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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Supermodel takes stand in trial over war crimes

Campbell grilled about gift from Liberian strongman

In this image made from television, Naomi Campbell is seen holding the Bible while being sworn in at the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone in Leidschendam, Netherlands, on Thursday.  (Associated Press)
Henry Chu Los Angeles Times

LONDON – Supermodel Naomi Campbell traded the catwalk for the witness stand Thursday as she acknowledged accepting a gift of “dirty-looking stones” that war crimes prosecutors say were uncut diamonds from former Liberian strongman Charles Taylor.

Prosecutors say the gems offer proof that Taylor engaged in the trade of illegally mined “conflict diamonds” to help arm rebels in neighboring Sierra Leone’s decade-long civil war. Thousands of civilians were killed or mutilated during the fighting. Taylor stands accused of crimes against humanity before a tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands.

Campbell, who met the then-Liberian president in 1997, was a reluctant witness at the trial, compelled to appear under threat of being found in contempt of court. On the witness stand, the model with a reputation for impetuous and aggressive behavior made her unwillingness plain.

“I was made to be here. So obviously, I’m just, like, wanting to get this over with and get on with my life,” Campbell told the court.

She was made to stay for two hours, grilled about her meeting with Taylor at a charity dinner hosted by then-South African President Nelson Mandela and events at her hotel later that night.

“When I was sleeping, I had a knock at my door. And I opened my door, and two men were there and gave me a pouch and said, ‘A gift for you,’ ” Campbell testified. “I saw a few stones in there, and they were very small, dirty-looking stones.”

Campbell told the court she did not recognize them as diamonds, which she was more accustomed to seeing “shiny in a box.”

Campbell says she had no idea that the stones were from Taylor, as the prosecution alleges. She maintains that she passed them along to a friend who worked for a children’s charity connected to Mandela, asking that he use them to do something good. The charity denies ever receiving them.

American actress Mia Farrow, who was also at the dinner in Pretoria, South Africa, has said that, on the following morning, Campbell told of receiving the diamonds. Farrow says she told the supermodel that they were almost certainly from Taylor.

Campbell told the court that she had never heard of Taylor or even of Liberia at the time of the charity dinner. She said she read about the former strongman and his alleged crimes later on the Internet.