Life sentence sought for DRC former rebel leader at French trial
This court sketch made on November 12, 2025, shows former Congolese rebel leader Roger Lumbala during his trial at the Assize Court in Paris. BENOIT PEYRUCQ / AFP
Roger Lumbala, 67, is on trial in Paris, accused of complicity in crimes against humanity during the Second Congo War (1998-2003). For human rights organizations, the trial is an opportunity to challenge the impunity enjoyed by warring parties in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
French prosecutors on Friday, December 12, sought a maximum sentence of life in prison for a former rebel leader accused of being one of the masterminds of atrocities in the Second Congo War. Roger Lumbala, 67, is on trial in Paris accused of complicity in crimes against humanity during the 1998-2003 conflict. He denies the charges. A verdict is expected on Monday.
For human rights organizations, the trial is an historic opportunity to challenge the impunity enjoyed by warring parties in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where fighting continues despite a “peace” agreement ratified in Washington in early December.
But Lumbala, who was arrested in France in December 2020, refused to attend the trial after its opening session, saying the court has no legitimacy. Lumbala, who briefly served as trade minister then ran for president in 2006, insists he was merely a politician with no soldiers or volunteers under his control.
One of the prosecutors, Nicolas Péron, told the jury that Lumbala is only failing to appear because he is “facing a problem he never thought he would encounter: He is now facing justice.”
For more than a month, the court has heard about rape used as a weapon of war, sexual slavery, forced labor, torture, mutilation, summary executions, systematic looting, extortion and the plundering of resources, including diamonds.
The alleged atrocities were committed in 2002-2003 during Operation “Erase the Slate,” conducted in the Northeast of the country by the Rally of Congolese Democrats and Nationalists (RCD-N) – Lumbala’s rebel group. The RCD-N was supported by neighboring Uganda and allied with the MLC group of the current Congolese Minister of Transport, Jean-Pierre Bemba.
During the trial, one man told how his brother had his forearm amputated and was then executed after being unable to eat his severed ear. Women recounted rapes by soldiers, often gang rapes committed in front of parents, husbands and children.
The victims were mostly Nande or Bambuti Pygmies, ethnic groups accused by the attackers of siding with a rival faction.
Lumbala is being tried under the principle of universal jurisdiction.
Le Monde with AFP https://www.lemonde.fr/en/international/article/2025/12/12/life-sentence-sought-for-drc-former-rebel-leader-at-french-trial_6748443_4.html

Offensive du M23 : “Si les appels de la CENCO et de l’ECC étaient entendus, notamment après la prise de Bunagana, combien de vies humaines ne pouvait-on pas épargner ? “(Fridolin Ambongo)
Burundi : Un pays de plus en plus isolé et menacé
Accord RDC-Rwanda : le business avant la paix
Rwanda and DRC leaders sign Trump-brokered peace deal, despite new violence
Lettre ouverte à Julien Paluku : l’amnésie politique ne fait pas un patriote !
Badinter, Kabila, Tshisekedi : la justice n’est pas la vengeance