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Gambian Ex-Minister Alleges Racism, Lies as Swiss Crimes Against Humanity Trial Closes


FILE - A picture taken on January 8, 2024 in Bellinzona, southern Switzerland shows the Swiss Federal Criminal Court at the opening day of the trial of Ousman Sonko, a Gambian former interior minister accused of crimes against humanity committed under Yahya Jammeh's regime.
FILE - A picture taken on January 8, 2024 in Bellinzona, southern Switzerland shows the Swiss Federal Criminal Court at the opening day of the trial of Ousman Sonko, a Gambian former interior minister accused of crimes against humanity committed under Yahya Jammeh's regime.

GENEVA — Switzerland's first full trial of crimes against humanity concluded this week, with the defendant, a former Gambian minister accused of rape and murder, giving a defiant closing speech in which he claimed to be a victim of racism and lies.

Ousman Sonko, a former interior minister of Gambia under ousted dictator Yahya Jammeh, is the highest-ranking official ever to be tried in Europe using universal jurisdiction which allows the most serious crimes to be prosecuted anywhere.

During the trial in Switzerland's Federal Criminal Court in Bellinzona, the court heard details of the charges of rape, torture and murder allegedly committed between 2000-2016 either by Sonko or under his watch.

"I regret that they (the plaintiffs) discredited themselves in this way by lying, with the sole aim of supporting the accusation against me, in defiance of the truth," Sonko, 55, said in closing remarks before the court late on Thursday.

He also denounced his seven-year pre-trial detention — a period which he said was partly spent in solitary confinement and affected his health. Sonko told the court it was "part of a history of colonialism and racism."

"My country does not need expatriatory victims immolated before foreign judges," he said.

The Attorney General's office said it could not comment on a statement provided by the accused person.

A U.N.-mandated report said in 2022 that while landlocked Switzerland had never had an empire, its banks and authorities benefited from colonialism and systemic racism persists in the country.

Benoit Meystre, a legal adviser at campaign group TRIAL international, which filed the complaint against Sonko, said he found the ex-minister's closing speech "disturbing."

"He was pretty disrespectful towards Gambians as he was positioning himself as the victim," he said.

FILE - Plaintiffs Demba Dem, Fatou Camara, Madi Ceesay, Ramzia Diab, Binta Jamba and an unidentified accompanying person pose at the entrance of the Swiss Federal Criminal Court, on January 8, 2024.
FILE - Plaintiffs Demba Dem, Fatou Camara, Madi Ceesay, Ramzia Diab, Binta Jamba and an unidentified accompanying person pose at the entrance of the Swiss Federal Criminal Court, on January 8, 2024.

Tears, heavy silences

Sonko fell out with Jammeh in the final months of his 22-year repressive rule before the latter was forced to flee in January 2017 after an election defeat. That same month, Sonko was arrested in Switzerland while seeking asylum.

Switzerland's public prosecutor is seeking the maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

Witnesses described the trial as emotional, with testimony punctuated by heavy silences and occasional tears.

One of the plaintiffs, Binta Jamba, told the court she was raped multiple times by Sonko after he murdered her husband. The court removed the defendant to a side room during her testimony. Sonko said he was abroad when the alleged rapes occurred.

Her lawyer Annina Mullis, who is acting for several plaintiffs, voiced confidence they had built a strong case.

"The defense still could not explain many of the contradictions between the defendant's declarations and the facts established," she told Reuters.

No date for a verdict has yet been given.

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