LEIDSCHENDAM, Netherlands, Thursday
A UN-backed appeals court today upheld Liberian ex-president and warlord Charles Taylor’s 50-year sentence for arming rebels during Sierra Leone’s brutal 1990s civil war.
A UN-backed appeals court today upheld Liberian ex-president and warlord Charles Taylor’s 50-year sentence for arming rebels during Sierra Leone’s brutal 1990s civil war.
“The appeals chamber
... affirms the sentence of 50 years in prison and orders that the
sentence be imposed immediately,” judge George King told the Special
Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) in The Hague.
The landmark ruling marks the end of the road for the former west African strongman’s marathon case spanning seven years.
Taylor
listened impassively as the judgment was read out, wearing a dark suit,
golden tie, gold cufflinks and gold-rimmed glasses.
He will now most likely spend the rest of his life in a foreign prison, possibly in Britain.
Blood diamonds
His
historic sentence on 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against
humanity was the first handed down by an international court against a
former head of state since the Nazi trials at Nuremberg in 1946.
“The defence failed to demonstrate any discernible errors in the trial chamber’s sentencing,” said King.
Taylor,
65, was found guilty in 2012 of supporting rebels from neighbouring
Sierra Leone who waged a campaign of terror during a civil war that
claimed 120,000 lives between 1991 and 2002, in exchange for “blood
diamonds” mined by slave labour.
Arrested and
transferred to The Hague in mid-2006, where his case was moved for fear
of stirring up divisions at home, Taylor was sentenced in May last year
for “some of the most heinous crimes in human history”.
As
Liberia’s president from 1997 to 2003, Taylor aided and abetted
neighbouring Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels by supplying guns
and ammunition during the conflict — known for its mutilations, drugged
child soldiers and sex slaves, trial judges found.
Appeals
judges confirmed that RUF rebels and the Armed Forces Revolutionary
Council (AFRC) sought “to achieve military gain at any civilian costs.”
The
rebels “used acts of terror as their primary modus operandi” and “there
is a sufficient causality link between the accused and the commission
of the crimes”.
“Taylor’s acts and conducts did not
only hurt the victims ... but fuelled the conflict that became a threat
to peace and security in the west African sub-region,” said King.
Sierra
Leone Government spokesman Abdulai Bayraytay told AFP that “as a
government, we believe that justice has been done and impunity is over”.
Around
100 people, including human rights activists and survivors of the
Sierra Leone civil war, watched a live broadcast of the ruling in the
capital Freetown.
“Let Taylor rot in jail,” said
Freetown taxi driver Andrew Lebbie, adding that he wished Taylor would
serve his time in an African prison.
Throughout the trial, Taylor maintained his innocence.
Both defence and prosecution lawyers had appealed the initial sentence.
“It’s
a very good decision. We feel good about it,” said Memanatu Kumara, 28,
who had her left hand amputated by the RUF in 1999 in Freetown and who
came to court for the verdict.
Judge King said he was
“not persuaded” by a recent controversial ruling before the Yugoslavia
war crimes tribunal (ICTY), also based in the Netherlands.
The
ICTY acquitted Yugoslav ex-army chief Momcilo Perisic on appeal, saying
they required “specific direction” in the commission of crimes for a
conviction. (AFP)
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