UPDATE 4-Ex-Ivorian leader Gbagbo wants to return home after acquittal - daughter


Reuters | Updated: 17-01-2019 00:37 IST | Created: 17-01-2019 00:37 IST
UPDATE 4-Ex-Ivorian leader Gbagbo wants to return home after acquittal - daughter

International Criminal Court judges on Wednesday rejected a prosecution request to keep former Ivorian leader Laurent Gbagbo in detention after his acquittal on crimes against humanity and his daughter said he intends to return to Ivory Coast.

Judges ruled on Tuesday that prosecutors had failed to prove any case against Gbagbo and co-defendant Charles Ble Goude and that his continued detention could no longer be justified. Gbagbo has been in custody for seven years.

On Wednesday, the court rejected a prosecution motion to keep the men in custody for any possible appeal by prosecutors, dismissing the case as "exceptionally weak".

It is unlikely their acquittals would be overturned by a higher tribunal and the men had assured the court they would return if required, Presiding Judge Cuno Tarfusser said.

Wednesday's decision paved the way for the speedy release of the two men, although it was unclear where they would immediately go. Discussions about their release were under way with member states, including Belgium, where Gbagbo has family.

Outside the courthouse in The Hague a handful of Gbagbo's supporters danced, sang and drank champagne.

"My father will not live in any other country than Ivory Coast. He would go back and we expect him to go back," his daughter, Marie Laurence Gbagbo, told Reuters outside the court.

Marie Laurence Gbagbo declined to comment on the former president's possible political ambitions, saying: "I can't speak for my father on this. It is a very delicate question."

Gbagbo's acquittal was deplored by victims' groups representing those who died in violence that killed around 3,000 people during Ivory Coast's 2010 election, which Gbagbo refused to concede.

Hundreds of thousands fled the unrest that prosecutors blamed on Gbagbo and victims fear his return home could revive hostilities in Abidjan.

"The defendant's release may increase tensions," Paolina Massidda, a legal representative of the victims, said at the court in The Hague.

Despite his victory in The Hague, Gbagbo faces a possible 20-year prison sentence in Ivory Coast based on a conviction in absentia last January for misappropriating funds from the central bank of the eight-nation West African CFA franc zone.

The government has not commented on whether the ruling will be enforced if he were to return.

"I believe that the government is in a new push to reconcile Ivorians and so it's not the moment to twist the knife in the wound with convictions that are not real convictions," the lawyer of Gbagbo's wife, Rodrigue Dadje, told Reuters. (Reporting by Toby Sterling; Additional reporting by Ange Aboa in Abidjan Writing by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Alison Williams and Toby Chopra)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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