Ex-Gambian minister appeals Swiss conviction for crimes against humanity

A former Gambian minister appeared in a Swiss court ‌on March 30 to appeal against a conviction for crimes against humanity under ex-dictator Yahya Jammeh. 

Ousman Sonko’s conviction for homicide, torture and false imprisonment in May 2024 was historic since he was ​the highest-ranking former official ever to be tried in Europe using universal ​jurisdiction, which allows for the prosecution of the most serious crimes ⁠anywhere. 

Five of the 10 Gambian plaintiffs in the case were present at the ​Higher Appeals Chamber of the Federal Criminal Court in the city of Bellinzona alongside ​the defendant, witnesses said. 

Sonko, who acted as interior minister until the former strongman Jammeh dismissed him in 2016, is appealing the ruling for crimes allegedly committed between 2000-2016. 

His lawyer Philippe Currat ​argued in court that many of the alleged acts happened before ​the relevant Swiss legislation took effect in 2011. “The conditions for criminal prosecution are not met,” he ‌said ⁠in a statement. 

Plaintiffs and the prosecution are also appealing the ruling with the aim of prolonging his 20-year sentence to life and expanding it to include sexual violence after Sonko was previously acquitted of rape. 

“Sexual violence was a tool of repression ​in the Gambia and ​that should be ⁠taken into account and recognized by the Court as such,” said Benoit Meystre, a legal adviser at TRIAL International, which ​filed the original complaint against Sonko and is supporting plaintiffs. 

Sonko ​has already ⁠been in custody over nine years, Currat said. 

Reed Brody, a member of the International Commission of Jurists working with Jammeh’s victims, said the case could help efforts in ⁠the West ​African country to prosecute Jammeh-era crimes.