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Mixed Feelings Over Charles
Taylor's Transfer to The Hague
By: Lansana Fofana
June 20, 2006 - (IPS) Former Liberian head of state
Charles Taylor was flown to The Hague, Tuesday, to face trial for
war crimes and crimes against humanity associated with the conflict
that took place in Sierra Leone during the 1990s. The ex-president
was previously held in that country's capital, Freetown, where a
United Nations-backed war crimes tribunal has charged him on 11
counts.
The Special Court for Sierra Leone is still responsible
for trying Taylor, even though he will now be housed at the detention
unit of the International Criminal Court in Scheveningen, near The
Hague. Taylor was transferred on the authority of the U.N. Security
Council, in a bid to maintain regional stability. "It is clear
to us that Charles Taylor still does command massive support in
the sub-region. We need to build on the hard-won peace here rather
than prepare its collapse," a British diplomat in Freetown
told IPS, Tuesday.
The former leader was indicted while still in office
on charges that include unlawful killings, recruitment of child
soldiers, sexual violence and attacks on U.N. staff in Sierra Leone.
In the face of international pressure and renewed civil war that
had seen rebels close in on Liberia's capital of Monrovia, he accepted
asylum in Nigeria in August 2003 -- but was handed to the court
in Sierra Leone in March of this year. Taylor stands accused of
bearing the greatest responsibility for atrocities that occurred
in Sierra Leone towards the end of the last century.
The war crimes tribunal is specifically concerned
with the period beginning Nov. 30, 1996. This was the day that a
failed peace agreement was signed by government and the Revolutionary
United Front (RUF) which had launched its rebellion in March 1991,
going on to kill, rape and mutilate thousands of civilians in the
course of an 11-year war. RUF combatants became notorious for their
practice of amputating the limbs of victims. The rebels entered
Sierra Leone from Liberia with the alleged backing of Taylor, who
is accused of supplying them with weapons in exchange for so-called
"blood diamonds". His activities have reportedly also
posed a threat to security in neighbouring Guinea, and Cote d'Ivoire.
"Taking Taylor for trial in The Hague is good.
He is powerful and if tried here, his supporters may resurface and
come finish us off," said Lamin Jusu-Jaka, chairman of Sierra
Leone's amputee association, who had both his arms cut off by machete-wielding
rebels. A government spokesperson agreed. "This is a welcome
relief," the official said of Taylor's transfer. "At least
the people of Sierra Leone and the entire region (can) now go to
sleep in peace." But these sentiments are not shared by everyone.
"The victims of the war, and for that matter all Sierra Leoneans,
would have been delighted to see Taylor put on trial here (in Sierra
Leone)," said John Caulker of the Freetown-based rights group,
Forum of Conscience. "He was indicted here and the alleged
crimes were committed here. So the people have been deprived of
seeing their number one tormentor being publicly tried."
The Special Court for Sierra Leone, headquartered
in Freetown, commenced operations in 2003. To date, it has indicted
11 people. They include leaders of the RUF, the Civil Defence Force
militants who fought alongside government during the civil war,
and three commanders of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council --
the military junta which toppled the government of President Ahmad
Tejan Kabbah in 1997, and joined forces with the RUF. The starting
date for Taylor's trial is still unknown, and he has made just one
appearance before the court in Freetown, when he pleaded not guilty
to charges against him.
Officials of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
and several hundred witnesses will travel to The Hague to enable
Taylor's trial to be conducted. If convicted, he will be jailed
in Britain. Taylor's rule in Liberia was also characterised by violence.
He won presidential elections in 1997 after having launched a bush
war against Samuel Doe's government that is said to have claimed
upwards of 150,000 lives. In December 1989, Taylor and the rebel
National Patriotic Front of Liberia entered the country from Cote
d'Ivoire, eventually capturing large swathes of territory. The Liberian
civil war was marked by extensive human rights abuses, which continued
after Taylor became head of state.
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=33700
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