A one-time feared rebel commander in the Liberian civil war, “Jungle Jabbah” has reportedly been given a 30 years jail sentence in the United States.
The news of the sentencing of Jabbah on Friday has been partly welcomed by Amnesty International.
Responding to the 30-year jail sentence handed to Mohammed Jabateh, a former Liberian war lord known as “Jungle Jabbah” now living in the US, for immigration fraud and perjury due to failure to disclose his involvement in human rights abuses during the Liberian civil war, Amnesty International’s Amnesty International’s West Africa Researcher Sabrina Mahtani said: “While Mohammed Jabateh was not convicted of the crimes he is allegedly responsible for under international law, this is nevertheless the first case to provide some justice for victims of Liberia’s civil war. Such prosecutions send a strong signal that the US does not have to be a safe haven for human rights abusers.”
Mohammed Jabateh, alias “Jungle Jabbah” used to be a feared commander in the from rebel group, United Liberation Movement for Democracy in Liberia (ULIMO) in the 1990s.
Sabrina Mahtani further said: “Whilst this is an important step in addressing allegations of systematic human rights abuses carried out during the civil war, it must not be forgotten that there has still been no accountability for these crimes in Liberia itself. The Liberian authorities must urgently establish a criminal court to try crimes under international law and ensure those responsible are held to account.”
On 22 January 2018, Amnesty International and several human rights organisations sent an open letter to newly elected President George Weah calling on him to take steps to finally bring justice and accountability to the countless victims of Liberia’s fourteen-year armed conflict.
Liberia’s civil war, which lasted for 14 years, caused the deaths of some 250,000 people, according to UN estimates/
But ever since the brutal conflict ended in 2003, not a single warlord or perpetrator has been prosecuted, neither has any reparation been given to the thousands of victims who have been living with the scars and trauma.
The country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commssion (TRC) in 2010 recommended prosecution for those who bear the greatest responsibilities for the atrocities and carnage as well as their financial backers.