Ex-Liberian
President Charles Taylor has arrived in the UK to serve the remainder of his
50-year prison sentence for war crimes.
He had
asked the UN-backed special court in The Hague to serve his jail term in Rwanda
instead.
Taylor
was handed over to UK prison service representatives after his plane landed at
11:00 BST (10:00 GMT).
He was
sentenced in May 2012 for aiding rebels who committed atrocities in Sierra
Leone during its civil war.
The former president, 65, was
convicted by the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), but his trial
was held in The Hague in case it sparked renewed unrest in West Africa.
The Netherlands only agreed to host
the trial if he was imprisoned elsewhere.
In a statement, the SCSL said
Taylor left the Netherlands on a chartered flight on Tuesday morning,
"accompanied by Special Court detention and security officials".
He would be given credit for the
time he had served in detention since his arrest on 26 March 2006, the statement
said.
Last month, Taylor's appeal was
rejected, with the court that ruling his guilt had been proved beyond doubt. (BBC)
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