Rwanda: The Appeals Chamber Hears Oral Arguments in the Ntawukulilyayo Case

The  Appeals  Chamber of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for  Rwanda, composed of Judge Carmel Agius, presiding, Judge Mehmet Güney, Judge  Liu  Daqun,  Judge  Andrésia Vaz, and Judge Arlette Ramaroson, today heard  oral  arguments  in  the  appeal lodged by Dominique Ntawukulilyayo, former  Sub-Prefect of Gisagara in Kibuye Prefecture. Ntawukulilyayo was on 3  August  2010  convicted  and  sentenced  to  25 years in prison by Trial Chamber III.

The  Trial  Chamber  found him guilty of genocide under Article 6(1) of the Statute for ordering, as well as aiding and abetting, the killings of Tutsi civilians at Kabuye hill, Butare prefecture, in April 1994.

In  his  appeal  Ntawukulilyayo contends that the Trial Chamber committed a number  of errors  of law  and fact, and accordingly requests the Appeals Chamber  to  reverse the Trial Judgement, enter an acquittal, and order his immediate release, or, in the alternative, reduce his sentence.

Ntawukulilyayo  was  born  in  1942  in  Kibeho,  Mubuga commune, Gikongoro prefecture,  Rwanda. On 1990, he was appointed Sub-Prefect of the Gisagara sub-prefecture  in  Butare  prefecture, a position he maintained until July 1994. The accused was arrested in France on 17 October 2007 and transferred to the United Nations Detention Facility in Arusha on 5 June 2008.