Denial, Deception and Crimes Against Humanity:
A Rejoinder to “The Misguided Taylor’s Apologist:
A Rejoinder”
By R. Wesley Harmon
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
May 5, 2004
Reference is herewith made to “The
Misguided Taylor’s Apologist: A Rejoinder” by Jenkins
K. Z. B. Scott, published on May 3, 2004, in your widely read media.
“O what a tangled web we weave when first we learn to deceive”.
Lies, deception and denial have been a staple of Liberian society for
so long that sometimes we are prone to believe our own spin of a given
event or of a story that may or may not have happened. In his rejoinder,
the learned Counselor Scott went on a diatribe about his association
with that grandmaster of evil, Charles Taylor. In my opinion, his attempt
at denial of being a legal adviser to Mr. Taylor was very disconcerting,
to say the least, because there is ample evidence to the contrary.
Counselor Scott averred, “I was never appointed or employed
by the Taylor Government as Legal Adviser but rather I was hired as
a lawyer or legal counsel to the Ministry of State for Presidential
Affairs, and of course Legal Counsel to the President”. What
is all this double talk about? Were you or were you not a legal adviser
to Mr. Taylor? Your own statement seems to affirm the fact that you
were. If you were employed or hired, (is there a difference between
the two?), whatever, “… as a lawyer or legal counsel
to the Ministry of State for Presidential Affairs”, isn’t
that the same as being a legal adviser to the president? The stated
purpose for the existence of the Ministry of State for Presidential
Affairs is to advise and serve the president of Liberia.
In any case your argument matters very little in the grand scheme of
events overtaking Liberia right now, especially since Mr. Taylor has
been unceremoniously kicked out of Liberia, and is awaiting prosecution.
I would hasten to mention that he had that and more coming to him for
all the mayhem he created in our beloved Liberia and in the sub-region.
What is appalling about the learned counselor’s attempt at denial
is the fact that he tried to accuse other Liberians of somehow influencing
the process of selection of names placed on the United Nations List
of Liberians barred from international travel, which happens to include
his name. I would like to point out that those whose names were placed
on that list have no one to thank or blame for it but themselves. Their
individual record of performance in government will, no doubt, confirm
that they were not victims of a process of random selection neither
were they victims of a “witch hunt” Liberian style, rather
they are reaping what they sowed.
While many Liberians wish they were opportune to influence the process
of selection of whose name went on the U.N.’s list, I doubt if
any were given such a privilege. The United Nations had its own team
of investigators, which catalogued the actions of all who were part
of Taylor’s inner circle, and since all of them operated with
impunity, and flaunted that fact in the faces of all Liberians, I doubt
if the UN team had any difficulty identifying any one of those individuals.
Little did they know that a day of reckoning would come, and come so
abruptly, when each would have to give account of his/her stewardship.
Suddenly everyone wants to disclaim participation in the mayhem and
carnage left behind by Charles Taylor and his gang of marauding killers.
Even the copycat killers, Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy,
(what a misnomer), LURD, and Movement for Democracy in Liberia, MODEL,
are all trying to distance themselves from their actions - killing innocent,
helpless Liberians. This is the only claim to fame for all of these
would-be liberators of the people - killing the very people they purported
to liberate.
Why is the learned counselor so concerned about his name being on the
United Nations Sanctions List? Why are George Dweh and others so concerned
about the possibility of a war crimes tribunal being set up in Liberia,
to the extent that they have begun to campaign against it? Are ordinary
Liberians worried about these probable phenomena? The Bible says, “Evil
men flee when no man pursueth”. Why are they running from their
shadows?
Because they, (warlords, and former Charles Taylor officials), are very
conscious about their past actions, being fully aware that they (their
actions) were perpetrated against an innocent, helpless people, a game
of preemption is being instituted to thwart whatever plans may be afoot
to bring them to justice.
In my opinion, it would be a gross miscarriage of justice if the perpetrators
of crimes against innocent Liberians, are allowed to live happily ever
after without accounting for those crimes. In my opinion, the learned
Counselor Scott, and many individuals like him, could be tried as accessory
before and after the fact, to some of the worst crimes ever committed
against a people. When Hitler’s former generals and other high
officials were prosecuted for crimes against the Jews and others, they
tried to claim innocence because they were following orders. The Court
ruled that each had a free will, or choice of not being a part of the
process that caused the death of so many innocent people. Is this any
different?