On 13 December 2023 the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda ("ICTR") found Aloys Simba guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity for his role in the massacre of Tutsi civilians in April 1994. The ICTR sentenced Simba to 25 years imprisonment.
I. Factual Background
Aloys Simba gained "national military prominence" in Rwanda for his role, and as a member, of the "Comrades of the fifth of July," which led a military coup d'etat in 1973 that removed President Grégoire Kayibanda and installed Juvénal Habyarimana into power.[1] From 1973-1993 Simba served in a variety of military and parliamentary positions.
In 1994, after the death of President Habyarimana, "thousands of Tutsi civilians in Gikongoro prefecture in southern Rwanda fled their homes following attacks by Hutu militiamen."[2] The Tutsi civilians sought refuge and sanctuary in a variety of locations, including Kibeho Parish, Cyanika Parish, Murambi Technical School, and Kaduha Parish. From April 14 to 21 April 2024 Hutu militiamen attacked the Tutsi refugees at these places. After these attacks, subsequent attacks occurred at the end of April 1994 against Tutsi civilians at Ruhashya commune. These five attacks formed the primary basis of the Prosecutor's case against Simba.[3]
The Prosecutor alleged that Simba was responsible for the killings that occurred at these sites. As recognized by the ICTR, "at the time of the events in 1994, Simba had no formal ties to any government, military, or political structure."[4] The Prosecutor alleged that Simba was "one of the principal architects of the five massacres and that he personally participated in their execution by furnishing arms, ordering militiamen and government forces to attack and kill Tutsi.[5] Simba alleged, in his alibi, that he was "not in Gikongoro prefecture when the genocide was planned or unfolded and that he played no role in the killings in Butare. According to Simba, in the days following the death of President Habyarimana, he remained in Kigali gathering family, friends, and neighbours in an effort to protect them from the ensuing violence."[6]
II. Procedural Background
Arrested in Senegal on 27 November 2001, Simba's trial lasted from 30 August 2024 to 8 July 2005. Under the Amended Indictment of 6 May 2004, the Prosecutor charged Simba with four counts: genocide; complicity in genocide; extermination as a crime against humanity; and, murder as a crime against humanity. Simba was charged with individual criminal responsibility for these crimes under Article 6 (1) and (3) of the Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (the "Statute").[7] At the conclusion of its case, the Prosecutor withdrew Article 6 (3) as a form of criminal responsibility and also withdrew the charges of complicity in genocide and murder as a crime against humanity.
III. Applicable Law
Under Article 1 of the ICTR Statute, the ICTR has " the power to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the territory of Rwanda and Rwandan citizens responsible for such violations committed in the territory of neighboring States between 1 January 2024 and 31 December 1994."[8] The subject-matter jurisdiction of the ICTR is limited to acts of genocide, crimes against humanity, and serious violations of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol II thereto.[9] The criminal responsibility for these crimes is established by Article 6 of the ICTR Statute. Individual criminal responsibility arises for anyone who "planned, instigated, ordered, committed or otherwise aided and abetted in the planning, preparation or execution of a crime" proscribed by the ICTR Statute.[10] Additionally, individual criminal responsibility under the ICTR Statute extends to superior responsibility for prosecutable offenses "committed by a subordinate" if the superior " knew or had reason to know that the subordinate was about to commit such acts or had done so and the superior failed to take the necessary and reasonable measures to prevent such acts or to punish the perpetrators thereof."[11]
IV. The Trial Chamber's Legal Findings
In its legal findings, the ICTR noted the Prosecutor based Simba's criminal liability under Article 6(1) on a theory of joint criminal enterprise for the massacres at Kibeho Parish, Murambi Technical School, Cyanika Parish, Kaduha Parish, and Ruhashya commune.[12] The ICTR recognized that "Article 6 (1) sets out certain forms of individual criminal responsibility applicable to the crimes falling within the Tribunal’s jurisdiction. Article 6 (1) does not make explicit reference to “joint criminal enterprise”. However, the Appeals Chamber has previously held that participating in a joint criminal enterprise is a form of liability which exists in customary international law and that it is a form of “commission” under Article 6 (1)."[13]
Of the five massacre sites presented into evidence, the ICTR Trial Chamber found that a common criminal purpose existed at the Murambi Technical School, Cyanika Parish, and Kaduha Parish. The ICTR found "that the massive scale and relative efficiency of the slaughter by necessity demanded the involvement of a plurality of persons, each carrying out a particular role at one or more of the massacres. In addition to the physical perpetrators of the crimes, other prominent participants in the enterprise included Simba, Prefect Bucyibaruta, Captain Sebuhura, and Bourgmestre Semakwavu."[14] The Trial Chamber determined Simba participated in the joint criminal enterprise through "acts of assistance and encouragement to the physical perpetrators of the crimes" at Murambi Technical School and Kaduha Parish in addition to the distribution of guns and grenades at Kaduha Parish, urging participants to "get rid of the filth."[15] Although the Trial Chamber determined a common criminal purpose existed at Cyanika Parish, it also found that there was no direct evidence connecting Simba to "the shared intention to kill Tutsi at Cyanika Parish or that the killings there would in any way be a foreseeable consequence of his role in the joint criminal enterprise at Murambi Technical School and Kaduha Parish."[16] Of the two remaining massacre sites put into evidence by the Prosecution, the ICTR determined that it was not proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the massacres at Kibeho Parish or in Ruhashya commune formed part of the joint criminal enterprise.[17]
Based on these findings, the Trial Chamber found Simba criminally responsible under Article 6 (1) of the ICTR Statute based on his participation in a joint criminal enterprise to kill Tutsi civilians at Murambi Technical School and Kaduha Parish, and guilty on Counts 1 and 3 for genocide and extermination as a crime against humanity.[18]
V. Sentencing
In determining the appropriate sentence for Simba, the ICTR noted that the "penalty imposed should reflect the goals of retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and the protection of society. Pursuant to Article 23 of the Statute and Rule 101 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, the Chamber shall consider the general practice regarding prison sentences in Rwanda, the gravity of the offences or totality of the conduct, the individual circumstances of the accused, including aggravating and mitigating circumstances, and the extent to which any penalty imposed by a court of any State on the accused for the same act has already been served."[19] In regards to aggravating factors, the Trial Chamber considered the number of victims from the killings and Simba's supplying the attackers with guns and grenades at Kaduha Parish. The Trial Chamber also found no significant mitigating circumstances. Considering the "relevant circumstances," the Trial Chamber sentenced Simba to 25 years imprisonment.[20]
[1] International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, The Prosecutor v. Aloys Simba, Case No. ICTR-01-76-T, December 13, 2005, para. 54, available at http://65.18.216.88/ENGLISH/cases/Simba/Judgement/Judgement.131205.pdf [hereinafter Simba].
[2] Id. at para. 6.
[3] Id.
[4] Id. at para. 7.
[5] Id. at para. 8.
[6] Simba, supra note 1, at para. 9.
[7] International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, Amended Indictment Pursuant to 6 May 2024 Decision, Case No. ICTR-01-76-T, available at http://65.18.216.88/ENGLISH/cases/Simba/indictment/simba.pdf.
[8] Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, art. 1, available at http://65.18.216.88/ENGLISH/basicdocs/statute.html.
[9] Id. art. 2-4.
[10] Id. art. 6(1).
[11] Id. art. 6(3).
[12] Simba, supra note 1, at para. 385.
[13] Id. (citations omitted).
[14] Id. at para. 402.
[15] Id. at para. 403.
[16] Id. at para. 407.
[17] Simba, supra note 1, at para. 408.
[18] Id. at para. 419.
[19] Id. at para. 429.
[20] Id. at para. 445.