TPL_GK_LANG_MOBILE_MENU
Bombs destroy police station in Libya's Benghazi

Bombs destroy police station in Lib…

Bombs flattened a polic...

Mozambique's Renamo threatens to paralyze vital coal railway

Mozambique's Renamo threatens to pa…

The Renamo opposition p...

Nigeria bans satellite phones in Islamist battleground

Nigeria bans satellite phones in Is…

Nigeria's military bann...

Tunisia Salafists jailed for 5 years for torching Sufi shrine

Tunisia Salafists jailed for 5 year…

Six people belonging to...

Egypt tourism minister, Hesham Zazou resigns over Luxor governor

Egypt tourism minister, Hesham Zazo…

Egypt's minister of tou...

Congo M23 rebels claims government has broken off talks

Congo M23 rebels claims government …

A rebel group in Congo ...

June 12: How can we forget? (2)

June 12: How can we forget? (2)

      by Chido Onuma...

IMF returns to economically troubled Zimbabwe

IMF returns to economically trouble…

The International Monet...

Wife of ousted Madagascar leader, Ravalomanana insist on election contest

Wife of ousted Madagascar leader, R…

The wife of deposed Mad...

Uganda summons EU ambassador over criticism of Museveni

Uganda summons EU ambassador over c…

Uganda summoned the Eur...

Prev Next
$value) { if (strpos($param, 'color_') === 0) { google_append_color($google_ad_url, $param); } else if (strpos($param, 'url') === 0) { $google_scheme = ($GLOBALS['google']['https'] == 'on') ? 'https://' : 'http://'; google_append_url($google_ad_url, $param, $google_scheme . $GLOBALS['google'][$param]); } else { google_append_globals($google_ad_url, $param); } } return $google_ad_url; } $google_ad_handle = @fopen(google_get_ad_url(), 'r'); if ($google_ad_handle) { while (!feof($google_ad_handle)) { echo fread($google_ad_handle, 8192); } fclose($google_ad_handle); } ?>

A+ A A-

ICC sentence Charles Taylor to 50 year jail term

LEIDSCHENDAM, Netherlands -- Former Liberian President Charles Taylor was sentenced to 50 years' imprisonment yesterday for arming and supporting murderous rebels in Sierra Leone in return for "blood diamonds," a landmark sentence activists hope will send a clear message to despots around the world that they will be held to account for sponsoring atrocities.

Taylor stood grim-faced and silent as Presiding Judge Richard Lussick of Samoa imposed what is likely to amount to a life sentence for the 64-year-old.

Lussick said Taylor's position as head of state put him in a "class of his own" when judges came to setting the sentence, one of the longest ever handed down by the Special Court for Sierra Leone or any other international tribunal.

Taylor shipped arms, ammunition and other supplies to rebels in Sierra Leone in return for personal wealth in the form of diamonds mined by slave labor and to gain increasing political clout in volatile West Africa. His reaction in court was in stark contrast to the delight of survivors who gathered in the Sierra Leone capital, Freetown, to watch a live feed of the sentencing.

"That makes me the happiest person on earth," said Alimami Kanu, who was 11 when rebels backed by Taylor hacked off his right hand. He was one of thousands of civilians mutilated during Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war that ended in 2002 with some 50,000 dead.

"Today's sentence not only reflects the severity of Taylor's crimes but sends a clear message that individuals who aid and abet war crimes can no longer act with impunity," said Patrick Alley, director of Global Witness, a nongovernment group that campaigns to prevent conflicts erupting around exploitation of natural resources such as diamonds and timber.

The sentence came a month after Taylor became the first former head of state since World War II to be convicted by an international court. Judges found him guilty of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including murder, rape, torture and the use of child soldiers.

User Registration
or Cancel