Charles Taylor: the long Wait for Justice Almost at an End – By Colin Waugh

April 25, 2012

Tomorrow in The Hague the judges in what has been one of the
lengthiest and most unusual legal battles ever to have been fought on
the international stage are due to deliver the verdict on a man who
over the past decade has variously been a deposed president under
house arrest in Nigeria, a prisoner awaiting trial and a defendant in
the dock of a specially-convened international court. After a process
which has run for a combined total of some nine years since his
original indictment, Charles Ghankay Taylor now awaits judgement
before the judges at the Special Court for Sierra Leone. The court,
which is a joint project of the United Nations and the Government of
Sierra Leone, was enshrined in the peace agreement which brought the
latter country’s bloody, decade-long civil war to an end in early
2002.

The verdict in the trial of Charles Taylor, former President of the
Republic of Liberia will also mark the climax of the unprecedented
experiment in international justice which the Special Court
represents. But when the judges announce their decision tomorrow
morning it will almost certainly not be the end of the story.

Not only has the process of Taylor’s indictment, apprehension and
trial been incredibly lengthy, it has been costly and controversial
too. The Taylor trial, which began in April 2006 in Freetown, Sierra
Leone, before being moved to The Hague, has been characterized by
delays of all kinds. The transfer of the court across continents, the
changes of counsel, the procedural objections, the need to
accommodating the large numbers of witnesses called and cross-examined
by both sides and their often extensive testimonies, together with
other holdups and hiatuses have all caused the trial to last far
longer than anticipated at the outset.

In June 2007, Charles Taylor sacked his entire defence team. Finding
and engaging a new lead council, the prominent British QC Courtenay
Griffiths and his replacement defence team delayed the proceedings by
over six months. The original location of the court in Sierra Leone’s
capital was changed to the Netherlands shortly after the trial began
in 2006, due to concerns that the proceedings might reignite
hostilities in the war-torn region.

During the trial Taylor received legal assistance of $100,000 per
month, which together with the location of the forum and the five-star
calibre of the legal representation of both sides made the process an
enormously costly affair, estimated at some $35-$40 million per year.
By its conclusion, it may end up having cost the international
taxpayer (mostly in the United States) close to $250 million, and
probably much more than that, if and when the verdict leads to an
appeal.

Charles Taylor’s guilt or innocence hangs on whether or not he
assisted and directed the Sierra Leonean rebel group, the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF), from the end of November 1996, the
date of the signing of the Abuja accord – an international agreement
concluded in the Nigerian capital and designed to bring peace to the
region – until 18 January 2002, the date when the Sierra Leone Civil
War was officially brought to an end.

For most of that time, Taylor was president of Liberia, elected
overwhelmingly in an internationally supervised and accepted vote in
July 1997, but previously himself the leader of a rebel group in his
native country which came close on a number of occasions to taking
power by force of arms.  The main focus of the case was to review
evidence that Charles Taylor and his National Patriotic Front for
Liberia (NPFL), proactively took the side of the rebels in Sierra
Leone in contravention of the Abuja agreement and contrary to the
pronouncements of the Liberian government itself that it was not
involved.

The main thrust of the prosecution’s case hinged on showing that in
addition to being present militarily in Sierra Leone, Taylor’s
government and army were responsible for either arming the RUF during
that period, or for directing it and its leadership in their actions
and thereby being responsible and culpable for the war crimes and
crimes against humanity which occurred. Despite the barrage of media
rhetoric and international hostility directed against Taylor for his
role in the Liberian Civil War and other conflicts in the region, the
prosecution was unable to present a definitive paper trail directly
linking Taylor to a protagonist’s role in Sierra Leone during the
period under examination by the court.

Taylor’s own testimony in the trial lasted a total of fourteen weeks,
during which time he was sometimes allowed leeway to give long and
often off-topic answers to relatively straightforward questions.
Despite the protests of the prosecution about this on a number of
occasions, the court largely gave the accused the benefit of the doubt
when their challenges were issued. Some observers have suggested that
the apparent leniency extended to the defendant was a result of
Taylor’s unique position as a former leader from a desperately poor
African country, on trial before the world and in a forum largely
conceived and almost entirely funded by the great world powers,
including states which were former colonists of Africa itself.

The trial’s conception, jurisdiction and indeed legal legitimacy have
been questioned at various times, not just by the accused and his
supporters. Certainly, there are apparent ironies in the way in which
justice is being meted out by the Special Court, which only considers
events and alleged crimes committed in Sierra Leone, not in Taylor’s
native Liberia. Although Charles Taylor could allegedly be held
responsible for many more deaths and much greater destruction in his
own country than he ever caused directly or indirectly in Sierra
Leone, it was nevertheless his transgressions of international law in
the latter country which finally brought about the issuance of an
international warrant for his arrest in 2003 for the second time in
twenty years. The first time was in the early 1980s, when he was
forced to flee Liberia, then under the brutal dictatorship of the
US-backed Samuel-Doe, on embezzlement charges relating to his period
as head of procurement in the Doe Administration.

The paradox of the present legal proceedings is poignant for many in
Liberian civil society who still hold an unrequited yearning for
accountability and reconciliation for the crimes committed against
them, despite Taylor’s departure from the scene in Monrovia over eight
years ago.

Many Liberians who were victims of the struggle in their country
remain hungry for justice to be done in respect of their own civil
conflict – although others would now rather forget and move on – but
whether Charles Taylor should be found innocent or be shown leniency
tomorrow by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, Liberians denied
justice will then wonder what recourse they should then be entitled
to, with the international community now unlikely to have the appetite
nor the resources for a further lengthy and expensive trial for events
which are now over a decade in the past.

Colin Waugh is the author of “Charles Taylor and Liberia: Ambition and
Atrocity in Africa’s Lone Star State” published in the UK by Zed
books.

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