Not one government has paid into fund for victims of Uganda warlord, says ICC
The international criminal court awarded a record 52.4m to survivors of Dominic Ongwen's crimes but member states have failed to contribute
Not a single country has contributed towards reparations for the victims and survivors of the Ugandan warlord Dominic Ongwen, despite the international criminal court awarding 52.4m (44m) in February, according to the ICC Trust Fund for Victims (TFV).
The ICC reparations order - the largest in the court's history - was issued after a 2021 ruling in which the court found Ongwen, a former commander of the Lord's Resistance Army militia group, guilty of various war crimes committed between 2002 and 2005, including murder, torture, sexual enslavement, the conscription of children into hostilities, and brutal attacks on four camps for internally displaced people in northern Uganda.
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