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West Africa: Taylor must face justice |
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Human Rights Watch
August 11, 2003
New York. Nigerian authorities must arrest Liberian
ex-President Charles Taylor and deliver him to the Special Court
for Sierra Leone, Human Rights Watch said today. Taylor accepted
Nigeria’s offer of safe haven today and left for Nigeria shortly
after handing over power to Vice-President Moses Blah. However,
this guarantee of Taylor’s physical safety must not shield Taylor
from prosecution before the Sierra Leone Special Court, said Human
Rights Watch.
“Taylor is an indicted war criminal accused of the most heinous
of abuses,” said Rory Mungoven, global advocacy director for Human
Rights Watch. “Amnesty for Taylor would flout international law
and would be an affront to his innumerable victims.”
Taylor was elected president of Liberia in 1997 after a
seven-year civil war. He soon gained international notoriety for
his forces’ brutal abuses of civilians and for his use of child
soldiers organized in “Small Boy Units.” In addition, Taylor’s
support for the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone
contributed to the deaths, rapes and mutilations of thousands of
civilians there, prompting United Nations sanctions on his regime.
Taylor’s forces have also been implicated in conflicts in
neighboring Guinea and Cote d’Ivoire.
On June 4, the Special Court for Sierra Leone “unsealed” its
indictment against Taylor. He is charged as one of those “bearing
the greatest responsibility” for war crimes, crimes against
humanity, and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law committed during Sierra Leone’s civil war. The
alleged crimes include murder, taking hostages, rape,
extermination, sexual slavery, and the use of child soldiers.
“The U.N. Security Council has called on all states to
cooperate with the Sierra Leone Special Court,” said Mungoven.
“Nigeria must not reject the Security Council’s request by
harboring an indicted war criminal.”
International law does not accept amnesty for atrocities that
amount to crimes against humanity or war crimes. The Special
Court’s statute and implementing legislation provide that neither
amnesty nor a suspect’s official capacity is a bar to prosecution.
The Special Court was established by agreement between the
United Nations and Sierra Leone and is designed to function for
three years. The Special Court has the power to prosecute those
“who bear the greatest responsibility” for serious violations of
international humanitarian law and certain violations of Sierra
Leone law committed in Sierra Leone since November 30, 1996.
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