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Charles Taylor gets 50 years for war crimes
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May 30, 2012
Original URL: http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Charles_Taylor_gets_50_years_for_war_crimes



Charles Taylor, the former President of Liberia, has been today handed a
50-year sentence for war crimes in neighbouring Sierra Leone. The court
previously held he financed a war which left an estimated 50,000 dead.

Taylor, 64, is considered likely to remain incarcerated for life if the
sentence stands, but his legal team has vowed to appeal. The prosecution
sought an 80-year sentence. Taylor's is the first conviction of a head
of state by an international tribunal since the fallout from World War
Two, when the Nuremberg trials were underway.

The Special Court for Sierra Leone, which is operating from the
Netherlands to avoid unrest if Taylor were tried in Africa, spent more
than a year deliberating before convicting Taylor last month. Acquitted
of ordering crimes or of acting in a joint enterprise to conduct them,
he was nonetheless convicted of aiding and abetting the offences. There
were 94 prosecution witnesses and 21 for the defence.

The allegations date to civil war in Sierra Leone, which ran from 1991
to 2002. Taylor, who had been a warlord since the '80s, backed the rebel
Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Taylor was elected Liberian president
in 1997 after a different civil war concluded. 

Six years later he was ousted when an arrest warrant was issued and fled
to Nigeria. He was arrested there in 2006 whilst again trying to flee
and went on trial later that year. Taylor, who had been facing a
rebellion against him since 1999 in Liberia, received training from late
Libyan ruler Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime.

Testimony included claims that Taylor-backed fighters adorned roads with
human intestines and ate human flesh. One claimed to have seen Taylor
himself eat human liver, something Taylor denied. One described asking
RUF rebels to sever his only hand in exchange for his young son's life.

Further allegations said teenage children were involved in the fighting
and that Taylor sold illegally mined diamonds to finance arms purchases
for the RUF. Western celebrities Naomi Campbell, a model, and Mia
Farrow, an actress, described an incident at a charity dinner held by
Nelson Mandella, then South Africa's head, in 1997. Campbell and Farrow
said Taylor gifted Campbell a number of diamonds. Taylor is claimed to
have ordered seizure of Sierra Leone's diamond deposits by RUF soldiers.

It was claimed in court that child soldiers were used in conflict, as
diamond mine guards, and to carry out amputations. Allegations of forced
amputation were made. Taylor was convicted in late April of aiding and
abetting forcing amputation, as well as rape, murder, child soldier
recruitment, sexual slavery, and pillaging.

The court's panel of judges, presided over by Judge Richard Lussick,
heard a 30-minute address by Taylor at an earlier sentencing hearing. "I
express my sadness and sympathy for crimes suffered by individuals and
families in Sierra Leone," said Taylor, adding he acted "with honour"
and as a peacemaker, asking for "reconciliation, not retribution" in
sentencing. Taylor also gave evidence at his own trial, spending seven
months of testimony saying he strove for peace in the region.

Lussick noted the panel felt 80 years to be excessive given that Taylor
was cleared of directly carrying out offences. However, the court found
other factors aggravated the case: In particular, he was a head of
state. "Leadership must be carried out by example by the prosecution of
crimes, not the commission of crimes," Lussick said in court. "The
special status of Mr. Taylor as a head of state puts him in a different
category of offenders for the purpose of sentencing," the judge said,
with the convict "in a class of his own".

"[His] positions both as president of Liberia and within the west
African regional bodies distinguish him from any other individual that
has appeared before this court," Prosecutor Brenda Hollis said at a
sentencing hearing. "Taylor's abuse of his authority and influence is
especially egregious given that west African leaders repeatedly
entrusted him with a role to facilitate peace." She had claimed "No
significant mitigating circumstances exist in this case."

Lussick also told the court today Taylor stood convicted of "aiding and
abetting, as well as planning, some of the most heinous and brutal
crimes recorded in human history". "The lives of many more innocent
civilians in Sierra Leone were lost or destroyed as a direct result of
his actions." These were, the court said, crimes of the "utmost gravity
in terms of scale and brutality". The prosecution had claimed Taylor
followed no more motivation beyond simple greed and power lust. Lussick
said today the judges were unanimous in imposing a term of 50 years.

The defence had called for a sentence that gave Taylor a realistic
prospect of eventual release. They also noted he is set to be sent to
the United Kingdom to serve sentence. The defendant would be "culturally
isolated", facing a "punishment within a punishment". At least one war
crimes convict has been attacked in prison in the UK, and it is
anticipated Taylor will end up in a high-security prison after the UK
Foreign Office has promised to uphold an agreement to imprison him there
made by ex-Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett.

"The sentence is clearly excessive, clearly disproportionate to his
circumstances, his age and his health and does not take into account the
fact that he stepped down from office voluntarily," said counsel for the
accused Morris Anya. The prosecution may also appeal the sentencing, and
the verdict itself with intent to increase Taylor's convictions beyond
merely aiding and abetting. The defence also intends to appeal the
verdict. 

The appeals process means Taylor is likely to remain at The Hague for
several months, where the court has been holding sessions in nearby
Leidschendam. He is the last defendant to face trial before the Special
Court, which has previously convicted and sentenced eight other
prominent figures in the conflict.

==Related news==
* Liberian ex-President Charles Taylor convicted in war crimes trial
== Sources == 

* http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/31/world/africa/charles-taylor-sentenced-to-50-years-for-war-crimes.html?_r=1
* http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5i9zjHEu23ufPkjI39bkcp2ugKqEQ?docId=N0045101338372010458A
* http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/30/charles-taylor-liberia-war-crimes
* http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/liberia/9299727/War-crimes-court-hands-Liberias-Charles-Taylor-50-year-jail-term.html