From the sublime to the ridiculous:
Charles Taylor is the former Liberian leader who was forced into exile in Nigeria in August 2003 after being indicted by a United Nations war crimes tribunal for atrocities he committed during his brutal 14-year rise and fall. As a warlord, Taylor commanded rebel forces who raped, tortured, and killed indiscriminately on their march to power. And as president of Liberia, he aided, abetted, and traded (guns for diamonds) with warlords in Sierra Leone whose rebel forces did there what his did in Liberia.
Yet such was his hubris that, when he went into exile, Taylor reportedly assumed that his gilded cage on the Nigerian coast was more sinecure than holding pen. Now, how ridiculous is that! But he clearly did not anticipate his improbable successor, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, joining President Bush in demanding his extradition to stand trial for his war crimes. And, after a pathetic attempt to escape on Tuesday, Nigerian forces caught him within 24 hours and delivered him, symbolically, to Johnson-Sirleaf in Liberia where he was immediately taken by UN forces to the war crimes tribunal in Sierra Leone. Although reports are that, for security reasons, Sierra Leone has asked the Netherlands to host Taylor’s trial in The Hague.
However, Liberian nationalists and prominent pan-Africanists have argued that Liberia’s sovereignty and regional dignity would be undermined if Taylor is not tried in Liberia (or, at worst, in Sierra Leone). But this argument reflects misguided jingoism and foolish pride. After all, if the trial of Saddam Hussein in Iraq has taught us anything, it’s that such a trial would probably make a national martyr of Taylor, fuel an insurgency against Johnson-Sirleaf’s government and detract national attention and resources from the important work nation building. By contrast, when the Serbs consented to have their former leader and accused war-criminal Slobodan Milosevic tried in Hague, it sealed his fate to die with a whimper in relative obscurity.
So here’s to the fate that awaits Charles Taylor (think Slobodan, not Saddam). And let’s hope that his capture puts all despots (like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe) on notice that their day of reckoning is drawing nigh. Because Taylor today, Kony tomorrow? Who knows for whom the bell will toll in due course?
NOTE: Click here for my CNN commentary of President Bush’s would-be assassins….
Jill Carroll, journalist hostage, Stockholm syndrome
Charles Taylor, Liberia, Nigeria exile, The Hague tribunal
Ric says
you may be too smart to say it outright but i think you are right that something’s fishy here. she’s behaving weird.
Rachel says
Hi Anthony
I am so happy Jill was released I can’t tell you. But I don’t understand why you suspect her of that syndrome. I think she’s just still really scared.
I think you are so right about Charles Taylor though. I like the way you compare his fate to Milosovich and Sadaam…and the for whom the bell tolls warning was a great touch.