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Is Outsourcing Exploitation?

I wasn’t going to write this article.
I was comfortable with my stance on outsourcing, comfortable enough to recommend it and promote products, and profit from the affiliate commissions, from people who use the catch-call of $2-per-hour labor and the phrase – “they do the work, you get the money“.
I’ve begun the process of outsourcing [...]

Mediation urged to stop G20 violence repeat

Independent negotiators should settle disputes between police and protesters to stop a repeat of the violence at the G20 summit where thousands of demonstrators were contained for hours using the controversial tactic of kettling, a parliamentary inquiry proposes today.

The report, by the joint committee on human rights, says police and demonstrators were to blame for failure to communicate in advance of the protests in the City of London in April.

It calls on the government to consider introducing a system of independent mediation – modelled on Acas, the body which settles industrial disputes – to improve dialogue in the run-up to protests.

The Met’s handling of the G20 protests has been under sustained criticism since the death of Ian Tomlinson, the 47-year-old newspaper vendor, who collapsed after being attacked by an officer who was not wearing his badge number. The committee said it noted “with concern” that the Independent Police Complaints Commission, which is still investigating Tomlinson’s death, has received 277 additional complaints about the Met’s operation.

The report said trust in the police could be “seriously damaged” if officers were not held to account. Wearing of police badge numbers was “crucial to ensuring that the police are accountable for their actions”, and should be made a legal requirement, it said.

In recent weeks, the Met has been criticised by HM Inspectorate of Constabulary, the official police watchdog, which said in its interim findings that there should be a national overhaul of the public order guidance given to police forces, and the home affairs select committee, which suggested the G20 protests exposed how officers had not received sufficient training.

All three inquiries have found serious failings in the Met’s containment of protesters using the tactic known as kettling, near the Bank of England. They also noted that the technique had been recently ruled lawful by the law lords in some circumstances. That decision is being appealed against at the European court of human rights.

Keith Vaz MP, chairman of the home affairs committee, will today come out against the use of kettling for the first time, saying it is “a very worrying tactic” that is potentially dangerous and should be abandoned.

“I personally am against it because I think the containment of people in those circumstances will lead to situations where either the public, somebody who is ill wants to come out of the kettle, or members of the press who have I think a right to be wherever they want to be in a protest of this kind, can’t come out,” he says in today’s episode of BBC Radio 4′s The Long View. Asked by the presenter, Jonathan Freedland, if he wanted to see the back of it, Vaz replies: “I would”.

Today’s report refers to evidence from Tom Brake MP, who attended the protest as a legal observer and witnessed police refusing to give permission to leave to a man who needed to care for his 83-year-old mother and a diabetic who needed to get insulin. The committee said facilities such as food and water were not available to protesters who, when leaving the kettle, were searched and asked for their details. While kettling could be “useful and lawful in some circumstances”, the implementation of the tactic at the G20 “did not give sufficient weight” to the human rights of individuals being contained, it said.

Andrew Dismore MP, the committee’s chairman, said: “I think police just saw this protest as trouble, not a demonstration that they had a legal obligation to try and facilitate. “There were obvious problems with this policing operation. While kettling may be a helpful tactic, it can trap peaceful protesters for hours.”

He added there was “huge mistrust” between police and protesters in the days leading up to the demonstration, and an independent broker could in the future help resolve disputes.

The report also said the media and not police were at fault for “talking up the prospect of violence and severe dirsuption” ahead of the protests, and called for the Met to release its report into the death of Blair Peach, who is widely believed to have been killed by Met officer at a demonstration in 1979.

The Met and the Association of Chief Police Officers said they were reviewing their approach to policing protests and would take note of the report.

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Trevor Phillips: a career in crisis

Outspoken, clever, brave and possessing great strategic nous – Trevor Phillips should have been a brilliant leader of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. So what on earth went wrong?

The idea of celebrity may not always mean much to a celebrity but there is a hierarchy to these things, and so it is that one of Trevor Phillips’s prized possessions is a photograph of himself in the company of Nelson Mandela. But it isn’t often that Phillips finds himself obliged to defer to anybody. He has status, a huge public profile and, in Lord Mandelson as well as many of the titans of New Labour, some very important allies.

A year ago, this might have been enough to guarantee his place in the governing establishment, with the agreeable side-products of wealth and reputation. Instead, with the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) that he runs hovering close to meltdown, his reputation is under the severest attack and his career is in crisis.

Phillips presumably has the support of government, which chose to extend his contract to run the organisation for another three years when a cross-section of his commissioners were calling for his head, but he cannot even be sure of that because, as the storm has raged, ministers have stayed silent.

Sir Ian Blair, the former Met commissioner, thought that he had the security of a five-year contract but now he sits at home, writing his memoirs. These contracts are not iron-clad. With headlines depicting only turmoil, nothing can be taken for granted.

The commissioners who say they have resigned (in fact, they have chosen not to re-apply; only Phillips and his deputy Margaret Prosser had their contracts renewed) are brutally specific about the problem they see at the EHRC. Nothing to do with the scale of the task. Nothing to do with teething. Phillips, they say, is the problem. His outspokenness in comments such as, “In truth, Obama may be helping to postpone the arrival of a post-racial America and I think he knows it”; his declaration that multiculturalism is dead, that it’s time to stop branding the police as institutionally racist – comments that many say they disagree with, pronouncements they never endorsed.

Kay Hampton, one of the first commissioners to bail out and a former chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, diagnosed it thus. “Phillips’s leadership style, which is better suited to a political party than a human rights organisation, led to deep discontentment and dissatisfaction. Not surprisingly, cracks soon appeared on the commission’s board, leading to a breakdown in trust and confidence in the chair.” Bert Massie, a disability rights campaigner, also said the problem stemmed from Phillips himself. “How do you manage to alienate that number of people? It’s quite a skill.”

Stepping down at the weekend, Ben Summerskill, head of the gay rights organisation Stonewall, went further. “Trevor is a brilliant communicator, he’s a fantastic maker of television programmes, but he has not been successful in running the commission and bringing it together. We should be crystal- clear: this isn’t an issue about policies, this isn’t an issue about whether the commission should be a modern, 21st-century commission, it’s an issue about old-fashioned management.”

So far, six members of the commission’s 16-strong ruling body say they have resigned, as well as the head of its disability committee, the director of stakeholder relations and, at the weekend, his director of communications. Greg Dyke, who knows Phillips well, having watched him rise from researcher to head of current affairs at London Weekend Television, said his friend is an able administrator. “He is clever and thoughtful and rational. He has always seemed very good with people. He was liked and popular. If people now are saying that he is autocratic, I have to say that is not something I ever noticed. But he does try to get things done. In some organisations, that doesn’t always make you very popular.”

A colleague who worked very closely with Phillips during his spell in 2000 as chairman of the Greater London Authority concurs. “He was very comfortable in the role, very courageous and he took the initiative. He was always wanting to move the thing forward. Others were hemmed in by the legislation, but he would say: we are a new organisation. Let’s try this. See where it goes.”

So if the problem is not a lack of ability, and Phillips hasn’t been daunted by the scale of his role as first chair of the Equalities Commission, what has gone wrong and how can it be fixed? One pertinent question is: was it the concept of the commission itself? Certainly Phillips was one of those who voiced strong opposition to the creation of the commission at the outset, arguing that the race agenda, for which he bore responsibility at the Commission for Racial Equality, would be lost or at least blanded out by the body’s absorption into the new super-quango, merging the separate government-funded bodies that dealt with race and gender and disabilities. Initially, he backed away from any suggestion that he might run it. Effectively his arm was twisted by ministers. His U-turn lost him considerable support among black activists who felt his involvement in the campaign against the EHRC might have helped them win the argument.

Dyke thinks there is a philosophical and structural problem. “When I saw they were putting all those organisations together, I thought, there is the recipe for a nightmare. Some jobs are beyond management.”

For all that, no one has suggested any lack of commitment on the part of Phillips towards the super-quango or the all-encompassing human rights agenda. Perhaps the problems go deeper.

Phillips travelled into the political arena on the path labelled New Labour. It was a particularly uncluttered path. He declined to be the Labour party’s candidate for London mayor, choosing instead to be Frank Dobson’s deputy. When Dobson lost to Ken Livingstone, Phillips entered the London Assembly by dint of his position at the top of the Labour list for elections run using proportional representation. It was a no-sweat entree to representative politics. It didn’t have to be that way. When it became clear that Bernie Grant, then MP for Tottenham, was ailing in the years before his death in 2000, many saw Phillips as a natural heir. But, not wanting the drudge of constituency meetings, backbenches and the loss of privacy, he chose not to subject himself to the hurly burly of a byelection.

He didn’t have to. From the chairmanship of the London Assembly to the chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, he attained high-profile jobs – all within his capabilities but, crucially, all with the blessing of the New Labour establishment. New Labour was never comfortable with a race agenda, but in time he became its most tangible symbol that black people could thrive within the Blairite project. But they had to be black people who understood the vocabulary. He understood the vocabulary.

One can’t help thinking that if the complaints from commissioners are even half true, Phillips seems to have run the EHRC in a very New Labour, Blairite way – with a certainty of conviction and strength of purpose, but with no great feeling that he had to take his lieutenants with him. Commissioners complain of key statements and policy pronouncements of which they had no advance warning, and felt uneasy about some of his public positions, such as the observation he made in 2005 that Britain was “sleepwalking its way to segregation”. They hit out at deals allegedly struck without their knowledge, of government by clique.

Hampton complained that Phillips’s approach was too political, but in fact it has not been at all political in any operational sense because politicians know only too well that they need to keep potentially troublesome elements “on-side” to prevent the sort of disunity and plotting that has brought Phillips’s career to the precipice. A good politician nurtures constituents, even when they are foolish or boring, and they know that while powerful friends are a boon, a personal constituency is crucial, especially when things go bad.

Rather than political, his approach thus far would appear to have been rooted in the skills that made him a formidable journalist. Single-mindness, strategic nous, a love of impact, the courage to take the debate into uncharted territory, a certain ruthlessness. “There are two schools of thought in government and public affairs,” says a colleague who has observed him closely. “The first way says you build alliances and go slowly. The second is that you need to push ahead and let anyone who lags behind catch up. He is much closer to the second.”

This approach has brought some success, but no one writes much about that. The commission has brought 330 enforcement and litigation actions in the last 18 months alone. But was it the right approach to fuse the disparate elements of the fledgling commission? The only thing that unites the rebel factions now is their criticism of him.

If he is to survive – and increasingly even friends question whether he will – the next week will be crucial. The resignations are losing their impact, but it must be worrying for him that few of the commissioners who have been so scathing about him are themselves being criticised. By attacking him, they seem to be doing the will of their own constituents. His allies, by contrast, appear to be keeping their heads down and so are ministers who hold his fate within their gift. One more push and he could topple over. Any fresh allegation of conflict between his work for the commission – a three-day-a-week contract – and his private race consultancy Equate would see an end to him. (Commissioners and ministers were aggrieved to learn that in 2007, as Channel 4 faced criticism over racist remarks directed towards the Indian actor Shilpa Shetty on Big Brother, the station was being advised by Equate, which is 70% owned by Phillips.) Any new worries about the EHRC’s finances, which triggered concern this year from the National Audit Office, could also see him finished. Sudden death.

But if he can soldier on through the next few days, the plan is for a fresh start. A new, coherent vision for the commission, drawn up with greenskin commissioners who will pull in the same direction. Perhaps a landmark speech. Maybe it will activate a legal challenge or two; get its hands dirty. But there will also have to be a new approach from Phillips. A more measured, consensual approach that includes his lieutenants, and might well appeal on some days to the Tories and the Daily Mail, but doesn’t leave everyone else with the impression that the pendulum is stuck in an illiberal direction.

Above all, he will need to start showing an increasingly sceptical public why the commission, with its £70m budget, exists and should continue to exist. Already there is the fear that the ongoing crisis will give an incoming Cameron government the perfect excuse to kill off the commission. It needs a reputation for effectiveness, not cabaret. It needs results. “So far, he can’t point to anything substantial that it has done for anybody,” says the MP Diane Abbott. “There has been a lot of damage done to Trevor and the commission. The sooner it starts delivering for people, the better.”

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Amnesty condemns Nicaragua abortion ban

Amnesty report details shocking effects of country’s penal code which criminalises abortions in all cases

Nicaragua’s ban on all abortions, even when a woman’s life is at risk, is compelling incest and rape victims to give birth and contributing to an increase in maternal deaths, according to a report from Amnesty International.

Delegates from the human rights charity, who recently visited the predominantly Catholic country, say young girls subjected to sexual violence by family or friends are forced to give birth even when they are carrying their own brothers and sisters.

The report also says the law has led to a recorded rise in pregnant teenagers committing suicide by consuming poison.

Official figures show 33 girls and women died in pregnancy in the past year, compared to 20 in the previous year, it says. But the numbers are feared to be greater as the government itself has acknowleged incidents of maternal deaths are under-recorded.

Abortion was a key issue for the 2006 presidential election, won by former Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega. The former revolutionary, who once supported abortion rights, mobilised his supporters behind a campaign for a blanket ban on terminations, which was signed into law just before he took office.

Previous to that, “therapeutic” abortions were allowed in certain circumstances where continuation of the pregnancy was life-threatening.

The new penal code, introduced in July last year, enshrined the criminalisation of abortion, regardless of circumstance, with prison sentences for women who undergo abortions, and the medical staff who help them.

It also introduced criminal sanctions for doctors and nurses who treat a pregnant woman or girl for illnesses such as cancer, malaria, HIV/Aids or cardiac emergencies if such treatment could cause injury to or lead to the death of the embryo or foetus.

“There is only one way to describe what we have seen in Nicaragua ‑ sheer horror,” Kate Gilmore, Amnesty International’s executive deputy secretary general, told a press conference in Mexico City. “Children are being compelled to bear children. Pregnant women are being denied essential life saving medical care.”

She added: “What alternatives is this government offering a 10-year-old pregnant as a result of rape? And a cancer sufferer who is denied life-saving treatment just because she is pregnant, while she has other children waiting at home?”

Amnesty said the law goes as far as punishing girls and women who have suffered a miscarriage, as in many cases it is impossible to distinguish spontaneous from induced abortions.

The charity is calling for the immediate repeal of the penal code, and a guarantee of safe and accessible abortion services for rape victims and women whose lives or health would be at risk from the continuation of pregnancy. It also wants protection for those who speak out against the law, and “comprehensive” support to be given to women and girls affected by it.

The report, The total abortion ban in Nicaragua: Women’s lives and health endangered, medical professionals criminalised claims the law is in conflict with the Nicaraguan obstetric rules and protocols issued by the ministry of health, which mandates therapeutic abortions in specific cases.

The church has been seen as a powerful force behind the ban in a country where an estimated 85% of the population is Catholic. Just 3% of the world’s countries, including El Salvador and Chile, have such an absolute ban in place.

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New claim of UK torture complicity

Papers suggest intelligence service knew men were being mistreated

A businessman who was held and mistreated in the United Arab Emirates following the London bombings believes he has evidence that British consular officials asked permission from the UK’s own security services to visit him while he was detained.

Heavily redacted documents seen by the Guardian appear to indicate that the request to visit Alam Ghafoor was made to an unidentified British intelligence officer and not to officials in the UAE.

Ghafoor is one of several British men who allege there has been British complicity in their detention and torture while abroad. The businessman, who is 38 and from Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, was detained and tortured while on a business trip to Dubai following the London bombings in July 2005.

Ghafoor and his business partner, Mohammed Rafiq Siddique, flew to the UAE on 4 July. They were dragged out of a restaurant as they dined on 21 July. The two British Muslims say they were threatened with torture, deprived of sleep, subjected to stress positions and told they would be killed and fed to dogs.

Ghafoor has obtained copies of correspondence from consular officials to the Foreign Office in London while he was in custody that show those officials were asking someone other than the UAE authorities for permission to see him. Who that person is, and who they represented, is unclear, as their name was censored before the copies were handed over. Some of the reports were so heavily redacted by the time Ghafoor received them that the only words not blanked are his name.

In one email, dated 25 July, 2005, a consular official wrote: “Today I phoned [name withheld] trying to get permission to see them. First [...] told me that there was no need because they would be deported soon. I asked if we could see them today or tomorrow. [...] told me that [...] would check with the UAE authorities… and would let me know. I didn’t hear from [...] since then. Tomorrow I’ll speak to [...] again.”

Ghafoor, who was released without charge on 30 July, is convinced that the individual to which consular officials were turning for permission to see him was a British intelligence officer. At the time of his interrogation, Ghafoor was told that British security services had requested his questioning.

MI5 and MI6 officers who question terrorism suspects they know are being tortured, are acting in line with a secret government interrogation policy, drawn up after the 9/11 attacks. The policy states: “we cannot be party to such ill treatment nor can we be seen to condone it” and that “it is important that you do not engage in any activity yourself that involves inhumane or degrading treatment of prisoners.” It also advises intelligence officers that if detainees “are not within our custody or control, the law does not require you to intervene” to prevent torture.

According to Philippe Sands, QC, one of the world’s leading experts in international human rights law, the policy almost certainly breaches international human rights.

When Ghafoor asked why he had been picked up, he was shown a photograph and told he resembled one of the 7/7 suicide bombers and must be related to him. His business partner, Siddique, who was also detained and tortured, says he was told he must have been involved in the bombings – not only did he share a name with the bombers – but he lived in Dewsbury, the same Yorkshire town.

Ghafoor said his interrogators questioned his sexuality, as he is not married, and insulted him because he was unable to wash, saying he smelled. He was also punched in the groin.

One interrogator said to him: “In the morning you will be thrown into a pit and the dogs will tear you to bits and I will watch it and enjoy it.”

Eventually, he agreed to sign a false confession admitting he was a friend of the bombers and had organised the London attacks. “I wrote a false confession and put crazy things in it like ‘I have constant contact with Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden’,” he said.

He was told he would be shot by a firing squad the following morning.

When Ghafoor returned home, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. His relationship with his partner broke down and he suffered nightmares, anxiety and paranoia.

Ghafoor is furious that there has been no explanation for his treatment, nor an apology. “I would like to know why I was put through this hell and I would like someone to be accountable.”

Clive Stafford-Smith, the legal director of Reprieve, a not-for-profit human rights organisation, said: “It is impossible for the victims of torture to move on without truth and reconciliation, yet the British government seems intent on covering up what it has done.”

He added: “Until recently, the British security services were told to effectively turn a blind eye to torture.”

The Foreign Office said in a statement that Ghafoor and Siddique were not detained at Britain’s request. “British consular staff visited them on July 30, 2005 to ensure their welfare needs were being addressed. Their detention was a matter for the Dubai authorities … they were not detained at the request of the UK government. We do not participate in, solicit, encourage or condone the use of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment for any purpose.

“Wherever allegations of wrongdoing are made, they are taken seriously and investigated as appropriate.”

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Fears grow over fate of Iran prisoners

• Two inmates die from meningitis in Evin prison
• Former detainees speak of harassment and torture

Fears are mounting over the safety of hundreds of political inmates in Iran’s most notorious prison following the deaths of two prisoners detained in the recent post-election unrest.

Mohsen Rouholamini and Amir Javadifar died in Tehran’s Evin prison after being arrested at a demonstration this month. Rouholamini, the son of a prominent Iranian scientist close to the country’s political elite, died from meningitis after injuries believed to have been inflicted by his jailers went untreated.

The deaths prompted fears of a meningitis outbreak in Evin and other overcrowded detention centres where opposition figures, journalists and students are kept following last month’s disputed election. News of the deaths coincided with reports of injuries to other detainees.

One inmate, Isa Saharkhiz, a prominent reformist journalist and commentator, is reported to have suffered broken ribs after being tortured under interrogation.

Campaigners are also concerned for the safety of Kian Tajbakhsh, an American-Iranian scholar said to be under pressure to confess involvement in an alleged western plot to orchestrate the protests following Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election.

Prisoners recently released from Evin have described enduring countless beatings and being herded into tiny cells without air conditioning, where stifling temperatures regularly soar above 40C.

“I was beaten by batons and slapped thousands of times,” said one, who spent two weeks in the prison’s Section 209, reserved for political prisoners. “I can’t remember how many times I have been beaten and slapped while they were forcing me to confess whatever they wanted,” he told the Guardian.

Another prisoner, who spent three weeks in a block normally used for ordinary criminals, said: “I still have the screams and shouts of the prisoners in my ears, the prisoners whose legs and arms were broken under warders’ attacks.” Both did not wish their names to be published.

One recently released man was said to have become mentally ill.

“He is not like before, he is very weak,” his girlfriend said. “He was harassed, insulted and tortured. The warders pushed him from stairs while his hands were bound together. He was forced to crawl on the ground like a worm.”

Iran’s already divided political establishment has been shocked by Rouholamani’s death, disclosed days after his family was told he would be released. His father, Abdol Hossein Rouholamani, is a former head of one of Iran’s leading research bodies, the Pasteur Institution, and adviser to the defeated conservative candidate, Mohsen Rezai. Rouholamani, 25, was arrested on 9 July during a demonstration commemorating the 10th anniversary of a 1999 pro-reformist student uprising at Tehran University, where his older brother had once headed the basij, the hardline pro-government militia used to quell the recent protests.

Javadifar, a student, is thought to have suffered a broken nose and arm while being arrested at the same event.

A blog in the name of a high-ranking revolutionary guard member, Hossein Alaie, quoted Rouholamani’s father as saying his son’s jaw had been broken and that he had been denied medical treatment.

“I found out that after torturing him, they had not attended to his wounds and his temperature sky-rocketed and he was diagnosed with meningitis,” the blog quoted the father as saying.

Rouholamani bowed to political pressure to play down his son’s death by today cancelling a public memorial scheduled for the headquarters of Iran’s state broadcaster, IRIB. An eyewitness said security forces dispersed large numbers of people who turned up for the event.

The head of the parliamentary investigations committee, Hamid Reza Katouzian, called Rouhoulamini’s death “very ugly” and added: “Those who have turned society into a security state and deployed military measures should be held accountable.”

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Sixth resignation at equality watchdog

Ben Summerskill steps down from equality commission, saying Phillips’s leadership style is unnerving

Trevor Phillips, the beleaguered head of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, was under further pressure today after one of the watchdog’s best known members resigned and called on Phillips to step down.

Ben Summerskill of the gay rights group Stonewall faxed his resignation to the minister for women and equality, Harriet Harman, at lunchtime today, becoming the sixth commissioner to resign from the EHRC.

He told the Guardian that Phillips’s leadership style had “unnerved” many commissioners and that the intense media scrutiny surrounding the commission meant that the time had come for him to step down as chair. Phillips’s contentious leadership was interfering with the commission’s work, Summerskill said.

“There were yet more headlines today and there comes a point when someone – particularly someone like Trevor who described himself as a politician – has to recognise that the headlines are destructive,” said Summerskill.

“I am crystal-clear that there are millions of people in this country whose lives are still disfigured by prejudice and every hour that the commission is arguing about who its chair is is an hour that is not being spent focused on changing the lives of those people.”

Summerskill’s resignation follows that of a string of commissioners including Sir Bert Massie – a leading disability rights campaigner who stood down last weekend and described Phillips’s chairmanship as “divisive” – and Kay Hampton, who resigned in March. Earlier this week, Hampton said that Phillips’s leadership style was “better suited to a political organisation rather than a human rights one”.

It has also emerged that Alun Davies, head of the disability committee, has recently resigned.

The EHRC found itself under further scrutiny on Monday after it emerged that it had spent £325,000 on re-employing seven executives who had recently left one of its predecessor organisations with generous redundancy packages.

The National Audit Office (NAO), which published a report into the EHRC, has refused to fully sign off the commission’s accounts because it had failed to get Treasury approval for the appointments.

The NAO said the commission – which grew out of the Commission for Racial Equality, the Disability Rights Commission and the Equal Opportunities Commission – “had no business strategy, no agreed organisational design, and no clear understanding of what the commission would do, and was missing important elements of effective programme management” in the run-up to its creation two years ago.

The EHRC was not immediately available for comment.

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Tamil Tiger leader vows to abandon violence

Tigers will use non-violent means to win homeland for Sri Lanka Tamils, group says

The newly appointed leader of Sri Lanka’s defeated Tamil Tiger rebels has pledged to turn the insurgent group into a non-violent separatist movement.

Selvarasa Pathmanathan was previously the movement’s head of international relations and allegedly ran an international weapons smuggling ring. The Sri Lankan government has appealed to foreign governments to find and arrest him.

Pathmanathan “will lead us into the next steps of our freedom struggle according to the vision of our esteemed leader”, the Tiger’s executive committee said in a statement released on Tuesday.

Pathmanathan replaces Velupillai Prabhakaran, who led the Tigers for decades until he was shot dead by Sri Lankan forces while trying to flee in May.

According to the statement, Pathmanathan said the Tigers would abandon their armed struggle and use non-violence to achieve their goals. He promised the group would reorganise itself on democratic principles — a major change from Prabhakaran’s dictatorial leadership style.

The defeated Tigers said they had set up a head office and an executive committee in their campaign for an independent homeland for ethnic minority Tamils, who claim they are marginalised and mistreated by Sri Lanka’s majority Sinhalese.

The government declared in May that its forces had crushed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), ending a civil war that began in 1983.

The rebels once controlled a parallel state across northern Sri Lanka backed by thousands of guerrilla fighters, a navy and even a nascent air force. In the final days of the battle, the military killed much of the senior Tiger leadership, including Prabhakaran.

It was not immediately clear whether Pathmanathan would get the support of an estimated 800,000 Tamil expatriates living in Britain, Canada, Australia and other countries. Signs have emerged that the Tamil diaspora is divided over whom to support. The TamilNet website, seen as a mouthpiece for the rebels, has refused to carry statements from Pathmanathan.

Reports have surfaced that many Tamils are furious with Pathmanathan for quickly acknowledging Prabhakaran’s death while others refused to believe the rebel chief had been killed.

Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan government has been criticised by human rights groups for what they say is the illegal detention of nearly 300,000 ethnic Tamils displaced by the recently ended conflict. Human Rights Watch says for more than a year, the Sri Lankan government has detained virtually everyone – including entire families – displaced by the fighting in the north in military-run camps, in violation of international law.

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Tamil Tiger leader vows to abandon violence

Tigers will use non-violent means to win homeland for Sri Lanka Tamils, group says

The newly appointed leader of Sri Lanka’s defeated Tamil Tiger rebels has pledged to turn the insurgent group into a non-violent separatist movement.

Selvarasa Pathmanathan was previously the movement’s head of international relations and allegedly ran an international weapons smuggling ring. The Sri Lankan government has appealed to foreign governments to find and arrest him.

Pathmanathan “will lead us into the next steps of our freedom struggle according to the vision of our esteemed leader”, the Tiger’s executive committee said in a statement released on Tuesday.

Pathmanathan replaces Velupillai Prabhakaran, who led the Tigers for decades until he was shot dead by Sri Lankan forces while trying to flee in May.

According to the statement, Pathmanathan said the Tigers would abandon their armed struggle and use non-violence to achieve their goals. He promised the group would reorganise itself on democratic principles — a major change from Prabhakaran’s dictatorial leadership style.

The defeated Tigers said they had set up a head office and an executive committee in their campaign for an independent homeland for ethnic minority Tamils, who claim they are marginalised and mistreated by Sri Lanka’s majority Sinhalese.

The government declared in May that its forces had crushed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), ending a civil war that began in 1983.

The rebels once controlled a parallel state across northern Sri Lanka backed by thousands of guerrilla fighters, a navy and even a nascent air force. In the final days of the battle, the military killed much of the senior Tiger leadership, including Prabhakaran.

It was not immediately clear whether Pathmanathan would get the support of an estimated 800,000 Tamil expatriates living in Britain, Canada, Australia and other countries. Signs have emerged that the Tamil diaspora is divided over whom to support. The TamilNet website, seen as a mouthpiece for the rebels, has refused to carry statements from Pathmanathan.

Reports have surfaced that many Tamils are furious with Pathmanathan for quickly acknowledging Prabhakaran’s death while others refused to believe the rebel chief had been killed.

Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan government has been criticised by human rights groups for what they say is the illegal detention of nearly 300,000 ethnic Tamils displaced by the recently ended conflict. Human Rights Watch says for more than a year, the Sri Lankan government has detained virtually everyone – including entire families – displaced by the fighting in the north in military-run camps, in violation of international law.

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Police face court challenge over film

Gemma Atkinson claims she was handcuffed after recording search of boyfriend on her mobile phone

A woman is to challenge the Metropolitan police in the high court, claiming she was handcuffed, detained and threatened with arrest for filming officers on her mobile phone.

Lawyers for Gemma Atkinson, a 27-year-old who was detained after filming police officers conduct a routine stop and search on her boyfriend, believe her case is the latest example of how police are misusing counterterrorism powers to restrict photography.

Atkinson’s mobile phone recorded part of the incident at Aldgate East underground station on 25 March, one month after Section 58(a) – a controversial amendment to the Terrorism Act – came into force, making it illegal to photograph a police officer if the images are considered “likely to be useful” to a terrorist.

Atkinson handed the footage, in which an officer can be heard telling her it is illegal to film police and demanding to see her phone, to the Guardian and said she was seeking to challenge the force in a judicial review. The incident was captured on CCTV.

The opening part of the mobile phone clip shows two uniformed police officers searching her boyfriend, Fred Grace, 28, by a wall in the station. Atkinson said she felt that police had unfairly targeted Grace, who did not have drugs in his possession, and decided to film the officers in order to hold them to account.

Seconds later, an undercover officer wearing jeans and a black jacket enters the shot, and asks Atkinson: “Do you realise it is an offence under the Terrorism Act to film police officers?” He then adds: “Can you show me what you you just filmed?”

Atkinson stopped filming and placed her phone in her pocket. According to her account of the incident, which was submitted to the Independent Police Complaints Commission that night, the officer tried several times to forcefully grab the phone from her pocket.

Failing to get the phone, he called over two female undercover officers from nearby. Atkinson said he told the women: “This young lady had been filming me and the other officers and it’s against the law. Her phone is in her right jacket pocket and I’m trying to get it.”

An argument ensued, Atkinson said, and five police officers – four of them undercover – backed her into an alcove, insisting they had the right to view her phone.

She said she was detained there for about 25 minutes, during which her wrist was handcuffed and a female officer told her: “We’ll put you under arrest, take to you to the station and look at your phone there.”

A second female officer approached her and said, incorrectly: “Look, your boyfriend’s just been arrested for drugs, so I suggest you do as we say.”

Atkinson claims the male undercover officer who initially approached her repeatedly threatened her with arrest, stating: “We believe you filmed us and that’s against the law so we need to check your phone.” When Atkinson protested, the officer replied: “I don’t want to see myself all over the internet.”

After officers made calls to the police station, possibly for legal advice on the situation, the handcuffs were removed and Atkinson was released.

She said the officers walked away – all but one of them refused to identify themselves to her.

“I felt totally helpless,” she said. “I was being restrained and I felt that no one was listening to me. During this whole thing I was saying, ‘This is a breach of my civil liberties – you can’t do this to me, I’ve done nothing wrong’.”

Atkinson’s solicitors, Bhatt Murphy, believe that faulty guidance to officers about how counterterrorism laws apply to photography in public places may have contributed to her treatment.

Last week, after notification from Bhatt Murphy that they would seek a judicial review of Atkinson’s case at the high court, the Met released the guidance it gives officers.

The force instructs officers that when searching people under the Terrorism Act, they “have the power to view digital images contained in mobile telephones”. It adds that the new offence relating to photographing officers does not apply in normal policing activities.

However, the Met’s guidance, which has been criticised by human rights lawyers and the National Union of Journalists, has not been endorsed by the Home Office, which is drafting its own legal advice for police.

The Met’s guidance is different to that issued by the National Policing Improvement Agency, which specifically advises that “officers do not have a legal power to delete images or destroy film”, and suggests that, while digital images might be viewed during a search, officers “should not normally attempt to examine them”.

A Met spokesman confirmed they had received Atkinson’s complaint.

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Equality watchdog rebels turn on Phillips

Trevor Phillips’ management of the troubled Equality and Human Rights Commission comes under renewed pressure today as two former commissioners accuse him of squandering the trust and confidence of the board through “divisive leadership”.

In her first public comments since resigning in March, Kay Hampton described Phillips’ leadership style as “better suited to a political organisation rather than a human rights one”.

His stewardship, she writes in today’s Guardian, “led to deep discontentment and dissatisfaction. Not surprisingly, cracks soon appeared on the board, leading to a breakdown in trust and confidence in the chair.”

She does not regard the watchdog as a “lost cause, rather a missed opportunity due to poor judgment and the wrong kind of leadership”.

Sir Bert Massie, who resigned from the EHCR on Saturday, said that Phillips’s “divisive leadership” had prompted the departure of five commissioners.

A sixth commissioner, Ben Summerskill of the gay rights group Stonewall, is considering his position.

“How do you manage to alienate that number of people?” Sir Bert said. “[It's] quite a skill. These are not people who are rebels for the sake of it.”

Sir Bert, a leading disability rights campaigner who has sat on government bodies and committees for 30 years, said he and his fellow commissioners often learned of policy announcements only when they saw press releases that had already been given to the media.

“[Trevor] is not a bad guy,” said Sir Bert. “He has got talent. That’s the sadness … He is not a natural leader or a natural chairman. He does not know how to build a team. He had a team there and had he got the best out of them, they would have been quite a team …

“That is the resource that has been most squandered.”

The watchdog was also criticised yesterday in a National Audit Office report for paying nearly £325,000 to re-employ seven senior staff who had recently accepted generous early severance packages.

Phillips, who had been widely tipped to be replaced as chair, was given a second three-year term last week by the minister for women and equality, Harriet Harman.

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Uighurs under blanket security in Urumqi

Troops patrol the streets of Xinjiang’s capital in the wake of ethnic riots


Rafsanjani attacks Tehran regime

Police clash with tens of thousands of protesters as cleric uses Friday prayers to claim people have lost faith with regime

One of Iran’s most powerful clerics today attacked the Iranian government for its handling of protests and unrest that followed the disputed presidential election result. But even as Hashemi Rafsanjani made his comments, police were firing teargas and wielding batons to disperse tens of thousands of opposition supporters.

In a closely watched speech at Friday prayers, Rafsanjani abandoned his neutral stance since the 12 June poll and rounded on the regime.

“Today is a bitter day,” he said at Tehran University. “People have lost their faith in the regime and their trust is damaged. It’s necessary that we regain people’s consent and their trust in the regime.”

Rafsanjani criticised the arrest and detention of protesters, and attacked the lack of freedom of expression. He expressed sympathy for the families of dead protesters, and ended his remarks by saying: “I hope this sermon will pave a way out of this current situation. A situation that can be considered a crisis.”

His comments came during his sermon before tens of thousands of opposition supporters. The opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi sat in the front row, while Rafsanjani, a pragmatic former president who sits on two clerical ruling bodies, spoke.

The opposition packed the university prayer hall in a show of strength at the weekly Islamic prayers – one of Iran’s most important and symbolic political platforms. Rafsanjani’s first sermon since the election was broadcast live on radio in Iran.

The vast crowd of mostly opposition supporters and some government supporters packed the prayer hall and shouted competing slogans. Hardliners chanted “death to America” while opposition supporters countered with “death to Russia”, referring to the Iranian government’s ties to Moscow. Many pro-reform worshippers wore green headbands or wristbands or had prayer rugs in green – the colour of the opposition movement.

The Friday prayers were the first attended by Mousavi since the election. He claims to have won the popular vote and that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s victory was fraudulent.

Mousavi has insisted the Ahmadinejad government is illegitimate. But the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has publicly backed Ahmadinejad. Hardliners in the clerical leadership have demanded that the public fall in line behind Khamenei, hoping to put behind them the biggest challenge to their rule since the Iranian revolution 30 years ago.

During Rafsanjani’s sermon the crowd inside the hall in Tehran University could be heard via state radio chanting, “Mousavi, Mousavi, we support you.”

The chants died away after the cleric quietened the crowd, urging them “not to contaminate the position and the sanctuary of Friday prayers by comments and slogans”.

Rafsanjani is one of four senior clerics who lead Friday prayers, though he had not done so for two months.

Outside Tehran University police fired teargas at Mousavi supporters who were demanding the release of detainees in the biggest anti-government protest since the mass demonstrations that immediately followed the contested election.

At least 15 people were arrested, witnesses said. The ceremony in central Tehran attracted greater numbers than usual. Worshippers can listen to the sermon through loudspeakers outside the university grounds. A senior cleric had earlier called for calm during the prayers, state radio said, in a sign of the religious establishment’s concern about possible unrest.

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Iran unrest dead may reach hundreds

Woman claims to have seen piles of corpses, as tension rises in Tehran over Rafsanjani speech

Hundreds more people may have died in Iran’s post-election unrest than the authorities have admitted, amid allegations that the death toll has been obscured by hiding victims’ bodies in secret morgues.

Human rights campaigners say anecdotal evidence suggests the number of demonstrators killed in clashes with government forces after last month’s poll was far higher than the official death toll of 20 and may amount to a “massacre”.

Suspicions have been fuelled after one woman described seeing corpses piled on top of each other in a refrigeration depot while searching for a missing relative. Another woman was shown pictures of between 50 and 60 people, all said to have died, while searching for her son.

The claims came as Tehran prepares for another day of tension tomorrow when the influential former president Hashemi Rafsanjani addresses Friday prayers at Tehran University. Hardline supporters of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – who was controversially re-elected in the election on 12 June that opponents say was “stolen” – have threatened to disrupt the event, at which Rafsanjani is expected to speak in support of his ally Mir Hossein Mousavi, the defeated reformist candidate, who will attend the event.

The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran accused the government of obfuscating casualty numbers by frightening victims’ families into silence. The true picture had emerged from hospital statistics and testimony from families who refused to keep quiet, it said.

“It’s hard to put a figure on it because most of the families involved are scared to talk,” Aaron Rhodes of the campaign told the Guardian. “But if you put together the evidence of the families that have spoken, along with eyewitness reports and data from hospitals, there could be well over a hundred fatalities.”

The campaign said that on 20 June – the day after Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned that the demonstrations must stop – three Tehran hospitals placed a total of 34 dead demonstrators in their morgues.

The authorities put that day’s fatalities at 11. Doctors have reported being stopped from signing death certificates by military commanders, who then ordered the corpses removed.

The security forces have acknowledged carrying out more than 2,000 arrests during the crackdown on the mass protests against Ahmadinejad’s re-election. Some detainees have been released but many are still unaccounted for.

The Norooz website – linked to Iran’s largest reformist party, the Islamic Participation Front – described how a mother searching for her missing child was sent to a facility normally used for preserving fruit and dairy produce on the outskirts of Tehran. After leafing through a photograph album of presumed victims, she was shown into a room containing what she described as “hundreds” of dead bodies. “Although I didn’t find my child’s body, on seeing all those corpses dumped on top of each other, I passed out,” the unnamed woman said.

Mousavi showed solidarity with relatives of the dead earlier this week when he visited the home of Sohrab Aarabi, 19, whose body was recovered nearly a month after he died of gunshot wounds at a mass demonstration in Tehran on 15 June.

Aarabi’s mother, Parvin Fahimi – a member of an organisation called Mothers for Peace – has described how after weeks of searching for her son she was summoned by a revolutionary court and shown pictures of between 50 and 60 people, all said to have died. The pictures included Sohrab, whom she had previously thought might be in detention.

Some families have reported being harassed into signing pledges agreeing that their loved ones died accidentally or of natural causes. Others say they have been forced to declare that the victims belonged to the Basij militia, which was used to suppress the demonstrations.

In one case, a family reported receiving their son’s corpse encased in concrete to hide signs of injuries.

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Russian rights campaigner murdered

Natalia Estemirova found shot dead after being abducted outside her home

Russia’s human rights record tonight came under severe criticism after one of the country’s most famous human rights campaigners was abducted from her home in Chechnya and brutally murdered.

Natalia Estemirova was seized by four unknown men this morning as she left for work. Neighbours at her house in Grozny, Chechnya’s capital, heard her shout: “I’m being kidnapped.”

Her body was found near Gazi-Yurt village, in neighbouring Ingushetia. She had been shot twice in the head and chest, police said, adding that her corpse had been dumped on the main road.

Human rights activists expressed outrage at her murder, reminiscent of the killing of Anna Politkovskaya, the journalist, writer, and bitter Kremlin critic shot dead outside her Moscow apartment in 2006.

Estemirova, 50, was a close friend of Politkovskaya’s. The two had collaborated on numerous investigations into human rights abuses in Chechnya. Both were scathing opponents of Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechnya’s pro-Kremlin president.

“Natasha was at the forefront of some of the most intense human rights investigations in Chechnya,” said Allison Gill, director of Human Rights Watch in Russia. “She was targeted because of her work. I have no doubt her killing was to silence her. One of the most amazing things about Natasha is that she never stopped doing what she was doing. She never checked herself. She was highly public in her calls for accountability.

“I think the human rights situation is in crisis in Russia,” she added. “We have a deathly silence from the authorities whenever activists, lawyers or journalists are murdered. Not a single person is brought to justice.”

Estemirova was the Chechnya-based head of Memorial, Russia’s oldest human rights group.

Operating out of a small office in Grozny, she doggedly pursued stories of human rights abuses in the face of official intimidation and hostility.

She recently collaborated on two damning reports into punitive house burnings and extra-judicial killings in Chechnya, allegedly carried out by Kadyrov’s forces. The reports documented how on 2 July his troops allegedly shot 20-year-old Madina Yunusova and her husband near Grozny.

Chechen officials claimed her husband had been involved in a plot to kill Kadyrov. Yunosova died three days later in hospital under mysterious circumstances.

“Natasha was always involved in the most sensitive cases. She knew what she was doing. She knew the risks,” Shamil Tangiyev, a former Memorial colleague said. “She was extremely brave. It was in her nature to be an activist.”

Estemirova made no attempt to hide her work. Her office near the newly renamed Putin avenue was well known.

The timing of her murder follows Barack Obama’s first visit to Moscow last week as US president. Obama met with Russian human rights activists and set out the US’s commitment to “universal values”.

The Kremlin responded with hardline pronouncements, with the president, Dmitry Medvedev, visiting the breakaway Georgian republic of South Ossetia on Monday. The trip appeared to be a direct rebuff to Obama who had said that both Georgia and Ukraine should be free to choose their own leaders.

Estemirova, who leaves a 15-year-old daughter, was probably the best-known human rights activist in Russia’s provinces.

Earlier this year she attended the trial in Moscow of four people – two of them Chechens – accused of involvement in Politkovskaya’s murder.

Speaking to the Guardian in February, Estemirova called the Politkovskaya trial a “farce”.

Kadyrov, a close ally of Russia’s prime minister, Vladimir Putin, has denied accusations he was involved in Politkovskaya’s killing, remarking: “I don’t kill women.”

Recently the Kremlin has given Kadyrov unprecedented powers for counter-terrorist operations in Ingushetia, amid a worsening Islamist insurgency across the entire North Caucasus.

Estemirova was also a close colleague of Stanislav Markelov, the human rights lawyer murdered in Moscow in January. A masked assassin shot Markelov in the back of the head, not far from the Kremlin, along with Anastasia Baburova, a journalist with the Novaya Gazeta newspaper.

Tonight human rights activists urged the west to place human rights at the centre of any dialogue with Russia. Gill said: “We can’t talk about trade or energy without mentioning the rule of law.”

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Caught in a Home Office trap

Y was sentenced to death in Algeria, but his inhumane immigration bail conditions seem designed to drive him back

Here’s irony for you. Five monologues based on five men living under deportation orders broadcast online, through the Guardian, one a day over a week. But none of the men featured will be able to watch them. For these so-called “threats to national security”, based on secret evidence, access to the internet, a computer or mobile phone is banned.

One of the men, Y, lives under immigration bail conditions in an isolated Home Office-selected location two hours outside London. Each time I visit I undergo a ritual. It involves switching off my mobile phone and digging deep into my handbag for stray USBs, iPods or MP3 players. I try to conceal my laptop under a car seat. Y is not allowed any of these items in the house.

A joint police and immigration search of his home can happen at any time, night or day. Hence the constant need for vigilant adherence to the “house rules”. Y finds it amusing that the state thinks him such a genius that he is deemed a lethal weapon if he were to wield an iPod. Granted, he is rather good at Sudoko after years of practice in isolation, but, no offence to Y, such electrical wizardry is beyond him.

This level of intrusion has a purpose. The objective of the incessant hardship, the isolation, the forced living on the outer edges of sanity and civilisation is to force these men back to the torture cells they escaped from. Y was tortured in Algeria – the evidence is clear from the scars on the front and back of his head. His crime was to speak out against human rights abuses in the early 1990s. When it was clear that he had to leave he came to the UK, and with his powerful testimony he was given full rights to remain. Not a false passport or fake name in sight. Leaving saved his life. Not long after, he was issued with a death sentence in absentia in Algeria. The UK’s desire to hand him back hints largely at maintaining diplomatic ties and is nothing to do with national security.

As a result, I see an isolated edgy young man turned old through the “slow torture” of these last eight years in the UK. Detained for a total of 57 months in prison – first for the ricin case, for which he was fully acquitted, then detained again based on…? Your guess is as good as mine. It’s called secret evidence and neither Y or his lawyers have any idea what it is.

When I visit, we go to Tesco for coffee. It’s the only place to go within his boundaries. On a rare occasion, Y gets clearance for the town centre but the time constraints are so challenging that the entire trip is adrenalin-inducing. A permitted three-hour trip is mainly spent on the bus getting there and back. And there is always a “random” police search of the house the next day.

When I leave, the tension in my head remains for some time. Even as a visitor you become infected by the pungent poison administered so lavishly by the Home Office and the security services to these men. This is Kafka’s Trial, 2009.

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Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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Unending agony for Liberia’s soldiers

Tomorrow Charles Taylor becomes the first African leader to appear in the dock at The Hague accused of crimes against humanity. In the bullet-scarred region of Lofa, in northern Liberia, Annie Kelly meets his former child soldiers, who were first traumatised by war, then abandoned by the state – and have now been cast out by their own families

Gloria Sherman was 13 years old when Charles Taylor’s soldiers came for her in 2001. Flushed from her hiding place in the bush outside her village in Lofa, northern Liberia, she was forced to watch as her father and brother were skinned alive. Then she was taken into a captivity lasting nearly two years: a conscript child soldier and a sexual slave in the former president’s army.

She is 18 now, but the memories are still raw. “We used to do bad, bad things that they told us to do,” she said last week. “Sometimes even if you were only 10 years old they would put guns and ammunition on your head to carry to the battle; you have to do what they said or they’d kill you. They killed many children, many girls. All the time many soldiers would have sex with you, every night they would come and have sex and beat you, and if you said no they would kill you or hit you with guns.”

Tomorrow Taylor will become the first African leader to be tried for crimes against humanity by the Special Court for Sierra Leone, sitting in The Hague. He faces 11 charges – including the deployment of child soldiers – relating to a decade-long civil war in the neighbouring state of Sierra Leone.

But it was in Liberia, as a rebel leader and then as president, that his juvenile bands of killers first began to roam in the 1990s, a military model that was then exported across the border.

Across the towns and villages of the north, countless atrocities took place and thousands of young lives were irredeemably brutalised. Nobody who managed to survive them has forgotten the days when Taylor was the power in the land.

During and after Taylor’s successful rebellion against the corrupt and violent government of Samuel Doe, his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) army controlled much of the country. The Small Boys Unit, made up of children under 11, was among his most feared rebel battalions, a regiment of innocent murderers.

When the rebel warlord was eventually elected president in 1997, one of his election campaign slogans was: “He killed my ma, he killed my pa, but I will vote for him.”

The Taylor presidency was savagely violent as constant insurgencies locked the country in a cycle of war until he was forced to resign in 2003. His son, the infamous Chucky Taylor, who ran Taylor’s paramilitary anti-terrorism security forces, was jailed by a US court for 97 years this year after it was found that, between 1999 and 2002, his “Demon Forces” squads had tortured to death scores of people accused of being anti-Taylor rebels.

By 2003, as Taylor lost control of large tracts of the country to the equally ruthless Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd) rebel force, backed by Guinea, some 15,000 children were fighting in Taylor’s government forces.

Defeated at last, Taylor resigned, went into exile in Nigeria and now faces life imprisonment if found guilty at The Hague. Meanwhile the children and adolescents who killed and suffered in his name have grown into a traumatised, desolate adulthood.

In Lofa county, where the child soldiers once rampaged, bullet-scarred buildings and burnt-out checkpoints still stand as monuments to the relentless fighting this province endured.

Rebel activity and government raids forced hundreds of thousands of civilians in Lofa to flee their homes and surge over the borders of Guinea and Sierra Leone, where they filled sprawling refugee camps until the peace in 2003. When they came back, they found Lofa in tatters, its infrastructure destroyed and villages burnt. Although the region is now peaceful and the land is once again lush, the scars of the war are everywhere.

Many villages in the region are little more than temporary shelters dotted with shattered buildings and burnt-out churches. Rows of tanks sit behind barbed wire as bored Bangladeshi peacekeeping soldiers sit fingering their rifles at lookout posts in United Nations encampments scattered throughout the area.

The vast majority of people here have no electricity and struggle to scrape a living from the land. As for the thousands of former child combatants who returned here after the war, they are now obliged to endure new horrors as they try to rebuild their lives.

Two years of systematic rape and beatings have left Gloria with jagged scars and internal injuries so severe that she has little chance of ever becoming a mother. When she managed to escape from her captors and make her way back to her village, she found that she was now an outcast.

Labelled a “rebel wife” and accused of collaborating in the violence inflicted on her village by drugged and ruthless soldiers during the war, she says that the only way she can survive is by having sex with men – NGO workers, government officials and businessmen – who often pay her in food, sanitary towels or soap.

“They say we are bad girls because of what we did in the war and what we do now,” Gloria said. “But they took me and I had no choice.”

The Observer talked to dozens of Taylor’s former child soldiers in Lofa who said that they have been abandoned by the state, ostracised by their families and forced into prostitution and crime in order to survive.

Elijah Kollie, a frail 19-year-old taken from his home by Taylor’s government troops in 2000, talked impassively of children’s stomachs being slit open in front of him and of the multiple rapes and murders he witnessed on the front line. “When I came back, I didn’t have anyone: everyone in my family was dead,” he said with a shrug.

He points to a patch of earth in the centre of the village where he said that Lurd rebels used to boil alive people they suspected of aiding Taylor’s government forces. “I still don’t know where to go because I can’t forget what happened. I feel angry because of what happened to me and now people here are causing many problems for us. I just wish my father was still here.”

A recent report by Plan, a leading international children’s organisation, said that the phenomenon of child soldier armies in conflicts across west Africa has left a devastating footprint of psychological trauma and spiralling suicide rates across the region.

Interviews conducted with child soldiers across Liberia for the report revealed that 60% of them had witnessed another child being beaten to death, 87% had seen a family member killed and 84% had found themselves “surrounded by, lying underneath or stepping on” dead bodies.

In Sierra Leone, Plan researchers deemed 70% of girls and 80% of boys interviewed for the report were at serious risk of suicide, with 30% of children interviewed having already attempted suicide on at least one occasion.

“The war broke the bonds between children and their parents and extended families. Those who fought as soldiers are now treated as pariahs and this stigma goes all the way up the chain from village level up to local and central government,” said Joseph Henah, a counsellor at one of Plan’s child soldier support programmes in Lofa.

“The situation that is faced by many of these children is desperate. The majority, if not all, of the girls are forced into transactional sex. Many are living alone, they are on drugs, they cannot go to school and this is the generation which is supposed to be leading our country out of poverty and into a better future.”

Child rights groups say that the plight of Liberia’s former child soldiers is going unheeded as the government struggles to provide even basic services to its 3.5 million people, 2.4 million of whom are surviving on less than $1 a day. As one of the world’s poorest countries – with only 50 government doctors and the eighth highest global maternal mortality rate – Liberia has no money to spend on the casualties of its shocking recent history.

When asked about why the government is failing to help former child soldiers, Dr Wilhemina Jallah of the John F Kennedy Memorial Hospital in the capital, Monrovia, points to the hundreds of women waiting for treatment in the hospital’s steamy outpatient clinic. “The majority of women who come in to give birth have malaria, many have terrible injuries which makes childbirth dangerous, there is no transport to health centres in rural areas and we don’t have enough drugs,” she said. “Although they are needed, mental health services are not our priority.”

Many fear the country’s fragile peace now hangs in the balance after Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report last week, recommending that the current president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and other key political figures face sanctions for their role in the civil war.

The report recommended that the popular Johnson-Sirleaf be banned from holding public office for 30 years for her role in financing Taylor’s invasion in 1989. Testifying before the commission earlier this year, Johnson-Sirleaf apologised for her support of Taylor, saying that she had been “fooled” into it.

“If there is anything that I need to apologise for to this nation, it is to apologise for being fooled by Mr Taylor in giving any kind of support to him,” the president told the commission. “I feel it in my conscience. I feel it every day.”

The commission, which was launched by Johnson-Sirleaf herself after she was elected in 2005, heard testimonies from thousands of victims in an effort to move the country towards reconciliation before launching its final report. Several of the former warlords who are recommended for prosecution by the commission, many of whom now hold public office, have already pledged to oppose any attempt to bring them to justice, sparking fears of a return to violence.

In Monrovia, many Liberians say their desire for peace outweighs their need for justice. “We just want to forget the war and move on; we don’t want a return to violence: we want peace and jobs,” said Charles Muyan, who drives a taxi downtown. “We don’t want this whole thing brought up again.”

But in Lofa, hundreds of miles away, there is no indication that life will get any better for the thousands of former child soldiers struggling to survive. “I think about my father and my brother every day and my sister who I haven’t seen since she was taken by rebels,” said Gloria. “When I close my eyes, all I can see is the war. I often think about taking my own life. It would have been better if I’d died in the war, but I am still alive and I hope one day something will be different and I will be a good person.”

The burden of being a “rebel child” has proved too much for some. Two months ago, Mardy Samuka’s body was found swinging from the roof of the bullet-scarred church near the village of Foya in Lofa – another, belated victim of Taylor’s terrifying reign.

Samuka’s aunt, Moidee, wept as she talked of the desperation her nephew felt. Crippled when a stray bullet lodged in his leg during fighting around the village in 2001, it was what happened to him after the war that drove the 19-year-old to put the noose around his neck, she said.

“I tell people that he was never a soldier, that he never did any of those terrible things that the children did to this village, but any child missing a limb is known as a former soldier here,” she said.

“He carried that stigma, we all did; his life could come to nothing. There was nobody to help him.”

• Some of the names in this article have been changed to protect identities

Life and times of Charles Taylor

1948 Born Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor to a Gola mother and American-Liberian father in Arthington, Liberia.

1972 Awarded degree at Bentley college, Massachusetts.

1980 Supports coup led by Samuel K Doe and given high-ranking position in Liberian government.

1983 Faces charges of embezzling $922,000 and flees Liberia.

1984 Arrested on the run in Massachusetts and jailed.

1985 Rumoured to have sawed through prison bars to escape a US jail before leaving for Libya.

1989 Launches rebellion against Doe.

1990 Doe overthrown after months of fighting.

1991 Revolutionary United Front rebellion starts in Sierra Leone, allegedly backed by Taylor.

1995 Liberian factions sign peace deal

1997 Taylor elected president in landslide.

1999 Start of anti-Taylor rebellion by Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (Lurd).

2003 Special Court for Sierra Leone charges Taylor with crimes against humanity as Lurd takes control of most of the country.

2003 Taylor resigns and goes into exile in Nigeria.

2006 Taylor arrested in Nigeria and handed to the UN in Sierra Leone. The prosecution asks for the trial to be switched to The Hague.

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China violence: ‘My husband is gone’

Dong Yuanyuan was a happy newlywed until ethnic hatred spilled over into bloody street violence in China’s far west. She is recovering: her husband is still missing

Dong Yuanyuan should be on honeymoon, sightseeing in Shanghai with her husband. But late last Sunday night, their bus stopped when a set of traffic lights in Urumqi turned red.

A few seconds earlier and the newlyweds might have escaped the ethnic riot sweeping the city. Instead, the hail of rocks and sticks that crashed down on them began an ordeal that would leave the 24-year-old teacher with injuries to her head, neck, arms and legs – and without her husband.

“I really hope to find him, no matter whether he’s dead or alive. At least I would know something. Now I know nothing. We had just got married and our new life was about to start. Now everything is…” She did not finish her sentence.

As the capital of China’s north-western Xinjiang province appears to be settling into an uneasy calm, policed by a security force of about 20,000 paramilitary, riot and regular officers, Dong is one of thousands counting the cost of the past week’s vicious inter-ethnic violence.

After scouring hospitals, her parents have found one body and one unconscious patient who they believe could be Liang He, 29. They cannot be sure until Dong is well enough to be discharged from Urumqi’s People’s Hospital and to look herself.

The government today raised the death toll to 184 and offered the first ethnic breakdown of the dead: 137 Han Chinese – the dominant ethnic group – and 46 Uighurs, who make up almost half of Xinjiang’s population of 21.3 million. One Hui Muslim also died. More than 1,000 people were injured.

Officials had said that 156 people had died on Sunday when peaceful protests over Han killings of two Uighur workers in Guangdong, in the south, turned into a mass riot and apparently indiscriminate attacks on mostly Han Chinese.

The state news agency, Xinhua, did not say whether any of the deaths happened last Tuesday, when vengeful Han mobs took to the streets armed with shovels, iron bars and cleavers and savagely assaulted Uighurs. Paramilitaries eventually dispersed them with tear gas.

Some Uighurs in the city voiced disbelief at how few alleged deaths they had suffered. “That’s the Han people’s number. We have our own number,” Akumjia, a Uighur resident, told Reuters. “Maybe many, many more Uighurs died. The police were scared and lost control.”

Independent evidence to back claims by exiled Uighurs that the authorities beat to death and shot dead peaceful protesters has not come to light, despite the presence of foreign journalists. But Uighur witnesses told one reporter they had seen police shoot dead two Uighurs.

Many Uighurs reported gunfire and the People’s Hospital said it treated people for gunshot wounds. The government has said rioters were armed.

Human Rights Watch called for an independent investigation, saying China had presented “a skewed and incomplete picture of the unrest” that had not included attacks on Uighurs or fully accounted for the role of security forces. The authorities accuse Uighur exiles of orchestrating the violence. They deny the claims.

Dong was caught by a group of young Uighur men as she fled the bus with other passengers, losing sight of her husband in the crush. “They thought I looked like a Han, not a Uighur. The people came and started to beat me. I ran away but they dragged me back. I fell to the ground. Some people punched me as they didn’t have rocks.”

She came around hours later in the darkness, covered in blood; shaken awake by a Hui Muslim woman who hid the newlywed in her home. “I asked them to find my husband,” said Dong. “But they said there were many people lying out on the streets and the Uighurs were still there. Nobody dared go out to rescue people.”

Instead, Dong lay listening to the sounds of breaking glass, fire spreading through torched vehicles and the roar of the mob sweeping back and forth before police finally suppressed the riot. “When I was young, many Uighurs were my neighbours and classmates. Nothing like this ever happened. We’ve had very good relations,” said Dong. “Now my Han female friends and I feel a bit scared when we see Uighur men because we were all hurt by them. I’ll still be nice to the friends I know well, but I may feel scared by strange Uighur men.”

The sense of bewilderment is common to many Han in the city. Several said that government policies – such as the one allowing minority couples to have more than one child – favour Uighurs.But Uighurs resent mass Han immigration and strict controls on their religion. Unemployment is high and many feel the Han look down on them,

“We feel pressure,” said a young man in a Uighur part of town, who requested anonymity. “Our standard of living is lower than Han . We are not comfortable here. We are attacked. We are hassled.” But there is nothing good in this fighting. I want ethnicities in Xinjiang to unite. A quiet life would be good for us.”

It is a longing widely shared despite the seething fear and enmity here. Thousands took part in the rioting; but most of Urumqi’s people want life to return to normal.

For Dong, crouching on a hospital bed, perhaps it never will. Despite her bloodied eye, bandaged head and widespread scarring, all that bothers her is the fate of her husband. “My physical injuries may heal soon, but my emotional wounds won’t heal for a long time,” she said

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