War crimes court finds Charles
Taylor guilty
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Decision on former Liberian leader
is first ever judgement of a former African head of state by an international
court.
Last Modified: 26
Apr 2012 15:10
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The former Liberian president was convicted of
aiding and abetting 11 war crimes in Sierra Leone and Liberia [Reuters]
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A
UN-backed international court has convicted former Liberian president Charles
Taylor of war crimes - the first African head of state to be found guilty by
an international tribunal.
Taylor,
64, was charged with 11 counts of war crimes including murder, rape,
conscripting child soldiers and sexual slavery during intertwined wars in
Liberia and Sierra Leone, in which more than 50,000 people were killed.
The
Special Court for Sierra Leone, in the Hague, the Netherlands, found him
guilty of all of the charges on Thursday.
"The
trial chamber unanimously finds you guilty of aiding and abetting [all of
these] crimes," presiding judge Richard Lussick said in court.
Lussick
then read out the eleven charges, including acts of terrorism, murder, rape,
sexual slavery, enslavement, conscripting child soldiers and pillage.
According
to the court, Taylor, who was president of Liberia from 1997 to 2003,
supported and gave orders to Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels in the
11-year civil war in neighbouring Sierra Leone that killed about 50,000
people.
"[According
to the court] he was an aider, an abetter and a planner," Al Jazeera's
Barnaby Phillips said from outside the court in the Hague.
"He
was not, however... the mastermind, the boss, the overall commander, of the
RUF.
"RUF
military commanders did not necessarily see themselves as subordinate to
Charles Taylor," our correspondent said.
The
prosecution said that the RUF undermined a ceasefire agreement in 1999,
prolonging the war for another three years, and that Taylor financed their
war effort from the proceeds of "blood diamonds" mined illegally in
Sierra Leone.
"The
Taylor verdict is a watershed moment, however it turns out," said
Richard Dekker, head of the international justice programme at Human Rights
Watch.
"As
president, Taylor is believed to have been responsible for so much murder and
mayhem which unfolded in Sierra Leone. His was a shadow that loomed across
the region, in the Ivory Coast, in Sierra Leone and Liberia."
Taylor
has denied the charges.
Prosecution challenge
The
courts have earlier convicted RUF fighters of crimes against humanity,
including rape, torture and terrorism.
Civilians
were mutilated during the conflict, their arms being cut off above the hand
[known by fighters as "long sleeves"] or above the elbow
["short sleeves"].
Trial
witnesses described seeing children and pregnant women being shot,
disembowelled or mutilated in a process aimed at creating terror in the
civilian population.
But
the challenge was to link Taylor to these crimes.
"The
accused never set foot in Sierra Leone when these crimes were being
committed. He never directly, physically committed these crimes," Brenda
Hollis, the court's chief prosecutor, told the Reuters news agency.
"In
a domestic case, you have to prove there was a murder, we have the added
level of proving linkage."
Taylor
is likely to appeal the verdict, but if the court sentences him in May as
planned, he will serve his prison sentence in Britain.
The
location and category of the prison will depend on the details of the verdict
and sentencing.
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Source:
Al Jazeera and
agencies
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Thursday, April 26, 2012
War crimes court finds Charles Taylor guilty
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