Prosecutors in the DRC are seeking a 20-year prison sentence for Vital Kamerhe, President Felix Tshisekedi’s chief of staff. Kamerhe is currently on trial for his alleged role in the embezzlement of more than $50m of public funds
The prosecution on Thursday also asked that Kamerhe be disqualified from holding public office for 10 years after completing his sentence. Also, the prosecution requested the seizure of his wife’s assets as well as those of other family members.
Vital Kamerhe is the most powerful politician to face corruption charges in the DRC. He however denies any wrongdoing.
The veteran political figure reportedly made a pact to back Tshisekedi in a 2018 election in the expectation of succeeding him. His supporters say the case is politically motivated, aimed at blocking his chances of challenging Tshisekedi at the next election in 2023.
Kamerhe, who has been detained since April 8, and two co-defendants are accused of embezzling state funds intended to finance major public works.
Aggravated Corruption charges against Kamerhe
A 20-year prison sentence was also sought against one of Kamerhe’s co-accused, Lebanese contractor Jammal Samih, 78. Samih will be deported at the end of his sentence.
The prosecutor’s office, which took nearly two hours to present its case, upheld a money laundering charge against both defendants and requested an additional sentence for “aggravated corruption”. However, the office added that the total prison term should not exceed 20 years.
Related: Kamerhe Vital, DRC President’s Chief of Staff on Trial for Corruption
Prosecutors said Vital Kamerhe and his wife, who married in February 2019, had acquired and renovated a mansion in France for more than one million euros ($1.1m).
Vital Kamerhe’s Paris-based lawyers said the sentence request was unconstitutional. They also announced that they had referred the matter to the United Nations’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.
“The proceedings mention the embezzlement of public money. But there is no evidence of any illicit financial flows,” Jean-Marie Kabengela and Pierre-Olivier Sur wrote in a statement.
Involvement in Judge’s Death
The two lawyers also said Kamerhe’s safety was in danger in the jail where he was being held. There are rumours that Kamerhe is responsible for the sudden death of the trial’s presiding judge last month.
Police said Judge Raphael Yanyi died from a heart attack, and the results of an autopsy are still pending.
In hearings last week that ran almost 13 hours, Kamerhe insisted he never entered a private contract with Samih.
He claimed that nothing was done “without the knowledge” of Tshisekedi. Kamerhe also insisted he was not in office when the contract at the centre of the allegations was signed in 2018.
A government adviser called by the prosecution during the hearing slammed Kamerhe’s comments as an insult to the president. The date of the verdict is not yet known