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''Liberia's president
prepares for the final round'' By
Jamie Menutis (YellowTimes.org) – After thirteen years and some of the most atrocious crimes ever committed against humanity being experienced, a United Nations court has finally moved and indicted Charles Taylor, the warlord-turned-president of the West African Nation of Liberia, for war crimes. Liberia, a nation the size of Tennessee, sits on Africa's Western Coast. The nation has a unique history that links it to the United States as it is a nation created as a republic in 1842 by freed American slaves. The legacy of American repression by the
slave owners rather than American democracy is one that the Liberian
nation's founding fathers brought home with them. The repression they
inherited was forced upon the inhabitants at the nation's formation and has
continued to rear its head for a century and a half with ethnic-based
fighting and scrambling to control the nation's rich natural resources.
Liberia is rich with plentiful diamond mines along its border with Sierra
Leone as well as rich with bauxite, ore and other natural resources that the
developed and developing nations desire. Liberian nationals who survived and escaped the initial war have endured a daily existence in refugee camps in neighboring countries for the past thirteen years. Their presence has strained the economies of neighboring countries already in struggle to maintain and develop their own governments. Neighboring Sierra Leone, known as the poorest nation in Africa in terms of functioning infrastructure, could not survive the flow of both refugees and rebels into its land. Its diamond mines were also on Taylor's list and soon after he began his pillage in Liberia, he extended it to Sierra Leone. Refugees then fleeing from Sierra Leone added greatly to the refugee crisis in West Africa. While Taylor's forces fought for control in Liberia, they employed scare and control tactics that included use of some of the most horrific crimes against humanity ever conceived. During these initial struggles, now President Charles Taylor was personally involved in the execution of many human rights abuses against ethnic groups not to his liking. Taylor's forces systematically kidnapped young girls as young as eight and made them travel with them as their so-called "wives." Taylor's group also recruited and/or abducted young boys, also as young as eight, and turned these children into unconscientious killing machines. Liberians from ethnic groups other than Taylor's were seen as enemies and were either repressed or killed. As an Officer for the U.S. Resettlement Office of the Department of State during the war in Liberia, I was attached to the American Embassy's Consular Office in five West African countries. I worked along the borders with Liberia and in refugee camps where I took testimony from refugees of human rights abuses in asylum cases. During this time I learned first hand accounts of the abuses employed by Taylor's people during the war. Some of the stories I heard are so horrific; I will never repeat them to a single individual during this lifetime. I also met and spoke with young child soldiers in Danane, Ivory Coast. They had crossed the border from fighting in Liberia and acted as a "protector" force for Taylor. During their free moments, they put down their AK-47s and played with small matchbox cars in the dirt. This image I will never forget. Then warlord Charles Taylor and his adult fighters were guests at a hotel that I stayed in during my work along the border. Taylor and his men remained there the entire weekend. My colleague and I were summoned to join the group for dinner and drinks at the only local restaurant and club in the village. They had guns and we had no choice. Though I was terrified, they viewed us simply as relief workers and not as a threat. And despite the guns, they did not harm or force us into anything. What I did learn was confirmation that these were scary people who had little or no respect for life - either that of others or the children they employed. They also did and took exactly what they wanted. While a U.N. court finally seeks to indict Charles Taylor in 2003, much time has passed and many lives have been lost. The United States government may aid the case of the United Nations if it chooses to. There are more than 5,000 testimonies of human rights abuses by Taylor and his people of which the American government is in possession within the filing cabinets of American embassies in West Africa. These are the ones that I alone took some ten years ago and was the primary caseworker on. Though the files are confidential, they are supporting documentation in a war crimes case and could be used in this matter. Many more activities of abuse have surely been recorded in the meantime. If the saying is true that what goes around comes around, then Taylor's days are, perhaps, reaching their end. An indictment now stands and Taylor's term as president ends in August. Whether charges will stand and Taylor steps down without a fight is yet to be seen. If the past is any indication of how things will go for Taylor, the Liberian people are in for more pain and suffering. There also remains the ugly question as to how much more suffering in Africa the world is willing to turn its eyes away from. Let us not forget that suffering is universal in each and every human and so should be caring and justice. * This article is dedicated to Joshua -- a war survivor, refugee and friend who lost his home and family as a child. Your life and courage give me hope and inspiration for humanity. [Jamie Menutis is a former human rights worker and program manager who spent many years in East and West Africa. Menutis is also a graduate of Georgetown University.] Jamie Menutis encourages your comments: jmenutis@mindspring.com |