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The record for this date is anchored by Hissène Habré, the Chadian dictator who ruled from 1982 to 1990 and whose political police, the Documentation and Security Directorate, was responsible for the systematic torture and killing of tens of thousands of people. Habré's eventual prosecution before a specially constituted African Union tribunal in Senegal — resulting in a life sentence in 2016 — made him the first former head of state convicted of crimes against humanity by an African court, a landmark that distinguished his case from those of many contemporaries who escaped comparable accountability.

March 27, 1942 - Hissène Habré

His presidency endured eight years through a combination of external backing and internal terror, with France and the United States providing material support in exchange for his role as a bulwark against Muammar Gaddafi's Libya. The instrument of his domestic control was the Documentation and Security Directorate, whose systematic abuses — documented in detail after his fall — eventually made him the subject of a landmark African prosecution. A Senegalese court convicted him of crimes against humanity and war crimes in 2016, making the case one of the first in which an African head of state was tried on the continent for atrocities committed during his rule.

Read more …March 27, 1942 - Hissène Habré

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