31 January 2002: Zainab Bangura, a co-founder in
1996 of the civil society
group
Campaign
for Good Governance, resigned her position as the group's National
Coordinator on Thursday to enter the political fray. Bangura told the
Sierra Leone Web she would register a new political party on Friday, the Movement
for Progress Party, which will contest in May's presidential and
parliamentary elections. The party's platform, she said, will stress the
promotion of patriotism and meritocracy, the empowerment of people,
especially of marginalised groups such as women and children, the
decentralisation of government functions and ensuring community
participation in resources management, and the expansion of the role of
the private sector in the economy. Meanwhile, human rights lawyer Abdul
Tejan-Cole has been appointed to head the Campaign for Good Governance on
an interim basis. In a subsequent press conference excerpted over the
Voice of America, Bangura explained why she was leaving civil society for
politics. "In civil society you have your limitations," she
said. "You can only actually advocate or advise. You cannot actually
force the politicians to do whatever you want to do. And I think the
issues that we’re dealing with, the issue of the empowerment of women,
the issue of decentralisation, the issues of corruption — a whole lot of
other issues are issues that actually need to be addressed at the
political level." Bangura stressed her leadership skills and her
background in human rights which she said she now wanted to take into
politics. "Within the last five years I think that Sierra Leoneans
have failed to receive an effective opposition credible enough to be able
to challenge the government, and we all see what is happening now in the
country," she said. "Most of the potential politicians are
moving on to the one-party state, the SLPP. We saw it happen in 1973 in
this country which led to the demonstrations of 1977...And it is the same
thing repeating itself, and I think the reason being that we still have
the same political class and people who have been involved in the politics
of Sierra Leone for the past 30 to 40 years. And so I feel it is our
obligation as a new generation of Sierra Leoneans who are very much
interested in Sierra Leone, and want the best for Sierra Leone, to be able
to get involved."
Members of Sierra Leone's opposition
political parties will take
their
complaints over the ongoing voter registration process to the streets
Thursday morning by demonstrating in front of the National Electoral
Commission headquarters, UNPP party leader Dr. John Karefa-Smart told the
Sierra Leone Web. "All the opposition parties have decided...to go
peacefully without any procession," he said. "Since there is a
state of emergency, we will not be able to obtain permits for a
procession. We’ve just asked all our members to one by one assemble at
the Electoral Commission to protest." Karefa-Smart accused the
commission of "inability, unpreparedness, and signs of already being
biased...and also doing things which are unconstitutional," and he
said opposition members wanted the government to halt the registration
process temporarily while the proper modalities were put in place.
"There is still enough time, if adequate preparation is made, for us
to go through with the elections as is announced," he said. "But
people are not going to be prepared to go through when all these
deficiencies are already apparent." Karefa-Smart insisted the
demonstration would be a peaceful one. "We are going to go there
without marching, we are going to go individually and just camp there
until he listens to our complaints," he said.
With the completion this month of the disarmament
programme, the United
Nations
peacekeeping force has fulfilled half of its mandate in Sierra Leone,
Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, said on Tuesday. Adeniji, who addressed the future of
the U.N. mission during a town hall meeting with UNAMSIL staff members,
said the mission would work to ensure that the forthcoming elections come
off peacefully. He also pointed to the U.N. role in reintegrating
ex-combatants and youths into society by providing them with skills
training. Adeniji, according to a UNAMSIL statement, said he was concerned
about the sustainability of peace in Sierra Leone, considering how much
the United Nations had already invested in the country. He added that the
United Nations was committed to providing support to ensure that the
country holds free and fair elections, reintegrates disarmed
ex-combatants, rehabilitates its damaged infrastructure, and maintains
good governance.
30 January: Liberian security forces have blocked
tens of thousands of persons uprooted by new fighting in the north of the
country from entering Monrovia, fearing that they could cause panic in the
city. According to the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, between
50,000 and 65,000 persons have been halted at Klay Junction, a crossroads
about 22 miles from the Liberian capital, the Reuters news agency
reported. The Associated Press, quoting UNHCR workers who visited the area
on Monday, put the number of displaced at 20,000, including 6,000 Sierra
Leonean refugees who fled their country for the relative safety of Liberia
during Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war. In an interview with Radio
France International, UNHCR spokesperson Delphine Marie said the agency
had initially feared that the fighting might cause panic in the six UNHCR
camps which currently shelter some 30,000 Sierra Leonean refugees.
"UNHCR was very concerned about the situation in our camps where we
have Sierra Leonean refugees in Liberia, because we were afraid they would
also panic and they would go back en masse to Sierra Leone or start
packing things and start a massive exodus on the roads," she
said. "But this did not happen, thank God. We also managed to go to
the camp to explain that the security was not so bad on the road and had
been restored in the area and especially that the camps were not at
risk." Marie said the refugee agency had no reliable information on
the fighting. "Up to yesterday the exact causes of this fighting were
not very clear; whether it was really a rebel movement — the rebels had
claimed to have gained some ground in that area — or whether it was
merely skirmishes within the army or with some smaller rebel
factions," she said. "It wasn’t very clear. What we know is
refugees were fleeing, people were fleeing because of fighting."
Sierra Leone's RUF rebels said
Wednesday that an internal inquiry has found no evidence of alleged
dealings between its members and Osama bin Laden's terrorist al-Qaeda
network. The charges came to light last November in a Washington Post
article, which alleged that RUF leaders had sold diamonds to al-Qaeda
representatives since 1998, using a safe house in Liberia to conduct the
transactions. Beginning last July, the Post said, al-Qaeda began paying
above-market rates for the diamonds — this in an apparent effort
to convert its cash assets into the easily concealable gemstones ahead of
September's terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, for which al-Qaeda
has been widely blamed. The U.S. government subsequently put the RUF on
its list
of
terrorist organisations whose members are barred from entering the United
States. In a statement issued on Wednesday by Omrie Golley (pictured
left), the chairman of the RUF's Political and Peace Council which
conducted the probe, the rebel group said it was not to blame. "These
investigations have now been completed, and in the course of these
investigations, the investigative panel found no evidence, either directly
or indirectly, linking the RUF/SL to any association to this organisation,"
the statement said. "The panel considers that whilst it is remotely
possible that individuals associated with al-Qaeda may have met with
individuals associated with the RUF inside Sierra Leone, or indeed outside
the country, with a view to purchasing mined diamonds, these meetings, if
indeed they took place at all, took place unwittingly, without the
knowledge on the part of the RUF that the individuals that they may have
met were connected with al-Qaeda in any way." In an interview with
the Sierra Leone Web, Golley said the Political and Peace Council had
interviewed more than 140 RUF members over the allegations, and had come
up with nothing. He insisted, however, that not all of those called to
testify were suspected of taking part in the illicit diamond trade.
"As a result of initial investigation, it was thought necessary by
the investigative panel to call a number of members of the RUF to come
forward to answer questions, but that did not in any way mean that they
were involved in any mining activity," he said, adding:
"Obviously a number of those that were called were those that were
known to be involved in selling diamonds." Golley acknowledged that
the RUF panel had made no written record of its findings or its
deliberations, and that its investigation consisted only of listening to
oral testimonies by RUF members. He confirmed that the panel had
interviewed Issa Sesay, the RUF's interim leader, but he declined to
disclose what Sesay had told them. "One of the things I would not
want to do is to highlight the names of any of those people that were
questioned," he said. Golley said that if hard evidence came to light
of an RUF - al-Qaeda connection, the group might take a second look at the
matter, "but for now we’re satisfied with the investigations that
we’ve conducted."
Liberian President Charles Taylor, in his annual State of
the Nation speech to
parliament,
has called on the United Nations to lift an arms embargo against his
country, Radio France International reported. Taylor warned that if the
U.N. failed to act, Liberia would have no choice but to defend itself. The
expanded arms embargo was part of a package of sanctions imposed by the
Security Council last year because of Liberia's alleged support for Sierra
Leone's RUF rebels, and for its involvement in the illegal
arms-for-diamonds trade in the sub-region.
29 January: Former AFRC junta chairman Johnny Paul
Koroma, who this week
announced
he would seek Sierra Leone's presidency through the ballot box under the
banner of his Peace and Liberation Party, told the BBC on Tuesday that he
thought he had a good chance of winning. "Even through I’ve entered
very, very late, but I am very, very optimistic that I will make a
breakthrough," Koroma told BBC correspondent Lansana Fofana. "It’s
because I do have a following. I know I have the support. I know the
people are looking for good leadership. They are looking for somebody with
moral leadership that has a political direction. I have that moral
leadership and I think I can lead the people very, very well." Koroma
insisted that his involvement with the AFRC, which he led for nine
turbulent months in 1997 and 1998, would not be an issue in the campaign.
"I’ve dismissed that long ago, and that is history," he said.
Koroma also insisted that his beliefs as a born-again Christian should not
be a hindrance to his seeking political office. "This is a mistake
that we’ve been making all along: They think if you are a born-again
Christian you’re not supposed to come into politics," he said.
"People should be God-fearing to come into politics. Government
should not be left in the hands of evil people."
Anniemaude Cole, the beautiful young
woman who just last November
was
crowned Miss Sierra Leone 2001, died
overnight Monday of burns she suffered a week ago after her nightgown was
ignited by kerosene. It is still not clear if the injuries were the result
of an accident, self-inflected, or whether she was the victim of domestic
abuse. Sierra Leone Live quoted Cole as denying that the burns, which
reportedly covered some 62 percent of her body, were the result of a
suicide attempt. A family member who spoke to Cole at Choithram Memorial
Hospital by telephone Monday morning told the Sierra Leone Web that plans
were underway to fly Cole to South Africa for treatment, but that her
condition deteriorated later in the day. Her only coherent words were
"de pain mona, de pain mona" (I'm in pain, the pain is
unbearable), the relative said,
adding: "Anyway, she's now free from the pain." Things began to
go wrong for the 22-year old soon after she received the crown early last
December. Her family complained that the pageant had failed to deliver on
most of the promised prizes, which were to have included a new car,
bedroom furniture, a one-year wardrobe, a return ticket to London, and a
Le 500,000 bank account. Then, in December, Cole lost her only surviving
sister. In January, pageant organisers pulled her from the Miss ECOWAS
competition, claiming that she did not meet the regional pageant's
requirements of five O'Levels.
Sierra Leonean
refugees are among tens of thousands of persons who have been forced to
flee new fighting in Liberia's Lofa and Gbarpolu Counties, a spokesman for
the U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Tuesday. Since the fighting
intensified in December, more than 6,000 new arrivals have been recorded
at refugee camps around Monrovia. UNHCR spokesman Kris Janowski said
agency officials were working to calm the situation. "Although there
were initial reports of refugees packing their bags in Sinje camp and
getting ready to go back to Sierra Leone, a visit yesterday to Sinje by
UNHCR officials helped to calm the situation in the camp," he said.
"Refugee leaders were taken to Monrovia to attend a meeting on the
planned repatriation to Sierra Leone." A pre-registration campaign in
Liberia's six camps for Sierra Leonean refugees found 6,000 persons —
about one fifth of the total — ready to return home. A proper
registration campaign is scheduled to begin shortly before a larger scale
return can begin, Janowski said.
28 January: Former AFRC junta chairman Johnny Paul
Koroma confirmed on
Monday
that he would contest for the presidency in next May's elections, Reuters
reported. In a press conference in Freetown Koroma, a former army officer,
warned of a split within Sierra Leone's military which he said was due to
preferential recruitment of former RUF and CDF combatants over members of
the junta. "There are cracks in the new army which should be dealt
with immediately," Koroma said, adding that he had brought the
problem to the attention of British military officers who have been
working with the Sierra Leone government to retrain and restructure Sierra
Leone's military, but that no action had been taken. "The British do
not know, but we as former members of the Sierra Leone Army know the
problems," he said.
27 January: Sierra Leone's army, renamed last week
the Republic of Sierra Leone
Armed
Forces, has deployed along the Liberian border in the country's eastern
Kailahun District, where nearly eleven years ago the RUF launched its
first attack into Sierra Leone, Reuters correspondent Christo Johnson
reported. "Your deployment...is a clear manifestation that you have
the capacity as the new Sierra Leone armed forces to protect and defend
the territorial integrity of Sierra Leone," Chief of Defence Staff
Brigadier Tom Carew told his troops at the military barracks in Daru. Last
year, ministers from the three Mano River Union nations of Sierra Leone,
Guinea and Liberia resolved to deploy troops along their common borders in
an effort to prevent dissident groups from launching attacks in the
volatile area. "Always be ready to go into battle on our border if
there is any attempt by any dissident that wishes to attack your
position," Carew said. "Remember the war is over but as soldiers
always be alert."
Military ordinance brought back from
peacekeeping operations in Sierra Leone and Liberia exploded at a military
barracks in Lagos, Nigeria late Sunday afternoon, news services reported.
The armory, in the Ikeja military cantonment, is located in a residential
section of Nigeria's most populous city, raising fears there might be
significant numbers of casualties. An army spokesman was quoted by the
Associated Press as saying that the weapons stockpile included a large
amount of heavy artillery ammunition returned to Nigeria following ECOMOG
operations in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Reuters noted that the Ikeja
Brigade included tank units, and was the main armory for T-55 and Leopard
tanks used for peacekeeping operations in the two countries.
Zainab
Bangura, the National Coordinator of the Sierra Leonean civil society
group
Campaign for Good Governance, has been named the recipient of this year's
Bayard Rustin Humanitarian Award, normally given to leaders who have made
significant contributions to improving the human condition and to
advancing the cause of human rights and democracy. The award is named for
Bayard Rustin, an American civil rights leader and the co-founder of the
A. Philip Randolph Institute. The award will be presented at a ceremony in
Las Vegas, Nevada next July 2.
25 January: Voter registration continued behind
expectations for a second day Friday, with fewer people than expected
showing up at registration centers in Freetown, the BBC reported. "I
drove around town and saw that some of the registration centers were
empty," said BBC correspondent Lansana Fofana late in the day. In Kenema
and Kono, Fofana said, registration officials downed tools on Thursday
because their allowances of just over $30 had not been paid. He added that
registration finally commenced in Kenema on Friday, but said the turnout
of people at registration centers was "less than encouraging."
In Kono, members of the militant Movement of Concerned Kono Youth (MOCKY)
disrupted the first day of registration, the official Sierra Leone News
Agency reported, quoting Radio UNAMSIL in Freetown. The youths reportedly
demanded that displaced Kono District residents, tens of thousands of whom
still live in refugee camps in neighbouring countries or in displaced
camps within Sierra Leone, be repatriated before they would allow the
registration exercise to go ahead.
The chairman of the
National Electoral Commission (NEC), Walter Nicol
(pictured
left), has dismissed as "grossly misleading" an opposition
statement denouncing the voter registration exercise as illegal and giving
the commission 24 hours to call it off. The statement, which was signed by
representatives of eleven opposition parties, alleged that the NEC, by
failing to submit its regulations to parliament, was in breach of
constitutional provisions. In a statement issued late Friday, Nicol
insisted that the registration was in fact being conducted in accordance
with the country's 1991 constitution and with the Electoral Registration
Act of 1995. Earlier Friday, in an interview with Voice of America
correspondent Kelvin Lewis, Nicol insisted that the registration period of
just two weeks would be adequate to register the country's eligible voters
— by U.N. estimates about one third of the population. "In the first place, we have no alternative," he
said. "That’s what the law requires. That’s what the law states,
that this should be done within 15 days. And the law has not been amended,
so we cannot act outside the law. But what we have devised is a system in
which if we have only 500 people to one registration centre for a period
of two weeks, I believe we have more than enough time to have those who want to be registered to be registered." Nicol was quoted as
saying that Sierra Leonean refugees living in Guinea and Liberia would
have until April to register to vote.
British Prime
Minister Tony Blair is expected to visit Sierra Leone on February 8, the
official Sierra Leone News Agency reported on Friday. No details were
available.
Liberia is urging that United Nations sanctions, imposed
nearly a year ago for the Liberian government's alleged backing of RUF
rebels in Sierra Leone, be lifted now that the war in that country has
officially been declared over, BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle
reported. Information Minister Reginald Goodridge insisted that Liberia
had played a role in bringing the Sierra Leone conflict to an end.
"We did our part in trying to help to bring about peace in Sierra
Leone," he said. "We are happy for the Sierra Leoneans now, and
I think that the United Nations and the world can look upon Liberia with
some sympathy and say hey, it's all over, let's go back to square one and
begin the process of rebuilding." Last March the United Nations
Security Council, convinced that Liberia had violated U.N. resolutions by
its involvement with the RUF in the illegal arms-for-diamonds trade,
imposed a range of sanctions including a strengthened arms embargo, a ban
on the sale of Liberian diamonds, and an international travel ban on
senior Liberian officials and their families.
Russia has welcomed the end of disarmament in Sierra Leone
as a "positive dynamic" in the peace process, Itar-Tass
reported. In a statement released on Friday, the Russian foreign ministry
said last week's arms-burning ceremony in Freetown "is meant to
symbolize the end of the disarmament of rebels, which has been on since
May 2001, and the practical end of the decade-long civil war in Sierra
Leone." This development, the ministry said, "will promote the
national elections scheduled for May, a solution for the refugee problem,
and reconstruction of the national economy."
Exchange rates for the leone against the
U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying /
Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2180 / 2300. [£] 2851 / 3170.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 2950 / 3275. Frandia: [$] 2200 /
2450 [£] 2700 / 2900. Continental: [$] 2200 / 2450 [£] 2800 / 3500.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2200 / 2230 [£] 2800 / 3000.
24 January: Voter registration got underway in
Sierra Leone on
Thursday, ahead of national presidential
and parliamentary elections now scheduled for May 14. During the two-week
registration exercise which end will end on February 7, the National
Electoral Commission (NEC) hopes to register one third of Sierra Leone's
population — roughly 1.5 million people. Over the next two weeks, teams
of NEC officials will travel
throughout Sierra Leone using bicycles, motorcycles and possibly even
helicopters to reach remote areas and to
register as many voters as possible. The NEC's efforts will be supported
by the United Nations, with UNAMSIL providing logistics. During the next
two weeks, more than 5,000 registrations centers will be set up around the
country. Each of those centers will later be transformed into a polling
station. Those who register will be given photo ID cards to use at the
elections, and their hands are marked with indelible ink to prevent them
from registering more than once. In the northern towns of Makeni and
Magburaka, scores of residents queued up at registration and photo centers
on the first day of registration, UNAMSIL reported. According to the UNAMSIL
statement, the process is said to be on course in many regions of the
country, with minor delays in some areas. In Freetown, BBC correspondent
Lansana Fofana reported that turnout was "less than enthusiastic as
people simply trickled in." But he
said
local radio stations were urging potential voters to register, while some
non-governmental organisations had joined in a nationwide campaign to
educate voters about the process. Voice of America correspondent Kelvin
Lewis quoted election officers as saying that while the turnout did fall
short of expectations, the pace was expected to pick up in the coming
days. Information Minister Dr. Cecil Blake (pictured left) suggested that
a change in the voter registration process might be behind the apparent
slow start in the capital. "The mode of registration has
changed," he said. "It’s no longer a house-to-house mode.
People are now expected to go to registration centers and register to
vote. So since it’s a new system, naturally it will take some time to
for us get used to it. But it’s a system that should facilitate voting
as well, because the expectation is people will vote at centers where they
registered." Blake stressed that the government expected people would
in fact register to vote. "People have been encouraged from all
areas, from all sectors, from all regions in the country to make use of
this
particular opportunity," he said. "It’s their only opportunity
to exercise their right — their constitutional right — to participate
in governance." In a BBC interview, NEC chairman Walter Nicol
(pictured right) acknowledged that the
registration of hundreds of thousands of Sierra Leonean refugees in neighbouring
countries still posed a problem. He said the NEC had asked permission to register refugees in the camps, but that the host governments had not responded
to the agency's request. "We are thinking of making provision for the late
registration of refugees," he said. Under Sierra Leonean law, voting
can only take place within the country's borders. Meanwhile, two Commonwealth
observers and a Commonwealth Secretariat staff member arrived in Freetown
on Wednesday to "observe relevant aspects of the organisation and
conduct of the voter registration process" and to "consider the
various factors impinging on the credibility of this part of the electoral
process" at Nicol's invitation, the Commonwealth News and Information
Service reported. Justice Brigadier-General (Rtd) Augustino Ramadhani,
Vice-Chairman of Tanzania's National Electoral Commission and Judge of the
Court of Appeal, and Nigel Buttler, Deputy Returning Officer, Vale of
White Horse District Council, Oxfordshire, U.K., along with Dr. Jackie
Dugard of the Secretariat's Political Affairs Division, will be present in
the country until January 30.
Former AFRC junta chairman
Johnny Paul Koroma resigned Wednesday from
his
position as chairman of the government's Commission for the Consolidation
of Peace, PANA correspondent Pasco Temple reported. In a one-page letter
of resignation backed by a four-page explanation, Koroma said he was
stepping down because of frustrations with the government, and because he
had been accused of using his position to further his political ambitions,
Temple said. In an interview with the Sierra Leone Web last June, Koroma
acknowledged that he was "seriously thinking" about standing for
president in the upcoming elections. Earlier Wednesday, Koroma
participated in a peace and reconciliation conference in Koidu, where he
called on the people of Kono District to accept each other in the spirit
of reconciliation. "People fight because they are not able to
talk," he said.
Behrooz Sadry, the U.N. Deputy Special Representative for
Operations and
Management,
and Johnny Paul Koroma, the chairman of the Commission for the Consolidation
of Peace (CCP), called on Kono District residents Wednesday to learn to
forgive one another so that the wounds of Sierra Leone's ten-year long
civil war could be healed. The two spoke at a peace and reconciliation
conference in Koidu organised by the CCP in collaboration with the United
Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL). Koidu, the district's largest
city, was the site last month of fighting between rival factions which
left more than a dozen persons dead and many more injured. "Peace can
only come if we learn to forgive and forget the bad things our neighbors
have done to us. Peace and reconciliation begins with us, the people of
this land," Sadry said, adding that sustainable peace could only be
achieved through reconciliation, forgiveness, repentance and justice.
"UNAMSIL is here to support you in your reconciliation efforts so
that the wounds of the war can be healed, and to remind you that reprisals
and vengeance will not solve the problems, but forgiveness will," he
said. The conference was attended by UNAMSIL officials, paramount chiefs,
representatives of the RUF, the CDF, the Sierra Leone Police, the National
Union of Students, the Movement of Concerned Kono Youths, and local
residents.
23 January: More than half of displaced Sierra
Leonean women and girls who came into direct contact with RUF rebels
during the country's decade-long civil war report they were sexually
assaulted, with a third of those saying they were gang-raped, the
U.S.-based group Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said in a new report
issued on Wednesday. The vast majority of the reported abuses occurred
between 1997 and 1999 — the two-year period which encompassed AFRC junta
rule and the rebel offensive which ended in the bloody January 1999 attack
on Freetown. In a survey of 991 households, 53 percent of the
women who had face to face contact with RUF fighters said they experienced some form of sexual violence, as compared to six percent
from the country's other warring factions. These figures, when extrapolated to the entire
internally-displaced population, suggest that between 50,000 and 64,000
displaced Sierra Leonean women may have experienced some form of
war-related sexual violence over the past ten years. Rape, when committed
during war, is considered to be a war crime. When it is
directed against a civilian population as a policy of war, rape is
considered to be a crime against humanity. Both fall under the
jurisdiction of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the war-crimes
tribunal established in Freetown last week. In the survey, the first to use
population-based random sample methods to evaluate the prevalence of
wartime sexual violence, one of eight households reported that a family
member had been the victim of war-related sexual abuse, while nine percent
of individual women who responded said they had been raped. The prevalence
of sexual abuse during the ten years of war, the rights group said, was
the equivalent of a lifetime of non war-related sexual abuse for those
women who participated in the study. PHR Senior Research Associate Chen
Reis, who coordinated the study in Sierra Leone, told the Sierra Leone Web
that as alarming as the findings were, the actual numbers might even be
higher. "There is a disincentive in a way for women to report that
they’ve been raped," she said. "This is not something that
people would say lightly. If anything, we believe that there was an
under-reporting of this." Reis urged that the Sierra Leone government and
the United Nations move to provide counselling and protection to women who
might soon be called upon to testify before the Special Court or the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission. "One of the things that the women we
interviewed told us is that they were afraid of retribution," she
said. "That’s a very real fear for people who’ve lived through
nearly eleven years of conflict and who’ve experienced violence,
including sexual violence, at the hands of people who may be living in
their community." Because so many of the women emphasised a desire
for skills training, Reis said, PHR advocated increasing funding for a
wide range of programmes to benefit the victims — "not just
physical and mental health services, but also provision of assistance,
skills training and income-generating projects." In its report, PHR
also called on the government to help address the needs of survivors of
sexual violence, including the provision of health services, referral,
transport assistance, counseling and education. It also suggested the
government work with women's groups and other agencies to educate women,
men and youth on issues relating to sexual violence and women's rights. In
addition, Reis said, the rights group recommended that government strengthen
the capacity of its police force and judiciary "to provide training
across the board for police, for law enforcement officials, for medical
officials to address appropriately cases of sexual violence that come
before them, to set up procedures that are sensitive and in keeping with
international standards." Reis had words of praise for both the PHR
researchers and the women who told them their stories — in some cases
for the first time. "Inasmuch as it was difficult for us, we can’t
even imagine how difficult if must have been for the women who
participated in the study to share their stories," she said.
"Many of them had never before shared their stories with anyone. We’re
really optimistic that this study will go some way toward making a
difference in these women’s lives."
22 January: The European Union has committed €17
million ($15 million) to aid displaced persons and refugees in the Mano
River Union nations of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia. The money, which
will be channeled through the EU's humanitarian aid office ECHO, will be
used to fight malnutrition, boost primary health care, and provide
blankets, shelter and drinking water. "Civil conflict over many years
has exacted a terrible cost in human misery with homes destroyed, health
and education systems left in ruins and huge numbers of people displaced
from their home areas," EU Development Commissioner Poul Nielson was
quoted as saying. "We will continue offering humanitarian support for
as long as it is needed." Meanwhile, the Japanese government has
approved a $3 million grant for the reintegration of ex-combatants and
reconstruction in Sierra Leone, UNAMSIL said on Monday. The funds, which
come from the Japanese Human Security Fund, will benefit some 5,000
ex-combatants in Koinadugu, Kono and Kailahun Districts over the next
three years. The United Nations Development Programme's implementing
partners will be responsible for implementing the programmes, which
include a number of self-employment, vocational training and formal
education schemes.
21 January: President Kabbah announced on Monday the
restructuring of
Sierra
Leone's
military in a way which will do away with separate army, navy and air
force command structures by April 1. Kabbah made the announcement in a speech
at a Tower Hill ceremony to open the new Ministry of Defence building on the
site of the former Paramount Hotel. The restructured force, to be known
as the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF), will be
divided into two commands, both located at Cockerill Barracks. The Joint
Force Command will be responsible for military operations and training,
while the Joint Support Command will deal with personnel, logistic support
and individual training. Over the next two to three years, Kabbah said,
the military is expected to reach a troop strength of some 11,000 soldiers.
Ceremonies to mark the official end of
disarmament took place at
the
weekend in Sierra Leone's provincial capitals of Makeni, Bo and Kenema. At
Makeni's Wusum Stadium, interim RUF leader Issa Sesay (pictured right) and
eight of his commanders and personal bodyguards handed over their weapons
to senior UNAMSIL officials at a ceremony Saturday attended by President
Kabbah and members of his government. Sesay then joined Kabbah and
Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, the U.N. Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, in lighting a bonfire of about twenty weapons turned in
during the disarmament process. In an address to the thousands of people
gathered at the stadium, Kabbah said that "the war has ended, but a
new war has started," which he described as the war on poverty. He
urged Sierra Leoneans to work hard to rebuild their country, and to strive
to reintegrate former combatants into society. Sesay, in his remarks,
noted that the presence of the president in the former RUF headquarters
town was "a positive manifestation that sustainable peace has come to
Sierra Leone." At similar ceremonies in Bo and Kenema on Sunday,
Kabbah again stressed the need for reconciliation among Sierra Leoneans.
He was joined in Bo by Omrie Golley, the chairman of the RUF's Political
and Peace Council, who told residents he had come to the former government
stronghold "to confirm that the war is now over." Golley said
the end of disarmament should not be the end of the peace process. The
priority now, he said, should be on reintegrating the ex-combatants into
society and showing them that with hard work and determination they could
prosper in Sierra Leone.
Reaction to Friday's announcement that
disarmament is complete and
that the
war is over:
Zainab Bangura, National Coordinator of the civil society group Campaign
for Good Governance: "We know that peace doesn’t mean when the guns
are silent. It goes beyond. So I think as much as I can say is we are on
the process for peace. The first thing is that there has been a ceasefire
for a long time. Secondly, government has been able to deploy the SLA into
vast areas of Sierra Leone. The remaining areas have also the UNAMSIL
presence. I think to a larger extent that gives confidence to Sierra
Leoneans and to the people in general. And so most people believe that we
are on the process of peace and I think that’s what the government also
means. They are yet to take complete hundred percent control, so when you
take those two things all in total, I think we can say we’ve come a long
way — we’ve travelled a long way. We are almost at the end of the
road."
The United Nations Development Fund for Women announced
Monday that two independent experts, Elisabeth Rehn and Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf, will travel to Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea to assess the
impact of conflict on women and women's role in peace building. Rehn is
the former Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, and Sirleaf is a member of the Organization of African Unity’s
Panel of Eminent Persons to investigate the genocide in Rwanda.
20 January: The end of disarmament marks the
beginning of a new stage in
the
peace process, the Executive Secretary of the National Committee on
Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration said on Sunday. "The
guns are silent indeed, but then we’ve got the long road to walk, the
road to reconciliation," Dr. Francis Kai-Kai told Voice of America
correspondent Josephine Kamara. "You know, it’s a long war, over a
decade, and there is bitterness around. People are forgetting slowly in
some areas. Others are only beginning to think about forgiving. It’s
going to be one of the major tasks for us now as Sierra Leoneans...If as
well adversaries become very regretful for what they’ve done and very
remorseful, we have a responsibility to make sure that we accept that in
good faith and move forward." Kai-Kai stressed that the most pressing
matter now was the reintegration into society of the more than 46,000 combatants
who had given up their arms over the past year. "Reintegration is
the major theme now," he said. "How do we get these people
to position themselves again in society, especially the ex-RUF fellows?
How do we make sure that they get back to their home areas? So for a lot
of us, it’s a moment to start another stage in the process towards
durable peace."
19 January: Reaction to Friday's announcement that
disarmament is complete
and
that the war is over: Omrie Golley (pictured left), chairman of the RUF's
Political and Peace Council: "I consider the end of disarmament and
the end of the war to be the first stage of the consolidation of the peace
process, but there’s such a lot more work that needs to be done,
particularly in terms of tackling the problems in our society — that of
poverty, corruption, nepotism and economic and social mismanagement.
Reconciliation is extremely important in the weeks and months that lie
ahead, and I hope as a people we would recognize that disarmament is just
the first stage of a wider process of reconciliation and change."
U.S. acting State Department spokeswoman Lynn Cassel: "We call upon
all parties to build on the significant progress made so far as Sierra
Leone moves toward a brighter future. The United States looks forward to
our continued close cooperation with Sierra Leone as it moves toward
elections in May and confronts the challenges of the years
ahead."
18 January: At a symbolic ceremony in Lungi on
Friday to burn nearly 3,000
weapons
collected
from Sierra Leone's warring factions, President Kabbah declared
that disarmament in the country was at an end — and that the war
was over. Kabbah also announced the lifting of the curfew, which has been
in effect since the restoration of civilian rule four years ago. The president spoke before a
crowd which included visiting dignitaries, government leaders,
representatives of the RUF and CDF, United Nations officials, diplomats, and 1,000 local residents and school
children. Since January of last year, over 46,000 combatants have turned
in some 14,500 weapons and 1.3 million rounds of ammunition. But despite
the success of Sierra Leone's disarmament programme, Kabbah warned that
there still were threats to peace in the
sub-region, including the illicit arms trade and the illegal trafficking
in natural resources — especially diamonds, which have been widely blamed for
fuelling Sierra Leone's ten years of civil conflict. And although the
process of disarmament was now formally over, he said, the formidable
tasks of reintegration and rehabilitation have only just begun. Noting the
paucity of funds pledged so far to help train and reintegrate former
combatants into society, Kabbah appealed to the international community to
remain engaged in Sierra Leone, and to help the country to consolidate
the peace. This week the Sierra Leone government signed an agreement with
the United Nations to set up a Special Court which will prosecute those
accused of war crimes during the conflict. Questions have been raised in recent days as to whether the timing
of the agreement might disrupt the fragile reconciliation process, but Kabbah
insisted that both justice and reconciliation were "major
components" of peace. "One cannot speak about the
need for national reconciliation, and at the same time ignore or dismiss
the moral and constitutional imperative of upholding the rule of law,"
he said. "The Special Court is about accountability. It is about
justice...In our situation it is a means of dealing with impunity. It is
also a means of ensuring that at all times, the human rights of every
individual, including those who are caught up in armed conflict, are
respected and protected." Of the heads of state who were invited to Friday's
ceremony, only President John Kuffuor of Ghana showed up. Liberia was
represented by Vice President Moses Blah, while Senegal, Mali and Libya
sent their foreign ministers. Nigeria was represented by Minister of
Defence Theophilus Danjuma.
Statements
made at the ceremony for the symbolic burning of weapons: RUF
interim leader Gen. Issa Sesay (pictured right) thanked UNAMSIL for having
given "us the courage to lay down our arms." He added: "We
are not only burning [tools] that were taking lives, we are producing
ashes out of (them) which will [forge] a new consciousness and
determination to foster greater unity and hope of a better and brighter future of all Sierra Leoneans. As we destroy the weapons that have been
collected and [smoke rises from the fire to the skies], let this be indication of
the declaring intention of all former fighters that violence and discord
are indeed ended in Sierra Leone."
Ghanaian President John Kuffuor said the successful disarmament of
combatants was "a significant milestone and moral victory for the
people of Sierra Leone and the international community." He noted,
however, that "ten years of fighting have robbed this country of
human and material resources which could have been used to alleviate
poverty." Said Kuffuor: "Let us resolve to give the children of
Sierra Leone a chance to grow up in a peaceful country." Nigerian
Defence Minister Theophilus Danjuma said that the proliferation of small
arms, most of which are manufactured outside the African continent,
constitute "weapons of mass destruction" in Africa and must be
tackled "at the source...so we urge the producing countries that
flood the market to search their hearts and have pity on us." The
U.N. Special Representative of the Secretary-General, Ambassador Oluyemi
Adeniji (pictured left), commended the leadership of the RUF and CDF
"who committed themselves to see the disarmament process through to
the end. Adeniji noted that "while this day symbolises an end, it
also symbolises a beginning — a new beginning for more than 46,000 men
and women of this nation." He appealed to the international community
to support the reintegration programme because "financial resources
required face a serious shortfall."
As Sierra Leoneans prepared Friday to
celebrate the end of
disarmament
with the symbolic burning of weapons, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
hailed the role of Britain, working together with ECOWAS and UNAMSIL, in
bringing the conflict to an end. "Sierra Leone is
emerging from the nightmare of a decade old civil war, which has left the
country and its people severely scarred," he said. "The process of healing and rebuilding must now
begin." Straw welcomed the signing of an agreement this week to set up
a Special Court to prosecute those accused of war crimes committed during the country's decade-long civil war. "Bringing
to justice those most responsible for gross violations of human rights and
crimes against humanity will send a powerful message to Sierra Leoneans
and around the world about the international community’s resolve not to
allow such activities to go unpunished," he said. The minister
said he was "greatly encouraged" about the number of
ex-combatants who had disarmed. "It is clear to me that the vast
majority of Sierra Leoneans are fed up with war and yearn for peace,"
he said. "I applaud the Revolutionary United Front’s decision to
give up the gun in favour of a political process, leading to elections in
May. I urge all Sierra Leoneans to grasp this opportunity to work
together, and help to rebuild their country and realise its great
potential."
The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, will begin repatriating
Sierra Leonean refugees in Liberia next month for the first time since war
erupted in their country a decade ago, a UNHCR spokesman said in Geneva.
Because of limited assistance available in eastern Sierra Leone, the
agency is not promoting a massive repatriation of the 38,000 refugees in
Liberia, but will facilitate the return of those requesting it. So far,
2,069 Sierra Leoneans have indicated they are ready to go back. Many of
the refugees are eager to return home to vote in the upcoming election,
the spokesman said. UNHCR staff and Sierra Leone government officials are
visiting the six refugee camps in Liberia this week to meet with refugee
leaders and discuss the conditions in the areas of return. The majority of
Sierra Leonean refugees in Liberia come from the eastern Kono and Kailahun
Districts.
U.S. President George W. Bush has renewed a ban on the
import of rough
diamonds
from Sierra Leone and Liberia, except those certified by the Sierra Leone
government, the Voice of America reported on Friday. Bush originally
imposed the ban last year, in line with an embargo by the United Nations
Security Council. In a statement, Bush said that the continuation of the
embargo was necessary because the actions of the RUF posed a threat to
U.S. foreign policy. In November, the Washington Post newspaper alleged
the RUF had sold diamonds to representatives of the al-Qaeda network,
blamed for terrorist attacks in the United States last September. Imports
of Liberian stones are also banned, Bush said, because of Liberia's
support for the RUF.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling] Standard
Chartered Bank: [$] 2180 / 2320. [£] 2651 / 3174. Commercial Bank: [$]
1800 / 2130. [£] 2601 / 3075. Frandia: [$] 2200 / 2250 [£] 2700 / 2900.
Continental: [$] 2200 / 2450 [£] 2800 / 3500. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2300 / 2350 [£] 3000 / 3050.
17 January: Representative of the Sierra Leone
government (delegation pictured
left)
and the RUF (below right) met for a final time for U.N.-brokered
Tripartite talks in Freetown Thursday and formally declared that, with
46,453 combatants having turned in their guns, the disarmament process in
Sierra Leone was at an end. In a communiqué
issued at the end of the meeting the two sides called for the acceleration
of the extension of government authority throughout the
country. The meeting also agreed on the need to reintegrate fighters from
the former warring factions back into society, and appealed to the
international community to back the DDR (Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration) programme with financial assistance. The two sides
expressed support for the on-going Community Arms Collection and
Destruction Programme, aimed at removing from circulation the remaining
weapons, many of them shotguns and hunting guns which are not generally considered
to be weapons of war. Both the government and the RUF stressed the
importance of repatriating tens of thousands of Sierra Leonean refugees so
that, if they wished, they could participate in next May's presidential
and parliamentary elections. RUF representatives raised the issue of the
transformation of their movement into a political party, which has stalled
recently over the rebel group's inability to secure a party headquarters
in the CDF stronghold of Kenema. They also urged that the United Nations
move to lift its international travel ban on RUF members.
Britain will maintain its current troop
strength in Sierra Leone at
360
soldiers through the elections, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon said in
response to a parliamentary inquiry. "Our military training and
assistance programme continues to make good progress towards its goal of
developing a professional, accountable and effective Sierra Leone Army,
able to protect the security and integrity of Sierra Leone on its
own," Hoon said. In September, Hoon announced that the British
onshore presence would be reduced to 360 troops, most of them military
trainers and support personnel, by January, to remain at that level until
April 2002. "Since then, it has been announced that presidential and
parliamentary elections in Sierra Leone are to be held on 14 May 2002. I
have therefore decided to maintain our presence at the force levels
announced in September over the period of the elections," he said.
The International Military Advisory and Training Team will continue the
military training and assistance task with the Sierra Leone Army."
The United Nations Security Council moved Wednesday to
clarify the role of U.N. peacekeepers during Sierra Leone's elections in
May. In a unanimous resolution, the Council mandated UNAMSIL to help the
government with logistical support, transport and security. The Council
also authorised an increase in the number of U.N. civilian police in order
to advise and support the Sierra Leone Police in carrying out
responsibilities related to the election, and to help the police force
train their personnel. The Council welcomed the interim establishment of
an electoral component in UNAMSIL designed to strengthen the U.N.'s
ability to help coordinate electoral activities between the government,
the National Electoral Commission, and others involved in the process. It
also welcomed UNAMSIL's decision to set up offices in each electoral
region to monitor the process and to provide assistance to international
election observers.
The Special Court for Sierra
Leone, which was established at a signing
ceremony in Freetown on Wednesday,
will seek to prosecute political and military leaders who bear the
greatest responsibility for crimes committed from November 1996 onward, U.N. Assistant Secretary-General
for Legal Affairs Ralph Zacklin told the BBC. "The
statute does not specify any distinction between government side or RUF,"
he said. "The prosecutors and the investigators will look at the evidence and they
will follow that evidence in their indictments." Zacklin acknowledged that
operating the court in Sierra Leone was going to be "a
challenge," but he told reporter Lansana Fofana that it was necessary the tribunal be set up
in the country where the crimes were committed. "I
think that there are a lot of infrastructure problems, communication
problems (in Sierra Leone), but we believe that it’s very important for a court of this kind to
take place in the country where the crimes took place," he said.
"If we established it in a third country, it would not have the outreach to the
population that we need."
16 January: The Sierra Leone government and the
United Nations signed an agreement in Freetown
Wednesday establishing a
tribunal to prosecute those who committed war crimes during Sierra Leone's
decade-long civil war.
Sierra
Leone "must have a full accounting for the atrocities in the
past," said Justice Minister and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa
(pictured right), who signed for the Sierra Leone government.
"Without ending impunity by bringing to justice those who bear the
greatest responsibility for the atrocities committed in this country, we
are dooming ourselves to repeat them." Under-Secretary-General for
Legal Affairs Hans Corell, who signed for the United Nations, noted that
the document was the first ever such agreement between the U.N. and a
member state. "The Special Court for Sierra Leone is different from
earlier ad hoc courts in the sense that it is not being imposed
upon a state," he said. "It is being established on the basis of
an agreement between the United Nations and Sierra Leone — at the
request of the Government of Sierra Leone." The court, which will
include both international and Sierra Leonean judges, will try those
deemed "to bear the greatest responsibility" for war crimes
committed since 30 November 1996 — the date of the ill-fated
Abidjan Peace Accord. Corell said the court would focus on crimes against
humanity, violations of the Geneva Conventions, and other serious
violations of international humanitarian law. It will also have the power
to try persons who committed certain serious crimes under Sierra Leonean
law, such as arson and crimes against women. "The court will also
have jurisdiction over crimes committed against personnel, installations,
material, units or vehicles involved in a humanitarian assistance and
peace-keeping mission in accordance with the Charter of the United
Nations, as long as they are entitled to the protection given to civilians
or civilian objects under the international law of armed conflict,"
he said.
Sierra Leone's Information Minister said Wednesday
that the
establishment of the
Special Court did not mean that the country had
abandoned the reconciliation process. "As
a matter of fact there is a United Nations team presently in Sierra Leone
to look into the setting up of (the Truth and Reconciliation Commission) and the commencement of its
deliberations," Dr. Cecil Blake told Radio France International.
"So we do have the reconciliation factor. The Special Court
should not be seen as something that negates the reconciliation process or
commitment." Blake said it would be unfair to suggest that because
the court had been set up, the country had abandoned the issue of
reconciliation. "Reconciliation is a very fundamental aspect of the policy
here," he said. "And
reconciliation could not be achieved without also applying certain demands
of justice and trying to redress issues surrounding impunity. So they
really go hand in hand."
Five
senior members of the RUF paid a courtesy call on President Kabbah on
Wednesday, a day ahead of the eighth and possibly final meeting of
U.N.-brokered Tripartite talks between the rebel group and the government
following the conclusion this month of the disarmament process. The RUF
delegation included Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie Golley
(pictured right), interim leader General Issa Sesay, former ministers Mike
Lamin and Pallo Bangura, and Brigadier Morris Kallon. Golley called the
meeting "very constructive." "We reiterated our
commitment to the peace process and asked the president for support and
encouragement in this," he told the Sierra Leone Web. "We also
agreed that we would all work together to ensure that the peace process
leads to lasting and sustainable peace in our country." RUF leaders
met Wednesday to discuss issues which they will bring up at Friday's
Tripartite talks, such as the rebel group's difficulty in obtaining
offices in Kenema — a necessary step before it can register as a
political party. Golley said that, at Sesay's request, he would lead the
16-member delegation to the talks. Other members of the RUF delegation
include Mike Lamin, Security Chief Colonel Augustine Gbao, Morris Kallon,
Benson Conteh, Political and Peace Council members Jonathan Kposowa, Agnes
Manning and Andrew Kanu; Peter Jusu, Isatu Kallon, Santigie Kamara,
Colonel "Bai Bureh" (Abubakar Jalloh), Colonel Harris Momoh,
Hector Bob Lahai, Abdul Razak Kamara and Mustapha R. Conteh.
15 January: The Sierra Leone government and the
United Nations will sign an agreement Wednesday afternoon formally
establishing a Special Court for Sierra Leone. The court, which will have
a non-Sierra Leonean prosecutor and a majority of its judges drawn from
the international community, will be mandated to try those deemed to bear
the greatest responsibility for war crimes committed during the latter
half of the country's decade-long civil war. Justice Minister and
Attorney-General Solomon Berewa will sign the document for Sierra Leone,
and Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs Hans Corell will sign on
behalf of the United Nations. On Thursday, the eighth and, likely, final
meeting of the Joint Committee on Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration will meet at U.N. headquarters in Freetown for Tripartite
talks to wrap up the disarmament process. This will be followed on Friday
by a symbolic burning of weapons. The Sierra Leone government has invited
the presidents of the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria and
Senegal to be present for the ceremony. A source told the Sierra Leone Web
late Tuesday that at least four of the presidents had indicated they would
come.
The bodies of six Zambian soldiers who died in
eastern Sierra Leone earlier this month while performing peacekeeping duties
are due to be returned home on Tuesday, the Times of Zambia reported. The
soldiers were transporting munitions collected from former combatants at
Tongo Field when a mortar bomb accidentally went off, triggering a larger
explosion. A dozen other Zambian peacekeepers were wounded.
A
delegation of a least 16 RUF officials will attend Thursday's
U.N.-brokered Tripartite talks in Freetown, RUF Political and Peace
Council chairman Omrie Golley (pictured left) told the Sierra Leone Web on Tuesday. He
said the RUF would use the meeting to raise still unresolved issues, such
as the transformation of the rebel movement into a political party. The
RUF's interim leader, General Issa Sesay, is expected to arrive in
Freetown by road in time for the meeting, Golley said.
The
Sierra Leone Army, with British forces providing logistics and
transportation, has begun deploying along Sierra Leone's eastern border
with Guinea in Kono District, BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle
reported from Kenema. Doyle quoted Sierra Leone Army officers as saying
they were aware "certain arms caches in certain
places" as well as "of certain RUF concentrations in certain
areas." He stressed, however, that the RUF leadership had
"undoubtedly shown a lot of good faith in giving up their guns"
and that the rebels had been disarmed in large numbers. "It
has to be said that when you fly and drive a little bit around this
eastern area, it really is the most inhospitable terrain for any army
really, and a stretched army like the Sierra Leonean army has particular
difficulties," he said. "But it really is the most inhospitable
terrain you can imagine. There’s mountains and forests and rivers and no
army in the world could really totally control it."
14 January: Members of a U.N. planning mission
who are in Sierra Leone this
month
to prepare for the establishment of a Special Court met in Koidu Sunday
with members of the RUF, the CDF (Donso militia), and the militant Movement of
Concerned Kono Youths (MOCKY). According to UNAMSIL, U.N. Assistant Secretary-General
for Legal Affairs Ralph Zacklin (pictured left), who is leading the
mission, said the court — mandated by the United Nations to
prosecute those deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for war crimes
in Sierra Leone — would prosecute only individuals, not groups or
organisations. "There will be no witch hunt, no finger
pointing," he said. He stressed that the court's independence
"would be assured by its structure, with an international, non-Sierra
Leonean, prosecutor appointed by the U.N. secretary-general." The
U.N. team's decision to meet with members of Sierra Leone's warring
factions came as somewhat of a surprise: Last week, Zacklin told reporters
he had no plans to meet with RUF leaders. Meanwhile, several members of
the team, led by Kenneth Flemming, Prosecutor of the International
Criminal Tribunal in Rwanda and reportedly one of two candidates for
prosecutor of Sierra Leone's Special Court, visited two sites in Koidu
where they found "material evidence of a massacre that could lead to
a formal investigation," UNAMSIL said.
13 January:
A total of 4,488 combatants disarmed in Kailahun District, including eight
Kamajors and 402 child combatants, BBC correspondent Lansana Fofana
reported on Sunday. "This is very remarkable because the rebels
initially gave 1,500 as their total strength in Kailahun," he said.
Fofana said that when journalists visited Kailahun town on Saturday they
were shown a "vast range" of arms and ammunition, including
mortars, rockets, mines, hand grenades, and surprisingly, stinger
missiles. "People didn’t even know that they had stinger missiles,
and you could imagine what that meant if they actually used them during
the course of the war," Fofana said.
12 January: Disarmament came to an
end in Sierra Leone's eastern Kailahun
District
on Friday when eleven senior RUF commanders handed over their weapons
to the UNAMSIL force commander, Lieutenant-General Daniel Opande. Among
those who disarmed were the RUF's brigade commander in Pendembu, Colonel "Peace
Eagle;" Colonel Tom
Sandy, who commanded the RUF's military police in Kailahun; Colonel Ben Kenny, Colonel Moriba, Colonel "Satellite,"
the commander of the RUF's border brigade in Koindu; rebel-appointed Paramount
Chief Sellu, and the RUF chairman and chairwoman, Eric Robinson and Susan
Kulagbanda. It was Kailahun District which, beginning in March 1991,
served as a base from which the RUF launched its decade-long civil war
against successive Sierra Leonean governments. With the closure of the
last disarmament camp in Kailahun, Opande said that disarmament in the
country was complete. "All camps in the country under the control
of UNAMSIL have been closed and we should all congratulate ourselves as
peacekeepers for a job well done," he said.
11 January: Sierra Leone's police
force has announced plans to deploy in the former rebel stronghold of
Kailahun District within a month, Radio France International reported on
Friday. Police will be sent to the towns of Kailahun, Segbwema, Pendembu
and Bunumbu following the completion in February of the Community Arms
Collection and Destruction Programme, a police official was quoted as
saying.
The interim leader of Sierra Leone's Revolutionary
United Front has
expressed concern about potential bias by a Special Court, being set up to
prosecute those who committed war crimes during the latter half of Sierra Leone's
decade-long civil war. "We still have reservations about the
independence of the court as (U.N. Assistant Secretary-General for Legal
Affairs Ralph Zacklin) has been holding talks with those in the government
who also bear the greatest responsibility for crimes against
humanity," Issa Sesay (pictured left) told Reuters correspondent Christo
Johnson in Makeni. Zacklin is currently heading a 15-member U.N. planning
mission to Sierra Leone to work out modalities for the court and a legal
framework for its operation with the Sierra Leone government. In a press
conference on Tuesday, Zacklin stressed that the court's independence
would be guaranteed by the fact that both the prosecutor and a majority of
the judges would be drawn from the international community. He also made
it clear that the U.N. team had no plans to meet with RUF leaders. "Our
interlocutor is the Government of Sierra Leone, which together with the
United Nations is one of the parties to the agreement," he said.
Sesay said the RUF feared its opponents, such as the pro-government
Kamajor militia, would have too much influence over the court. "When
the war started eleven years ago, the world said it was a
brother-to-brother matter and indeed we have solved it in a brotherly
manner, so we would not want the world to create more problems," he
said.
10 January: President Kabbah has nominated Dr. Prince A. Harding to succeed Charles Margai as Minister of Safety and
Security. Margai resigned from the post on Tuesday. Harding is currently
secretary-general of the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party. He previously
served as Minister of Mineral Resources from 1996 to 1997, and also as
chairman of the National Power Authority. The nomination cleared
Parliament's Committee on Appointments, over the objection of UNPP
opposition members who wanted to scrutinise Harding's record. UNPP
parliamentary leader Dr. Raymond Kamara and one of his party colleagues
reportedly walked out of the committee in protest prior to the vote.
A
total of 45,844 ex-combatants — 27,490 from the CDF and 18,354 from the RUF — had disarmed by the official close of disarmament
on January 5th, the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration (NCDDR) said on Wednesday. The actual processing of the
former fighters was not expected to be complete for a week due to the
large turnout of combatants just before the deadline. The demobilisation
of ex-combatants at centres in Kenema, Tongo Field, Daru and Kailahun will
continue until all have been processed. The NCDDR began paying reinsertion
benefits to disarmed and demobilised former combatants last October.
Through January 5th, 39,220 had registered to receive payments in the
Western Area and in all except Kenema and Kailahun Districts, which were
the last to disarm. 38,093 of the former combatants have already been
paid. Through January 3rd, 4,537 ex-combatants had completed reintegration
projects in agriculture, public works and job placement, vocational
training and small enterprise development, and apprenticeship schemes
throughout the country. 11,196 are currently involved in reintegration
projects. Meanwhile, 290 former child combatants have been placed in
skills training programmes while 834 are taking enrolled in school.
9 January: Sierra Leone is facing a shortfall of at least $12 million for the
reintegration of ex-combatants
because of a larger than expected turnout from the country's warring
factions, the U.N. Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Sierra Leone said
on Wednesday. Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, who spoke to reporters in New
York following a closed-door session of the United Nations Security Council,
said the U.N. had budgeted based on estimates that there were about 25,000
combatant in Sierra Leone. Instead, 46,346 had disarmed through Wednesday,
he said. "We have now disarmed about 46,000 people, which is almost
double (the estimated) figure, and you cannot leave this huge number of
able-bodied young men disarmed and having nothing to do," he said.
"So there will be the need to garner the resources to be able to
reintegrate them." Adeniji briefed the Council on the
secretary-general's latest report on UNAMSIL and updated Council members
on the latest developments in Sierra Leone, including the end of the
disarmament process, plans for presidential and parliamentary elections in
May, and the current U.N. planning mission to set up a Special Court for
Sierra Leone. In a statement released following the meeting, Security
Council President Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul of Mauritius
said members had agreed that the upcoming elections would be an important milestone
for the war-torn country, and they signalled their intent to adopt a resolution
clarifying UNAMSIL's role during the balloting. "They welcomed the
secretary-general's recommendations for UNAMSIL's role in the elections;
to provide support with security, logistics, monitoring, public
information and the co-ordination of election observers," Koonjul
said. Council members also stressed the importance of providing adequate
resources for the reintegration of ex-combatants, the ambassador said, and
they underscored the importance of regional stability by encouraging
high-level contacts within the Mano River Union as a way of improving
relations between countries in the volatile sub-region.
Former Safety and Security Minister
Charles Margai, who resigned from
the
cabinet Tuesday amid controversy over whether he intended to challenge
President Kabbah for the leadership of the ruling Sierra Leone People's
Party, confirmed Wednesday that he would indeed seek the party's
presidential nomination for the upcoming elections "I will be running
for the leadership because I believe that the party is disunited, and it
is necessary for us to have our act together if the party is to survive
the next election," Margai told BBC Freetown correspondent Lansana
Fofana. "I have no doubt in my mind that from my record, especially
in trying to organize the party, there is no better person now to lead the
party than myself." Margai denied that he had been pressured to
resign his post, but said his decision to leave the cabinet resulted from
differences with President Kabbah over leadership of the party. He also
complained that he had not received the backing he needed "to do what was
to be done" within his own ministry. "I came into government
hoping that we would all work as a team in a rather cohesive manner,"
he said. "But then it got to a stage when I could not do as much as I
had wanted to, even in the ministry. And I felt frustrated, but
nonetheless I decided to plod along. But then it has now come to a stage
where I believe that I have to resign so that His Excellency could feel
free to proceed with governance minus me." In a separate interview
with Radio France International, Margai spoke of a deteriorating personal relationship
between himself and the president over the leadership issue. "I
decided to run for the leadership of the SLPP to give a new direction to
the party – a direction which would unite the party, give it a cohesive
outlook," he said. "I decided to leave because I have found out
that the chemistry between the president and I is not working as it
should. There seems to be mistrust between the two of us, and therefore in
the interest of good governance and for the people of this nation I
advised myself that the best way forward was for me to tender my
resignation."
8 January: Safety and Security Minister Charles
Margai resigned Tuesday
following
a request by President Kabbah that the minister clarify reports he had
stated his intent to quit the cabinet and contest the
leadership of the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party. According to a press
release issued from State House, the matter came to a head on Sunday when
Kabbah wrote to Margai requesting clarification on the issue within 24
hours, before the convening of Tuesday's National Security Council
meeting. Following the minister's reply, which was not made public, Kabbah
met with Margai and, according to the statement, told him that the reports
would "have a negative impact on the aid Sierra Leone was receiving
from abroad," since donors might conclude that the country was still
unstable. Margai then tendered his resignation. Margai, the son of the late
Prime Minister Albert Margai, contested the 1996 parliamentary elections
under National Unity Party banner. He later switched his allegiance to the
SLPP and subsequently joined President Kabbah's cabinet in April 1998, following the ousting of the AFRC military junta and
the restoration of civilian rule.
Sierra Leone's
primary and secondary school teachers began a nationwide strike on Tuesday
to press for payment of back salaries and allowances, PANA correspondent
Pasco Temple reported, quoting officials of the Sierra Leone Teachers
Union (SLTU). "We have resolved to stay away from the classrooms
because of the contempt with which the government treats teachers in the
country," SLTU Secretary-General Davidson Kuyateh said. He
warned that teachers were prepared to stay away until the government paid
all salary arrears, but he added that the union was prepared to enter into
a dialogue with the authorities.
Two leading candidates have emerged for the
position of prosecutor for the Special Court for Sierra Leone, a U.S.
State Department source told the Sierra Leone Web on Tuesday. David M.
Crane, who since 1997 has served as Senior Inspector General for National
Security Systems in the U.S. Department of Defense was nominated by the
American government, while Kenneth Flemming, prosecutor for the
International Criminal Tribunal in Rwanda, was nominated by the Australians.
The United Nations reportedly would like to have the prosecutor in place
in Freetown by the end of January, the source said. Meanwhile, a visiting
U.N. legal team looked at a proposed venue for the Special Court on
Tuesday, and toured Freetown's Pademba Road Prison and Sierra Leone's High
Court. The team, led by U.N. Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs
Ralph Zacklin, is in the country this month to establish a legal framework
and modalities for the operation of the court, which will be charged with
prosecuting those deemed most responsible for war crimes committed during
Sierra Leone's civil war. An agreement between the U.N. and the Sierra
Leone government on the establishment of the court will likely be signed
on January 16, the State Department source said.
The head
of a visiting 15-member United Nations legal mission to Sierra Leone
told reporters in Freetown Tuesday
that his team was in the country to tackle the practical aspects of
setting up the Special Court. The court, which will be established jointly
by the United Nations and the Sierra Leone government, is charged with
prosecuting those deemed most responsible for war crimes committed during
the latter half of Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war. "This is a
nuts and bolts visit," said Ralph Zacklin (pictured left), the U.N.'s Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs.
"We are looking at absolutely everything that is concerned with the
creation of this institution, beginning with where it will be located —
the premises; we will be having discussions with the authorities regarding
prosecutions and investigations. We will be having discussions with
officials of the government regarding the relationship between the Special
Court and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and various other
matters. Zacklin said that the proposed Special Court for Sierra Leone, aside from
the inclusion of
some provisions of the Sierra Leonean criminal code, and differences in its
funding process, would have "exactly the same" jurisdiction as
earlier tribunals established for Rwanda and Yugoslavia. In a press
conference at UNAMSIL headquarters, Zacklin insisted that events
in Sierra Leone had played no part in the U.N.'s decision to go ahead and
set up the court; rather, he said, the decision was "part of an
evolutionary process" which started two years ago. He played down
suggestions that the establishment of the court now could cause a backlash against the
peace process. "Obviously, in a situation where we are still in the
process of establishing peace, disarmament and reconciliation, there is
probably never a perfect time to establish a Special Court," he said.
"I regard the role of the Special Court as part of an overall process
which the U.N. is engaged in Sierra Leone." Zacklin said he viewed
the court as part of the reintegration process in Sierra Leone, and he
noted that similar concerns had been raised when the U.N. set up the war
crimes tribunal for Yugoslavia. "I don’t believe that the
establishment of the Special Court, its timing, poses any particular
difficulties that we cannot overcome," he said. The assistant
secretary-general stressed that the court would be independent of both the
Sierra Leone government and the United Nations, with the prosecutor, two of the
three trial judges, and three of the five appeals judges being non-Sierra
Leoneans. "We can safely say that the independence of
this institution will be guaranteed by the international character of the majority of judges, not to mention that
there will be many international staff appointed to the registry of the
court and among the prosecutor’s staff and the investigators," he
said. On the question of whether juveniles might fall under the tribunal's
mandate,
Zacklin acknowledged it was technically possible the prosecutor might indict children
between the ages of 15 and 18 if he felt they fell
into the category of those bearing the greatest responsibility for war
crimes committed in Sierra Leone. "There are various provisions in
the agreement that make special provisions for such trials if they should
take place and there is no provision in the statute for the sentencing to
terms of imprisonment of anybody under age 18," he said.
The influx
of hundreds of former combatants to disarm before the January 5
deadline
was spurred by an ultimatum from the National Committee for Disarmament,
Demobilisation and Reintegration (NCDDR) that those who failed to hand in
their weapons would risk losing their reintegration benefits, NCDDR
Executive Secretary Dr. Francis Kai-Kai told the Sierra Leone Web on
Tuesday. "It has worked," he said. "Hundreds turned in on
the last day at the various centres in the Kenema and Kailahun Districts.
Processing of these fighters is on-going and we'd wrap it all up during
the course of the week." He said that the effective reinsertion and
reintegration of the ex-combatants was now the next challenge for the
NCDDR. Kai-Kai said it was difficult to confirm reports that some RUF
combatants had crossed into Liberia rather than surrender their arms to
U.N. peacekeepers. "I only know that we had a number of Liberian
commanders in the Kailahun area," he said. "Most of them
disappeared at the commencement of disarmament in the Kailahun
District."
The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR,
has temporarily suspended the relocation of Sierra Leonean refugees from
the Liberian border area to refugee camps following an improvement in the
security situation at the Sinje II camp some 50 miles north of Monrovia,
and a subsequent drop in the number of spontaneous repatriations, the
agency said on Tuesday. About 1,700 Sierra Leonean returnees and Liberian
refugees crossed the border into Sierra Leone during the second half of
December, citing harassment by Liberian solders and fears that fighting to
the north between government and rebel forces could spread southward.
Meanwhile, the Sinje II camp has received 1,800 new Sierra Leonean
refugees who fled fighting in Lofa County since early December. Liberia
hosts a total of about 30,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in six camps.
Ambassador Jorge Eduardo Navarrete of
Mexico has been elected chairman for 2002 of the United Nations Security
Council's Sierra Leone Sanctions Committee. Cameroon and Singapore hold
the posts of vice chairman.
7 January: A sixth Zambian peacekeeper has died of
wounds he received in Saturday's accidental explosion of a mortar bomb in
the eastern town of Tongo Field, the Associated Press reported on Monday.
Twelve others were being treated at the Choithram Hospital in Freetown
after being evacuated by two UNAMSIL Mi-8 helicopters. "It was
a tragic accident," said UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki.
"UNAMSIL sends their condolences to the government of Zambia, who
have paid the ultimate sacrifice to restore peace in Sierra Leone."
The peacekeepers, from Zambia's Third Battalion, were transporting weapons
collected from former combatants to a storage centre when the mortar bomb
exploded. Novicki said the bomb had set off further explosions on the
truck. In New York, a spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
expressed sadness over the deaths of the peacekeepers, and noted that the
incident underscored the inherent dangers associated with peacekeeping.
"The secretary-general deeply regrets the deaths of these Zambian
peacekeepers and extends his sincere condolences to their families,"
the spokesman said.
A U.N. team of legal experts met in Freetown Monday
with Justice Minister and
Attorney-General Solomon Berewa (pictured right) and other government
officials on the setting up of a Special Court for Sierra Leone. The
court, which was approved by the U.N. Security Council in August 2000,
would be charged with prosecuting those deemed to bear the greatest
responsibility for war crimes committed during the last five years of
Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war. The U.N. mission will be in Sierra
Leone through January 18 to work out modalities for setting up the court,
and to sign an agreement with the Sierra Leone government to establish a
legal framework for the court to operate. The U.N. delegation, which is
headed by Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs Ralph Zacklin,
includes members of the U.N. Office of Legal Affairs, the International Criminal
Tribunals for Rwanda and for the former Yugoslavia, and the management
committee, which includes officials from the U.S., the U.K., Canada, the
Netherlands, Italy, Lesotho and Nigeria.
The last few days
leading up to the official end of disarmament in Sierra Leone
produced
a high turnout of former combatants in Kenema and Kailahun Districts,
UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki said on Monday. "It’s not so
much individuals coming in on their own, but it’s ground battalions and
such coming in under their commanding officer," she told Radio France
International. Novicki praised the acting RUF leader, General Issa Sesay,
for "fulfilling the commitments he has made to get his men to come
in." "We have faced problems from time to time with
individual ground commanders who may have delayed the process for whatever
reason, but I would say at the very top of the leadership of the RUF,
General Sesay has been true to his word overall," she said.
"When we’ve come up against difficulties with some of the troops on
the ground, he has gone himself the extra mile to go and talk to the
troops and explain to them why they need to disarm now that the war is
over — that this the time when everybody has to turn in their
weapons."
6 January: An announcement on lifting Sierra
Leone's national curfew will
come later this month, following the last Tripartite talks on January 17 between the
government and the RUF and the symbolic burning of weapons
the next day, President Kabbah said in an address
on Sunday to mark the third anniversary of the bloody January 1999 rebel attack on
Freetown. Speaking before an ecumenical service at Freetown's Sewa
Grounds, Kabbah urged Sierra Leoneans to work for reconciliation in what
he called the "spirit of the Lomé," — the July 1999 Lomé Peace
Agreement. "Today we should remember that the agreement, perhaps more than anything else, opened the main door to
national reconciliation," he said. " I would therefore like to take this opportunity
to appeal to every Sierra Leonean, wherever you are, to rededicate yourself
to the principle of national reconciliation." A year ago, Kabbah
proposed that January 6th be
observed
each year as "Dedication Day," a day of remembrance and
thanksgiving, to be commemorated by the wearing of a white rosette with a
red spot in the centre — the white symbolising peace and reconciliation,
and the red recalling the scars of war still borne by many Sierra Leoneans. On Sunday, the president urged
his countrymen to keep open the door to reconciliation, and to resolve to settle
their political differences peacefully. "We shall always have different
perceptions of how this nation should or should not be governed," he
said. "We shall
continue to encounter difficulties in uprooting the evils that deter our
progress towards social justice and economic self-sufficiency. But, these
should never be used as a pretext for launching acts of aggression against
the people of this country."
Five Zambian peacekeepers
were killed Saturday and 13 others wounded — three of them
critically — when a box of mortar shells they were transporting to
a UNAMSIL arms storage centre in eastern Sierra Leone accidentally exploded,
Reuters correspondent Christo Johnson reported. The incident reportedly
took place near the diamond mining town of Tongo Field, where hundreds of
RUF combatants showed up at the weekend to hand over their weapons to U.N.
peacekeepers. The wounded were flown by helicopter to Choithram Hospital in Freetown. "It appears it was just a tragic
accident," UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki said, adding that weapons turned in
by combatants were sometimes old and dangerous. "A lot of these
things have deteriorated," she added. "Disarmament is a very
dangerous process, especially for the people who are handling the
weapons." BBC West Africa correspondent Mark Doyle reported that four
of the peacekeepers were killed instantly, while a fifth later died from
his wounds on what was, officially, the last day of disarmament to end ten
years of civil conflict in the war-torn country.
Several hundred former combatants
are still waiting to turn in their weapons
following the formal end of the
disarmament process, the Associated Press reported, quoting acting UNAMSIL
force commander Major-General Martin Luther Agwai. "Although
the period has officially ended, those who are still armed and have
arrived at the reception centers will be disarmed," he said. He added
that former combatants were lining up at disarmament centers in Kenema and
Kailahun Districts, including 300 in Kailahun town alone. Despite
disarmament having stalled twice in recent weeks — in November over RUF
political demands and in December following clashes between RUF and CDF in
Koidu — Agwai said the disarmament process had been "very
impressive," considering that it was a voluntary exercise. "It
has been a very welcome development for Sierra Leone and by the end of the
exercise one can see it has been successful," he said. The general
said that by the time disarmament was complete, some 45,000 combatants on
both sides would have laid down their weapons.
46,511
combatants had laid down their arms nationwide by the official close of disarmament
on Saturday, while many more were still waiting to hand over their guns to
U.N. peacekeepers, Radio France International correspondent Kelvin Lewis
reported. "The hundreds of combatants who turned up at
the disarmament centers overwhelmed the staff, leaving a huge number
unattended at the close of the day," Lewis said. "So though the
deadline has expired, the combatants are still being processed."
5 January: The United Nations said it hoped to
disarm most of the remaining combatants in Sierra Leone on Saturday, officially
the last day of the eight-month disarmament effort which began last May. A community arms collection programme will continue to
collect shotguns and other arms not generally considered to be weapons of war. In
Kenema and Kailahun Districts, the last to disarm, the process has twice
stalled — first over RUF political demands and then following clashes
last
month in Kono District. Ambassador Oluyemi
Adeniji, the Special Representative
of the U.N. Secretary-General (pictured right), told the BBC that there
were still a number of combatants on both sides who had failed to turn in
their weapons, and that they would still have an opportunity to do so
after Saturday. "In the last couple of days we’ve been told by both
the RUF and the CDF, and especially by the CDF, that they have pockets of
their combatants who did not disarm when disarmament was in their
district," Adeniji said. "And so we have told them that we’ll
be prepared for the next two days to look into those cases and see those
that really qualify and disarm them. But these are just going to what you
might call stragglers." Last May the RUF and CDF estimated that
collectively they had some 25,000 men under arms. Adeniji said that more
than 44,000 combatants had already disarmed through Saturday, and that the
number would probably pass the 45,000 mark by the end of the day. The
ambassador suggested that initially, both sides had deliberately
understated the size of their forces. "At the beginning, neither
group quite frankly was honest because they were not sure that their
opponents would stick by their agreement," he said. "But I think
as we went along, and they saw the number of people turning out from each
group, and we also encouraged confidence-building measures being taken by
both sides, I think they both
became confident that yes, for once the war
seems to be over and therefore there is no point retaining anybody under
arms." Meanwhile Dr. Francis Kai-Kai (left), the Executive Secretary
of the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration, said disarmament could not be an open-ended process.
"We should be very clear in our minds as to when we think disarmament
should be over in Sierra Leone," he told Voice of America
correspondent Kelvin Lewis. "And our peace process here does not just
end with disarmament. There are lots of other things to happen, and those
things cannot happen if disarmament doesn’t officially end."
Kai-Kai pointed to the need to reintegrate ex-combatants into society, and
to the National Electoral Commissions commitment to a timetable for
elections, now scheduled for mid-May. While it was still too soon for a
final assessment, Kai-Kai said, the disarmament programme appears to have
been a success. "If we talk about the amount of arms collected, there
have been far more than what was expected," he said. "If we talk
about the number of ex-combatants, it has far exceeded the target that we
set ourselves. You know, we said 28,000 to the best of our knowledge, even
to the best of the knowledge of the factions. But now we are talking about
over 40,000. Then if we also look at the response of the ordinary
citizenry to the process, it’s been very, very overwhelming...The
process has brought real confidence again in the people."
A meningitis outbreak in Sierra Leone's northern Koinadugu District has claimed the lives of 13 persons and infected many
more, the government's medical officer in charge of disease prevention
told Radio UNAMSIL on Friday. "The disease is of great concern to
government because it has moved from Koinadugu District to Kono District,
Reuters quoted Dr. Aruna Turay as saying. The U.N. Integrated Regional
Information Network (IRIN) quoted acting UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker
as saying the outbreak, first reported on December 31, had been confirmed
by Medecins sans Frontieres and Sierra Leone's Ministry of Health. He
added that a medical team had been sent to the area to try and control the
spread of the disease. "The outbreak was first reported by UNAMSIL
Radio from reports of troops on the ground," Coker said. "The
team from the ministry has taken vaccines there."
Before the old year begins to fade from memory, many
thanks go out to those who contributed financially in 2001, in particular
the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). Your contributions
allowed the Sierra Leone Web
to continue operating into its sixth year, and even to expand its mandate.
Special thanks are also due two tireless volunteers who have done much to
help improve the quality of the website's news page. Andrew Masuba
(pictured right), except when he is on holiday in his native Bo, makes the
rounds in Freetown each Friday to compile exchange rate information from
banks and foreign exchange bureaus, and even from the black market
"dollar boys." Last year, Masuba drew on his experience as a
one-time Bo School footballer to write colourful accounts of league soccer
matches in Freetown. Half a world away, in the U.S. state of California,
Andy Kaplan — who a year ago had no connection to Sierra Leone
apart from his conviction that the international community in its rush to
focus on conflict-torn Eastern Europe had overlooked the far greater
suffering of Sierra Leoneans — pledged to monitor internet audio
for broadcasts about Sierra Leone. He has been even better than his
word.
Except for him, news and interviews which are beamed only to Africa might
never have been seen or read outside the continent. Thanks also to Gary
Schulze (left), who scanned his collection of hundreds of historic Sierra Leonean
postcards for the website. These images, some nearly a century old, remind
us that Sierra Leone's history is a rich one, and that despite the present
conflict, its prospects for the future are bright. Finally, thanks to all
who have written with words of encouragement. Your words have made this
work lighter, and you have made it clear to all that Sierra Leone, even in
its darkest hours, has not been forgotten.
4 January: A high-level U.N. mission to Sierra
Leone next week will work out modalities for the setting up of a Special
Court to try those deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for war
crimes committed in the country during the past five years, a spokesman
said on Friday. "What the planning mission wants to do is deal with
certain practical matters, such as where will this court be located, what
sort of personnel and services will it have, (and) how will the
investigative and prosecutorial process be launched," Farhan Haq told
Radio France International. "At the end of its stay in Sierra Leone,
around the 18th of
January,
it’s expected that this mission will sign an agreement with the
government of Sierra Leone that would establish the legal framework for
the court to operate," he added. Meanwhile, Information Minister Dr.
Cecil Blake (pictured left) said his government would not attempt to
influence the workings of the court. "This is a court that’s going
to be handled by a prosecutor, and the prosecutor will be the one to
determine who the suspects would be based on what the investigations will
reveal," Blake said. "The government wishes this to be a very
independent process, particularly (the) prosecutorial dimension. And based
on the evidence, those who have [committed] the greatest crime, those
people who have thus created such crimes will be identified and
prosecuted." The minister played down a suggestion that the Special
Court could open old wounds and thus disrupt the reconciliation process in
the war-torn country. "This is an issue of justice, so let us allow
the process to take its course for now," he said. "We are busy
right now also working hard on the reconciliation dimension. We are trying
to get the resettlement programmes in place. Disarmament is just about
ended. So things have been done contemporaneously, and the hope is that we
wish as best as possible to maintain the independence of this process that’s
going to start."
The United Nations Security Council
is scheduled to hold consultations next Wednesday on the United Nations
Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL).
The next Tripartite
meeting between the government, the RUF and UNAMSIL will likely be held on
January 17th, followed on the 18th by a symbolic destruction of weapons, a
source told the Sierra Leone Web on Friday.
Exchange rates for the leone against the
U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying /
Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2180 / 2320. [£] 2651 / 3174.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 2950 / 3275. Frandia: [$] 2350 /
2450 [£] 3000 / 3200. Continental: [$] 2350 / 2600 [£] 3100 / 3600.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2400 / 2430 [£] 3200 / 3250.
3 January: United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan has decided to move
forward with a Special
Court for Sierra Leone, despite a shortfall in funding needed to operate the
tribunal, his spokesman said on Thursday. The Special Court, approved by
the U.N. Security Council in August 2000 to prosecute those deemed most
responsible for war crimes in Sierra Leone, has already been scaled back
once after international donors balked at the proposed $22 million a year
price tag. In a letter to the Security Council released on Thursday, Annan
said the Council and the U.N. Secretariat had an understanding that the
court would be set up only enough contributions were in hand to fund its
first twelve months of operations, with pledges of funding for the
following two years. As of November 30, the U.N. had received $14.8
million for the first year — $1.4 million less than had been requested —
with pledges of $13 million and $7.4 million for the next two years, a
shortfall of $19.6 million. "I am persuaded...of the political will of
states and their commitment to the success and continued viability of the
court," Annan wrote. "I have therefore taken the decision to
authorize the commencement of the operation of the court, beginning with
the dispatch of a planning mission to Freetown." He pointed to the
difficulty in raising the needed funds through voluntary contributions
alone, and said he reserved the right to ask the Council to raise any
continued shortfall through assessed contributions or other means. Annan's
spokesman said a mission from the U.N.'s Office of Legal Affairs, to be
headed by Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs Ralph Zacklin,
would leave for Freetown on January 7 and would remain in Sierra Leone
through January 18. During that time, the spokesman said, the mission was
expected to sign an agreement with the Sierra Leone government to
establish a legal framework for the setting up and operation of the
court.
2 January: Tensions between Pakistan and India are
not serious enough to warrant the withdrawal of Pakistan's 4,266-member
peacekeeping contingent from UNAMSIL, an unnamed senior Pakistani officer
told Voice of America correspondent Kelvin Lewis. He noted, however, that
there was a clause in the peacekeeping agreement with the U.N. that the
troops could be pulled out if they were needed at home. The Associated
Press quoted unnamed Pakistani military and diplomatic sources as saying
Pakistan had informed the United Nation of its intention to leave Sierra
Leone. The acting UNAMSIL spokesman, Patrick Coker, insisted that the U.N.
had received no official notification that Pakistan intended to pull out.
UNAMSIL's Pakistani contingent, second in size only to that of Nigeria,
consists of three battalions deployed in Koidu, Kailahun and Daru.
With
three days to go until the official end of disarmament, a U.N. spokesman
said Wednesday that 42,132 combatants had given up their arms in Sierra
Leone since the disarmament process resumed last May, exceeding original
UNAMSIL estimates of 30,000 combatants nationwide. Of that number, 16,620
were from the RUF, 25,314 from the CDF, and the remaining 198 were members
of the Sierra Leone Army and AFRC. Over the past two days, 259
ex-combatants handed in their weapons in Kailahun and Kenema Districts,
and more are expected to follow suit before disarmament officially ends on
Saturday.