Charles A. Adeogun-Phillips

His mandate was to lead teams of international criminal lawyers and investigators in the prosecution of persons who bore the greatest responsibility for the massacres in the Kibuye, Bisesero and Bugesera regions – the main Tutsi strongholds[6][7] during the 1994 Rwandan genocide.Charles also led a team of international prosecutors in the retrial of Lt. Col Tharcisse Muvunyi, between 17 June and 2 October 2009, on the charges of direct and public incitement to commit genocide.[24] However, on 29 August 2008, the Appeals Chamber reversed all the convictions against the defendant and ordered a retrial on the charge of direct and public incitement to commit genocide.His work on behalf of the survivors and victims of the Rwandan genocide has been the subject of several books including Court of Remorse[35] by Thierry Cruvellier (Wisconsin Press 2010); Guilty Pleas in International Criminal Law[36] by Nancy Combs and Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals[37] by André Klip and Goran Sluiter (Intersentia 2005).[40][41] He has also served as a visiting lecturer on international humanitarian law at the National Defence College, Nigeria and at the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies.[47] In 2013, while representing the outspoken Tanzanian opposition politician, the late Rev Christopher Mtikila, in a landmark and precedent-setting case against the United Republic of Tanzania before the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, he successfully challenged the Tanzanian constitutional prohibition against independent candidature for election into public office as a violation of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights.[55][56][57] Since 2017, Charles has been retained by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria to investigate, trace and recover over 5 trillion Naira (14 billion US Dollars) currently owed to the Nigerian Government, following its acquisition in 2011, of non-performing loans from some of the country’s ailing commercial banks.
Charles at UNHQ, New York, with Under-Secretary-General Hassan Jallow, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and UN Under-Secretary-General Adama Dieng
Charles A. Adeogun-Phillips working at the Ntarama church massacre site in Rwanda
Charles A. Adeogun-Phillips during a UN court hearing
Alma materLondonUnited Nationsgenocidewar crimesUniversity of LagosOsun StateFederal Republic of NigeriaCape CoastRepublic of GhanaAbeokutaOgun StateYorubaC.M.S. Grammar School, LagosReptonWarwick UniversitySchool of Oriental and African StudiesUniversity of LondonSupreme Court of NigeriaCarla Del PonteKibuyeBiseseroBugeseraJustice Hassan B. JallowNurembergPhilip GourevitchWe Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our FamiliesNtarama churchNyamata massacre siteRadovan KaradžićSaddam HusseinO. J. SimpsonRon GoldmanFrançois RouxSteven Kay, QCSlobodan MiloševićNancy Combswhite-collar crimeUniversity of Wisconsin Press