The Obim Rock internally displaced persons’ camp in northern Uganda.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Uganda, as the concerned state party, is expected to go out and find Dominic Ongwen’s victims.
Joseph Kony speaks to journalists in southern Sudan in November 2006.
Stuart Price/AFP via Getty Images
The Ugandan militant remains on the run despite a US$5 million bounty on his head for war crimes committed between 1987 and 2006.
LRA commander Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court in 2016.
Peter Dejong / EPA-EFE
Dominic Ongwen was the first person to use the defence of duress at the International Criminal Court.
Dominic Ongwen (centre) sits in the court room of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, on December 6, 2016.
Peter Dejong/AFP via Getty Images
The International court did not allow Dominic Ongwen’s background to colour the legal determination of his criminal liability.
Dominic Ongwen enters the court room of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, on December 6, 2016.
Photo by Peter Dejong/Pool/AFP via Getty Images
Former fighters described Ongwen as a model fighter and an effective commander – but testimony in his trial detailed the former child soldier’s alleged personal role in the rape of underage women.
Victim and perpetrator: Lord’s Resistance Army commander Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court.
EPA-EFE/Peter Dejong / POOL
Sex and gender-based offences have become an increasing focus of war crimes trials at the International Criminal Court.
‘Night commuter’ girls in Gulu, norhern Uganda in 2006. The girls walk into the city after dark to evade capture by the Lords Resistance Army.
EPA/Kim Ludbrook
Their mothers were forcibly married or raped during Uganda’s vicious civil war. Now these children are ‘non people’.
Former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo attends a confirmation of charges hearing at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
EPA/Michael Kooren
African leaders who have sought ICC involvement have all seen the court as being beneficial to the survival of their governments.
Rebels from the Lord’s Resistance Army making their way to a camp in southern Sudan. The group forcibly recruits children.
EPA/Stephen Morrison
Natural resources are an important factor in explaining why some rebel groups forcibly recruit children into their ranks.
People in Uganda bear long term physical, emotional, social and economic scars from the years of deadly conflict.
EPA/Stephen Morrison
Post conflict recovery is largely driven by the assumption that as soon as conflict ends, normality returns.