In post-war public hearings, Sierra Leoneans shared with their
compatriots stories of how rebel fighters cut children into
pieces in front of their parents, and forced people to drink the
blood of slaughtered family members.
Four years on, the Sierra Leonean people are still learning how
to move on from such horrors and their causes. Punishing
perpetrators is part of that recovery but, as Sierra Leoneans
are quick to point out, only a part.
With ex-Liberian president Charles Taylor behind bars and
awaiting trial for war crimes committed in Sierra Leone’s brutal
1991-2002 civil war, one of Africa’s biggest ‘big men’ has been
halted. Taylor’s impending trial before a UN-backed Special
Court is set to be the first time a former African president
faces an international tribunal for crimes allegedly committed
while in office. If convicted at his trial in The Hague, Taylor
will serve out his sentence in a British jail.
Alhaji Ahmed Jusu Jarka, who had both hands hacked off by rebels
whose guns were allegedly supplied by Taylor, says many Sierra
Leoneans are happy Taylor will finally be judged. “This is what
we have been looking for. Everybody is anxious for the Special
Court to try him.”
But the book should not stop there, says Jusu Jarka. He and many
other Sierra Leoneans stress that while Taylor’s trial is
important, other means of seeking justice, such as Sierra
Leone’s truth commission, should not be sidelined.
Unique to Sierra Leone’s post-war recovery is the simultaneous
operation of the Special Court and a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC), both established under the 1999 Lome peace
accord. While the Special Court deals with “those most
responsible” for war crimes in Sierra Leone, the TRC provided a
forum of the multitude of crimes committed at the grassroots and
as well as war-related murder, torture and rape.
National civil society and rights groups say implementing the
recommendations of the TRC, which wrapped up its work in 2004,
is vital to tackling conditions that contributed to the outbreak
of war and which persist today: corruption and lack of
accountability in government, weak human rights protections, and
crippling poverty and unemployment.
The ‘hybrid’ Special Court, created by an agreement between the
UN and the Sierra Leonean government, comprises judges and staff
from in and outside the country, and covers violations of both
local and international law. Taylor is one of just 13 people
indicted to date.
By contrast, the broader truth commission was created to probe
the causes and nature of the violence, establish an impartial
record of human rights abuses, and promote reconciliation and
healing to prevent a repetition of such acts.
In 2004, the commission published sweeping recommendations for
reparations for war victims, action against corruption and human
rights protections.
“The TRC recommendations are more relevant to the Sierra Leonean
people today than the Special Court,” said Oluniyi Robbin-Coker,
a Sierra Leonean civil society and rights activist who has led a
push for the Sierra Leone government to implement the TRC
recommendations.
TRC Chairman, Bishop Joseph Christian Humper added that their
report must not remain mere words on paper. “For us to leave it
on the shelf would mean business as usual.”
Successful experiment?
Debate continues over whether running the court and the Truth
Commission at the same time is the best approach. Some observers
say citizens did not fully understand the roles and interaction
of the two bodies. Despite the court’s limited mandate to try
only a handful of the worst offenders, many combatants guilty of
offences were afraid to speak to the TRC for fear of indictment.
For many, like human rights activist and former head of the
national forum for human rights, Joseph Rahall, running the two
at the same time is not the way to go.
“It undermined the ability of the TRC to actually get the
information it could have gotten, if the Special Court had not
been operating, because many of the combatants shied away from
giving testimony at the TRC,” Rahall said. “Reconciliation was
not achieved for a lot of these combatants because they did not
come out and confess and ask for forgiveness. They are still
finding it difficult to go back to their communities.”
A civil society coalition in Sierra Leone – the Working Group on
Truth and Reconciliation (WG) – says efforts to clarify the
relationship between the TRC and the court did not succeed.
“Every Sierra Leonean we interviewed referred to the way in
which ordinary people were confused by the relationship between
the two institutions until very late in the TRC process, fearing
indictment by the Special Court should they cooperate with the
TRC,” the WG said in a report entitled “Searching for Truth and
Reconciliation in Sierra Leone”.
Sierra Leonean student, Josephus Williams, agreed: “If it was
the TRC before the Special Court then maybe a number of rebels
would have come forward to tell us what happened in the bush.”
In an interview with the civil society group that questioned
Sierra Leoneans in 2005 about the process, one woman said: “I
was told by the elders that I would go to prison if I gave a
statement to the TRC. There is no support in the village for the
Special Court. I now regret not talking to the TRC. I would
still like to tell my story.”
Sierra Leone’s simultaneous approach was seen as a potential
model for other post-conflict settings, but the civil society
group cautions that it should not automatically be seen as the
best route. “We are worried that an ‘official view’ may take
shape at the international level that the ‘experiment’ was a
success and that concurrence will uncritically be endorsed as
‘best practice,’” the WG report said.
The civil society working group says it hopes its report will be
just the first step “to what should be a much wider and deeper
debate in Sierra Leone and internationally”.
Some in neighbouring Liberia, which launched its own Truth
Commission in June, are calling for a tribunal to run at the
same time. Sierra Leone TRC chairman, Humper, says Liberians
must study lessons learned from Sierra Leone and other
countries, and choose the best approach for Liberia based on its
own circumstances. “They have to decide on the right route to
sustainable peace and development and lifting up the masses.”
Whatever the observers’ view of running the two bodies
concurrently, most see both mechanisms as critical to healing
and progress.
“The TRC and the Special Court are on a journey,” Humper said.
“They are moving in one direction: a place called ‘justice and
peace’. But they are taking two different routes.” He said the
two can be effective simultaneously if the people are properly
educated about their roles. He added that the two bodies must be
given equal attention: "Then and only then will we arrive at our
destination.”
Rights activist Rahall agreed: “Both mechanisms are vital.
Impunity had taken over the country, so for it to be gotten rid
of was vital.”
Arrest, trial of ‘local hero’ sows dismay
The Special Court engendered scepticism among some Sierra
Leoneans, with the 2003 arrest and subsequent trial of Samuel
Hinga Norman, who led a civil force against rebels bent on
toppling President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The court is trying
leaders from all three of the main warring factions: the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels, the rebel Armed Forces
Revolutionary Council, and the pro-government Civil Defence
Forces (CDF).
Hinga Norman led the CDF militia, made up mostly of traditional
hunters who battled alongside Kabbah’s soldiers. While the
militia is charged with torturing and killing civilians during
the war, Hinga Norman’s arrest sparked debate over the
legitimacy of the court and its mandate. Many see Hinga Norman
as a local hero who fought off the dreaded RUF rebels, and think
he should be congratulated, not condemned, whatever the CDF’s
methods.
“This is why I do not like the Special Court,” said Mabel Sesay,
a trader in Sierra Leone. “You mean the man who sacrificed his
life to save us is the one they have arrested?”
In 2004, the then deputy prosecutor Desmond de Silva, spoke of
the Hinga Norman trial controversy, and told the BBC: “I’m
afraid you can fight on the same side of the angels and
nevertheless commit crimes against humanity.”
Student Williams – who claimed that he suffered at the hands of
the Kamajors, the largest group within the CDF – said no matter
one’s cause, the killing and maiming of innocents must be
punished. “I cannot argue the issue of who bears the greatest
responsibility, but nobody has the right, no matter on what side
you are fighting, to take the life of innocent people – if you
do that then you must pay.”
Miles to go to justice, peace
Meanwhile, countless wrongs must be righted in Sierra Leone.
Unemployed youths continue to roam the streets, and amputees -
shocked and angry that the very ex-combatants who hacked off
their limbs have seen more benefits than they have – are still
fighting for a satisfactory compensation package. According to
Humper, frustrated former fighters, without a path to
reintegrate into society, are "a threat to security".
Transparency and accountability in government remain fairly
weak, said Marieke Wierda, the Sierra Leone expert with the New
York-based International Center for Transitional Justice. And
national rights activists say the government has yet to put in
place a viable TRC follow-up process and human rights
commission. The civil society working group says in its report:
“If there is not a credible and effective follow-up phase, many
Sierra Leoneans will legitimately ask whether the TRC was ever
more than an expensive ‘talking shop’.”