abuse.

"A lot of things have happened that were very dark and bitter," he
says. "In many ways, it's like a movie."

But this past week, two decades after the worst genocide in Africa's
recent history, Black's client Augustin Ndindiliyimana, former chief
of staff of the Rwandan paramilitary police, was acquitted by the
Arusha-based tribunal.

Ndindiliyimana, arrested in Belgium in 2000, was initially convicted
of genocide for allegedly allowing his police guard to supply weapons
to the Hutu militia that carried out the slaughter of some 800,000
Rwandans, including Tutsis and moderate Hutus.

"This case was so big and complex it covered the whole war," Black
said. "They had all sorts of charges against him, individual murders.
In the end, they threw them all out. The judge accepted that the
charges were politically motivated."

Ndindiliyimana spent 11 years in detention before trial and three
years ago was released for time served. One of the most senior
officials indicted by the tribunal, he was acquitted on appeal Tuesday
along with François-Xavier Nzuwonemeye, a former military battalion
commander.

To Black, the original conviction was as perplexing as the lengthy
delay, which he says resulted from pressure on Ndindiliyimana to
testify against another high-ranking suspect. In 2004, he went on
strike, along with other defence lawyers, maintaining that the UN
tribunal was politically manipulated.

The Ndindilyimana case convinced him that justice was far from blind.
The conviction came after Gen. Roméo Dallaire and Human Rights Watch's
senior Africa adviser Alison Des Forges, among others, had testified
on the 70-year-old general's behalf, saying said that he was not in
control of the police and had helped to save the lives of civilians.

But the unpopularity and political explosiveness of the case -- seeking
to exonerate a man labelled a hated "genocidaire" -- put Black's
reputation as well as life in danger. And his dogged, more than
decade-long defence is typical of a maverick lawyer who has never
hesitated to plunge into the turbulent waters of politics.

Defending what others find indefensible is Black's trademark. And his
empathy for the underdog began early.

Born in High Wycombe, northwest of London, 64 years ago, he arrived in
Hamilton at the age of 9 when his father came in search of work. "My
parents were working class. They left school at 11," he said.
Nevertheless, the elder Black fought his way up the immigrant ladder
and retired as a director of Hamilton's St. Joseph's Hospital.

"I went to law school, and didn't really like it," Black said with a
chuckle. "He told me you have two choices: university or the steel
mill."

His family's struggle stayed with him, and he joined the left wing of
the New Democratic Party. But the bombing of Yugoslavia convinced him
to migrate to the Communist Party: "It was the only party that opposed
the NATO attack." It was also opposed to Western imperialism, a
recurring theme in Black's work.

He opened a one-man law practice in Toronto, sharing digs with two
other lawyers and taking on legal aid cases, including murder trials.
But he was increasingly drawn to international criminal law, winning a
reputation as a high-profile contrarian.

He has argued for the innocence of the Serbian strongman and accused
war criminal, Slobodan Milosevic; joined a team of Canadian lawyers
laying war crimes charges against NATO leaders for bombing Yugoslavia
in the Kosovo war; and attacked former international prosecutor Louise
Arbour for halting a politically volatile inquiry into the downing of
a plane that killed the Hutu presidents of Rwanda and Burundi in 1994,
triggering the Rwandan genocide.

It was the political content of Ndindiliyimana's case that intrigued Black most.

"He asked me to do it as a political case. The genocide talk was so
intense that at first I didn't want to get involved. But the UN paid
for one trip (to Tanzania) and over three days he told me what had
happened. I was hooked."

During years of reviewing thousands of documents and hearing dozens of
witnesses, Black formed a different opinion on the Rwanda genocide
from the accepted wisdom -- that it was a preconceived plan by Hutus to
eradicate the powerful Tutsi minority.

He believes the picture was more complex and less one-sided. And that
the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front played a deadly role in the
extent of the killing. When Black became legal counsel to Rwandan and
Congolese groups who called for war crimes charges against Rwanda's
President Paul Kagame, a former RPF militia leader, an outpouring of
rage and threats followed.

"There was propaganda, death threats and threats from the CIA," he
said. "It was like a dogfight. You stopped relying on the law."

Now his battle is over. He is packing up the house in Arusha where he
has lived for several years, and preparing to return to Toronto. In
some ways it feels like a pyrrhic victory. The past decade has taken a
serious toll on his life and health.

The malaria has recurred and he has had debilitating typhus. His
salary was a fraction of a Toronto lawyer's pay. Divorced, and with a
grown son, he admits his family relationships have suffered. And, he
believes, the outlook for rebuilding his criminal law practice is
bleak since the 2008 recession.

But, as ever, Black is ready to fight another day. Some international
cases are hovering in the wings. And he's begun a book on the Rwandan
war that promises more controversy. It's based on the voluminous
evidence he has accumulated since 2000.

But he asks, "how do you compress these 14 years into one book?"

(c) Copyright Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. 1996-2014

http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/02/16/canadian_lawyer_wins_legal_battle_over_rwanda_charges.bb.html

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-“The root cause of the Rwandan tragedy of 1994 is the long and past historical ethnic dominance of one minority ethnic group to the other majority ethnic group. Ignoring this reality is giving a black cheque for the Rwandan people’s future and deepening resentment, hostility and hatred between the two groups.”

-« Ce dont j’ai le plus peur, c’est des gens qui croient que, du jour au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre ».

-“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

-“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.

-“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

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