Mia Farrow, Naomi Cambell give conflicting accounts of alleged 'blood diamonds' gift
LEIDSCHENDAM, Netherlands (AP) — Naomi Campbell's former agent fended off defence accusations that she lied to the war crimes court to further her own lawsuit against Campbell, insisting the model knew she was receiving diamonds from Charles Taylor.
Taylor, the former Liberian president, faces 11 counts of war crimes linked to allegations he supported rebels during Sierra Leone's vicious 11-year civil war, which ended in 2002 with an estimated 100,000 dead. Prosecutors accuse him of trading in so-called blood diamonds — gems used to finance wars — in exchange for supporting the rebels. Taylor denies the charges.
Agent Carole White said she was present when Campbell told Jeremy Ractliffe, head of the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund, that the diamonds she was donating to the charity came from Taylor.
Campbell testified last week she did not know the source or value of the "stones" she received after a 1997 dinner party at Mandela's presidential mansion. She told the court that two men came to her room in the middle of the night and said merely it was "a gift for you".
The British supermodel said she did not even know they were diamonds. Taylor's lawyer Courtenay Griffiths QC accused White of lying to assist her in a separate case against her former client, whom she is suing for millions of dollars for alleged breach of contract. "I suggest that your account is a complete pack of lies, and you've made it up in order to assist in your lawsuit against Ms. Campbell," Griffiths said. "Put bluntly, for you this is all about money."
White told the court her account was true, and that she had told the same story to friends in 1997 because "it was funny at the time."
"It's totally the truth. It has nothing to do with my business argument with Naomi Campbell," White said. "This is not about money."
Naomi Campbell flirted with Taylor across the dinner table at Nelson Mandela's presidential mansion in 1997 and boasted the following morning that her had given her a huge diamond during the night, Mia Farrow and another witness testified at Taylor's war crimes trial Monday.
Prosecutors hope testimony from the actress-turned-human rights activist and from Campbell's estranged former modelling agent will help tie Taylor to the illicit "blood diamond" trade that fuelled Sierra Leone's civil war. Both contradicted Campbell's account from the witness stand last week that she did not know the nature or value of what she had received.
However, even if judges accept the women's testimony, it seems unlikely to change the course of the trial. Neither claimed to know for certain it was Taylor that gave Campbell the diamonds, meaning the episode will almost certainly be a surreal interlude of glamour in a grim case focused on murder and mutilation in the jungles of West Africa.
Taylor says he is innocent of 11 war-crimes charges linked to allegations he supported rebels during Sierra Leone's vicious 11-year civil war, which ended in 2002 with an estimated 100,000 dead.
He has dismissed suggestions he was involved in the diamond trade as "complete, complete nonsense."
Farrow, however, recounted what she called the "unforgettable" memory of an excited Campbell coming down for breakfast the morning after Mandela's dinner party, so excited she could hardly sit.
"She said 'Oh my God, last night I was awakened by men knocking at the door and it was men sent by Charles Taylor and he sent me a huge diamond'," Farrow said.
Campbell, who resisted appearing before the war-crimes court for months, testified under subpoena last Thursday that she was given several small "dirty-looking" stones by men she didn't know after the function in Pretoria. The British model said she hadn't known they were diamonds, nor who had sent them, and said Farrow was the one who suggested the gift was from Taylor.
Defence lawyers accused the prosecution of calling the unlikely witnesses as a publicity stunt to raise the profile of the trial, which has gone on for more than two years. Taylor himself was on the stand for seven months, portraying himself as an African liberator and statesman who sought to bring stability and peace to his turbulent corner of the continent.
Mr. Griffiths said Farrow was unlikely to accurately remember what happened at a breakfast 13 years ago. He noted that Campbell received three uncut diamonds — not the single diamond Farrow insisted she heard Campbell talk about.
The defence also suggested Farrow's credibility was tainted by her activism, particularly her campaigns for the victims of Africa's wars. Farrow, 65, conceded she had never seen the diamond or diamonds herself, and that Campbell might not have used the word "huge". But she insisted remembering Campbell only mentioned a single diamond.
South African businessman Jeremy Ractliffe, the former head of the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund, confirmed last week he had three stones he had received from Campbell to donate to charity after the 1997 dinner.
He said he hadn't done anything with them because he feared that a blood diamond scandal might attach to Mandela or Campbell as a result. He has now handed them over to South African authorities and they have been identified as uncut diamonds, but their origins are unknown. In court, Judge Julia Sebutinde asked Farrow whether it was possible she might have seen the 2006 movie "Blood Diamond" and been influenced by its plot, which centres on a single large diamond. But Farrow denied any suggestion that she was confusing reality with Hollywood.
Agent Carole White, who fell out with Campbell several years ago, told the court that Taylor and her then-client enjoyed each other's company at the dinner table. "I think she was flirting with him and he was flirting back," she said.
At one point during the meal, White said, Campbell leaned back to speak to her. She "was very excited and she told me he was going to give her some diamonds," White told the court.
She said Campbell later appeared disappointed when she saw the uncut diamonds and they were "not very impressive and not enormously big."
But under cross examination, Griffiths strongly challenged White's testimony.
In all, 91 witnesses testified against Taylor before this week.
The court has heard evidence of radio dispatches between him and rebels, how weapons were allegedly smuggled in bags of rice in exchange for diamonds carried in a mayonnaise jar. The court has also heard from numerous victims and witnesses of atrocities. One of Taylor's former aides testified to witnessing Taylor eat a human liver.