Stor lettelse i Sierra Leone efter dommen over Charles Taylor

Forfatter billede

“Han fik hvad han havde fortjent” var en udbredt reaktion hos den dømte eks-præsident mange ofre i et af verdens fattigste lande, som mange år efter lider under følgerne af en ualmindelig bestialsk og traumatisk borgerkrig.

DAKAR, 26 April 2012 (IRIN) – Sierra Leoneans are relieved that former warlord and President of Liberia Charles Taylor has been convicted by the Special Court of Sierra Leone on 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Taylor was convicted today by the UN-backed court in The Hague, capital of The Netherlands, of acts of terrorism, murder, violence to life, rape, sexual slavery, outrages to (overgreb mod) personal dignity, cruel treatment, the use of child soldiers, enslavement and pillage (plyndringer). He has denied the charges.

President of Liberia from 1997 to 2003, Taylor was accused of supporting the rebel Revolutionary United Front (RUF) who killed, raped and injured tens of thousands of people during the 1991-2002 civil war in the West african country.

Abioseh, 31, who was used as a sexual slave or “wife” of an RUF commander during the conflict, told IRIN from Makeni, central Sierra Leone, that “Taylor got what he was due – now we have seen justice and can move on.”

The verdict will not make her daily life or that of other survivors any easier. The father of one of her three children is an ex-RUF commander, and the associated stigma (udstødelse/fordomme) means she has never married and now struggles to provide for her children.

Brutal violence

The RUF were known for their brutal violence, using machetes to cut off people’s limbs (lemmer), training and coercing (true) thousands of children to injure and kill civilians, and perpetrating widespread sexual violence and rape.

An estimated 27.000 Sierra Leoneans were disabled (invalideret) or had one or more of their limbs amputated during the conflict.

The verdict “marks a watershed for efforts to hold the highest level leaders accountable for the greatest crimes, and for the victims of Sierra Leone’s brutal armed conflict”, Annie Gell, an attorney at the Human Rights Watch International Justice Programme, told IRIN.

This is the first time since the Nuremburg trials in 1947, after World War II, that a former head of state has faced a judgement in an international court, and should be a “wake-up call to leaders everywhere that those in power can be held to account for their crimes”, said Gell.

Many Sierra Leoneans see Taylor as accountable (ansvarlig) for atrocities committed during the civil war. His trial, held in The Hague due to stability concerns in Sierra Leone, has taken almost five years.

So far eight more people associated with the three main warring factions have been tried and convicted by the court in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, and are serving sentences in Rwanda.

Mixed reactions in Liberia

Læs videre på
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95368/SIERRA-LEONE-Now-we-can-move-on

Se også telegrammet
http://www.u-landsnyt.dk/nyhed/26-04-12/afrikansk-eks-pr-sident-fundet-skyldig-i-krigsforb