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CHARLES TAYLOR TRIAL MOVED TO ICC PREMISES
Charles Taylor, former Liberian president and suspected war criminal, has
been transferred to the ICC in The Hague for trial. Taylor was arrested in
northern Nigeria in March 2006 and taken to the Special Court for Sierra
Leone (SCSL) in Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown.
The SCSL expressed growing concern that conducting Taylor’s trial in
Freetown would cause renewed instability in the region, and requested that
the trial be moved to the ICC’s premises in The Hague. The U.N. Security
Council passed a resolution granting the request and on June 20, Taylor was
transferred from the SCSL to the ICC.
Although Taylor will be tried on the ICC’s premises, the SCSL still has
full
jurisdiction over the case. Taylor is
facing 11 counts of war crimes which include the mutilation of civilians,
conscription of child soldiers and sexual slavery. If convicted, he will
serve his sentence in the United Kingdom.
Updated June 22, 2006
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