UN court orders Uganda to pay $325m for DR Congo occupation

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In this file photo taken on February 25, 2021 the United Nations logo is seen inside the United Nations in New York City. Angela Weiss / AFP

 

Democratic Republic of Congo is to receive the sum of $325m from Uganda as compensation for its role in the conflict there .

This according to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) which ruled that Uganda had violated international norms as an occupying force between 1998 and 2003.

According to the judges, Uganda was responsible for the deaths of 10-15,000 people in the eastern Ituri region and was also found to have looted gold, diamonds and timber.

DR Congo had demanded $11bn but the judges dismissed several parts of the claim and decided on a far lower amount.

The ICJ ordered Uganda to pay five annual installments of $65m between 2022 and 2026, with the first installment due in September.

Uganda had argued that the billions demanded by DR Congo would destroy its economy. The court said its order would be “within the capacity of Uganda to pay”.

In its judgment, the court said: “The reparation awarded to the DRC for damage to persons and to property reflects the harm suffered by individuals and communities as a result of Uganda’s breach of its international obligations.”

DR Congo filed a case against Uganda in 1999 for acts of armed aggression committed against it and its citizens. It accused Ugandan soldiers of looting and human rights violations.

Numerous armed groups have been wreaking havoc in mineral-rich eastern DR Congo for decades. In the 1990s, troops from Uganda and Rwanda twice invaded their much larger neighbour DR Congo, working with local militias to topple the government.

They argued that they had intervened to stop the conflict in DR Congo from spilling across their borders.

The court’s decision is final with no recourse to appeal, but the world court has no means of enforcing its verdict.

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