The international court that was set up to try suspects indicted for war crimes in Sierra Leone announced that the judgment in the trial of the former Liberian President, Charles Taylor, will be delivered on April 26.
The international court that was set up to try suspects indicted for war crimes in Sierra Leone announced that the judgment in the trial of the former Liberian President, Charles Taylor, will be delivered on April 26. Taylor is on trial before the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) on 11 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including pillage, slavery for forced marriage purposes, collective punishment and the recruitment and use of child soldiersThe charges relate to his alleged support for two rebel groups in Sierra Leone – the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council and the Revolutionary United Front. The decision by the SCSL comes just days after the International Criminal Court announced that it render its ruling in the case against DRC politician Thomas Lubanga Dyilo on March 14, 2012. This will be its first verdict since it was established in 2001.Closing arguments in the Taylor trial, which opened in June 2007 in The Hague, the Netherlands, took place in February and March 2011. During the course of the trial, the Court heard from over 100 witnesses, including suspect, who testified in his defence. Special Court Registrar Binta Mansaray said that with this judgment, the Court is set to reach another "critical milestone,” given that this is the last trial stemming from Sierra Leone’s decade-long civil war, and that it will be the last major trial to be held at the Court.The SCSL was set up jointly by the Sierra Leonean Government and the UN in 2002. It is mandated to try those who bear the greatest responsibility for serious violations of international humanitarian law and national law committed on Sierra Leonean territory since the end of November 1996.Although the SCSL is headquartered in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, Taylor’s trial took place in a chamber of the Court sitting in The Hague for security reasons.