Passy Mubalama
IWPR-trained reporter
IWPR-trained reporter
IWPR-trained reporter
IWPR-trained reporter
I was born in Goma, in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC, in April 1984. I grew up and studied there. My family comes from South Kivu, a region prone to militia violence.
Because of this insecurity, poverty has increased in the region in the last decade and the population has become more and more vulnerable, particularly women and children. I come from a big family of 12 children, seven girls and five boys, and I am the eldest.
I have worked as a journalist in Goma for the past seven years. I began my career by doing internships at local radio stations in the city, including Radio Grands Lacs and the Radio Liberté. For a time, I also worked in television. After that, I was hired by Syfia Grands Lacs, a Belgium press agency which works with local journalists in DRC, Rwanda and Burundi. In June 2010, I became an IWPR reporter, producing radio and print reports on subjects such as the rule of law, reconciliation, justice, human rights and women's rights.
I wanted to become a journalist because where I come from there was almost no female reporters. Therefore, women could not make their voices heard despite all the injustice and human rights violations they have to endure. I admired good journalists and found the job fascinating but also wanted to expose wrongs and to bring about change.
What has been most beneficial for me has been the training I received in radio production and also my internship in The Hague, where I was able to work closely with IWPR journalists and get a better understanding of how the International Criminal Court works. I was especially pleased to be able to produce reports on the Bemba trial and to know that these reports were being read by an international audience.
Public hearings strengthen local judiciary, but some experts say they don’t reflect full range of crimes.
Campaigners say court has improved its record on prosecuting gender-based violence but obstacles to justice remain.
Law ignored in favour of traditional view that wives have no right to husband’s property.
Deployment of newly recruited magistrates snagged, seemingly leaving judiciary in east as flawed as ever.
IWPR trainee who reports on ICC-related issues in eastern DRC pays visit to The Hague to witness firsthand the trials she follows back home.
Some activists say that the country is still too violent for its abolition.
Prosecutors allege Congolese soldiers led by Bemba committed widespread abuses in CAR.
Poverty forces thousands of children into taking on exhausting and dangerous work.
Suspected criminals killed after locals disillusioned with justice system take law into their own hands.