Belgium V Senegal
Belgium V Senegal
Belgium V Senegal
SUMMARY: Hissène Habré, currently a resident of Senegal, was the President of the Republic of Chad from 1982 until
1990. During that time, he established a brutal dictatorship which, by the bias of its political police, the Bureau of
Documentation and Security (Direction de la Documentation et de la Sécurité (DDS)) caused the deaths of tens of thousands of
individuals.
Proceedings have commenced and failed against him in the Republic of Chad, Senegal, and most recently in Belgium. The latter
State issued an international arrest warrant for Habré in 2005 for charges of crimes against humanity, war crimes, torture and
serious violations of international humanitarian law. The request was never complied with; the Court of Appeal of Dakar in
Senegal held that Habré enjoyed immunity and it was incompetent to rule on the validity of the arrest warrant for a former Head
of State. Belgium instituted proceedings before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) alleging that Senegal was in violation of its
obligation to prosecute or extradite Habré under the Convention Against Torture.
The present decision by the ICJ is the culmination of these proceedings. In its decision, the ICJ ruled that Senegal was indeed in
breach of its obligations under the Convention and should proceed without further delay to the prosecution of Habré. It cannot rely
on its internal law or financial difficulties to evade the implementation of this obligation.
BRIEF HISTORY:
Habré was President of the Republic of Chad for eight years, during which time large-scale violations
of human rights were allegedly committed, including arrests of actual or presumed political
opponents, detentions without trial or under inhumane conditions, mistreatment, torture,
extrajudicial executions and enforced disappearances
He was overthrown by the current President of Chad. After a brief stay in Cameroon, he requested
political asylum from the Senegalese Government, a request which was granted. He then settled in
Dakar, where he has been living ever since.
He was thrown in house arrest after 7 Chadian nationals residing in Chad, together with an
association of victims, filed with the senior investigating judge at the Dakar Tribunal régional hors
classe a complaint with civil-party application against Mr. Habré on account of crimes committed
during presidency.
He then filed for annulment of proceedings claiming that the courts of Senegal had no jurisdiction.
This was granted by the Chamber of the Court of Appeal after it found that the investigating judge
lacked jurisdiction and that the concerned crimes committed outside the territory of Senegal by a
foreign national against foreign nationals and that they would involve the exercise of universal
jurisdiction.
Eventually, after a lot of people filed cases against Habre before a Belgian investigating judge, and
such judge issued two international letters rogatory, to Senegal and Chad.
o 1st letter: sought to obtain a copy of the record of all proceedings concerning Mr. Habré
pending before the Senegalese judicial authorities
Senegal provided Belgium with a file
o 2 letter: sought to establish judicial co-operation between Belgium and Chad, in
nd