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'Kids dismembered boy'
08/01/2008 16:50  - (SA)  

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  • The Hague - Child soldiers serving with rebels in Sierra Leone dismembered a screaming child before tossing him in a toilet pit, a pastor testified during the trial of Charles Taylor on Tuesday.

    The former Liberian president, once one of Africa's most feared warlords, is on trial for orchestrating rape, murder, mutilation and recruitment of child soldiers during the 1991-2002 civil war in neighbouring Sierra Leone.

    In harrowing testimony, Alex Tamba Teh, 47, told the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone how he saw a rebel commander from Liberia he called "Rocky" shoot 101 people. Rocky spared his life only because he was a pastor.

    "After he killed the civilians... he gave the instruction that they should be decapitated. Rocky gave the order to the small boy units," Tamba Teh told the court, referring to the gangs of child soldiers used by rebels during the war.

    On the second day of prosecution evidence, Tamba Teh - from the eastern diamond district of Kono - recounted how rebels voted on whether to spare his life and how they carved the initials RUF into the bodies of abductees.

    Children mutilate boy

    Child soldiers rounded on one child and chopped off his hand, then his arm, then both his feet, before tossing him into a toilet pit, Tamba Teh said, speaking in an African Creole.

    Showing the court his mouth, Tamba Teh explained how a rebel knocked out his teeth with a pistol.

    Prosecutors say Taylor sought to plunder Sierra Leone's diamond wealth and destabilise its government by supporting the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels.

    Taylor, 59, the first former African head of state to face an international court, has pleaded not guilty to all charges. He appeared in court wearing a dark suit and a gold tie.

    His defence lawyers do not contest that atrocities took place in Sierra Leone but dispute Taylor's involvement. They say bringing victims to The Hague is a tactic by prosecutors to boost emotional impact.

    Blood diamonds

    Earlier, the court heard from blood diamond expert Ian Smillie, who said the RUF used brutality to frighten people away from diamond fields that earned them up to $125m a year.

    Smillie met Taylor in 2000 while investigating diamond smuggling as part of a UN probe. He said diamonds were the primary source of RUF funding and most left through Liberia, possible only with the complicity of the Liberian government.

    More than 250 000 people died in intertwined wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone. Prosecutors want the trial to end decades of impunity for ousted African strongmen, who have often fled overseas to live out their days unpunished.

    Taylor found exile in Nigeria after being overthrown in 2003 and was handed to the court after international pressure. His trial was moved to The Hague because of fears it could spur instability if held in Sierra Leone.

    Prosecutors expect a judgment by the end of 2009, though an appeal would be likely to stretch the case into 2010.

    - Reuters



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