Former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo goes on trial at the International Criminal Court on Thursday, the most senior politician to do so since the global war crimes tribunal was set up 13 years ago.
Accused
of unleashing a civil war that killed 3,000 people after he refused to
accept losing a re-election bid in 2010,
Gbagbo remains an influential
figure at home and his trial could rekindle tensions in the world's
largest cocoa grower.
It is also a test for the ICC, seen in much of Africa
as a neo-colonial institution that does the bidding of its European
financial backers. Its last attempt to try an African president, Kenya's
Uhuru Kenyatta, failed amid diplomatic lobbying and allegations of witness intimidation.
Gbagbo,
70, and his co-accused, youth leader Charles Ble Goude, 44, face four
counts, including a campaign of rape and murder aimed at hanging onto
power. Both men deny the charges, which carry maximum sentences of life
imprisonment.
Gbagbo's supporters say he is a victim of collusion between France and current Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara,
who won the election and took office after a military intervention by
the former colonial power ended the four-month civil war.
Ouattara,
who was re-elected last year, is accused by his opponents of using the
ICC to silence opposition. Gbagbo and Ble Goude - known as the "general
of the streets" - were handed over the to The Hague after the ICC issued
arrest warrants.
A lawyer representing victims of
the violence, Habiba Toure, said the ICC risked "losing credibility" as
it had failed to pursue anyone from the other side of the conflict.
"No member of the pro-Ouattara forces suspected of grave crimes against humanity has been prosecuted," he said.
During
his four years in the ICC's jail in The Hague, Gbagbo worked with a
French journalist, Francois Mattei, on a book published last year that
depicts his prosecution as punishment for standing up to France.
Gbagbo's wife Simone, also wanted by the ICC, was sentenced to 20 years' jail by an Ivory Coast court.
The
ICC has so far convicted just two little-known Congolese warlords.
Gbagbo's trial will be closely watched for evidence that it can
successfully tackle higher-profile cases.
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