BELLINZONA (SWITZERLAND) – A former Liberian rebel commander shouted before a tribunal on Thursday during the start of the trial into his alleged involvement in killing civilians, rape and eating pieces of a school teacher’s heart during Liberia’s civil war. He decried his extended pre-trial detention.
It is just one of the handful of cases that have been brought before international courts in connection with the Liberian civil war of 1989-2003 civil war in which thousands were killed and unspeakable brutalities were committed.
The accused Alieu Kosiah, 45, denied the allegations and his lawyer said the commander, who was held in Switzerland in 2014, was not present in the area in question when the so-called crimes took place.
Dressed in a shirt and black suit, Kosiah listened attentively and took regular notes, briefly responding to opening questions from the judge.
Asked if he knew what crimes he was accused of, he said: “Yes of course.” He later interrupted proceedings, shouting: “I was targeted…I have been six years in prison pre trial,” before apologising for the outburst. A witness in court said he appeared to be shaking.
Kosiah’s alleged crimes are listed by the Swiss court as “recruitment and use of a child soldier, forced transportation, looting, cruel treatment of civilians, attempted murder, murder (directly or by order), desecration of a corpse and rape”.
Kosiah, a teenager when the conflict involving thousands of child soldiers began, became one of the so-called ‘big men’ in the rebel faction ULIMO which fought against the troops of warlord Charles Taylor in the remote Lofa County in the 1990s.
The indictment says that he killed or participated in the killing of 18 civilians, forced a displaced woman to be his “wife”, raping her repeatedly, and that he recruited a 12-year-old boy as his personal bodyguard.
In one alleged incident, Kosiah joined fighters in eating slices of an assassinated man’s heart off a metal plate. Acts of cannibalism were not uncommon in the conflict.
Kosiah, who has given testimony to Swiss prosecutors, has not yet pleaded in court and is due to be heard next week.
“According to Mr. Alieu Kosiah, one of the big problems with this case is he had not yet arrived in Lofa (county) at the time of the crimes he supposedly committed there,” his lawyer Dimitri Gianoli said before the trial.
“(He) has always been very clear on his whereabouts in Liberia and the court filings include testimonies collected in Switzerland that confirm it.”
The case before a three-judge panel at the Federal Criminal Court in Bellinzona is a first for Switzerland under a 2011 law allowing prosecution for war crimes committed anywhere. The Swiss Attorney General’s office has said the case took a long time to prepare partly because of a lack of help from Liberian authorities.
Lawyers for Liberian victims are opposed to a court decision to postpone their hearings until next year due to COVID-19, effectively preventing them from hearing Kosiah in person.
The court is also mulling video link testimonies.
“It would be cruel to deny our clients the chance to be present with us,” Alain Werner, a lawyer representing four plaintiffs, said in court, explaining that it could help them heal. Kosiah’s lawyer Gianoli said their presence was not necessary. “Your tribunal is not a theatre,” he told the judges.
Liberia has never prosecuted its war criminals despite a recommendation to do so by its Truth and Reconciliation Commission more than 10 years ago. Former warlords retain positions of power and witnesses are reluctant to come forward.