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LAGOS, April 3 (Xinhua) -- Former Liberian leader
Charles Taylor, who on Monday became the first African ex-president to answer
war crimes charges in the UN-backed special court in Sierra Leone, pleaded not
guilty to all the indictments.
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| This picture combo shows former Liberian
President Charles Taylor during his first appearance at the Special Court
in Freetown. (AFP) | The
first court appearance of the 58-year-old ex-warlord, who was arrested and
transferred to Freetown last week barely 36 hours after escaping from his villa
in exile in Nigeria, started at about 3:00 p.m. (1500 GMT) and lasted about one
hour.
Taylor, wearing a dark suit and brown tie, pleaded
not guilty to the 11 indictments for atrocities committed during Sierra Leone's
1991-2002 civil war, which were read to him by Judge Richard Lussick.
He is accused by the special court of arming Sierra
Leone's rebels, notorious for recruiting child soldiers and amputating the limbs
of innocent women and children, in return for "blood diamonds."
"Most definitely, your honor, I did not and could not
have committed these acts against the sister republic of Sierra Leone," he said,
according to television footages.
"I think that this is an attempt to continue to
divide and rule the people of Liberia and Sierra Leone and so most definitely I
am not guilty," Taylor added.
Chief Prosecutor of the court, Desmond de Silva, said
in a statement that Monday's court appearance of Taylor marked the first phase
of the trial.
"The people of Sierra Leone have been waiting
patiently for three years to see the accused finally face the Trial Chamber here
at the Special Court. Today this has happened," he said.
"Today also marks an important step in the
administration of international criminal justice. Those who commit atrocities
and violate international humanitarian law will be held accountable."
"Now that the Defendant has pleaded not guilty to all
counts, it is up to the Prosecution to prove its case," Silva added.
The court's spokesman, Peter Andersen, in an e-mail
to Xinhua said Taylor required legal aid as he is broke to the wide now.
"Now the Defense Office will work to secure defense
lawyers for him. He filed a declaration of means and, based on that, the
Principal Defender has concluded that he is partially indigent," Andersen said.
The actual trial, however, is expected to begin at
least months later, as the court had called for a change of the trial venue to
The Hague for the west African region's stability.
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf had also
said that the court in The Hague would be a "more conducive environment" for
Taylor's trial. But Taylor reportedly preferred to be tried in Sierra Leone.
Taylor accepted Nigeria's offer of safe exile in August 2003 when rebels besieged Monrovia, as part of a deal to end his homeland's 14-year-old civil war that claimed about 250,000 lives. His attempt to flee last week after Nigeria agreed to return him to Liberia was soon aborted. Enditem
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