Liberia's ex-warlord Charles Taylor |
Liberia's ex-warlord Charles Taylor has asked to serve his 50-year
prison sentence for war crimes in a Rwandan jail rather than in Britain,
Kigali said Tuesday
The former president, 65, is likely to spend the rest of his life behind
bars after the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) in The
Hague last week upheld his sentence for arming rebels during Sierra
Leone's brutal civil war during the 1990s.
London said last week that Taylor would serve his time in a British jail, but Taylor has since appealed to be sent to Rwanda.
Rwanda's justice ministry said in a statement that the SCSL court has
"contacted government on the matter, but that the Kigali administration
would only make the next step after an official request has been brought
before it".
However, Kigali is "ready to make appropriate deliberations" on whether
Taylor can serve his sentence in a Rwanda jail, Minister of Justice
Johnston Busingye said in a statement.
Taylor's lawyer Morris Anyah had suggested after his appeal was turned
down last month, that the former west African strongman would prefer to
go to Rwanda to be closer to his family.
Several Sierra Leone prisoners convicted by the SCSL court are already
incarcerated in a special Rwandan jail that meets international
standards.
Taylor's landmark sentence -- on 11 counts of war crimes and crimes
against humanity -- was the first handed down by an international court
against a former head of state since the Nazi trials at Nuremberg in
1946.
He had been arrested in 2006 and sentenced at The Hague last year for "some of the most heinous crimes in human history".
As Liberia's president from 1997 to 2003, Taylor supplied guns and
ammunition to rebels in neighbouring Sierra Leone in a conflict
notorious for its mutilations, drugged child soldiers and sex slaves,
judges said. AFP
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