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Subject:
From:
Joe Sambou <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 31 Oct 2003 20:55:14 +0000
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folks, is Justice Emmanuel Olayinka Ayoola the Chief justice of Gambia?
Please read on.


Taylor: Hearing On Preliminary Objections Begins Today in Sierra Leone


This Day (Lagos)

October 31, 2003
Posted to the web October 31, 2003

Lillian Okenwa
Abuja

Former Liberian President, Mr. Charles Taylor, currently facing charges of
war crimes and crimes against humanity has filed a notice of preliminary
objection challenging the jurisdiction of the Special Court in Sierra Leone
to try him.

The court sitting in Freetown, Sierra Leone's capital, will today begin
public hearing into the objections raised by Taylor.

The Session to be presided by a Queens Counsel, England's equivalent of a
Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr. Geoffrey Robertson (QC), also has Justice
Emmanuel Olayinka Ayoola who retired last Monday from the Supreme Court and
is currently the Chief Justice of Gambia as a panel member.

The court will sit from October 31 to November 7, 2003.

In a statement signed by Mr. Femi Falana, secretary, African Bar Association
(ABA), the association said Taylor is challenging the competence of his
indictment on the grounds that he enjoyed immunity as a head of state of the
sovereign state of Liberia when he was alleged to have committed the said
war crimes in Sierra Leone.

Also, Taylor is challenging the legality of the execution of his arrest
warrant outside the borders of Sierra Leone.

Some of the questions the Special Court would determine today include:

whether the court has been lawfully established; whether the court's
voluntary funding by the United Nation's member states deprives it of the
necessary guarantees of independence and impartiality; whether the
indictment of Charles Taylor at the time he was Liberian President or
subsequently was invalid because he was immune from prosecution; whether in
any event the writ issued him by the court can run outside Sierra Leone;
whether the indictees can benefit from an amnesty or undertaking not to
prosecute, allegedly given them before or in Lome agreement; and whether
there is a crime of recruiting child soldiers in customary international
law.

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