KTN Kenya
| May 30, 2012
Former Liberian President Charles Ghankay Taylor has been sentenced to 50 years in prison for war crimes against humanity. Taylor was found guilty of aiding and abetting war crimes during the dark era of civil war that rocked neighbouring country ...
France 24
| May 30, 2012
Former Liberian president Charles Taylor has been sentenced by a special United Nations court to 50 years in prison following his landmark conviction for war crimes committed in Sierra Leone during the country's 1991-2001 civil war.
VOA News
| May 16, 2012
Former Liberian President Charles Taylor spoke in his own defense on Wednesday as judges hear oral arguments in the sentencing phase of his war crimes trial. Taylor was convicted last month, and prosecutors are seeking an 80-year sentence in a max...
France 24
| Apr 26, 2012
The Special Court for Sierra Leone finds Liberia's former president, Charles Taylor, guilty of aiding and abetting war crimes and crimes against humanity Thursday in a landmark judgment against a former head of state.
ABC News (Australia)
| Apr 26, 2012
Charles Taylor, the former President of Liberia, has been found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity by a UN-backed special court. He is the first former head of state to be convicted of war crimes since the Nuremberg Trials after the ...
— May 13 at 06:03 pm
...candidates who contested the presidential election in 2012 election and lost to incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma. Margai's party does not h...
— last Thursday at 02:08 pm
...China has signed $6 billion mining and construction deal with Sierra Leone, which the west African nation said Thursday would boost an economy s...
— May 3 at 02:54 am
...to neighboring Liberia in 1997 to work for a relief organization. Sierra Leone is a former British colony on Africa's western coast, with a trop...
— last Friday at 05:47 pm
...largely untapped mineral resources has sparked an economic revival in Sierra Leone a decade after the end of a devastating 1991-2002 civil war. ...