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LAGOS, March 26 (Xinhua) -- The prosecutor for the
UN-backed special court in Sierra Leone, Desmond de Silva, on Sunday asked
Nigeria to arrest exiled former Liberian president Charles Taylor.
Silva said in a statement obtained here that he had asked Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo "to take all
necessary steps to ensure that Charles Taylor is unable to abscond."
Obasanjo on Saturday agreed to return Taylor, accused
of 17 counts of crimes against humanity by the court, to his homeland's new
administration after two years of pressure from the international community,
especially from the U.S. government. But he did not say when the extradition
will take place.
"Until the indicted war criminal Charles Taylor is in
the hands of Liberian authorities to whom Nigeria is making Taylor available for
collection, the spotlight of the international community will be upon Nigeria,"
Silva said.
"In particular, the watching world will wish to see
Taylor held in Nigerian detention to avoid the possibility of him using his
wealth and associates to slip away, with grave consequences to the stability of
the region."
Taylor has been living in Nigeria since August 2003
when he accepted Nigeria's offer of safe exile as part of a deal, backed by the
U.S. government, to end Liberia's 14-year civil war that killed about 250,000
people, about 8 percent of the west African country's population.
Originally, Obasanjo had pledged to protect Taylor
with all his might if Taylor stayed out of Liberian politics, and described the
reported 2-million-dollar universal offer by the U.S. to capture Taylor as being
tantamount to state-sponsored terrorism.
But Obasanjo's attitude towards the Taylor issue
changed in late 2004, when reports came out saying he wanted to amend the
constitution to be eligible for an extended or third term, which was alleged to
be opposed by the U.S. government.
As described in Saturday's announcement, which came
before Obasanjo's visit to Washington scheduled for next week, Obasanjo chose to
agree that "Taylor can only be turned over, on request, to a
democratically-elected government of Liberia at a time that such a government
considers appropriate."
Taylor stoked a bloody civil war at home, but it is
in neighboring Sierra Leone that he is wanted on 17 counts of crimes against
humanity for supporting rebels in return for "bloody diamonds" during its
1991-2002 civil war that killed some 50,000 people.
With his release, it's believed that the 58-year-old
ex-warlord, who now lives in the southeastern Nigerian city of Calabar with
about 70 relations and aides, will be sent directly to the court in Sierra
Leone's capital Freetown by the Liberian authorities.
Silva had on Saturday in a statement called it "a
most significant day for those who support the cause of international justice
around the world, and for the victims of so many conflicts who have suffered so
grievously."
This sounds good news for victims, but some would
argue that Obasanjo's decision might be another obstacle to peace processes
across Africa in the future as it influenced thinking of warlords that they have
to continue fighting to avoid being brought to book for their crimes.
Taylor's spokesman Sylvester Paasewe predicted that
African warlords might no longer have faith in "an African solution."
Obasanjo himself did not want to be seen as having
broken his word and said he had consulted the African leaders involved in the
2003 deal after receiving a formal request from his Liberian counterpart Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf on March 5, who said the time was opportune" to extradite
Taylor.
"With no substantive objection other than timing and
continued peace in Liberia raised by those other heads of state involved in the
2003 arrangement ... the government of Liberia is free to take former president
Charles Taylor into its custody," he said.
Nigeria's leading newspaper The Guardian had reported
on Friday that Taylor had begun preparations for his extradition home as about
20 of his relations and aides had left Calabar for an unknown destination. The
report also quoted sources as saying that Taylor had put in order all his cars
in preparation for his departure. Enditem |