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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(8 pp) Who is Charles Taylor and what is he doing
to Liberia? According to Sheer (2000), from 1990
to 1997, 30,000 to 60,000 armed fighters
(10 percent of whom were under the age of 15)
raped, stole, and killed their way across the
country of what used to be 2.5 million people.
Approximately 150,000 to 200,000 people were killed
and 1.5million fled their homes. Civil warfare
has been eating away at this African nation since
1989. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBLberiR.doc
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country of what used to be 2.5 million people. Approximately 150,000 to 200,000 people were killed and 1.5million fled their homes. Civil warfare has been eating away at this
African nation since 1989. Bibliography lists 5 sources. BBLberiR.doc Who is Charles Taylor and what is he doing to Liberia?
Written by B. Bryan Babcock for the Paperstore, Inc., November 2000 Introduction Who is Charles Taylor and what is he doing to Liberia?
According to Sheer (2000), from 1990 to 1997, 30,000 to 60,000 armed fighters (10 percent of whom were under the age of 15) raped, stole, and killed their way across
the country of what used to be 2.5 million people. Approximately 150,000 to 200,000 people were killed and 1.5 million fled their homes. Civil warfare has been eating away
at this African nation since 1989. Past History In 1822, under mixed and questionable reasoning, the American Colonization Society saw an answer to their perceived dilemma - they would create
a colony between the current Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone. The organizers of this venture, included such prominent Americans as James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, and Francis Scott Key, determined
that the colony would serve at least two purposes: the first to spread the Christian gospel in Africa, and the second to serve as a refuge for freed American
slaves (the unsaid, was also to get them out of the country). With their plans formalized, the American Colonization Society, dispatched three groups of about equal number of freed American
slaves, free-born blacks, and a few "recycled" slaves who were turned mid-ocean, were returned to the Continent. As a distinction from the indigenous peoples of the area, these returning
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