The lawyer responsible for setting up Liberia's long-awaited war crimes court told AFP that the first trials will take place in the next five years, more than two decades after the brutal civil wars that left around 250,000 people dead.
Justice has so far proved elusive for the victims of the back-to-back conflicts that raged in the small West African country between 1989 and 2003.
Despite years of international and domestic pressure, Liberia has yet to try anyone for crimes committed during the years of violence which resulted in massacres, mutilation, rape and cannibalism.
"I do not think it is too late," said Jallah Barbu, who in November was appointed by President Joseph Boakai to manage the establishment of a War and Economic Crimes Court.
"We have a wonderful opportunity now to address our situation in the world and move forward," he added.
"In the six-year period of the administration of President Boakai, based on all of the commitments I have and the momentum I see, the court will have, long before the expiration of the six years, at least commenced its first trial, if not concluded" it, Barbu said.
Boakai, who took over the presidency at the start of this year, in May signed a decree creating an office responsible for setting up the special court, which will try those accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity, as well as economic crimes committed during the period.
A Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in 2009 found that all parties in the conflicts were responsible for war crimes and recommended the establishment of a special court.
But the recommendations had until this year gone largely unheeded, particularly in the name of peacekeeping as a number of accused warlords remained influential in their communities.
- 'Bring closure' -
One of those was Prince Johnson, a key militia leader in the civil wars and an influential senator until his death at the end of November.
Johnson, who was seen sipping beer in a video as his fighters tortured then-president Samuel Doe to death in 1990, was a leading opponent of the creation of the court.
He was one of eight warlords that the TRC recommended be tried.
"We want to make sure that when we bring a closure to this process, the Liberian people will be happy, our country will be on a better trajectory, at least in terms of ensuring that respect for the rule of law is not just on the tongue, but it's in our conduct," Barbu said.
The lawyer said that the eventual court would be "of a hybrid nature" and established in Liberia, respecting both local and international laws.
He added that the office had been given a "very strong commitment from the government to support this process in terms of assurances".
"We've also received similar commitments from partners, especially the international community, that they will come to our aid," he said.
But Barbu admitted that in the two months he had been in his position, the office had "not received a penny from any source other than the UK government", whom he said gave $5,000 to fund travel for a research trip to Sierra Leone.
While no trials have taken place within Liberia, a number of convictions have been secured abroad.