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Subject:
From:
Malanding Jaiteh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 22 Mar 2005 15:24:00 -0500
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----------------- Original message (ID=0D5A2CFB) (64 lines)
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Received: from maelstrom.stjohns.edu (149.68.45.24) by maelstrom.stjohns.edu (LSMTP for OpenVMS v1.1a) with SMTP id <[log in to unmask]>; Tue, 22 Mar 2005 13:59:57 -0500
Date:         Tue, 22 Mar 2005 13:59:56 -0500
From:         Momodou Camara <[log in to unmask]>
Subject:      FWD:Dutch police arrest national for war crimes in Liberia
To:           [log in to unmask]

MONROVIA, 22 Mar 2005 (IRIN) - Authorities in the Netherlands said on
Monday they had arrested and charged a national businessman close to exiled
President Charles Taylor of Liberia with war crimes and smuggling weapons
during that country's civil war.

The 62-year-old man whom the authorities refused to name, was arrested last
Friday in the Dutch city of Rotterdam following a year-long investigation,
the Public Prosecutor said in a statement.

The man, identified as Guus van Kouwenhoven in previous investigative
reports by the United Nations and non-governmental organisations is also
suspected of supporting brutal militias.

"Militias belonging to the Dutchman's logging companies apparently took
part in massacres of civilians in which nothing and nobody was spared, not
even babies," added the Public Prosecutor. "The arms used to commit these
war crimes were apparently supplied by the Dutchman".

Kouwenhoven had managed Hotel Africa, Liberia's five star hotel at the
time. He also had a hand in several logging companies and managed one of
the largest operations in Liberia - the Oriental Timber Company (OTC), to
which Taylor granted a massive 1.44 million hectare concession in the
country's coastal provinces of Grand Bassa, River Cess and parts of Sinoe
counties.

Kouwenhoven is suspected of war crimes and bypassing an international arms
embargo on the West African country that emerged from a 14 year civil war
in August 2003. Under a peace deal, Taylor was given exile in Nigeria.

"Several witnesses have made statements to the National Criminal
Investigations Bureau relating to arms supplies and the involvement of the
Dutchman in the years 2001, 2002 and 2003, a period during which UN arms
embargoes were in force," said the Public Prosecutor.

The United Nations imposed a ban on arms exports in Liberia in 2001 to stop
then-president Taylor from using foreign exchange earnings from timber and
diamonds for arms purchases.

A UN panel of experts report on the trade in diamonds and arms in Sierra
Leone first raised suspicions over Kouwenhoven's activities in the region
in 2000. In a separate report by the British NGO Global witness in 2003,
further connections were made between Kouwenhoven and the illegal arms
trade.

According to Global Witness spokesperson Alex Yearsley, Kouwenhoven was a
close confident and ally of Taylor and helped guarantee the former
warlord's survival.

"Without having the supply of cash brought in [by the company] it would
have been hard for Taylor to operate and stay in power as long as he did,"
Yearsley said.

Global Witness said it hoped this latest might serve as a precedent for
more prosecutions against sanction-breakers.

"It is the first time a prosecuting authority has taken steps of this
nature against somebody violating specific UN sanctions," Yearsley
said. "It reflects an important precedent."

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