Finnish High Court Acquits Gibril Massaquoi; As Hassan Bility Others Go Into Hiding

Crime Watch

Finnish High Court Acquits Gibril Massaquoi; As Hassan Bility Others Go Into Hiding

IPNEWS: Finnish High court has ruled a nonguilty verdict for Gibril Massaquoi on all counts after more than one-year trial.

In a ruling, the Finnish High Court stated that Massaquoi is fully acquitted on all charges and the District Court decision was upheld.

Prior to this ruling there had been a suspected conspiracy of Civitas Maxima and Global Justice Research Project to defraud the Global Justice System with coached witnesses that lie under Oath to seek an unlawful guilty verdict.  Werner & Bility have allegedly amassed millions of US dollars and Euros for personal and financial gain.   Countless governments and victims have been harmed as a result.  “Both Werner & Bility need to be held accountable for this Global fraud.” A relative of Gibril Massaquoi carried out in court when the verdict was announced.

IPNEWS understand that currently both Civitas Maxima and Global Justice Research Project are being sued by $15 million in Liberia for falsely accusing Agnes Reeves Of murder.

It may be recalled, on March 10, 2020, Finnish police arrested Massaquoi, who had located to Finland legally after assisting the UN-sponsored Special Court for Sierra Leone in its investigation of war crimes during that country’s civil war. Based on information gathered by Civitas Maxima, a Geneva-based NGO which defines its mission as “the documentation of international crimes, and . . . redress of such crimes on behalf of victims who do not have access to justice,” the Finns charged Massaquoi with crimes including “homicide, sexual violence, and the recruitment and use of child soldiers.”

Sierra Leonean national Gibril Massaquoi, 51, wears a face mask as he attends his trial at the Pirkanmaa District Court in Tampere, Finland, Wednesday Feb. 3, 2021, accused of committing war crimes during Liberia’s second civil war two decades ago. Massaquoi faces several charges including dozens of murders, eight rapes as well as aggravated war crimes and aggravated human rights violations during Liberia’s 1999-2003 war. (Kalle Parkkinen/Lehtikuva via AP)

The case against Massaquoi began unraveling early. Witnesses used to press the case against Massaquoi accused Hassan Bility, director of the Global Justice Research Project (GJRP), Civitas Maxima’s local partner in Liberia, of bribing them to shape their accusations against Massaquoi. Independent investigators accused Bility and Civitas Maxima Director Alain Werner of recruiting, paying, and coaching witnesses. Judges found that not only had Massaquoi never killed anyone, but he was not even present in Liberia at the time of the allegations leveled against him.

That the case against Massaquoi got this far—especially after he had dedicated years to help bring justice to Sierra Leone, an effort that ultimately led to the arrest, trial, and imprisonment of former Liberian President Charles Taylor—is a travesty of justice. In the local level, it smacks of revenge. More broadly, it would not have been possible absent the dishonest behavior of a self-described human rights organization.

Within the State Department, there should be some serious soul searching. As charges surfaced against Bility, US Ambassador Michael McCarthy invited him to the US Embassy in Monrovia to imply US support for his efforts. “Ambassador McCarthy remarked that the painstaking efforts of the GJRP to research war crimes has demonstrated that a group of committed Liberians can achieve justice for war crimes victims,” the embassy’s press release stated. McCarthy got it exactly backwards; that he was unaware of the depth of GJRP duplicity raises questions both about the embassy’s detachment from reality and its overreliance on a small set of agenda-driven informants.

For Foggy Bottom, the problem is not just Liberia. In 2015, the Belgian National Police arrested Michel De Sadeleer on accusations that he enslaved victims to mine diamonds and also provided weapons to the Liberian civil war-era Revolutionary United Front. Civitas Maxima provided them the evidence. De Sadeleer was an American citizen, and his aunt had been the US ambassador to Togo. Justice moves slowly, however, and the stigma of being accused of enslavement is not something that can be undone. After near two years in prison, De Sadeleer committed suicide. Subsequently, it became clear that the evidence against him was also tainted and that he was not guilty of the crimes for which he was accused. Civitas Maxima, meanwhile, raised funds off its cases and became a multimillion-dollar organization.

Crimes committed during West Africa’s civil wars were atrocious. The damage that dishonest activists now do unravels not only individual cases, but also casts doubt more broadly on local and international efforts to bring justice and accountability to the region. Not only will Civitas Maxima, its board of human rights luminaries, and its partners potentially now face charges itself, but the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine may force retrial if not unravel every case in which Civitas Maxima or GJRP played a role. There are no winners in this tragedy, only yet one more warning that it is dangerous and naïve to take human rights organizations and advocacy at face value given how both money and politics have corrupted the community.

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