Charles Taylor sentenced to 50 years in prison for war crimes
Judge at court in The Hague says ex-Liberia president's crimes were of the 'utmost gravity in scale and brutality'
Liberian ex-president Charles Taylor listens to the judge passing his sentencing at the court in The Hague. Photograph: Toussaint Kluiters/Pool/EPA
Judges at an international war crimes court have sentenced Liberia 's former president Charles Taylor to 50 years in prison for war crimes during the long-running civil war in Sierra Leone .
Delivering the sentence on Wednesday, Judge Richard Lussick said Taylor's crimes were of the "utmost gravity in terms of scale and brutality".
"The lives of many more innocent civilians in Sierra Leone were lost or destroyed as a direct result of his actions," Lussick said.
Taylor showed no emotion as Lussick handed down what will effectively be a life sentence.
Prosecutors had asked the special court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) to impose an 80-year prison term.
Lussick said an 80-year sentence would have been excessive as Taylor was convicted of aiding and abetting crimes and not direct involvement.
But the judge added that Taylor was "in a class of his own" compared to others convicted by the United Nations-backed court.
"The special status of Mr. Taylor as a head of state puts him in a different category of offenders for the purpose of sentencing," Lussick said.
The 64-year-old warlord-turned-president is the first former head of state convicted by an international war crimes court since the second world war.
Taylor's sentence is likely to be served in the UK, which has offered to take him once his trial and appeal are completed. The civil war left more than 50,000 dead in the west African state.
Taylor's defence lawyers have told the court that exiling him to Britain's jails – where a Serbian war crimes convict was attacked in his cell two years ago – would leave him "culturally isolated" and constitute a "punishment within a punishment".
In an interim sentencing hearing, the court's chief prosecutor, Brenda Hollis, a former US military prosecutor, said: "[His] positions both as president of Liberia and within the west African regional bodies distinguish him from any other individual that has appeared before this court.
"Taylor's abuse of his authority and influence is especially egregious given that west African leaders repeatedly entrusted him with a role to facilitate peace."
The court should deliver its sentence in a spirit of "reconciliation, not retribution", said Taylor, who offered no admission of wrongdoing or words of remorse. "I express my sadness and sympathy for crimes suffered by individuals and families in Sierra Leone," he told the panel of judges at the SCSL.
"What I did to bring peace to Sierra Leone was done with honour. I was convinced that unless there was peace in Sierra Leone, Liberia would not be able to move forward. I pushed the peace process hard, contrary to how I have been portrayed in this court."
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Charles Taylor sentenced to 50 years in prison for war crimes
This article was published on guardian.co.uk at
11.16 BST on Wednesday 30 May 2012
. It was last modified at
11.48 BST on Wednesday 30 May 2012
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