About Us   Trial Watch   ACT   Tribunals   Truth Commissions   Int'l Law   Swiss
  english  français  deutsch  | Sitemap

  Sam Bockarie
  Moinina Fofana
  Augustine Gbao
  Morris Kallon
  Brima Bazzy Kamara
  Santigie Borbor Kanu
  Allieu Kondewa
  Johnny Paul Koroma
  Samuel Hinga Norman
  Foday Sankoh
 Appeals Chamber Judgment
SCSL, 22 February 2008
 Appeals Chamber Upholds Sentences of Convicted AFRC Leaders
Press Release 22 February 2008
 Consolidated Indictment, Part 1 (pdf)
 Consolidated Indictment, Part 2 (pdf)
 Decisions by the Appeals Chamber and the Trial Chamber
 Judgment of the SCSL
20 June 2007
 Press Release SCSL
20 June 2007
 Special Court for Sierra Leone Press Release
19 July 2007
 Summary of the charges SCSL
 Un appel dans une affaire de mariage forcé susceptible d’influencer la CPI
IWPR 24 July 2007
 Website of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
 Spezialgerichtshof für Sierra Leone
TRIAL Website
 Statute of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
 Tribunal spécial pour la Sierra Leone
Site de TRIAL
 Website of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
 Riskieren Sie den Handel mit Devisen! - Blick Online
09.11.2008
gate24.ch ist das umfassende Schweizer Firmenverzeichnis für den täglichen Bedarf. Dank der regionalen Suchfunktion finden Sie treffsicher und ganz einfach die gewünschten ...
TRIAL_TXT_RSS display all...
You have information to share ?
Or mistakes to correct ?
click here...

Receive future updates of this profile in your e-mail :

 

 

Become a member

 

 

Donate

 

 

Link to our Website

Alex Tamba Brima

context : Sierra Leone Search
judgement place : Sierra Leone Special Court Search
status : Sentenced
particulars : Trial before the SCSL started on 7 March 2005; found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to 50 years imprisonment on 19 July 2007; sentence confirmed on appeal on 22 February 2008
position : Leading member of the «Armed Forces Revolutionary Council» (AFRC)
facts legal procedurespotlight
Alex Tamba Brima was indicted on 7 March 2003.He was accused of crimes against humanity, violations of Article 3 Common to the Geneva Conventions and of Additional Protocol II (commonly known as war crimes) and other serious violations of international humanitarian law, in conformity with Articles 2, 3 and 4 of the Statute of the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL).

Alex Tamba Brima was arrested and transferred to the SCSL on 10 March 2003.

At his initial court appearances on 15 and 17 March 2003, he pleaded not guilty to all of the charges.

The indictment deems that during the relevant period, that is starting on 30 November 1996, a state of armed conflict existed in Sierra Leone and that a link existed between the armed conflict in question and the acts and omissions considered to constitute violations of Articles 2, 3 and 4 of the Statute of the SCSL.

As stated in the indictment, Alex Tamba Brima, together with all the other members of the corps of organised armed forces involved in hostilities in Sierra Leone, had an obligation to conform to the rules of international humanitarian law as well as to the rules and customs governing the conduct of hostilities.

The AFRC/RUF coalition and Alex Tamba Brima, in his capacity as a leader of the AFRC, are alleged to have worked together on the same plan and goal thereby constituting a common criminal conspiracy which led concretely to concerted operations undertaken with a view to take over power in Sierra Leone and to control the diamond rich regions, particularly in the districts of Kenema and Kono. The atrocities committed against the civilian populations (murder, amputations, abductions, forced labour, burning down of villages, use of child soldiers, multiple violations of sexual integrity, forced marriages) were apparently an integral part of the plan drawn up by the AFRC/RUF coalition or at the very least could be considered as an inevitable consequence of such a plan which included the terrorizing and collective punishment of the civilian population as a method of taking control over the territory of Sierra Leone.

The indictment includes 18 counts: acts of terrorism and collective punishments against the civilian population (counts 1 and 2), acts of extermination, murder, and other life threatening offences (counts 3 to 5), sexual violence, including rape, sexual slavery and forced marriage (counts 6 to 9), violence to physical and mental well being, including amputation (counts 10 and 11), enlistment and use of child soldiers under 15 years of age (count 12), pillage (count 13), abduction and taking of hostages (count 14), and attacks against the personnel of UNAMSIL, the United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra Leone (counts 15 to 18).

According to the charges, individual members of the AFRC/RUF coalition indicted by the SCSL acted in concert with Charles Taylor during the period covered by the indictment.

Alex Tamba Brima is held to be criminally responsible for the above mentioned crimes, whether it be for his personal contribution to their planning, instigating, and organizing in which he would have participated in one way or another, or alternatively where they are alleged to have been committed as part of a common criminal conspiracy in which he participated.

The indictment holds him to have equal or additional responsibility in his role as hierarchical superior, for crimes committed by his subordinates, for which he had, or should have had, knowledge and also because he did not take the necessary measures aimed at the prevention or punishment of such crimes.

On 27 January 2004, the SCSL ordered the joint trial of Alex Tamba Brima, Santigie Borbor Kanu and Brima Bazzy Kamara (see “related cases”).

The trial before the SCSL started on 7th of March 2005. The defence testimony was concluded on 27 October 2006. The closing arguments took place on 7 December 2006.

On 20 June 2007, Alex Tamba Brima and his co-defendants were found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity by the SCSL.

On 19 July 2007, Tamba Brima and Santigie Borbor Kanu were sentenced to 50 years imprisonment. Brima Bazzy Kamara was sentenced to 45 years. The three are likely to serve their prison sentences in Sweden or Austria rather than Sierra Leone because of security concerns.

The verdicts were the first delivered by the SCSL. This constitutes the first time in the history of international criminal justice that former rebel leaders are found guilty and sentenced to heavy prison terms for the recruitment of child soldiers.

On 22 February 2008 , the Appeals Chamber confirmed the sentences handed down by the Trial Chamber. It found that acts of forced marriage amount to a separate crime under international law. This is the first such finding by any international court. It declined however, to enter
new convictions.

The Appeals Chamber also reversed a Trial Chamber decision that the Prosecution had not properly pleaded the issue of Joint Criminal Enterprise. The Appeals Chamber found that the common criminal purpose of the Joint Criminal Enterprise was properly pleaded in the indictment, but it did not enter additional convictions.
Print  Send to a friend  Add to my favorites    click for more...
Trial Watch would like to remind its users that any person charged by national or international authorities is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
 nationality :
 Sierra leone
 date of birth :
 23.11.1971
  also known as :
  Gullit
  last time seen :
  Freetown (Sierra Leone)
  period of charges :
 29.11.1996 - 09.2000
  judgement period :
  07.03.2003 - 22.02.2008
  charges :
  Crimes against humanity
War crimes
  profile last modified :
  23.02.2008
 
icl
Trial Watch has benefited from a financial support from the Loterie Romande and the City of Geneva.
Copyrights © 2008 trial-ch.org. All rights reserved - DB Engineering: J. Bédat, Design: X. Righetti - Legal informations