Chad's former ruler
Hissene Habre has appealed against his conviction for crimes against humanity
and war crimes, a spokesman for the Special African Chamber that conducted his
trial in Senegal said on Saturday.
| Former Chad President Hissene Habre makes declarations to media as he leaves a court in Dakar, Senegal November 25, 2005. |
Habre, 73, an ally of the West during the Cold War, was
sentenced on May 30 to life in prison for rape and ordering the killing and
torture of thousands of political opponents during his eight-year rule.
"The lawyer's
commission have submitted the paperwork for Habre's appeal," said Marcel
Mendy, a spokesman for the Chamber, a tribunal created in 2013 by Senegal and
the African Union for human rights crimes committed during Habre's rule.
New judges will be appointed and the appeal will
take at least seven months with no start date set, Mendy said.
So
far, the court has only tried Habre and the case marks a milestone for African
justice. It is the first time in modern history that one country's domestic
courts have prosecuted the former leader of another country on rights charges.
Other such cases have been tried by international tribunals.
The
verdict capped a 16-year battle by victims and rights campaigners to bring the
former strong man to justice in Senegal, where he fled after being ousted in a
1990 coup.
Reuters
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