AMSTERDAM -- Former Liberian president Charles Taylor deserves an 80-year sentence for the war crimes he was convicted of last week, including aiding and abetting murder and rape on a mass scale, prosecutors said in a written filing Thursday.
Judges at the Special Court for Sierra Leone on April 26 ruled Taylor played a crucial role in helping rebels continue a bloody rampage during that West African nation's 11-year civil war, which ended in 2002 with more than 50,000 dead.
They found Taylor guilty of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in arming the Sierra Leone rebels in exchange for "blood diamonds" mined by slave laborers and smuggled across the border.
In a written submission Thursday, prosecutor Brenda Hollis said an 80-year sentence would "reflect the essential role Mr. Taylor played in crimes of such extreme scope and gravity." The court does not have the death penalty.
Taylor's conviction, the first of a former head of state since the aftermath of World War II, is seen as a landmark in international war crimes law.
The 64-year-old Taylor will be sentenced May 30. The defense must submit its counter-recommendation by May 10, and oral arguments are scheduled for May 16 -- including a chance for Taylor to address the court in person.
Taylor fled into exile in Nigeria after being indicted by the court in 2003 and wasn't arrested for three years. And while the Sierra Leone court is based in that country's capital, Taylor's trial was staged in The Hague, Netherlands for fear it could destabilize the region.
During seven months of testimony in his own defense, Taylor insisted he was an innocent victim of neocolonialism and a political process aimed at preventing him from returning to power in Liberia.
Hollis said the scale and brutality of the crimes Taylor helped make possible were such that they affected "virtually the entire population of Sierra Leone."
"The purposely cruel and savage crimes committed included public executions and amputations of civilians, the display of decapitated heads at checkpoints, the killing and public disembowelment of a civilian whose intestines were then stretched across the road to make a check point, public rapes of women and girls, and people burned alive in their homes," she wrote.
She said there was little that could be said in favor of giving Taylor a lighter sentence, and the "brutality and impact on the victims should be reflected" in the demand.
There was no clear paper trail linking Taylor to rebels, and the three-judge panel hearing his case wound up convicting him of aiding and abetting the fighters. He was cleared of even more serious direct command responsibility over the rebels.
Taylor's lawyers must wait for the sentencing before they can file any appeal. Taylor will serve whatever sentence he receives in Britain.
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