Liberian reconstruction
Last reviewed: 27-03-2008
Conflict fuelled by diamonds and timber

Charles Taylor speaks after resigning as president, August 2003.
REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
Guns, neighbours and justice
Despite cautious optimism, Liberia still faces the problem of how to fit some 100,000 former fighters back into society, including the thousands of children who were forced to fight or act as servants and sex slaves to various militias. With the country awash in weapons, unemployment at about 85 percent and more than half the population under 18, this is no easy task. "Simmering ethnic, social and political tensions within Liberia are likely to lead to unrest unless issues of inequity, corruption and social and economic deprivation are urgently addressed," the United Nations said in 2006. "The volatile political situation in the region also has the potential to further destabilise Liberia and unravel the gains made so far." Liberia's conflict was intimately entwined with its neighbours, and Taylor offended all of them at various times. The rebel group Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) which fought against Taylor used northern neighbour Guinea as a base and Taylor is accused of trying to assassinate Guinean President Lansana Conte in retaliation. Meanwhile, Ivory Coast - on Liberia's northeastern border - turned a blind eye to a smaller rebel group, Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL), which operated from its territory. Liberian mercenaries have been reported active in Ivory Coast's simmering insurgency. Taylor is currently on trial for his role in Sierra Leone's conflict where he is accused of supporting the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) and being the driving force behind a civil war in which tens of thousands were killed, mutilated or raped. Taylor has pleaded not guilty to 11 charges including acts of terrorism, murder, rape, enslavement, conscripting child soldiers, sexual slavery, pillage and outrages upon personal dignity. Taylor was captured in March 2006 as he tried to escape his lavish home in Nigeria. He was taken first to Sierra Leone, then moved in June 2006 to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, where proceedings began a year later. It was adjourned after a day following claims by Taylor that he was not being represented adequately. The trial re-opened in January 2008 and is expected to last until mid-2009. Britain has agreed to jail Taylor if he is convicted. Some Liberians worry that the trial could destabilise the fragile peace. Others argue that he should be on trial in Africa, not Europe. A U.N. ban on weapons sales to Liberia was lifted in 2006 so that newly trained police and security forces could be armed. The Security Council imposed a ban on Liberian timber and diamond exports as well as an arms embargo during Taylor's final years in office after accusing him of fuelling conflict in the region through an illicit trade in arms for diamonds and other natural resources. Sanctions on timber exports were lifted the same year and an embargo on diamond exports ended in 2007. A Truth and Reconciliation Commission was set up in February 2006, but has complained of inadequate working conditions, lack of security, and not enough funding. Hearings began in October 2006, but the Commission's work is not likely to be easy, given that many former commanders were elected as senators or parliamentary representatives in late 2005 and became part of Johnson-Sirleaf's government.
Child Soldiers

Liberian rebel fighters celebrate in Monrovia, August 2003.
REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
A long road home
Tens of thousands of Liberians who were forced from their homes by war have returned, although many refugees have had a hard time reclaiming their homes once they've gone back. The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said there were still more than 105,000 Liberian refugees in neighbouring countries in March 2007, mostly in Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone. There were still 10,000 internally displaced people in camps in March 2007, according to the Liberia Refugee Repatriation and Resettlement Commission (LRRRC), which is responsible for assisting them. Displaced people living in buildings in Monrovia, for example, are considered squatters by authorities, and not eligible for assistance. Camps in Liberia have been notorious for sexual exploitation, with several reports finding children had exchanged sex for food or even bars of soap from men in positions of power, including teachers, aid workers and peacekeepers. Aid agency Save the Children researched the scandal in detail. The U.N. mission said there were 30 cases of sexual exploitation and abuse implicating its staff in 2006, and 45 in 2005. Women's rights activists say rape and sexual exploitation are common, and the weak justice system makes prosecution and conviction rare. A 2005 report by the U.N. World Health Organisation said a survey of six Liberian counties found that three-quarters of women had been raped.
Hungry and sick

Johnson-Sirleaf on a visit to Nigeria in 2006
REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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