What does it take to make a dictator answer for his crimes? Hissène Habré, the former despot of Chad, had terrorized, tortured, and killed on a horrific scale over eight bloody years in power--all while enjoying full American and Western support. After Habré's overthrow, his victims and their supporters were determined to see him held responsible for his atrocities. Their quest for justice would be long, tense, and unnerving, but they would not back down.
To Catch a Dictator is a dramatic insider's account of the hunt for Habré and his momentous trial. The human rights lawyer Reed Brody recounts how he and an international team of investigators, legal experts, and victims worked across three continents to unearth evidence and witnesses, petition courts and skeptical governments, and rally public opinion. They faced many obstacles and constant threats. One of Brody's Chadian colleagues was gravely injured in a bomb attack, and another had to seek asylum in the United States. Habré fought back bitterly, drawing on secret bank accounts and extensive political connections to preserve his life of luxurious exile. Yet Brody and his allies ultimately triumphed: Habré became the first former head of state to be convicted of crimes against humanity in the courts of another country. This fast-paced, suspenseful book shows that there is nothing inevitable about the impunity that too often protects the powerful and that even the worst tyrants can be brought to justice.
The book also features a foreword by Jacqueline Moudeïna, the lead lawyer for Hissène Habré's victims, who received the Right Livelihood Award (the "alternative Nobel Peace Prize") in 2011.
Los Angeles Review of Books
"Reed Brody tells the story of the long struggle to bring Habré to trial and gives a detailed account of the many legal, political, and personal problems that had to be overcome to get there." @dougmerlino reviews "To Catch a Dictator." https://t.co/MPfnIAFcb6 https://t.co/9ZeroEXXz0
US & international Prosecutor, Author“To Catch a Dictator” reedbrody@gmail.com 🇭🇺
Grateful for review by @_MiaSwart in African Yearbook on Int'l Humanitarian Law "inspiring.. a compelling & highly personal tale of...bringing Habré to justice against all odds. The tools of this trade are patience, nerves of steel, blood, sweat and tears" https://t.co/StHG4zXpcf https://t.co/ajk3SIhnmz
A riveting account of how a band of unrelenting victims and their allies were able to turn the tables on a brutal tyrant who thought he had gotten away with his crimes. I saw the story play out in real time as Senegal organized one of the most important trials in African history, and it was every bit as extraordinary as it appears on the page. Reed Brody's engrossing book will restore your hope in the possibility of justice.
--Aminata Touré, former prime minister of SenegalTo Catch a Dictator reads like a gripping espionage thriller, except the whole thing is about true-life crime on an international scale. This definitive account of the origins and conduct of the Hissène Habré trial abounds with dictators, spies, assassinations, and political intrigue.
--Craig Etcheson, author of Extraordinary Justice: Law, Politics, and the Khmer Rouge Tribunals