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31 January 2001: Former Sierra Leonean soccer star Ishmail Dyfan died early Wednesday morning in Boston hospital, where he had been undergoing treatment for colon cancer. He was 44. Dyfan played for Freetown's East End Lions from 1973-1980, before embarking on an international career with Ivory Coast's African Sports d'Abidjan and Egypt's Arab Contractors. He returned to Sierra Leone in 1987 to play for Sierra Fisheries, then from 1988-1990 was player-coach for St. Edward's. In 1990, he took over the reins of Mount Aureol. Following the 1997 AFRC military coup, Dyfan coached the Wallidan Football Club in the Gambia, but returned home in 1998 to lead Sierra Leone's national team, the Leone Stars. The funeral is set for this weekend. President Kabbah has formally asked Parliament to delay
presidential and A former Appeal Court judge, Justice Edmond Cowan, was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives on Tuesday, defeating Deputy Speaker Abdul O. Bangura for the post by 41 votes to 26. Justice Cowan succeeds the late Justice Sheku M. F. Kutubu, who passed away earlier this month. Sierra Leone and Guinea will set up a military contact
group to prevent civilians The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is hoping by the end of the week to begin relocating tens of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees placed at risk by new fighting along Guinea's southern border to a new refugee camp at Kuntaya, 82 kilometres north of Kissidougou, the UNHCR's country representative in Guinea said on Wednesday. "We hope that once we start moving, starting with the camp of Nyaedou, space will be created for refugees to leave the most dangerous places to this new camp, and we hope to do that for other camps in the region." Chris Ache told the BBC. Ache said the security situation around the Nyaedou camp, only 17 km. north of the embattled town of Gueckedou, had deteriorated to the point where some UNHCR implementation partners had refused to go there to distribute food. "(Agencies) had to physically look for volunteers and physically do this food distribution in that camp," he said. "Partners were afraid because of the persistent...attacks in these areas." Fighting in the area is still preventing aid agencies from reaching some 250,000 refugees and displaced persons stranded in the elongate of Gueckedou, more commonly known as the "parrot's beak," Ache added. Meanwhile, the UNHCR is expressing concern over what Ache called a "new phenomenon" in the Guinean capital: Many of the refugees who have left the camps for Conakry are refusing to be repatriated to Sierra Leone. "Some have gone to Sierra Leone and have come back to the country," Ache said. "And it’s creating new problems for us in Conakry, because they say that they prefer to remain in Guinea even though they left their camps. They left because of the insecurity in those camps, and we just hope that if we have a new site that they’re able to go there to the new site away from the border areas where the fighting is taking place." ECOWAS Executive Secretary Lansana Kouyate (pictured left)
arrived in British Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon visited the Benguema Military Training Centre Wednesday, where British troops are training soldiers for the restructured Sierra Leone Army, then flew by U.N. helicopter to Masiaka where he met with Sierra Leonean troops in the field. Hoon will return to Britain on Thursday. 30 January: Presidential and parliamentary
elections due to be held in United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has appointed Alan Doss, a British national, as Deputy Special Representative of UNAMSIL, a U.N. spokesman said in New York. Doss, an expert in U.N. development activities, will work as deputy to Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Sierra Leone. Another Deputy Special Representative, Behrooz Sadry of Iran, will continue to assist in the overall political leadership, operations and management of UNAMSIL, the spokesman said. Doss is currently Director of the U.N. Development Group Office, which brings together the U.N.'s development agencies and is headed by an Executive Committee comprising the heads of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP), the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF), the U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA) and the World Food Programme (WFP). Prior to this, Doss was Director of UNDP's European Office in Geneva, during which time he served as UNDP's representative to the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). British Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon left London for
Freetown on Tuesday, Liberian President Charles Taylor said
Monday his government The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has "dramatically scaled down relief efforts in Guinea" and withdrawn most of its staff from the town of Kissidougou after new reports of fighting late Sunday and Monday near the town of Gueckedou, a spokesman for the agency said in Geneva. The fighting has frustrated hopes for quick access to an estimated 180,000 Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and 70,000 displaced Guineans stranded in the volatile "parrot's beak" region, along the country's border with Sierra Leone. The spokesman expressed concern over reports from former refugees of beatings and torture by the Guinean army in the Gueckedou area. "There are also allegations of widespread abuses by Sierra Leonean rebels against desperate refugees who have resorted to walking back home through rebel-infested border areas," he said. "Refugees who have crossed areas of Sierra Leone controlled by the RUF rebels speak of rape, abduction and murder." The volatile situation, he said, had turned the relief effort into "an extremely risky ad hoc venture." Meanwhile, the UNHCR is continuing work on two new camp sites — at Borea, 62 kilometres north of Kissidougou, and at Kuntaya, 82 kms north of Kissidougou — where the agency hopes to relocate refugees from the Gueckedou and "parrot's beak" regions. By the end of the week, the UNHCR will begin relocation convoys from the endangered Nyaedou camp, which is only 17 kilometres north of Kissidougou. Nyaedou currently houses some 30,000 refugees. On Monday the UNHCR airlifted 8,100 jerrycans, 7,000 blankets and 500 rolls of plastic tarpaulins to Conakry from Copenhagen, Denmark. The supplies are destined for the new camps. Meanwhile, tensions between Liberia and Guinea, who accuse one another of supporting rebel insurgencies in their respective territories, show little sign of abating. Liberian Defence Minister Daniel Chea, who last week accused the Guinea army of cross-border shelling near the Lofa County town of Foya, alleged Tuesday that Guinean helicopter gunships had bombed a Liberian customs post at Soloba and a market in Foya, killing ten persons. "That has been an area of concentration of the attack in recent weeks," Chea told the BBC. "We don’t know why, but they have to stop it because Liberia is doing everything to ensure that peace comes to the region. We have no other interest in the region other than to see peace. But this wave of constant unprovoked attacks against our territory will not be condoned. It’s a matter of time before we get fed up." Chea said Liberia was pursuing the matter through diplomatic channels, but that Liberian troops along the border area had been instructed "to stand by and if possible bring down the first helicopter that flies through our airspace." 29 January: The joint UNAMSIL - RUF Contact Group is expected to meet at Makeni on Monday to discuss the situation around Mange, and the possible deployment of U.N. peacekeepers in the area, according to a UNAMSIL statement. On Saturday two RUF officials, Colonel Alfred Morlu Jimmy, a member of the RUF Contact Group, and Major Mohamed Gibril Sesay, commander of the Fourth RUF Brigade at Magburaka, handed over a letter to the commander of the Bangladeshi battalion, BANBATT-2, addressed to the chairman of the UNAMSIL Contact Group and requesting the meeting. Meanwhile, UNAMSIL's Russian Aviation Unit and Force Military Information Staff conducted an aerial reconnaissance mission of the Daru - Segbwema - Pendembu Road as well as the Manowa Ferry site on Saturday. The road was found to be "in reasonably good condition with no major obstacles which could impede vehicular traffic," UNAMSIL said. Two filled-in trenches were observed on the stretch of road between Segbwema and Mobai. No checkpoints were observed along the road. The ferry was found to be operational by means of rope, the statement said, adding that no evidence of RUF personnel or traffic was seen at the ferry site. Also on Saturday, U.N. military observers based in Kenema conducted a patrol to the town of Giehun. No RUF presence was observed in the village. The patrol established that the RUF was present in the town of Lalehun, and that unarmed RUF members frequently visit Giehun, the UNAMSIL statement said, noting that the RUF members were not in conflict with the local CDF forces. Polio immunisations for 18 West African countries exceeded expectations last year, with 76.9 million children vaccinated in the region between January and November, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said on Friday. In Sierra Leone, 842,817 children were immunised, a number UNICEF said fell 21.9 percent short of its target due to the security situation in the country. The interim leader of Sierra Leone's
opposition National Unity The Guinean government has placed five prefectures (provinces) hit by recent insurgent attacks under military administration, the Pan African News Agency (PANA) reported on Monday. According to a decree announced Saturday on state radio and television, President Lansana Conte has appointed gendarmerie officers to administer Gueckedou and Kissidougou, while a naval officer will oversee Macenta. Senior civil servants who previously served as prefects in other areas of the country are being transferred to help administer the prefectures of Kindia and Forecariah. The fighting along Guinea's southern border has put at risk hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and displaced Guineans caught between warring armed groups. The European Union said Monday it supports initiatives by the United Nations Security Council to "step up pressures on Liberia's President Taylor who, according to the evidence given by the U.N. survey report on Sierra Leone, continues to play a decisive role in the conflict that rages in that country." The communiqué, which was issued in Brussels, said Ambassador Pierre Schori of Sweden announced the EU's position during Thursday's Council debate on the report by a panel of experts, which examined the link between the illicit diamond trade and arms trafficking in Sierra Leone. Sweden currently holds the chairmanship of the 15-member European body. The EU believes "the links between the conflict, arms and diamond trafficking comprise the mainstay of the tragedy the people of Sierra Leone are suffering from," Schori told the Council, adding: "The Revolutionary United Front continues to bank on the illegal trade of diamonds to finance its violent campaign." He charged that U.N. sanctions on the trade in Sierra Leonean rough diamonds and on arms trafficking were violated by the Liberian government. "President Taylor's destabilising scheme also extends to Guinea with dramatic effects on security and the situation of refugees and displaced persons in that country," Schori said. Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Monday: [Buying / Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 1700 / 2100 [£] 2400 / 2800. Commercial Bank: [$] 1500 / 1700. [£] 2220 / 2516. Frandia: [$] 1650 / 2000 [£] 2400 / 2850. Continental: [$] 1700 / 2000 [£] 2400 / 2900. 27 January: The president of Médecins sans Frontières' International Council has called the refugee crisis in Guinea a "worst case scenario," as hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees remain stranded in the country's volatile southern border region. "We do have perhaps a quarter of a million refugees that are trapped," Dr. Morten Rostrup said in a BBC interview. "They don’t have any protection. They don’t have any freedom of movement. They cannot escape. they don’t get any assistance when it comes to food, medicines and other non-food items, and there is an increased tendency of violence in the area." He said the refugees should be moved immediately to safer areas, starting with the 30,000 to 40,000 residents of the Nyaedou camp, which is located only about 15 kilometres north of the embattled town of Gueckedou. Rostrup acknowledged reluctance by the Guinean authorities to move large numbers of refugees further into the country's interior, but warned that the alternative was "an uncontrolled massive movement of people" which would be of no benefit to anyone, including the Guinean government. "So I think it should be possible to try to push the government also to allow for this controlled movement at this point of time," he said. He added that the refugees should be screened before being relocated, but argued that this could be done relatively quickly. "Of course it’s very tricky, and I must say from my perspective as a doctor I can just see people suffering, and I can just imagine what’s going on in the 'parrot’s beak' (on the Sierra Leone border), and we just need to find a solution," he said. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in coming under pressure from aid agencies, including the medical charity Medècins sans Frontiéres, to "try and get their act together" and move hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees away from Guinea's troubled southern border area, BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle said on Saturday. "The problem," he said, "is getting permission and so on from the Guinean authorities." Doyle quoted a priest from the area of Guinea's so-called "parrot's beak" region — a strip of land which juts into Sierra Leonean territory where an estimated 250,000 refugees and displaced Guineans are trapped by the fighting — as saying he thought relief agencies, and the U.N. in particular, were being too reticent in taking action. "I know where all the refugees are, I don’t know where the aid agencies are," the priest was quoted as saying. But Doyle noted that the UNHCR, which is the lead agency in the operation to move the refugees, still needed to get the permission of the Guinean government. "They are liable to do what the Guinean authorities tell them to do because it is after all Guinean sovereign territory, and the Guineans are very worried that any large uncontrolled movement of refugees might mask rebel maneuvers of some sort," Doyle said, adding that the vast majority of the refugees had no involvement in the fighting. Doyle said that during his visit to Kissidougou this week he saw "very heavily-armed Guinean convoys" heading south towards Gueckedou, the scene of new fighting at the beginning of the week. "And as well as regular Guinean troops I saw ULIMO people," he said. "These are basically Liberian dissidents. Some of them are of Guinean nationality, but some of them certainly are of Liberian nationality. They certainly speak with Liberian accents. And so the Liberian accusation against Guinea that it is harbouring at least some Liberian dissidents does appear to be true. At the same time, I saw some people who the local people told me were Kamajors. These are the pro-Sierra Leonean government civilian militia, and I’m not quite sure what they’re doing in Guinea, but there certainly are some of them there." Meanwhile, UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond said Saturday that the agency had been forced to temporarily suspend the distribution of food and other aid to refugees after encountering heavily-armed pro-government militiamen in two of the camps. 26 January: Britain announced Friday that it would
extend its programme to train soldiers for the restructured Sierra Leone
Army through September of this year. At that point, it is expected that
responsibility for Sierra Leone has formally requested the extradition from
Liberia of former RUF Food distribution at Guinea's Nyaedou refugee camp resumed
The Liberian government said Friday it was lifting a travel ban it imposed last October against U.S. officials and their families. The measure was a response to a similar ban on travel to the United States by Liberian officials after the U.S. accused Liberia of continuing to support Sierra Leone's RUF rebels. Reginald Goodridge, press secretary to President Charles Taylor, told the BBC the move was an overture by the Liberian leader to the incoming administration of U.S. President George W. Bush. Last week the United States introduced a resolution in the United Nations Security Council which would impose a global travel ban on senior Liberian officials, but Goodridge insisted the Liberian government was seeing what he called "positive signals" coming out of Washington. "The fact that so far the Bush administration has not made any negative remarks about the Liberian government, the fact that President Bush has said that he will review the executive orders that were put into place by his predecessor, the fact that there will be a change in the State Department — these are all positive signs," Goodridge said, adding that Liberia was looking for an opening to improve relations with the United States. "We, too, must be seen to be doing something to meet them halfway, because as I’ve said, diplomacy is a matter of reciprocity," he said. Guinea's ambassador to Sierra Leone apologised Friday for recent attacks on Sierra Leonean territory by Guinean helicopter gunships. In one attack last week on Yelibuya Island, a number of civilians were killed and wounded, several homes destroyed, and many residents were forced to flee. "If the air raids by the Guinean air force did indeed spill over to some towns and villages in Sierra Leone as alleged, I would like to apologise to those Sierra Leoneans affected," Ambassador Mohamed Lamine Sompare told the Reuters news agency in Freetown. "Guinea has no intention of bombarding her friendly brothers and sisters in Sierra Leone. We are only chasing those who are making life difficult for those peaceful and law-abiding Sierra Leoneans and Guineans in the two countries." UNAMSIL said Friday the number of persons known displaced by the January 20 Yelibuya Island raid had reached 1,500 at Barlo Wharf and 300 at Barbara. Two Guinean helicopters were said to have been employed in the operation, in which fishing boats and the settlement area on the island came under attack. An exchange took place between approximately ten RUF fighters and the gunships, a UNAMSIL spokesperson said, adding that the gunships used conventional guns and may have also used rockets. Liberia threatened retaliation Friday for alleged shelling by the Guinean army into the country's northern Lofa County. "The continuous shelling of Liberian territory by Guinean troops is unacceptable," Defence Minister Daniel Chea told reporters late Thursday. "If Guinea continues the artillery shelling on Liberia, we will do what we can to stop it because we have to protect our government, people and young democracy." Chea alleged the bombardment, which he said targeted the town of Foya, was deliberate. "If you are fighting dissidents, the shelling must land on the rebels and not on Liberia. I do not think the shelling was a miscalculation," he said. The accusations drew an angry response from Guinea's embassy in Monrovia. "The government of Guinea...raised a strong and indignant protest against the accusation made against the Guinea army forces, to have shelled the Liberian city of Foya in Lofa County," the embassy said in a statement. In New York, Guinea's ambassador to the United Nations accused Liberia of supporting cross-border attacks by Guinean insurgents and RUF rebels. The charges and counter-charges are only the latest sign of increased tensions between the two countries, which regularly accuse each other of backing attacks by dissidents on their respective territories. Last week Liberia withdrew its ambassador from Conakry, citing a long list of grievances which extend back to 1999. Caught in the middle are some 250,000 Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and displaced Guineans, stranded beyond the reach of aid agencies and trapped by fighting between the Guinean army, rebel forces, and various militia groups. The Sierra Leone government announced on Thursday the shortening of the curfew by one hour, the Sierra Leone News Agency (SLENA) reported. The curfew now takes effect at midnight, and ends at 5:30 a.m. Preliminary findings by a food security assessment mission
to two chiefdoms in 25 January: Britain and the United States urged the United Nations Security Council to impose sanctions on Liberia as Council met in open session Thursday to debate the report by a panel of experts on the illicit diamond trade and arms trafficking in Sierra Leone. Sanctions Committee Chairman Ambassador Anwarul Karim Chowdhury of Bangladesh, who presented the report to the Council, said the panel's findings should not end up "on the proverbial shelf, gathering dust," and stressed that all of the recommendations in the report should receive full, due and thorough consideration. While the report named many of those deemed responsible for violating United Nations sanctions and dealing in arms and diamonds with Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, the panel singled out Liberia which, it said, had been "actively supporting the RUF at all levels, in providing training, weapons and related materiel, logistic support, a staging ground for attacks and a safe haven for retreat and recuperation." In response, Liberian Foreign Minister Monie Captan handed out a 150-page line-by-line rebuttal to the panel's 64-page report. He denied his country was involved in illegal activities, and claimed Liberia was being unfairly demonized by what he called "grossly unsubstantiated allegations." But in an effort to head off the proposed sanctions, Captan told the Council that Liberia was now prepared to cooperate with the world body. He said the U.N. would be asked to post monitors at the country's airports, seaports and borders, and to oversee Liberia's diamond industry. "On the issue of diamonds, the government of Liberia can neither deny nor confirm that the war in Sierra Leone is financed by the sale of conflict diamonds. What the government of Liberia can confirm is that it is not connected, nor is it a party to the illicit trade of Sierra Leone diamonds," he said, adding: "If we are involved in violating the sanctions, why would we want verification? Why would we want monitoring?" But British Deputy Permanent Representative Stewart Eldon told the Council that Liberia's overtures were "too little too late." Even as Liberia was pledging cooperation, Eldon said, there have been increasing reports of Liberian support for recent rebel attacks in Guinea which have left hundreds dead and displaced hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees. "Liberian actions are threatening the stability of the entire region," Eldon said. "It is high time for the Security Council to act." Britain's position was backed by the United States, which last week formally introduced a draft resolution in the Security Council which would impose such sanctions on Liberia as a ban on Liberian diamond and timber exports, a strengthening of the 1998 arms embargo, the grounding of Liberian-registered aircraft, and a travel ban on senior Liberian
officials. "We are concerned that these last minute announcements, in
the face of imminent council action, are a calculated ruse designed to
divide the Security Council rather than to signal any genuine change of
policy," said Deputy U.S. Ambassador James Cunningham (pictured
right). "The steps announced thus far are unconvincing and not
sufficient." French Ambassador Jean-David Levitte also voiced
his country's support for the resolution, saying
"too many promises have been made in the past for us to settle for
mere oratory" from the Liberian government. But Levitte said France
preferred that a time limit be placed on embargoes and that the criteria
for lifting sanctions should be clearly spelled out. He said his country
preferred to see a gradual imposition of the sanctions beginning with a
diamond embargo, with other sanctions to be applied in stages if at all.
Russia and Ukraine also criticized the report, and accused the panel of exceeding
its mandate in proposing remedies and recommending sanctions. Russia has expressed opposition to the diamond certification
system, while Ukraine objected to references to arms smuggling by
Ukrainian nationals. Perhaps the most vociferous attack on the report was
made by Gambian Ambassador Baboucarr-Blaise Jagne, who said he was
"flabbergasted" by the report's "malicious
allegations" against his country. "What is the motive behind
these baseless allegations," Jagne demanded. "Is there a hidden
agenda to mount a smear campaign against the Gambia?" The report did
not, in fact, name the Gambian government, but noted that Gambian diamond
exports to Belgium averaged over $100 million a year between 1996 and
1999. Gambia produces no diamonds of its own, and industry sources were
quoted as saying that 90 percent of the exported gems were likely
"conflict diamonds" from Sierra Leone. A vote on the sanctions resolution is not expected
for some weeks, but Russia, Mali, China and Ukraine all expressed strong
reservations over the panel's recommendations.
Sierra Leone's permanent representative to the United
Nations told the Security Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees at the Nyaedou camp, 15 kilometres north of the Guinean town of Gueckedou expressed "fear, frustration, and desperation to get home," when they met with UNHCR representatives on Wednesday, AllAfrica.com reporter Ofeibea Quist-Arcton told the BBC. Aid workers pulled out of the camp on Tuesday after the sound of fighting was heard coming from the direction of Gueckedou. "(The refugees) feel that Nyaedou is not a safe area, and they were saying to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees representatives who went to the camp yesterday, Wednesday, that they need to be moved and they want to be moved quickly, and they said they don’t want to be at a new safe site, they all want to go home — even to Sierra Leone or Liberia," said Quist-Arcton, who accompanied the UNHCR team to the camp. She added that the UNHCR's Regional Director for West and Central Africa, Abou Moussa, told the refugees that they would have the option of being repatriated or moved to safer areas of Guinea, but that it would take time. Quist-Arcton told the BBC's Network Africa programme that conditions at Nyaedou camp were generally good. "I was surprised at how many of the refugees looked reasonably well fed and healthy, although there were a lot of sickly babies tied to their mothers’ backs," she said. "There was a little market, there was a clinic, there was a school. I saw a tailor, and there was even a project: one centre for gender-based violence." Some of the refugees had been at the camp for as long as eight years, Quist-Arcton noted, and had settled until the latest trouble along Guinea's borders with Sierra Leone and Liberia. She said the situation in the area appeared to have calmed since Tuesday, but that the refugees were still tense. All, she said, now felt unwelcome by the local population, and many complained they were being targeted by local Guinean soldiers and civilians who accused them of being rebels. Quist-Arcton said the refugees were being recruited by Kamajor militiamen from Sierra Leone, who were apparently fighting alongside the Guinean army. "(The Kamajors) are going into Nyaedou camp and trying to recruit and enroll refugees, including children," she said. "Some refugees say they’ve been told that they’ll be offered safe passage back to Sierra Leone in exchange for serving for the militia groups." The UNHCR, Quist-Arcton said, expressed concern that the presence of militia groups in the camps would lead to the refugees being targeted by the rebel forces. "So they’re saying to people, 'don’t let yourselves be recruited, even if they promise you safe passage'," she said. "'We will get you home if that’s what you want to do, but don’t let yourself be fooled by anyone'." 24 January: Guinean helicopter gunships have reportedly launched new attacks against suspected rebel positions north of Kabala, Sierra Leone's Senior Assistant Police Commissioner, Abu Kamara, told reporters in Freetown on Tuesday. The report has not been independently confirmed. Meanwhile, 800 new internally-displaced persons have arrived at Barlo Wharf since Monday following Friday's reported attack on Yelibuya Island by a Guinean helicopter gunship. According to a UNAMSIL statement, eleven of the civilians who arrived wounded were evacuated to the government hospital at Lungi, while four others who were seriously wounded were airlifted to Freetown for medical treatment by UNAMSIL. Some of the victims had suffered both shrapnel wounds and burns, the statement said. Sierra Leone's presidential election, which is due to be held after President Kabbah's five-year term expires next month, may have to be delayed because of a lack of funds and continued instability in the country, National Electoral Commission chairman Walter Nicol told Reuters on Tuesday. "The electoral commission needs a total of about $23 million," Nicol said. "The government of Sierra Leone should provide half of that amount and we are looking to foreign donors for the rest, but they are reluctant because of insecurity in the country." Under the constitution, presidential elections are to be held within three months of the expiration of the president's term. The constitution also provides, however, that "if Sierra Leone is at war in which the national territory is physically involved, and the president considers that it is not practicable to hold elections," that Parliament has the option to extend the president's term, but that "no such extension shall exceed a period of six months at any one time." Last October, President Kabbah told a United Nations Security Council mission that he planned to organise the elections toward the end of 2001, and in a BBC interview shortly afterward suggested that he would be prepared to ask for only a single six-month extension. But in an address to the nation last month, the president said that the holding of elections this year would be linked to an improved security situation in the country. Liberian Foreign Minister Monie Captan met in New York Wednesday with Ambassador Anwarul Karim Chowdhury of Bangladesh, the chairman of the United Nations Security Council's Sierra Leone Sanctions committee. The meeting took place on the eve of a public Security Council debate on the report by a panel of experts, which documents the link between the illicit diamond trade and arms trafficking in Sierra Leone. The report, which was submitted to the Sanctions Committee last month, accuses Liberia of sanctions-busting and of "actively supporting" Sierra Leone's RUF rebels at all levels — a charge Liberia denies. Last week, the United States formally introduced a draft resolution which would impose sanctions on Liberia until President Charles Taylor's government "has ceased its support for armed rebel groups of neighbouring countries, in particular its support for the RUF," and agreed to implement U.N. resolutions banning arms sales to Liberia and imposing a global ban on the sale of Sierra Leonean rough diamonds. Following his meeting with Chowdhury, Captan told reporters that Liberia was prepared to cooperate with the Council in order to head off the sanctions. "I don't think punitive sanctions should be the first response of the international community to this problem. I don't think that's going to solve the problem," he said. "What I believe is that the U.N. should say, 'Liberia, you've said you are willing to cooperate...let us take you up on that.' ...You have the option of last resort to impose sanctions." Captan claimed that Liberia had not yet seen any evidence of diamond dealing by Taylor or senior Liberian officials. "We feel Liberia is being demonized," he said. "We believe this matter is far more complicated than people assume it to be, and we believe there has to be far more of an objective investigation into what has happened." He said Liberia was prepared to allow the United Nations to post monitors at its airports, seaports, and borders, and to allow the U.N. to oversee the diamond trade in Liberia, including a new certification system to curb the sale of so-called "conflict diamonds." A diplomatic source told the Sierra Leone Web late Wednesday that Captan had apparently persuaded the Council to defer action on the sanctions resolution until after the arrival in New York of a ministerial-level ECOWAS delegation during the first week in February. "It appears that Mali is trying to develop an ECOWAS position on the Liberian issue," the source said, adding: "We expect many speakers, including the Gambia and Burkina Faso, to defend themselves in tomorrow's debate. The ECOWAS delegation will also be discussing the deployment of ECOWAS military observers along the Guinea-Liberian border." Some 180,000 Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees stranded without assistance in Guinea's "parrot's beak" region risk being drawn ever deeper into the escalating border conflict as dissidents move into the refugee camps, many of which have been abandoned by aid workers. "There is an element of militia presence in the camps, which is extremely worrisome, as it could make them a target. It is something we have not seen before," United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesman Peter Kessler told Reuters, adding: "We absolutely have to preserve the civilian nature of the refugee camps." In addition, Kessler said, an estimated 70,000 Guineans had been displaced by the fighting. "They've not only been forced from their huts, they've been forced off their land, so their coping mechanisms have gone," he said. Kessler said the growing instability in Guinea had forced some Sierra Leonean refugees to flee back into rebel-held parts of Sierra Leone. "Basically we're seeing a breakdown of law and order," he said, adding that several hundred of the refugees were known to have made their way to the northern town of Kabala. Kessler said last week that 800 refugees were reported to have reached Kabala, but a Western source who visited the town told the Sierra Leone Web that as of the end of the week "the refugee count in Kabala was 480, give or take an orphan or two." Meanwhile, Guinea is reportedly seeking clarification from ECOWAS over the mandate of a 1,696-member West African force expected to be deployed shortly in the border region. "The Guinean government, as I understand it, is still seeking clarification of...what exactly are they going to do," BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle said on Wednesday. "Are they going to fight the rebels who are clearly attacking southern Guinea? Where are they coming from? Will they arrange the Sierra Leonean and Liberian governments to sort things out first, or will they come in guns blazing? — which is perhaps unlikely, but the Guineans still are seeking clarification about what they will do and how effective they might be. And so far, all that we’ve had is groups of senior soldiers doing reconnoiters and trying to find out what the situation is, and as yet no concrete force on the ground." Parliament adjourned in disorder Wednesday after an
SLPP-backed motion to RUF commanders from Lunsar met Monday with the UNAMSIL Sector 1 commander at Port Loko, UNAMSIL said on Wednesday. The two sides discussed the U.N. force's plans to send a patrol to Lunsar on January 31, proposed repairs to the Kumrabai Bridge, a guarantee of security for non-governmental organisations operating in the area, and the proposed establishment of a joint monitoring group to oversee activities of the various factions in the Sierra Leone conflict. The group could include representatives from the RUF, the Sierra Leone Army, and UNAMSIL, the statement said. The four RUF commanders were named as Colonel Moleski Mohamed Kallon, Lieutenant-Colonel Kodjo, Colonel Kamara and Major Daiki. Meanwhile, ten CDF militiamen, including two child combatants, were disarmed at the Wilberforce Barracks on Tuesday, UNAMSIL said. The two children were handed over to Caritas in Freetown. A Sierra Leonean parliamentarian has been elected to the 14-member governing Bureau of the ECOWAS Parliament, the regional body said in a statement. Dr. Alex M. Koroma of the opposition National Unity Party was elected to a one-year term as Second Parliamentary Secretary during the Parliament's inaugural meeting in Abuja. A Malian, Professor Ali Nouhoum Diallo, was elected as Speaker. Each of the 16 ECOWAS member states is guaranteed five seats in the Parliament, with the remaining 40 seats allocated on the basis of population. Nigeria has 35 members, Ghana eight and Ivory Coast seven. Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali, Niger, and Senegal have six members each, while Sierra Leone, Benin, Cape Verde, the Gambia, Guinea Bissau, Liberia and Togo each have five representatives. 23 January: Liberian President Charles Taylor
pledged Tuesday he would There has been renewed fighting near the Guinean town of Gueckedou, aid workers said on Tuesday. Insurgents first attacked the town in early December, in one of a series of cross-border raids into southeastern Guinea since last September which has displaced hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and Guinean residents. U.N. aid workers at the Nyaedou refugee camp, ten kilometres north of Gueckedou, reported hearing "heavy exchanges of fire" Tuesday coming from the direction of the town, BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle said. "Aid workers say that they’ve seen truckloads of Guinean soldiers heading towards Gueckedou from the general area of Kissidougou, which is to the north of Gueckedou, and one can only assume that they’re going to try and rout the insurgents," he told the BBC Focus on Africa programme. Doyle said the current military situation in the area remained unclear. "The whole situation is quite chaotic in that border area," he said. "It’s undoubtedly one of the most dangerous areas in the world because of the different warring factions from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea who are operating there, including of course the Guinean army who are trying to protect their territory from these attacks. But it’s complicated by the fact that there are militias loosely allied to the Guinean army: a Liberian dissident faction known as ULIMO-K for example, and even some Sierra Leonean traditional militiamen known as Kamajors in the area according to various reliable reports." United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesman Peter Kessler told Reuters that UNHCR staff pulled out of the Nyaedou camp when they heard the sound of machine-guns and heavy weapons fire coming from Gueckedou. "Just as we began to get access, we have had to withdraw again," Kessler said. "There seems to be, at least in part, a determined effort to isolate civilians from humanitarian aid." He expressed concern for some 30,000 refugees housed at a camp 30 kilometres north of Gueckedou, many of whom had already fled camps in the so-called "parrots beak" area of Guinea, along the country's border with Sierra Leone and Liberia. "Some of the refugees are frenzied, they don't know where to turn," he said. A Liberian government spokesman acknowledged Tuesday that former RUF field commander Sam "Mosquito" Bockarie was still in Monrovia despite a previous announcement that he had departed from the country, but he insisted that Liberia was not to blame. "Mr. Sam Bockarie is here, but not on account of anything that the Liberian government has done, as it has been rumoured that we are harbouring him or we are having him under any type of duress or anything like that," Reginald Goodridge told the Voice of America. "He is in Monrovia. He’s a free man, has been a free man here over the past years since the United Nations and the international community acquiesced with his coming here as a means of preventing a breakdown in the Lomé peace process in Sierra Leone." Earlier this month Bockarie announced that he was returning to Sierra Leone to rejoin the RUF, but in a Washington Post interview last week he said he now had no plans to leave Liberia. Goodridge, who is press secretary to President Charles Taylor and also deputy minister of public affairs, brushed aside a suggestion that Liberia might hand Bockarie over to the authorities in Freetown due to his activities in the RUF. "We don’t know if he’s a wanted man," Goodridge said. "This is my first time hearing of this. In terms of the matter of expelling him, I think that Liberia has asked him to leave, which is in a sense an expulsion. There is no official communication from the Sierra Leone government asking for him, and whether he’s a wanted man or not, that is not the concern of the Liberian government." Goodridge insisted that the former rebel commander was in Liberia at the behest of the United Nations and the international community, which had wanted him removed from Sierra Leone to give the peace process a chance to succeed. "Now people are calling for his return," he said. "We are a little bit disappointed, and we believe that some members of the international community have been a little bit hypocritical because they were the ones in the first place that asked us to bring Sam Bockarie here." The spokesman acknowledged that Liberia was engaged in talks with ECOWAS to find a third country willing to accept Bockarie, but he declined to give details. "We don’t want to pre-empt any situation and in so doing bring into the light whatever negotiations are going on," he said. "But rest assured that such discussions are going on, and as soon as a situation is found for the safe conduct of Mr. Bockarie from this country, that will also be made known." Goodridge said Liberia had played an active part in the Sierra Leone peace process, but complained that "we’ve done all of these things and yet this government does not get any credit for trying to help bring peace to Sierra Leone." He dismissed charges, made most recently by a U.N. panel of experts, that the Liberian government was involved in diamond smuggling and arms trafficking in Sierra Leone, and he lashed out at the international community for "threatening to impose crippling sanctions on this country, especially at a time when we are still struggling with our post-war reconstruction." For this reason, Goodridge said, Liberia was disengaging from the peace process in Sierra Leone. "We are not going to use our country as a venue for the passage of RUF personnel again," he said. "We’re not going to use our country as a venue for holding meetings to solve the Sierra Leonean problem. We are going to disengage from the RUF; we are going to disengage from the problem. This is not to say we are not interested in what happens in Sierra Leone. We still want peace to come to Sierra Leone, because peace in Sierra Leone means peace in Liberia." Goodridge noted that while the conflict in Sierra Leone was nearly a decade old, charges of diamond smuggling were only leveled at Liberia in the past two years. "Someone doesn’t like President Charles Taylor out there," he said. "They’re trying to demonize him, they’re trying to discredit him, they’re trying to bring this government down. And all we are saying is that if you are accusing us of doing all of these things, we are going to disengage, we are going to close the border, we are going to protect ourselves and see if this problem is going to be solved. And if it’s not going to be solved, then try and look elsewhere and try to readjust the attitude that we are causing this problem by smuggling diamonds and gun-running." The Sierra Leone Appeal Court on Monday set aside a High Court judgment against the partly U.S.-owned flour company Seaboard West Africa Ltd., which awarded damages of three billion leones to businessman Eric James, head of James International Enterprises Ltd. The court found for Seaboard on eight of eleven grounds of appeal raised by the company's attorney, Freetown solicitor Abdul Tejan-Cole. "The case of Eric James v. Seaboard has once again restored my faith in the Sierra Leonean judiciary," Tejan-Cole told the Sierra Leone Web. "(The case) is a relatively straight forward case of breach of contract, but from a legal point of view it raises several novel points, including whether a business not registered in Sierra Leone can enforce a contract, the extent of damages to be awarded, etc...The case sends the right signal to foreign businessmen that the laws of Sierra Leone will be interpreted regardless of nationality." James, who is represented by A. F. Serry-Kamal, is expected to appeal the case to the Supreme Court. The rate of return home by Sierra Leonean refugees from
Conakry to Freetown 22 January: More than a week after the Liberian
government announced his Liberian Foreign Minister Monie Captan will put his country's case against proposed U.N. sanctions to the United Nations Security Council on Thursday, when the Council meets to debate the report by a panel of experts on diamond smuggling and arms trafficking in Sierra Leone. The panel has said it found "unequivocal and overwhelming evidence that Liberia has been actively supporting the RUF at all levels" — a charge Liberia denies. Captan left for New York on Monday. A Guinean helicopter gunship attacked the Sierra Leonean town of Yelibuya on Sunday, BBC correspondent Sylvester Rogers reported. Residents fleeing the area spoke of some civilian deaths, but no details were available. The Guineans have launched a number of reprisal raids in recent months against Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, who they blame for attacks on Guinean territory. Liberia and Guinea have continued to trade charges over incursions along their common border, even as aid agencies struggle to assist vast numbers of refugees displaced by recent fighting in southeastern Guinea. In August 1999, thousands of Sierra Leoneans refugees were among those forced to flee when insurgents launched cross-border attacks into Liberia's northern Lofa County. More recently, Guinea has accused Liberia of instigating a series of rebel attacks on its territory which began in September, and which have displaced hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and Guinean nationals. Last week, Liberia recalled its ambassador from Conakry, citing a long list of grievances and accusing Guinea of support for a group of dissidents who, it said, were preparing to attack Liberia. In a BBC interview broadcast on Monday, Liberian Foreign Minister Monie Captan said that recalling the ambassador was "a sign of protest to Guinea." He insisted that Liberian President Charles Taylor had expressed willingness to hold talks with President Lansana Conte of Guinea over the problem between the two countries, but said Conte had declined. "He doesn’t see dialogue as the solution," Captan said. "If he doesn’t see dialogue as the solution, then one would wonder what is his perception of a solution to the problem between Liberia and Guinea." Captan accused Guinea of harbouring Liberian dissidents from the former ULIMO and LPC factions who, he said, "have been trained, armed and equipped inside Guinea," but denied his country had reciprocated by supporting Guinean rebels. "We have told the Guinean government that we reserve the right to take action, punitive action, against any aggression against our territory. We have not done so," he said. Britain's Head of the Land Command, General Sir Mike Jackson, arrived in Freetown Sunday, according to a statement by the U.K. Joint Task Force in Sierra Leone. Jackson's visit to Sierra Leone was the second by a high-ranking British military official within the past week. 21 January: The Sierra Leone government has reacted
cautiously to a pledge The Liberian government announced Sunday it was grounding all Liberian-registered aircraft until the planes' owners could document that they were in compliance with all Liberian civil aviation laws and regulations, as well as standards of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO). A Ministry of Information statement urged aviation authorities worldwide "to assist in the enforcement of the aircraft grounding order." The press release referred to irregularities discovered in the Liberian aircraft registry, and said the measure was an attempt to increase its effectiveness. Accordingly, it said, the Ministry of Transport had revoked the appointments of all agents who had been acting on behalf of the Liberian government in matters of aircraft inspection and registration. Because of its lax license and tax laws, Liberia has for many years been a "flag of convenience" for what a U.N. panel of experts investigating arms trafficking and diamond smuggling in Sierra Leone called "the fringe air cargo industry." In its report issued last month, the panel found that the Liberian "EL" registry was "clearly connected to illegal activities that go beyond the economic rationale for the offshore registration of aircraft or crews" and that Liberian-registered planes were frequently used to transport illegal arms shipments. The Liberian Civil Aviation Authorities and the Ministry of Transport were unable to tell the panel how many planes carried Liberian registrations, and maintained that the documentation had been lost or was destroyed due to the Liberian Civil War. In its recommendations to the United Nations Security Council, the panel called for the immediate grounding of all planes bearing the EL registration number, and said operators should be required to file their airworthiness and operating licenses and their insurance documents with the ICAO's headquarters in Montreal, including documentation on all inspections carried out during the past five years. Aircraft belonging to operators who refused to comply would have their planes grounded, and planes which failed to meet ICAO standards would be grounded permanently. The plight of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees in
southeastern Guinea 20 January: Liberia has announced it will abandon its efforts to
restore peace in 19 January: The first meeting of the UNAMSIL and RUF core contact group took place Wednesday at Mile 91, according to a UNAMSIL statement. The UNAMSIL delegation was led by the Head of the Policy and Planning Section and included both civilians and military officers. The RUF delegation was led by Colonel Edward Sembey. The two sides agreed to establish regional contact groups at Daru, Kenema, Mange and Mile 91, the statement said. The groups will meet weekly, while the core group will meet every other week or whenever requested by either side in the event of an emergency. UNAMSIL will search all vehicles plying the roads to ensure they are not carrying "lethal materials," the statement said. Former Speaker of Parliament and Chief Justice Sheku M. F. Kutubu received a state funeral in Freetown on Friday. Kutubu died January 4 at Choithram Hospital after suffering an apparent heart attack. Liberian President Charles Taylor, facing the prospect of
United Nations Since January 9 the transit camp in Conakry for refugees wanting to return to Sierra Leone has received approximately 300 new arrivals per day, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday. The total number of refugees in the camp, constructed to house 3,000 persons, has now reached 3,675. To date, more than 4,000 Sierra Leonean refugees have been repatriated to Freetown by boat, where they are then relocated to two transit camps operating at Jui and Waterloo. The WFP and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees recently carried out a food security assessment at Soro Gbema and Makpele Chiefdoms in Pujehun District, to evaluate the overall food security situation and to determine whether refugees have begun returning to the area. Both areas are close to the Liberian border, where there have reportedly been cross-border attacks. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) called Friday for the
immediate relocation of On the last full day of his eight years in office, U.S.
President Bill Clinton signed The outgoing U.S. Permanent Representative to the United
Nations, Richard Among the images "etched most clearly" in her
mind during her eight-year Relief agencies have begun to resume work in parts of
southern Guinea after On Wednesday the vessel MV Overbeck, chartered by the
International 18 January: The United States formally introduced a resolution in the United Nations Security Council Thursday which would impose a range of sanctions on Liberia, intended to stop that country from trading in illicit diamonds and weapons with Sierra Leone's RUF rebels. A report issued last month by a U.N. panel of experts found there was "unequivocal and overwhelming evidence that Liberia has been actively supporting the RUF at all levels, in providing training, weapons and related matériel, logistical support, a staging ground for attacks, and a safe haven for retreat and recuperation." The U.S.-sponsored resolution, which is strongly backed by Britain, calls on all U.N. member nations to "prohibit the direct or indirect import of all rough diamonds from Liberia to or through its territory," and also bans the export of Liberian timber, whether "rough or whether or not stripped of bark or sapwood or roughly squared." The U.N. panel alleged that the principals of Liberia's timber industry were involved in a variety of illicit activities, and that "large amounts of the proceeds are used to pay for extra-budgetary activities, including the acquisition of weapons." The resolution would impose a flight ban on all Liberian-registered aircraft, and broaden an arms embargo first imposed in November 1992. It would also impose a travel ban on senior Liberian officials and military commanders and adult family members. The sanctions would remain in place until the U.N. secretary-general certified that Liberia was no longer involved in the illicit diamonds and arms trade. Liberia recalled its ambassador to Guinea on Thursday amid charges of Guinean government support for Liberian dissidents who, the Liberian foreign ministry claimed last week, were preparing to launch cross-border attacks into the country's northwestern Lofa County. Guinea, for its part, has accused Liberia of backing insurgents who have launched a series of attacks into its territory since last September, displacing hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees and Guinean residents. The Liberian foreign ministry, in a statement released Tuesday night, said staff at its embassy in Conakry had been reduced, adding that it was constrained to take these measures because of "the continued acts of aggression and unfriendly acts perpetrated by the government of Guinea against the Republic of Liberia." The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said
Thursday it was Sorius Samura's documentary "Cry Freetown" was
among Wednesday's Fatou Mbaye Sankoh, the Senegalese-born American wife of imprisoned RUF
leader Foday Sankoh, has asked an unnamed 17 January: Britain's Chief of General Staff,
General Sir Michael Walker, The first meeting of a newly-formed contact group between UNAMSIL and the RUF was due to meet Wednesday at Mile 91, according to a UNAMSIL statement. The commander of the Sierra Leone Army's First Battalion has confirmed that the RUF has repaired the Bumbuna - Magburaka and Bumbuna - Binkolo roads in northern Sierra Leone, UNAMSIL said on Wednesday. The roads remain closed, however, as Defence Headquarters has not yet given instructions to open them. Richard Holbrooke, the outgoing U.S. permanent
representative to the United 16 January: Renewed fighting in southeastern Guinea
has dashed hopes for a Fighting between Guinean government forces and insurgents has forced sixteen humanitarian agencies, including Medècins sans Frontiéres and Action Contre la Faim, to pull out of Guinea's troubled Gueckedou region, where more than 200,000 Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees are thought to be stranded without food or medicine, BBC Conakry correspondent Alhassan Sylla reported on Tuesday. Guinean state radio confirmed for the first time Monday evening that insurgents had carried out a series of attacks in the Gueckedou area, including on the town centre, Sylla said, adding that Guinean forces claimed to have pushed them back and appeared ready to counter any moves by the attackers. "Gueckedou is known to have like 21 sectors...and (the government) has mobilised all the vigilantes from these areas and these are moving forward to counter the rebels. So the situation is really becoming dramatic at the moment," Sylla said. Government forces claimed to have killed 75 rebel fighters, a number which could not be independently confirmed. "(People say) they’ve seen the severed heads of supposed rebels; that is to say, rebels who were killed by government forces," Sylla said. "And they were kind of pathetic and killed in a very, very gory manner. So for the first time we are hearing reports of heads of rebels and even rebel sympathisers having been severed and their heads being displayed on trees all around the town of Gueckedou." Meanwhile, the plight of the refugees has grown even more desperate. "In the face of these intensified battles there’s very little (aid agencies) can do," Sylla said. President Kabbah travelled by helicopter to Port Loko District on Monday, where Sierra Leone Army troops are holding frontline positions, BBC Freetown correspondent Lansana Fofana reported. The area has seen an influx of returning refugees who have fled recent fighting in Guinea, and Fofana noted that the president's visit "also addressed the issue of reintegrating these people who have been displaced for considerable length of time." Discussion of conflicts in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia is on the agenda for the 21st Franco-Africa Summit opening this week in Yaounde, Cameroon, Radio France International reported on Tuesday. United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan responded to
the United Nations |