Naomi Campbell arrives to testify about diamond gift at Charles Taylor’s war crimes trial

By Toby Sterling, AP
Thursday, August 5, 2010

Naomi Campbell arrives at Taylor war crimes trial

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Naomi Campbell appeared at a Dutch courthouse Thursday to give evidence at the war crimes trial of former Liberian ruler Charles Taylor after the supermodel lost her battle to avoid testifying.

Campbell will be questioned about claims made by actress Mia Farrow that Taylor gave the British model an uncut diamond after a dinner party hosted by Nelson Mandela in South Africa in 1997. Prosecutors say if that’s true, it’s evidence that he received diamonds from Sierra Leone rebels in exchange for weapons during that country’s 1992-2002 civil war.

Campbell arrived at the courthouse in The Hague on Thursday surrounded by police escorts. She did not speak to reporters outside.

On Wednesday, judges rejected a last-minute protest from Taylor, who had argued that Campbell should not appear until prosecutors provide a summary of her likely testimony.

The judges said it was not reasonable to expect prosecutors to obtain a statement beforehand from Campbell, who is essentially a hostile witness.

Prosecutors say that from his seat of power in Liberia, Taylor armed, trained and commanded Sierra Leone rebels who murdered and mutilated thousands of civilians across the border. Taylor has said he is innocent of the 11 war crimes charges he faces, including murder, rape, sexual enslavement and recruiting child soldiers.

He has also denied involvement in the diamond trade in general, and specifically said he did not bring any diamonds to the celebrity-studded dinner he and Campbell attended in South Africa in September 1997.

The story of the diamond gift surfaced via Farrow, who told prosecutors in a statement that Campbell told her the morning after the dinner that Taylor’s men had come to her room during the night and presented her with a rough, or uncut, diamond. Farrow is due to testify in person on Aug. 9.

However it is far from clear what Campbell will say in court on Thursday.

She declined to cooperate with prosecutors until judges last month ordered her to appear or face a maximum sentence of seven years for contempt.

In April, she told ABC news she “never received a diamond” from Taylor and didn’t want to talk about it. In May, she told Oprah Winfrey she didn’t want to be involved in Taylor’s case and feared for her safety if she were.

Judges have ordered special security measures for Campbell, saying her fears for her safety and privacy are legitimate because of her high profile and the intense media interest in her appearance.

The hot-tempered Campbell, 40, is no stranger to courtrooms, having faced a series of minor lawsuits and criminal cases over the years.

In June 2008 she pleaded guilty in an incident where she cursed, kicked and spat at police at London’s Heathrow airport in a rage over a missing piece of luggage; she was sentenced to 200 hours of community service.

She also did a week of community service sweeping floors and scrubbing toilets in a Manhattan garbage-truck garage in 2007 after pleading guilty to misdemeanor assault for hurling a cell phone at her maid because of a vanished pair of jeans.

In 2000, Campbell pleaded guilty in Toronto to an assault charge for beating an assistant who said the model whacked her on the head with a phone.

A few of Campbell’s former aides and maids have sued her, accusing her of violent outbursts; some cases have been settled on undisclosed terms.

Campbell became one of the world’s highest-paid models after being discovered while shopping in London at age 15.

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