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Posts Tagged ‘Cameroon’

Intelligence tested

Infectious disease may explain why some countries have cleverer populations

HUMAN intelligence is higher, on average, in some places than in others. And researchers at the University of New Mexico have come up with an explanation, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. Comparing the average IQ in a particular country with its disease burden (based on the reduction in life expectancy caused by 28 infectious diseases) reveals a striking correlation. At the bottom of the IQ list is Equatorial Guinea, followed by St Lucia, with Cameroon, Mozambique and Gabon tied for third last. These countries also have among the highest burdens of infectious diseases. At the opposite end of the scale, Singapore, South Korea, China and Japan show the highest intelligence scores and relatively low levels of disease. America, Britain and a number of European countries also place in the top left-hand corner of the chart. For more on this, see article.

FIFA World Cup 2010 Schedule in Indian Time

The FIFA World Cup 2010 is the 19th FIFA World Cup, the premier international football tournament. The tournament which is being hosted by South Africa is scheduled to take place between 11 June and 11 July 2010.
There are 32 teams in this World Cup, which are categorized into 8 groups, each group contains 4 teams. [...]

Football squad gets win before heading to South Africa

The Serbian national squad took home a win in a friendly against Cameroon, restoring their confidence before heading to South Africa for the World Cup. Serbia trailed twice in the game played in Belgrade, but managed to take and keep the lead in the second half, winning the match by the score of 4-3.

Joanna Garcia and Nick Swisher to Be Engaged

It looks like that New York Yankees are able to get an additional dose of Hollywood. According to the latest news, Reba as well as Privileged star Joanna Garcia is engaged to Nick Swisher who is considered to be an outfielder of New York Yankees. Actually, such news was confirmed by the rep of Joanna [...]

Cameron Douglas Moved to Lewisberg

Cameron Douglas who has been sentenced to five years imprisonment has been moved to a minimum security prison in Lewisburg. This was in consideration of Cameron’s request to the judge and his promise that he plan to live sober and would not be touching drugs again in his life.
The 31 year old Cameron, son of [...]

World Cup Soccer Stars Vanity Fair June 2010

Some of soccer’s biggest stars are stripping for VF! In honor of next month’s soccer World Cup Soccer Championship in South Africa, Vanity Fair Magazine has commissioned shutterbug Annie Leibovitz to snap a full spread on the upcoming World Cup star players wearing their country’s flags — and very little else. Here’s the cover with [...]

GMG Global aims to double rubber output in 2-3 years

Singapore-based rubber plantation firm GMG Global (GMGG.SI) plans to more than double its output in two to three years, partly through acquisitions in Southeast Asia, its chief executive said on Monday. 
 
Elson Ng, who is also president of the firm, told Reuters in an interview that the company will also seek to expand its plantation area in Cameroon to boost output and feed growing demand for rubber, especially from China. 

Read more…

Eto’o confident of Cameroon success

African superstar Samuel Eto’o is banking on fighting spirit driving Cameroon into the Cup of Nations quarter-finals tomorrow. The “Indomitable Lions” tackle fellow former champions Tunisia in the Angola town and the stakes are high. Victory for four-time title holders Cameroon over the

Zambia wary of another mauling

Zambia coach Herve Renard hopes his players have short memories as they prepare to face Cameroon in the Africa Cup of Nations today.   After making a losing start to the previous tournament in Ghana two years ago, the Indomitable Lions roared back with a 5-1 win against the Chipolopolo (CopperZambia coach Herve Renard hopes his players have short memories as they prepare to face Cameroon in the Africa Cup of Nations today. After making a losing start to the previous tournament in Ghana two years ago, the Indomitable Lions roared back with a 5-1 win against the Chipolopolo (Copper

Playing away

Most African footballers play for foreign clubs

The Africa Cup of Nations, which takes place every two years, kicked off in Angola on January 10th. The tournament went ahead without the Togolose team, who withdrew after their bus was attacked by terrorists. Of the 345 players in the 15 squads remaining in the competition, most are employed by foreign clubs: 205 of them ply their trade outside Africa, mainly in Europe. Seven of the squads have three home-based players or fewer; two, Cameroon and Nigeria, have none at all. French clubs are the most popular destination, with 58 on their books, followed by English clubs, with 24. (Togo’s team had just two home-based players and nine from French clubs.) South Africa, host of this year’s World Cup, is the biggest African importer; its own national squad, however, failed to qualify for the event. In all, clubs from 54 countries will be represented, from Azerbaijan to China. None of the participants play in the Americas: Latin America is football-mad too—but is also a big exporter of footballers.

McAfee Most Dangerous Web Domain List Topped by Cameroon

In its third annual report on the riskiest Web domains, McAfee says attackers are using Cameroon’s domain name as part of typo-squatting schemes to infect users with malware.
– McAfees list of the most dangerous Web domains has a new leader.
Africas

Cameroon(.cm) domain has taken the top spot from
Hong Kong(.hk) as the riskiest domain on the Web, according to McAfees third annual Mapping the Mal Web report (PDF).

Japan(.jp) was found to be the safest country…


Afrobeat Legend Tony Allen New Album Hits 01/12

NIGERIAN AFROBEAT LEGEND TONY ALLEN’S WORLD CIRCUIT/NONESUCH DEBUT

SECRET AGENT TO BE RELEASED JANUARY 12

“At nearly 70 the man Brian Eno reckons is perhaps the greatest drummer that ever lived
is reveling in his heritage, and it’s contagious.” —Q

Tony Allen

Tony Allen — best known for his work as drummer and musical director for Fela Anikulapo Kuti, one of Africa’s most influential artists — makes his World Circuit/Nonesuch debut with Secret Agent, January 12. Following its European release earlier this year, Secret Agent has received generous critical praise. The Guardian proclaimed, “There is no question that Tony Allen is a genius, one of the greatest percussionists in the history of popular music,” while Observer Music Monthly said, “If you’re wondering why Afrobeat is hip, start here.”

Together with Fela Kuti, with whom he played for 15 years, Allen co-created Afrobeat — the hard-driving, horns-rich, funk-infused, politically insurrectionary style that became such a dominant force in African music and is now one of Africa’s most popular styles among international listeners.

Allen produced Secret Agent, which was recorded with his touring band of musicians from Nigeria, Cameroon, Martinique and France. The music is square in the Afrobeat tradition — rhythmic tenor guitar, funky keyboards, call and response vocals, and full-throated horns — with a few twists (including keyboard player and arranger Fixi’s accordion on some tracks). Allen’s playing meanwhile draws on four different styles — highlife, soul/funk, jazz and traditional Nigerian drumming. At Afrobeat’s heart is the beat, even more prominent now than it was in Fela Kuti’s legendary Afrika ’70 band.

Secret Agent is Allen’s first release since he became a founding member of The Good, The Bad & The Queen (alongside Damon Albarn, Paul Simenon and Simon Tong). This association has helped encourage a recent upsurge of interest in Afrobeat. Over the years Allen has appeared on dozens of albums and his continued relevance in 2009 — fans of hip hop, funk and jazz clamor for his recordings — speaks to the staying power of the Afrobeat music that he helped create in the 1960s.


Football: Algeria, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Tunisia target World Cup

Algeria, Cameroon, Ivory Coast and Tunisia could qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa this weekend. Ivory Coast need one point at bottom-of-the-table Malawi Saturday in Group E to clinch a second successive appearance at the quadrennial international football showpiece. But

Mobile cash

By Louise Greenwood
BBC Africa Business Report

A M-Pesa office

Millions of Africans are using mobile phones to pay bills, move cash and buy basic everyday items. So why has a form of banking that has proved a dead duck in the West been such a hit across the continent

It has been estimated that there are a billion people around the world who lack a bank account but own a mobile.

Africa has the fastest-growing mobile phone market in the world and most of the operators are local firms.

In countries like South Africa, for example, mobile phones outnumber fixed lines by eight to one.

In Kenya there were just 15,000 handsets in use a decade ago. Now that number tops 15 million.

Setting up a bank account on your phone is straightforward. All you do is register with an approved agent, provide your phone, along with an ID card, and then deposit some cash onto your account.

You can use it to pay for everything from beer to cattle – one Masai farmer told the BBC that when he sells cows in Nairobi, he puts the money on his phone to ensure that robbers can’t get his cash.

A Kenyan woman said she uses the technology to transfer money from her phone to that of her parents while a Nairobi businessman told us it was handy for settling customer accounts.

Large volumes, small transactions

In Tanzania just 5% of the population have bank accounts. In Ethiopia there is one bank for every 100,000 people.

Phone showing M-Pesa money transfer

Even Africans with bank accounts often face high charges for moving their cash around. It is this gap in the market that mobile phone banking is targeting.

While the amounts of cash being transferred are often tiny, the sheer volume of business compensates for that, as Pauline Vaughan, head of Kenya’s biggest mobile phone banking service M-Pesa, explains.

"We have over seven million customers who have registered for M-Pesa…. Our average transaction is actually less than $40 [£24] – this is the kind of customer we are addressing," she says.

"But in total we are moving in excess of $8.5m per day."

‘Cherry-picking’

However, the mobile phone revolution continues to leave large parts of the continent behind.

While countries like Kenya, South Africa and much of North Africa are approaching 100% mobile penetration, in Burundi, the Central African Republic, Eritrea, and Rwanda it is less than 30%.

Customers in a Kenya supermarket using mobile phones to transfer and withdraw money

Low incomes, illiteracy and large signal black spots are all obstacles to the sale and use of mobile phones. Taxes, which can be as high as 30% in countries like Tanzania and Uganda, are also a disincentive.

Telecoms experts say that many African markets remain too risky for mobile phone companies, which have targeted more stable and wealthy countries first.

"What we have seen is cherry-picking in markets like South Africa and much of Francophone North Africa," says Nigel Hawkins, an independent industry analyst.

"There are concerns [in other countries] about the cost of building infrastructure; there are worries about the non-payment of debt and unstable governments."

Expansion

Mobile phone banking is, however, attracting charitable backing. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation plans to put $12.5m into a programme to extend services to the poor.

But those companies with a firm foothold in their home markets are increasingly looking to expand.

With the market in Kenya largely sewn up, M-Pesa is now eyeing neighbouring Tanzania and even Afghanistan.

France’s MTN recently announced plans for a fully-fledged bank account on mobile phones, with an optional credit card.

The service will be extended to the 20 countries where MTN operates, including Uganda, Nigeria, Cameroon and Ivory Coast, which combined have over 90 million mobile phone users.

Africa Business Report, BBC World News – Saturday, 22 August 0130 GMT and 2230 GMT; Sunday, 23 August, 1330 GMT and 2030 GMT.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Scientists find new strain of HIV

Gorilla

Gorillas have been found, for the first time, to be a source of HIV.

Previous research had shown the HIV-1 strain, the main source of human infections, with 33m cases worldwide, originated from a virus in chimpanzees.

But researchers have now discovered an HIV infection in a Cameroonian woman which is clearly linked to a gorilla strain, Nature Medicine reports.

HIV originated from a similar virus in chimpanzees called Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV).

"This demonstrates that HIV evolution is an ongoing process"

Dr David Robertson, researcher

Although HIV/Aids was first recognised by scientists in the 1980s, it is thought it first entered the human population early in the twentieth century in the region of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The virus probably originally jumped into humans after people came into contact with infected bush meat.

SIV viruses have been reported in other primates, including gorillas.

Unusual case

French doctors treating the 62-year-old Cameroonian woman who was living in Paris said they initially spotted some discrepancies in routine viral load tests.

Further analysis of the HIV strain she was infected with showed it was more closely related to SIV from gorillas than HIV from humans.

She is the only person known to be infected with the new strain but the researchers expect to find other cases.

Before moving to Paris, she had lived in a semi-urban area of Cameroon and had no contact with gorillas or bush meat, suggesting she caught the virus from someone else who was carrying the gorilla strain.

Analysis of the virus in the laboratory have confirmed that it can replicate in human cells.

Co-author Dr David Robertson, from the University of Manchester, said it was the first definitive transfer of HIV seen from a source other than a chimpanzee, and highlighted the need to monitor for the emergence of new strains.

"This demonstrates that HIV evolution is an ongoing process.

"The virus can jump from species to species, from primate to primate, and that includes us; pathogens have been with us for millions of years and routinely switch host species."

He added that the fact the patient had been diagnosed in France showed how human mobility can rapidly transfer a virus from one area of the world to another.

Professor Paul Sharp, from the University of Edinburgh, said the virus probably initially transferred from chimpanzees to gorillas.

He said the latest finding was interesting but perhaps not surprising.

"The medical implication is that, because this virus is not very closely related to the other three HIV-1 groups, it is not detected by conventional tests.

"So the virus could be cryptically spreading in the population."

However, he said that he would guess it would not spread widely and become a major problem.

"Although the patient with this virus was not ill, there is no reason to believe that it will not lead to Aids," he added. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New strain of HIV found in Africa

Gorilla

A new strain of the HIV virus has been discovered in a 62-year-old woman living in Cameroon, West Africa.

Only three strains of the virus that causes Aids were previously known, all from chimpanzees.

But the new form of HIV, discovered by researchers from the University of Rouen in France, appears to be closer to a strain found in wild gorillas.

The team think it came from gorilla-to-human transmission – but the patient said she had no contact with apes.

The woman had moved from Paris to near the Cameroonian capital of Yaounde, but insists she never ate wild bush-meat or encountered simians.

Despite remaining untreated she currently shows no signs of developing full-blown Aids.

Jean-Christophe Plantier, who led the scientists, said the finding "highlights the continuing need to watch closely for the emergence for new HIV variants, particularly in western-central Africa".

Could be spreading

The first HIV virus is thought to have originated in the region before crossing to humans, possibly by infected blood splashing into the wound of a hunter.

It is not known how widespread the new strain may already be – but researchers said it could already be spreading in Cameroon or elsewhere in the world.

The virus replicates itself rapidly in the human body, indicating that it is already adapted to human cells.

Although the most likely reason for the new strain’s emergence is gorilla-to-human transmission, Mr Plantier’s team could not rule out the possibility that it started in chimpanzees before moving to gorillas. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ibrahimovic seals Barcelona move

Samuel Eto'o

Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o's has reached an agreement with Inter Milan to join the Italian champions, according to his agent.

Barca have had an offer of about £38m plus Eto’o, in exchange for Zlatan Ibrahimovic, accepted while Alexander Hleb will also join Inter on loan.

"The deal is sealed, next week he will start working with Inter," said the 28-year-old’s agent Josep Maria Mesalles.

"When he signs the contract he will be at (coach) Jose Mourinho’s disposal."

Reports suggest Eto’o has agreed a five-year deal with Inter and will earn about £9.6 a season. It brings an end to his five-year stay at the Nou Camp.

"It’s done," said Mesalles. "We have reached an agreement with Inter. Samuel talked to Mourinho and is very happy to be wearing the Nerazzurri shirt. All the details have been filed.

"It’s complete harmony with us and the Nerazzurri club. We are very happy and satisfied. The deal’s sealed, next week he will start working with Inter.

The agreement should give the green light for Ibrahimovic’s move in the opposite direction, despite the 27-year-old Sweden striker picking up a wrist injury during Inter’s friendly defeat by Chelsea on Tuesday.

Inter and Barca have yet to confirm the news but the Italians announced on Thursday that Ibrahimovic’s injury is not as serious as first feared.

606: DEBATE

"£40 million alone would buy you a world class player, but adding Eto’o Think Barca have gone mad myself. "

mascotman

Inter president Massimo Moratti said on Tuesday: "Until things are wrapped up, there’s nothing to say but I am confident.

"Eto’o is one of the most important players on the market. Along with Ibra, he’s one of the most wanted. It’s a good chance for us to have another champion."

Ibrahimovic was the top scorer in Serie A last season and Moratti had nothing but praise for the 27-year-old.

"He’s a very serious professional," he said of the Swedish international. "He has always behaved well with us.

"He helped us win the championship and he was top scorer last year."

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola, who transfer-listed Eto’o last year, has said he believes the Cameroon striker should leave the club.

"I am convinced that the best thing for Barca is for Eto’o to leave," stated Guardiola. "Could I be mistaken Maybe so. But I am here to make these decisions."

Guardiola added Eto’o's departure would be good for the team.

"I feel that it is best for the club and the team. It’s a question of feelings," said Guardiola. "I am not here to change anyone’s character, but I can decide on which players I want to count on for the season.

"After what we won, we had to change the dressing room. I took this decision from my experience as a footballer."

Eto’o had been on the verge of a deal with Manchester City but Mark Hughes’s side withdrew their interest last week.

The forward signed for Barcelona from Mallorca for £16m in 2004.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

African lake gas poses threat to millions

Trapped methane and carbon dioxide could be set loose by a quake or landslide, say scientists

More than two million people living on the banks of Lake Kivu in central Africa are at risk of being asphyxiated by gases building up beneath its surface, scientists have warned.

It is estimated that the lake, which straddles the borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, now contains 300 cubic kilometres of carbon dioxide and 60 cubic kilometres of methane that have bubbled into the Kivu from volcanic vents. The gases are trapped in layers 80 metres below the lake’s surface by the intense water pressures there. However, researchers have warned that geological or volcanic events could disturb these waters and release the gases.

The impact would be devastating, as was demonstrated on 21 August 1986 at Lake Nyos in Cameroon, in West Africa. Its waters were saturated with carbon dioxide and a major disturbance – most probably a landslide – caused a huge cloud of carbon dioxide to bubble up from its depths and to pour down the valleys that lead from the crater lake.

Carbon dioxide is denser than air, so that the 50mph cloud hugged the ground and smothered everything in its path. Some 1,700 people were suffocated.

“The lake was essentially like a bottle of beer that had been shaken up,” said Professor George Kling, of the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at Michigan University. “When you opened it, carbon dioxide bubbled up, and the beer frothed over. A glassful is OK. A lakeful is deadly.”

Kling has since turned his attention to Lake Kivu, which is more than 3,000 times the size of Nyos and contains more than 350 times as much gas. More worrying is the fact that the shores of Kivu are much more heavily populated. About two million people live there, including the 250,000 citizens of the city of Goma.

Mount Nyiragongo, near Goma, erupted in 2002 and lava streamed from it into Lake Kivu for several days. On this occasion there was no disturbance of the lake’s deep layers of gas and no deadly outpouring of carbon dioxide or methane. However, Kling has warned – in the journal Nature this month – that in the event of another eruption the region may not be so lucky again.

Indeed, the impact would dwarf the disaster that struck Nyos. “Kivu is basically the nasty big brother of Nyos,” Kling told Nature.

The source of Kivu’s problems stems from carbon dioxide that has bubbled up through the lake bed from molten rocks below. The region – in Africa’s Great Rift Valley – is a centre of volcanic activity. In addition, some of this carbon dioxide has been converted by bacteria in the lake into methane. Hence the accumulation of both gases.

According to studies by researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, there was a 10% rise in carbon dioxide concentration, and a 15-20% increase in methane concentration in Kivu between 1974 and 2004. At the same time, plankton fossils on the lake’s bed have revealed several massive bouts of biological extinctions in Kivu over thousands of years. However, it is impossible to say if a new one is imminent, researchers told Nature.

At the same time, engineers are trying to tap Kivu’s rich supplies of methane – by lowering pipes from floating platforms down to its holding layers and siphoning off the gas. This could then be burnt and used as a source of industrial and domestic energy.

Several projects have been established, though only one is currently generating electricity – albeit sporadically – for the Rwandan grid. Another platform sank last year shortly before it was scheduled to begin production.

Tapping Kivu’s methane could, theoretically, reduce the risk of a deadly eruption, say engineers. However, scientists have also warned that tampering with the lake’s gases also carries a risk of triggering a disaster.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Tevez completes move to Man City

Carlos Tevez

Manchester City have confirmed the signing of former Manchester United striker Carlos Tevez, who will hold a 1400 BST news conference on Tuesday.

The Argentine, 25, left Old Trafford last month and will sign a five-year deal following a medical.

City depart for a three-match tour of South Africa on Wednesday.

"It’s terrific news," said boss Mark Hughes. "He’s an international of the highest class who possesses all the attributes to help drive us forward."

Hughes added: "This is yet another deal that shows the commitment of the owner to make this club the very best it can be."

Tevez, who will wear the number 32 shirt at Eastlands, spent a season with West Ham before joining Manchester United on an extended loan deal in 2007.

His move to Old Trafford ended a long-running saga following complications with West Ham’s registration of the player.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer"

Mark Hughes

The Premier League has ratified all the paperwork regarding his move to Eastlands having been assured City have sole registration of the striker.

Tevez, the only player to win the South American player of the year award three seasons running, won the Olympic gold medal with Argentina in Athens in 2004.

He was at Old Trafford as Sir Alex Ferguson’s side lifted successive Premier League titles, becoming a crowd favourite as he scored 34 goals in 99 league and cup starts.

Tevez will become one of a select band to have joined both Manchester clubs and he could re-visit his former club at the Old Trafford derby on 19 September.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer and someone who will contribute fully to the team ethic," Hughes added.

"He gives us another exciting, attacking dimension."

PHIL MCNULTY’S BLOG

"Is he better than what City currently have Can they afford him Yes, and most emphatically yes."

United said in June that they were willing to pay the £25.5m to turn the striker’s two-year loan move into a permanent five-year deal but Tevez decided to move on.

Speaking after Tevez’s decision to leave Manchester United, the player’s advisor Kia Joorabchian said: "He has to sign the next five years with a club he believes has got ambition to go forward in the Premier League, a club with history and one that really wants to achieve things."

Argentine international Tevez scored 15 goals last season but was often on the bench for key games and was wary of not getting enough first-team football ahead of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Manchester City’s summer spending so far has seen them sign striker Roque Santa Cruz from Blackburn for £18m and Aston Villa midfielder Gareth Barry for £12m.

But a proposed bid for Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o fell through – even though reports suggested the club was willing to make the Cameroon international the highest-paid player in the world, earning £250,000 per week.

There have also been rumours that Chelsea captain John Terry is on Manchester City’s wish-list, although Stamford Bridge boss Carlo Ancelotti insists the England defender is not for sale at any price.

Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor is understood to be in talks over a move to Eastlands.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Charles Taylor claims ‘love for humanity’

Former Liberian leader faces 11 counts, including murder, sexual slavery and using child soldiers in backing Sierra Leone rebels

The former Liberian president Charles Taylor began his defence at his war crimes trial in the Hague today by professing his “love for humanity” and said the charges against him were based on lies and misinformation.

Taylor faces 11 counts before the special court for Sierra Leone, including murder, sexual slavery and the use of child soldiers. Prosecutors have accused Taylor of arming and instructing rebels during the 1991-2002 civil war in Sierra Leone in order to gain control of its rich diamond fields.

In court, Taylor confidently introduced himself to the three judges as the 21st president of Liberia. His defence lawyer, the British QC Courtenay Griffiths, asked Taylor what he thought of an indictment that accused him of being “everything from a terrorist to a rapist”.

“It is quite incredible that such descriptions of me would come about,” Taylor said. “It is very, very, very unfortunate that the prosecution – because of disinformation, misinformation, lies, rumours – would associate me with such titles or descriptions.”

Yesterday Griffiths told the court that Taylor, 61, had been a “broker of peace” in the region rather than a war criminal and would testify about his efforts to restore calm in Sierra Leone.

The description was sharply at odds with the evidence offered by the prosecution since January 2008. The 91 witnesses called included a man whose hands were hacked off by rebels during the war and a former aide of Taylor who said he saw him eat a human liver.

Taylor, who is expected to give several weeks of testimony, insisted he had done no wrong.

“I am a father of 14 children, grandchildren, with love for humanity, have fought all my life to do what I thought was right in the interests of justice and fair play. I resent that characterisation of me. It is false, it is malicious, and I’ll stop there.”

He is the first African leader to be tried by an international court. An economics graduate who once escaped from a US prison, Taylor launched a successful rebellion in Liberia before being elected president in 1997.

He is alleged to have forged close ties to the brutal Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel movement in neighbouring Sierra Leone, which was notorious for recruiting child soldiers and hacking off the limbs of civilians during a conflict which cost tens of thousands of lives. The prosecutor, Stephen Rapp, said Taylor provided weapons and support to the rebels in return for “blood diamonds”.

Taylor denied encouraging atrocities such as forced amputations by the rebels, and said the allegation that he had been paid in diamonds placed inside food jars was a “diabolical lie”.

“Never, ever, whether it was mayonnaise or coffee or whatever jar of diamonds from the RUF,” he said.

Taylor fled to Nigeria after being indicted in 2003 for war crimes. In March 2006, when Nigeria accepted that he should face international justice, Taylor escaped from his seaside villa and was arrested trying to cross into Cameroon. He was transferred to The Hague, rather the Sierra Leone capital, Freetown, where the special court is based, due to fears that the trial might affect regional stability.

A verdict is expected next year.

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