Finnish judges will on Friday publish a verdict in the trial of a suspected warlord accused of atrocities in Liberia's civil war, the first such case to be partly heard on Liberian soil.
Gibril Massaquoi, 52, has been on trial at Pirkanmaa district court for a litany of rapes, ritual murders and the recruitment of child soldiers during the later years of Liberia's second internal conflict, which ended in 2003.
At the time he was a senior commander of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), a Sierra Leone rebel group that also fought in Liberia.
Massaquoi moved to Finland in 2008 and was arrested there in March 2020 after a rights group investigated his war record.
He denies all charges and claims he was not in Liberia when the alleged offences took place.
He faces a life sentence, which in Finland means on average 14 years behind bars.
The written verdict is due to be published at 1200 GMT and will be closely watched by campaigners who have fought for decades for those who carried out atrocities in Liberia to face justice.
Back-to-back civil wars between 1989 and 2003 in the West African nation of five million left 250,000 people dead and millions displaced.
The conflicts were marked by merciless violence and rape, often carried out by drugged-up child soldiers.
Civitas Maxima, a rights group whose probe into Massaquoi prompted Finnish police to act, said at the outset of the trial in February 2021 that the "groundbreaking" decision could set "a monumental precedent".
So far only a handful of people have been convicted for their part in the conflict, and efforts to establish a war crimes court in the country have stalled.
Former Liberian warlord-turned-president Taylor was imprisoned in 2012 -- but for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone, not in his own country.
- 'Angel Gabriel' -
In an unprecedented move, the Finnish court decamped to Monrovia between February and April last year, and again in September, to hear testimony from dozens of witnesses and visit sites where the atrocities allegedly unfolded under Massaquoi's orders.
The visits became the first time that testimony in a war crimes trial was heard on Liberian soil.
The Finnish trial thus avoided the problems of bringing witnesses to Europe that have hampered similar Liberian war prosecutions in Switzerland and France.
In villages in northern Liberia, witnesses claimed Massaquoi went under the moniker 'Angel Gabriel' and ordered civilians, including children, to be locked into two buildings which were then torched.
At least seven women were raped and murdered in one village and other locals were killed, their bodies cut up and "made into food which Massaquoi also ate," prosecutor Tom Laitinen told the court.
A 4,000-page evidence dossier seen by AFP further detailed mass murders and rapes in Lofa county and the capital Monrovia, and the enslavement of child soldiers.
But Massaquoi's defence highlighted numerous inconsistencies and contradictions over the timings and locations of witness accounts of atrocities, which happened a generation ago.
His lawyers insisted he was in neighbouring Sierra Leone under watch in a UN safehouse at the time of the atrocities.
Massaquoi agreed to give evidence to the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, set up to investigate war crimes in that country.
He was later granted asylum in Finland and immunity from prosecution over crimes in Sierra Leone, but not Liberia.
Finland's law allows the prosecution of serious crimes committed abroad by a citizen or resident.