The survivors later testified that their side had fired only fourteen rounds in the conflict, although one of them hit Jones in the side.
A survivor testified that the leader of the group had made a mistake about the time of the tides.
After the war, many survivors testified of her notoriously brutal beatings.
Breaking the taboo of silence and shame, more than 100 survivors testified, their stories at last receiving a public hearing.
The survivors who caught sight of him in those last moments testified to his outward calm and resolution.
All the survivors still alive testified at the trial.
On the contrary, survivors testified as to the apparent gentleness of the impact.
The military had initially said the dead were Colombian guerrillas but two survivors testified all were unarmed civilians.
A survivor testified that the station announced that armed Tutsi fighters were in the mosque.
Together she and Mr. Williams bought 55 bottles, which survivors later testified were handed to them through holes in the truck.