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Joint statement by Carol Bellamy, Executive
Director of UNICEF; Sadako Ogata, UN High Commissioner for Refugees; Olara Otunnu, Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict; Mary Robinson, UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights and Sergio Vieira de Mello the UN Emergency Relief
Coordinator
17 June 1998
The current crisis in Sierra Leone is a brutal reminder to the delegations now meeting in
Rome of the urgent need for an effective international criminal court to provide justice
for the appalling violations of human rights in that country and elsewhere.
Since April this year, rebel forces in the east, north and more recently the west of
Sierra Leone have engaged in a terror campaign involving the systematic laceration,
mutilation or severing of limbs of non-combatants including children and the elderly.
The perpetrators of these atrocities are
deaf to appeals from the international community. Despite the willingness of the
government, there is little likelihood of the judicial system in the war-shattered country
being able to bring these criminals to justice. This raises the prospect of yet another
round of mindless violence going unpunished.
A standing international criminal court empowered and resourced to take action when
national systems are either unable or unwilling would provide a credible deterrent. We
believe that much of the criminal violence in armed conflicts and rebellions is the result
of impunity.
It is no longer sufficient for humanitarian and human rights officials to denounce
atrocities while unable to prevent their recurrence. The International Criminal Court is
intended to be the first effective weapon against the culture of impunity which has
fuelled cycles of violence in every part of the world over the past decades. The brutality
in Sierra Leone is a harsh reminder that the diplomatic exchanges in Rome have flesh and
blood, life and death consequences for people living in fear in many parts of the world.
United Nations officials in Sierra Leone report that, since April, 500 people have been
admitted to hospitals after brutal rebel attacks. These people say that for every person
hospitalised there are another five either dead or incapable of reaching help.
Most victims receiving treatment are men, aged from eight to 60 years, but there are also
female victims. The youngest amputee is a six year old girl whose arm was severed. Other
victims report babies being taken from their mother's arms, doused with petrol and set on
fire. There are numerous reports of rape, including one of the multiple rape of a 12 year
old girl. Doctors at one hospital say the lacerations on the head of a 60 year old woman
are the result of a failed attempt to behead her.
The actions of the rebel forces constitute outrageous violations of the human rights of
the victims and their families. They are also grave breaches of international humanitarian
law. They can achieve nothing good and serve only to inflict further terror and pain on
people who have suffered too much already. These acts, creating a climate of violence and
fear, have forced hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leoneans to seek refuge in neighbouring
Liberia and Guinea.
We urge the delegations now meeting in Rome to study carefully the situation in Sierra
Leone and to ensure that the Statute they adopt will result in a court able to combat
impunity, bring justice and contribute to a lasting peace in this country.
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