Ending Impunity: The Case for War Crimes Trials in Liberia

Author:

Marong Alhagi,Jalloh Chernor

Abstract

AbstractThis article argues that Liberia owes a duty under both international humanitarian and human rights law to investigate and prosecute the heinous crimes, including torture, rape and extra-judicial killings of innocent civilians, committed in that country by the warring parties in the course of fourteen years of brutal conflict. Assuming that Liberia owes a duty to punish the grave crimes committed on its territory, the article then evaluates the options for prosecution, starting with the possible use of Liberian courts. The authors argue that Liberian courts are unable, even if willing, to render credible justice that protects the due process rights of the accused given the collapse of legal institutions and the paucity of financial, human and material resources in post-conflict Liberia. The authors then examine the possibility of using international accountability mechanisms, including the International Criminal Court, an ad hoc international criminal tribunal as well as a hybrid court for Liberia. For various legal and political reasons, the authors conclude that all of these options are not viable. As an alternative, they suggest that because the Special Court for Sierra Leone has already started the accountability process for Liberia with the indictment of Charles Taylor in 2003, and given the close links between the Liberian and Sierra Leonean conflicts, the Special Court would be a more appropriate forum for international prosecutions of those who perpetrated gross humanitarian and human rights law violations in Liberia.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Law,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Cited by 4 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Should Monrovian Communities Agree to Voluntary Slum Relocations: Land, Gender and Urban Governance;Land Issues for Urban Governance in Sub-Saharan Africa;2020-11-12

2. Intervention and the ‘Justice Cascade’: Lessons from the Special Court for Sierra Leone on Prosecution and Civil War;Human Rights Review;2014-07-31

3. Crime and punishment in Liberia;International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice;2013-02

4. Donors' Justice: Recasting International Criminal Accountability;Leiden Journal of International Law;2011-08-05

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