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News Stories
May
17 2000 Following this morning's arrest of Foday Sankoh in Sierra
Leone, Amnesty International reiterated its call for all those responsible
of committing human rights abuses to be brought to justice. Amnesty International has always maintained that the
viability of the peace agreement, signed in July 1999, was undermined from
the outset by providing a blanket amnesty. The human rights organization
opposed the amnesty because it violated international law and failed to
address the gross human rights abuses, including war crimes and crimes
against humanity, committed during the conflict. The RUF has clearly failed to abide by the terms of the
agreement which it signed. Neither RUF members nor anyone else should
continue to benefit from the amnesty in that agreement. The killings,
mutilations, rape and abductions which continued after the amnesty are, in
any case, not covered by the amnesty and those responsible must be brought
to justice. The amnesty provided in the peace agreement precludes the
prosecution of anyone in Sierra Leone for human rights abuses during the
internal armed conflict. Even if the amnesty is not annulled by the Sierra Leone
government, the international community must comply with its obligations
under international law to bring to justice those responsible for serious
violations of human rights or international humanitarian law. Any state may
request the extradition of suspected perpetrators of human rights abuses for
trial in its own courts. If the Sierra Leone government does not submit the
cases of such suspects to its own courts, it must nevertheless comply with
any extradition request. The human rights organization stated that any such trial
must conform to international fair trial standards and not impose the death
penalty. Amnesty International firmly believes that the continuing
political and human rights crises in Sierra Leone will not be resolved while
the perpetrators of human rights abuses enjoy impunity. Human rights abuses, documented by Amnesty International, committed by rebel forces in Sierra Leone both during the conflict and since the signing of the peace agreement include: killings, cutting off limbs -- most frequently arms and legs -- rape and other forms of sexual abuse and abductions.
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(c) 1999- The Children and Armed Conflict Unit |
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