Naomi Campbell.
Naomi Campbell and actress Mia Farrow will be summoned to
testify at former Liberian President Charles Taylor's war
crimes trial, addressing allegations Taylor gave the supermodel
an uncut diamond at a South African reception in 1997.
The Special Court for Sierra Leone granted a request
Wednesday by prosecutors to call Campbell and Farrow, along
with Carole White, who was Campbell's agent at the time. It
is not yet clear when their summons will be issued.
The prosecution hopes the women's testimony will support its
claims that Taylor dealt in "blood diamonds" when he
supported rebels in neighboring Sierra Leone during the
1991-2002 civil war, which Taylor denies.
Taylor's lawyers had argued that the request to call the
celebrities was "an obvious publicity stunt," and that it was
too late to introduce new evidence, nearly 18 months after
the prosecution closed its case.
But the judges accepted the prosecution's argument that the
evidence came to light only last June, and was pertinent
enough to warrant their summons.
Prosecutors said Campbell has told them through a lawyer she
does not want to get involved in the case, and that
subsequently they had made "many unsuccessful attempts" to
contact her.
In a written statement to the court, Farrow said Campbell
told her that two or three men woke her up and "presented her
with a large diamond which they said was from Charles
Taylor."
White has said she heard Taylor say he was going to give
Campbell diamonds and saw them being delivered.
Prosecutors say Campbell's testimony would provide "direct
evidence of the accused's possession of rough diamonds from a
witness unrelated to the Liberian or Sierra Leone conflicts."
Taylor, once one of West Africa's most powerful men, is
charged with 11 counts of murder, torture, rape, sexual
slavery and the use of child soldiers and terrorism in his
role backing rebels in Sierra Leone's 1991-2002 civil war.
An estimated 500,000 people were the victims of killings,
systematic mutilation or other atrocities in that war, with
some of the worst crimes committed by child soldiers who were
drugged to desensitise them.
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