For the past few years, the founder of the Liberia-based Fyrkuna Metalworks and his team of skilful craftsmen have been collecting weapons scrap -- relics of the West African country’s vicious civil conflict -- for their Arms into Art project.
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WAEC Results Expected Next Month
The West African Examination Council Monrovia-office Monday disclosed that results of this year’s WAEC exams would be released in July.
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Liberian Arrested For Black Money:In Vietnam
Two African men have been arrested for allegedly attempting to cheat locals out of money in the central province of Khanh Hoa, local police said Sunday.
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Liberia To Benefit From US$100B Investment From Indian
Libeia has been 19 nations named amongst countries in Africa to benefit from a US$100-billion investment from an Indian company, according to the Business Standard online.
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US$695m Complex For Liberia
A delegation of the Make Group, a South Korean-based investment company specializing in Africa’s development, last week paid a courtesy call on President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Vice President Joseph N. Boakai with a pledge that they will invest US$695 million in the construction and development of a Millennium Village Complex.
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Weapons Of Creation :Guns Turn Into Art
For the past few years, the founder of the Liberia-based Fyrkuna Metalworks and his team of skilful...
It may have seemed endless,
but the hour of justice is now barely 2 weeks away.
Judges of the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone will decide whether Mr. Charles Taylor bears the greatest responsibility for the war crimes in neighbouring Sierra Leone, or whether he is the subject of lies for political reasons as he and his lawyers have argued.
Mr. Taylor, from the onset, insisted that the case against him is ‘politically motivated’, and that he is a victim of western power play.
After the end of the trial, several prosecution witnesses were sought after to change their testimonies against the erstwhile leader of the rebel National Patriotic Front of Liberia and for guilty of perjury.
Mr. Taylor’s lawyers then entered a plea for a new trial, contending that the war in Cote d’Ivoire offered new evidence and circumstances in favour of their client. Their request was rejected.
As the verdict’s date, 26 April 2012 was set, the defense lawyers again pleaded for the date to be extended. Again, the court rejected their request, and the verdict will be handed down in 2 weeks.
It is difficult to predict the outcome of a guilty or not guilty verdict. Mr. Taylor still enjoys admiration amongst his loyalists here, and they are said to be praying for acquittal.
If he is acquitted, there are fears that a new and fluid political security environment will rock the country and region. Declassified US embassy cables note that rebel command and control structures remain in tact.
On the other hand, if he is found guilty on any of the 11 counts and sent to Britain to serve whatever sentence the court hands down, reactions here are unpredictable.
In Sierra Leone itself, with the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), described as Mr. Taylor’s proxy army, a spent force many of whose leaders are still in prison, jubilation is expected if it is a guilty verdict. All this will be known in 14 days beginning today.