Reports
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"No Money, No Justice"
Police Corruption and Abuse in LiberiaThis 64-page report describes the multiple criminal activities by corrupt police officers, from charging crime victims for every stage of an investigation, to extorting goods from street vendors.
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"Even a 'Big Man' Must Face Justice"
Lessons from the Trial of Charles TaylorThis 55-page report analyzes the practice and impact of Taylor’s trial by the United Nations-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone. The report examines the conduct of the trial, including issues related to efficiency, fairness, and witnesses and sources.
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Trying Charles Taylor in The Hague
Making Justice Accessible to Those Most AffectedOn March 29, 2006 former Liberian President Charles Taylor was surrendered to the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone. -
Liberia at a Crossroads
Human Rights Challenges for the New GovernmentThis briefing paper warns that Liberia’s transition from a near-failed state to a democratic country governed by rule of law cannot be considered complete until there is considerably more progress in several key areas. -
Youth, Poverty and Blood
The Lethal Legacy of West Africa’s Regional WarriorsThe lives of “regional warriors” are documented in this 66-page report. Based on interviews with some 60 former fighters who have crossed borders to fight in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire and Guinea, the report explores the forces driving the phenomenon of cross-border mercenary activity in West Africa.
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Bringing Justice: the Special Court for Sierra Leone
Accomplishments, Shortcomings, and Needed SupportThis 56-page report evaluates developments at the court, identifying achievements and making recommendations where operations should be improved. The report also urges the international community to provide more financial and political support for the court so it can complete its work effectively. -
How to Fight, How to Kill
Child Soldiers in LiberiaThis 43-page report documents how more than 15,000 child soldiers fought on all sides of the Liberian civil war, and that many units were composed primarily of children. -
Child Soldier Use 2003
A Briefing for the 4th UN Security Council Open Debate on Children and Armed ConflictThroughout 2003 thousands of children were deployed as combatants, to commit abuses against civilians, as sex slaves, forced labourers, messengers, informants and servants in continuing and newly erupting conflicts. -
“The Guns are in the Bushes”
Continuing Abuses in LiberiaDespite significant changes in the political environment over the past six months, most notably the August 2003 signing of a peace agreement, the departure into exile of president Charles Taylor and the establishment of a newly-mandated United Nations peacekeeping mission, the plight of civilians in Liberia remains dire. -
Policy Paralysis
A Call for Action on HIV/AIDS-Related Human Rights Abuses Against Women and Girls in AfricaViolence and discrimination against women and girls is fueling Africa's AIDS crisis. African governments must make gender equality a central part of national AIDS programs if they are to succeed in fighting the epidemic.
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Trapped Between Two Wars
Violence Against Civilians in Western Côte d'IvoireThis 55-page report documents widespread abuses against civilians in fighting following a September 2002 army mutiny. The abuses include summary executions, sexual violence against women and girls, and looting of civilian property by Ivorian government troops, government-supported civilian militias, and by the rebel groups. -
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Liberian Refugees In Guinea
Refoulement, Militarization of Camps, and Other Protection ConcernsThe United Nations Security Council should extend the arms embargo on Liberia to all rebel groups, and closely monitor the compliance of the Guinean government with that embargo, Human Rights Watch said today. -
Back to the Brink
War Crimes By Liberian Government And RebelsThe United Nations Security Council should maintain the arms embargo against the Liberian government, Human Rights Watch said in releasing a new report about abuses in Liberia today. -
No Questions Asked
The Eastern Europe Arms Pipeline to LiberiaIn this briefing paper, Human Rights Watch builds on the U.N. experts’ report to examine the manner in which the Liberia arms embargo has been systematically breached to furnish weapons to gross human rights abusers.