Amnesty Wants Perpetrators in Liberia Brought to Book
By: Martin C. Benson
The Inquirer
Monrovia, Liberia
Distributed by
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
Posted January 19, 2004
Amnesty International is calling on the International Community including
the UN Security Council to explicitly state to the National Transitional
Government of Liberia that there can be no impunity for crimes against humanity
and other serious violations of international humanitarian law.
Amnesty International says those responsible for crimes under national law
must be brought to justice and has since welcomed statements by the UN Secretary
General, the Security Council, the Special Representative of the Secretary
General for Liberia and the Acting High Commissioner for Human Rights that
those responsible for such crimes will be held individually accountable.
In a 10-page document issued by the International Secretariat on Liberia
under the title: "The Goal is Peace, To Sleep Without Hearing Gunshots,
To Send Our Children To School; that is what we want", said there should,
as soon as possible, be an international independent investigation to establish
accountability for such crimes and to recommend an appropriate measures
to try those alleged to be responsible.
Amnesty International in the report said there is still alarming level of
human rights abuses against civilians and that the security council must
give attention and take measures to ensure that every possible efforts is
made to protect them.
The International Human Right Organization said from 5 to 19 November during
its delegation visit to Liberia it found that men, women and children in
arrears where UN peacekeeping troops have got to deploy continues to be
killed, raped, beaten, used as forest labour and driven from their homes
and their possessions looted by one group of fighters after another.
The reporter said these responsible are from all the three parties are the
three parties to the conflict which signed the peace agreement including
the former Government of Liberia, the Liberia United for Reconciliation
and Democracy (LURD) and the Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL) which
are now represented by senior ministers in the NTGL.
Amnesty is therefore recommending that those now in the NTGL should strongly
condemn continuing attacks against civilians by combatants of the armed
groups which they represent and the international community must insist
that signatories to the peace agreement fulfill obligations under international
human rights law.
Meanwhile, Amnesty International is calling for additional peacekeeping
troops, with adequate logistical support to be provided urgently to the
UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) so that it can deploy swiftly throughout the
country and effectively implement the mandate to protect civilians.