Of the 13 people indicted by the UN-backed war crimes court for the
west African state of Sierra Leone, only Sam Hinga Norman, a former
government minister, is seen to have been wrongly accused of crimes
against humanity.
His indictment on March 7, 2003, has prompted both international
and local criticism of the court, as there are many in Sierra
Leone, particularly in the south and east, who consider him a hero
for having liberated the areas from the clutches of the rebel
Revolutionary United Front (RUF).
Norman was pressed into service by President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah,
who asked him in 1996 to lead the pro-government Civil Defense
Forces (CDF) or Kamajors in the fight against the RUF alongside the
emasculated Sierra Leone army.
Norman had come out of retirement at Kabbahs request, having served
as deputy defense minister during a previous, short-lived
government.
The sheer dominance of the Kamajors over the national army during
the latter half of the Sierra Leone conflict caused a rift within
the pro-government forces, with the army believing the Kamajors
were able to commit crimes, even against soldiers, with impunity
and government approval.
His political negotiating skills were also well-utilised in the
negotiations in 2001 of the Lome Peace Accords that were signed in
January 2002 to end the decade-long rebel war that left more than
200 000 dead and thousands more without arms or legs, noses or
ears.
Norman was one of the more outspoken critics of the RUF and
vehemently opposed giving amnesty to the rebels, an opinion he
voiced frequently after being appointed minister of internal
affairs in 2002, once peace was restored in Sierra Leone.
The fate of Norman, whether he is convicted or acquitted, would
have lasting repercussions for future generations of Sierra
Leoneans, his lawyer, Suleiman Tejan-Sie, said in an
interview.
"A conviction of Hinga Norman would be a conviction of democracy in
Sierra Leone; it sets a bad precedent that if anything, God forbid,
should happen again and people are asked to stand up and defend
their communities, they may have second thoughts for fear of
prosecution," Tejan-Sie said.
"An acquittal would be a vindication of democracy and would show
that, indeed, during the 10-year conflict in Sierra Leone that
there were good guys and bad guys".
Joining Norman in the detention center at the sprawling,
half-finished court complex in the capital Freetown, are CDF
leaders Moinina Fofana and Allieu Kondewa. – Sapa-AFP.
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