31 January
1998: Sierra Leone's military junta ordered its security forces in the Western
Region, which includes Freetown, on "red alert" Friday night "as a result
of the present security situation." The Department of Defence announcement,
repeatedly broadcast over SLBS (state radio), gave no reason for the order. "This is
because, to the latest development, Nigeria is now resorting to terrorism," junta
spokesman Amadu Bailoh Bah told the BBC Saturday. "They have abducted a said number
of Guinean delegates who were here on a fact-finding mission to abreast themselves with
latest developments," he said, adding that the Nigerian ECOMOG troops had detained
the Guineans as they were on their way home, and taken them to an unknown location. Bah
also cited a radio broadcast by exiled Vice President Albert Demby on 98.1 "that the
only way out is to employ the use of force." Bah cited "intelligence
reports" that Nigeria, along with the Kamajors, Executive Outcomes, and 600 Iranians,
was preparing an attack "as was published yesterday by an independent observer
newspaper." A diplomatic source close to the exiled Kabbah government suggested that
reason for the "red alert" was the arrival of the exiled civilian
parliamentarians in Lungi, and a broadcast by Vice President Albert Demby on Radio 98.1
which noted that force is the only thing the AFRC understands. He cited an unconfirmed
report which indicated that those detained by ECOMOG were not Guineans, but Niger
nationals caught with materials relating to arms deals. There has so far been no protest
by the Guinean government over the arrests.30 January: The United
Nations Security Council Committee on Sierra Leone published on Wednesday its list of 57
AFRC members whose entry into, or transit through, other states is banned under the terms
of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1132. The list, which was adopted by the Committee on
January 8, consists primarily of members of the AFRC Supreme Council and Secretaries of
State. The Committee is currently considering additional names provided to it, including
junta members' immediate families, and will update the list on a regular basis. The
publication of the list is a departure from United Nations precedent, which would normally
require that sanctions lists be distributed only to U.N. member states.
The United States Department of State issued its Sierra Leone Country Report on
Human Rights Practices for 1997 on Friday. The report examines human rights abuses by
government security forces, the Revolutionary United Front, and the Civil Defence Forces
prior to and following the May 25, 1997 coup, concluding that, "Sierra Leone's human
rights record worsened significantly and is now extremely poor." The report
chronicles in great detail political killings and disappearances, torture, rape, arbitrary
arrests, the collapse of the judicial system, and attacks on freedom of speech and the
press. "Before the coup on May 25, government security forces and the RUF committed
numerous human rights abuses," the report notes. "After May 25, the scale of
violence and human rights abuses committed against civilians by the AFRC and RUF greatly
increased. In addition, members of the Civil Defense Force allegedly committed serious
human rights abuses."
Sulaiman Banja Tejan-Sie, a spokesman for exiled President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, has
expressed concern about frequent violations of the sanctions imposed on the military
government. "We are aware that junta members and their relatives come in and out of
Guinea and that goods are also smuggled into Sierra Leone via Guinea," Tejan-Sie
said. "However, the issue has been raised with the Guinean authorities, who have
assured us that their security agents would tighten the screws, and hence block this entry
and exit route." The Guinean authorities are reported to have recently stepped up
their security patrols on the highway between the two countries. Avayama Caulker, Chairman
of the Movement to Restore Democracy, accused the Guinean authorities of assisting the
junta in evading the sanctions. "The Guinean security forces certainly have something
to do with the travel embargo violations committed by junta members and we cannot sit by
and allow this to continue," Caulker said. The Guinean government has said it is
committed to respecting the sanctions. "We are still committed to the ECOWAS peace
plan for Sierra Leone and the sanctions. Guinea would not allow its territory to be used
as a conduit by the AFRC military junta," a Guinean official said.
Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi has reportedly called a meeting of the ECOWAS
Committee of Five foreign ministers on Sierra Leone in New York for early next week.
The Japanese foreign ministry on Friday introduced a five-tiered scale of foreign
countries regarded as having security problems, in order to warn Japanese tourists and
Japanese citizens living abroad. Six countries were rated at level 5, meaning that
Japanese should leave the area: Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, most of Albania, Iraq, the
Republic of Congo, and Somalia.
29 January: The Agence France-Presse (AFP), quoting local
journalists Thursday, reported that the Kamajor militia had "pinned down" army
troops in eastern Sierra Leone. "The situation is desperate as mortar shells and
rocket-propelled grenades are falling like rain as both sides try to dislodge each
other," one soldier was quoted as saying. The two sides continue to make conflicting
claims as to who controls Tongo. "(The Kamajors) are still in control in Tongo Field,
giving government troops hell," Civil Defence Forces spokesman Arthur Koroma said. He
added that the Kamajors had repelled government troops and taken a number of prisoners.
AFRC Under Secretary of State for Information Allieu Kamara has maintained that
"loyal troops are still in total control."
Security officials in Makeni have reported a spate of armed robberies by men in
military fatigues.
The Organisation of African Unity will hold a summit meeting on the prevention and
settlement of disputes in Africa February 11-12 in Harare, Zimbabwe. The agenda will
reportedly deal with crises in Comoros, Sierra Leone, Burundi, and Angola, and will also
discuss Egypt's efforts to reconcile warring factions in Somalia.
28 January: More than 300 children aged between 5 and 10 died from
measles in Koinadugu District between October and December, Dr. Al-Hassan Sesay said
Wednesday on SLBS television. 3,000 more were affected by the disease, according to Sesay,
who heads the Maternal and Children Health Programme. He said the provision of measles
vaccines had been financed by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) office in
Conakry, but that funding had dried up after the May 25 coup. "We are currently
working with Plan International to launch a nationwide immunization exercise to forestall
the spread of measles in other parts of the country," Sesay said. He disclosed that
Plan International and UNICEF have committed to vaccinate all children in Bombali District
under a measles control programme. The United Nations Report on the Status of the World's
Children in 1998 classified Sierra Leone as having the third highest child mortality rate
in the world, at 284 per 1,000. Sesay said this was "due to lack of proper preventive
measures like vaccines."
Sources in Freetown have called into doubt a report of fighting on Tuesday between army
troops and the ECOMOG force at Jui. Reuters news service cited statements by junta
spokesman Amadu Bailoh Bah and an "unnamed official" in its report, and
speculated that the army had attacked ECOMOG positions after the ECOMOG force fired at a
cargo ship to prevent it from docking in Freetown. IRIN quoted an aid worker based
near Jui, who said that no shots had been fired in the vicinity. Other sources in Freetown
have also denied the report.
Two Sierra Leoneans detained at Monrovia Central Prison on suspicion of being
mercenaries and colluding with the Kamajor militia have gone on hunger strike. Ahmed
Tarawally and Joshua Kohan, who were detained in September, have maintained their
innocence. "Five months they kept us behind bars on such fiction of being a
mercenary, and nobody can try us," Tarawally said Tuesday. "Nobody can take us
to court, nobody speaks to us. Instead, the other day the Deputy Justice Minister came
here threatening us, telling us he will deal with us because the other day I spoke on the
radio, but I told him I give a damn to that. As far as I know, I have committed no crime,
and I know I am not a Kamajor, and neither am I subscribing to the movement that is
opposing the government in Sierra Leone." Under Liberian law, a conviction for being
a mercenary carries a sentence of death or life imprisonment.
27 January: Sierra Leonean soldiers reportedly clashed with Nigerian
ECOMOG troops at Jui on Tuesday, with each side blaming the other for starting the
fighting. "Nigerian-led ECOMOG soldiers ventured into our own positions around Jui
town with the intention of tactically expanding their territory and taking over our
positions," junta spokesman Amadu Bailoh Bah said. Reuters news service,
quoting an unnamed official, said the army attacked ECOMOG positions after the
peacekeeping force prevented a cargo ship from docking in Freetown. Truck drivers fleeing
the area reportedly said the two sides battled each other with machine guns and
rocket-propelled grenades. Bah confirmed that there had been casualties, but said he had
no details. Witnesses were quoted as saying that ECOMOG began firing its artillery at the
unidentified ship on Monday evening, and that fighter jets had been flying near the ship
and over the capital. Fisherman reported that the ship, which was said to be carrying a
cargo of rice, had pulled out farther to sea. A source in Freetown, citing reports by
commercial drivers and radio reports monitored locally, suggested that the fighting had
not involved ECOMOG troops, but resulted from a dispute between soldiers and RUF fighters.
Two Herald Guardian journalists detained by the Criminal Investigation
Department three weeks ago, remain in police custody without charge. Herald Guardian
owner David Kamara, who was also briefly detained, said the two were arrested in
connection with an article which accused an AFRC member of participating in the looting of
the Iranian Embassy. "They also were suggesting that, if the report that they had
before the publication of the article were anything to go by, then it means that
particular AFRC personality that was mentioned must be arrested, because he too
participated in the looting of the Iranian Embassy," Kamara said. A report by the
International Freedom Of Expression Exchange (IFEX) issued on Tuesday alleged the the two
had been tortured, and that Koroma was said to have been hospitalised for injuries
suffered since his arrest. Kamara said the two told him that "they are treated like
animals, because they are victimised, beaten, tortured, and they are given inhuman
treatment." Kanyako and Koroma have reportedly been transferred from police
headquarters to an unspecified police station in Freetown, IFEX said. Three other
journalists detained without charge were released last week, according according to the
IFEX statement. Desmond Conteh of the newspaper We Yone and freelance journalist
Anthony Swaray, who were accused of reporting for Radio 98.1, were released on January 21.
Michael Danielson of the Independent Observer was released on January 22.
26 January: Kamajor militiamen ambushed a convoy of soldiers and
civilians at Moyamba Junction Sunday, resulting in a highway battle that killed at least
47 people, military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel John Milton said Monday. He said the dead
included 15 civilians, 3 soldiers, and 29 Kamajors. Two traders who escaped the fighting
said the death toll was likely much higher, as many civilians were trapped and burned
alive inside their vehicles, which exploded during the fighting.
Over 800 soldiers, RUF fighters, and police personnel have given themselves up to
ECOMOG forces at Lungi and Jui since last December, ECOMOG task force commander Colonel
Max Khobe told the BBC on Monday. He said 300 Sierra Leone Army personnel, 180 police
officers including some from the Special Security Division, and over 400 RUF rebels had
voluntarily surrendered, some with their weapons. Khobe's claim was disputed by Khobe
junta spokesman Amidu Bailor Bah, who called it "just another manifestation of
hostile propaganda" by ECOMOG. "Definitely, it is baseless and it is
unfounded," he said.
Junta spokesman Amidu Bailor Bah denounced 40 members of Sierra Leone's dissolved
civilian parliament as "rebels" on Monday in response to an announcement that
the M.P.'s intend to convene parliament on Sierra Leonean soil, on ECOMOG-held territory
at Lungi. "We are confronted with a very funny situation here because, naturally, you
will not have two governments in the state affairs," Bah said. "There is a
government, and that government is a government of the AFRC." Bah said that if the
parliamentarians were accepting the AFRC's invitation to return to Sierra Leone before the
April 22 deadline for reinstating the civilian government, they must communicate that to
the AFRC. "We want to first of all have their status clearly defined," Bah said.
"If they are rebels, then we are going to treat them accordingly." He said the
junta would continue "to extend the olive branch" to the parliamentarians, but
that Sierra Leone's "government of the day" was the AFRC. "If any group of
persons are claiming a government as traitors, naturally we refer to them as rebels. But
in this case now, we are not going to treat them the way people expect rebels to be
treated, that is, by fighting them or by waging war on them. We are tired of fighting war,
but we will at the same time let them know that they are rebels."
25 January: AFRC Chairman Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma said
Sunday he was "holding out an olive branch" to the Kamajor militia, inviting
them to join the junta in the process of nation building. "Any Kamajors who give up
their arms will not be harmed and will be amnestied," Koroma said. He said the junta
would "embark on the registration of the (RUF) People's Army" and would absorb
"willing and fitted" RUF fighters into the national army. "We have no doubt
learned our lesson this bitter way and we must now keep and maintain an army with teeth
strong enough to bite if and when our hard won freedom is threatened," Koroma said.
Some 40 members of parliament living in exile said Sunday they would return to Sierra
Leone to convene parliament in the country for the first time since the May 25 coup. In
view of the security situation, the session will be held on ECOMOG-controlled territory at
Lungi, the M.P.'s said. Exiled President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah has reportedly given his full
backing to the exercise. The AFRC's Under Secretary of State for Information, Allieu
Kamara, called the move "cosmetic."
Four civilians were reported killed at Malanchor village in Yoni Chiefdom by armed
militia members. A traveller reaching Freetown on Sunday said many residents identified
the attackers as Kamajors, described as wearing green uniforms and carrying
rocket-propelled grenades and new AK-47 rifles. The towns of Mafallah, Ronetta, Rogbanke,
and Rorucks, all in Yoni Chiefdom, were said to have been abandoned because of fears of an
imminent Kamajor attack. A military spokesman in Freetown confirmed that many villagers
with "deep machete wounds" had been taken to Masiaka to be seen by the military
before being sent to the government hospital at Port Loko.
Former ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu told the Nigerian Vanguard
newspaper Sunday that Liberian President Charles Taylor had opposed ECOMOG using Liberia
as a base for its operations in Sierra Leone because he wanted "to surround himself
with proteges in neighbouring African states who would do his biddings." Malu denied
that ECOMOG had provided assistance to the Kamajor militia. "That runs counter to our
mission which is to restore democratic rule to that country," he said. "We
cannot be seen to support parochial interests there." Malu said that the "main
objective" of the Kamajors was to take control of the mineral-rich areas of Sierra
Leone, and not to restore President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah to power. Only the use of force
would compel the junta to cede power to the civilian government of President Kabbah as
agreed in the Conakry Peace Accord, Malu said.
24 January: Heavy fighting is reported to be taking place between the
Sierra Leone Army and the Kamajor militia for the strategic Mano Bridge, on the Sierra
Leone-Liberia border. Army forces launched an attack on Kamajor positions on Friday night,
and were reportedly repelled after a six hour battle with heavy artillery exchanges on
both sides, according to a BBC report on Saturday. The Kamajors were said to be
strengthening their defences in preparation for a new attack.
23 January: The United Nations is prepared to send up to 1,600
peacekeepers to supervise the disarmament of warring factions in Sierra Leone, a diplomat
in Freetown told the Xinhua news service Friday. The peacekeepers "will
supervise the exercise when it gets underway in early February," the diplomat said.
Diplomatic sources outside of Sierra Leone have have disputed this assessment. The
disarmament process, which was to have begun in December, has fallen behind schedule
following junta demands for the immediate release of RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh from
detention in Nigeria, for a reduced Nigerian role in the ECOMOG force, and for the
non-disarmament of the Sierra Leone Army.
The Department of Information suspended the weekly newspaper Standard Times on
Thursday following an article which suggested that exiled President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah as
"annoyed with China and France...for propping up the military regime." On
Friday, the Department suspended the bi-weekly Concord Times for failing to resolve
a salary dispute with its journalists. "We have asked the management to resolve the
matter, including the payment of salaries and other staff matters, before it can resume
operations," a Department official said. Under the Newspapers Act, management is
required to pay journalists on time.
Staff of the Concord Times launched a new newspaper on Friday, the Express.
22 January: Thousands of civilians fleeing fighting in southern Sierra
Leone are wandering in the bush and are badly in need of food and other assistance, aid
groups said Thursday. International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Relief Coordinator
Diego Thorkelsson said at least 25,000 civilians in three chiefdoms in Moyamba District
were in need of food aid, and urged West African countries to help. The group Medecins
Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) expressed similar concerns about civilians in
the south and east who had fled fighting between the army and the Kamajor militia.
Thorkelsson said ECOMOG had repeatedly denied aid agencies permission to bring food into
the country on the grounds that the modalities had not yet been worked out. "We
urgently need to get food to them but we can't because we have no food," he said.
"We are appealing to the task force to allow the ICRC to bring food to alleviate the
suffering of these people. We expect their condition to have deteriorated more than in
November when we carried out our assessment and found that 25,000 of them were suffering
from malnutrition. Since then they have had no access to food whatsoever." Medecins
Sans Frontieres Head of Mission Martha Carey expressed concern about villagers who had
disappeared across the south and east because of the fighting. "It looks like they
have gone into the bush. We are worried about how they will survive or get food," she
said.
21 January: Civil Defence Forces leader Sam Hinga Norman has denied a
claim by Sierra Leone's military junta that to have recaptured Tongo from the Kamajor
militia. Norman told Radio 98.1 on Wednesday that the Kamajors remain in control of the
town.
Former President Joseph S. Momoh Wednesday rejected as "baseless and
unfounded" charges made last month by Nigerian Director of Defence Information Major
Godwin Ugbo accusing Momoh and the Ukrainian government of assisting the junta's military
buildup. "I wish to state most categorically and emphatically that (I have) no
knowledge whatsoever of any military buildup in Sierra Leone, and I have never in all my
life had any dealings with the Ukrainian government," Momoh said in a press release
distributed by SLBS. Momoh also termed as "a figment of his imagination" Ugbo's
assertion that he, rather than Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma, is actually leading
Sierra Leone's military government. "My most burning desire for Sierra Leone is to
see my country restored to constitutional rule, and whatever I can do to aid and further
that process will be done with all the emphasis at my command," Momoh said.
"Sierra Leone has been bleeding for the past six years, and I stand to gain nothing
by creating chaos in the only country which I have in the world."
Relief workers expressed concern Wednesday about the plight of refugees fleeing the
fighting around Tongo. Local humanitarian sources said villages around Bo and Kenema had
been deserted in the past few days. They expressed concern residents might be afraid to
venture into towns for help because of the presence of soldiers.
U.S. Secretary of State Madeline Albright on Wednesday awarded the Secretary's Award
for Heroism to Mary Ann Wright and Jeffrey C. Breed "in recognition of their
exceptional service in Sierra Leone during the May 1997 military takeover and the
subsequent U.S. military evacuation of 2500 civilians," according to a press
statement issued by State Department Spokesman James P. Rubin. Wright was the Charge
d'Affaires at the U.S. Embassy and, as the highest ranking U.S. official in Sierra Leone
at the time, took personal responsibility for American citizens and embassy employees in
the country. She established a dialogue with rebel leaders to seek a peaceful conclusion
to the crisis, and planned and directed the evacuation of Americans, embassy staff, and
other endangered foreign nationals from Freetown. Breed, who was the Bureau of Diplomatic
Security's Regional Security Officer at the time of the coup, coordinated the Embassy's
security response to the crisis, and was instrumental in maintaining order among the
thousands of people seeking to escape Freetown during the evacuations.
20 January: ECOWAS Executive Secretary Lansana Kouyate said Monday
that consultations among ECOWAS leaders are underway to put together a 15,000 member
peacekeeping force to disarm the warring factions in Sierra Leone. "If our experience
in Liberia is anything to go by, only those who contributed to ECOMOG in that country
might contribute to the latest effort," Kouyate said. He said he believed that a
disagreement between the United Nations and ECOWAS on troop deployment could be resolved
amicably. "The U.N. wants ECOMOG to deploy into Sierra Leone first, but we are
disagreeing. We think they should land there before us, Kouyate explained." Kouyate
confirmed that ECOWAS will insist that Sierra Leone's military government turn over power
by April 22, saying that the junta was not in a position to impose new conditions on the
international community. "The international community condemned the coup," he
said, adding that it was ECOWAS' prerogative to determine the tenure of ECOMOG in Sierra
Leone. A meeting of the Committee of Five foreign ministers on Sierra Leone will take
place in Abuja in February to review the political situation in Sierra Leone, Kouyate
said.
A clash between soldiers and RUF fighters in eastern Freetown Monday left at least
three of the combatants dead, police and witnesses said Tuesday. The clash broke out after
a woman driving a truck filled with fertiliser told RUF fighters that soldiers, after
asking for documents to show who owned the fertiliser, had illegally seized the vehicle.
Junta spokesman Amadu Bailoh Bah said both sides had been warned against a repeat in such
behaviour. He warned civilians not to involve soldiers or RUF fighters "in matters
that are purely civilian," adding that such matters should be left to the police.
The group Action by Churches Together (ACT) announced Tuesday that it plans to raise
$2.1 million during 1998 to benefit 100,000 internally displaced persons, primarily in Bo
District. ACT, working through the Council of Churches in Sierra Leone, Christian Aid, and
the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Sierra Leone, plans to carry out a comprehensive
emergency programme to assist families, communities, and vulnerable groups to rehabilitate
their homes and community structures. The churches will also provide local level trauma
counseling, and work toward reconciliation, and to facilitate the demobilisation and
resettlement of ex-combatants.
About 130 people were killed in fighting at Tongo over the weekend, half of them
Kamajors, Under Secretary of State for Information Allieu Kamara said Tuesday. He said 30
people died in fighting for the town on Saturday, and about 100 on Sunday. SLBS (state
radio), quoting Military Spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel John Milton, accused ECOMOG of
instigating the Kamajor attack. "The fighting in Tongo Field has been perpetrated by
the Nigerians who are aiding and abetting the Kamajors," the statement said. Some of
the civilian killings were reportedly the result of old scores related to the
chieftaincy and land disputes.
19 January: A force of 800-1,000 soldiers of the Army 4th Battalion,
along with RUF fighters, has recaptured Tongo after a night of heavy fighting with
mortars, anti-aircraft guns, and rocket-propelled grenades, military commanders in Bo said
Monday. They said more than 50 Kamajors and 8 soldiers were killed overnight, but that
they expected the number would rise as more bodies were discovered in destroyed houses.
One commander put the total number of casualties in three days of fighting at over 100.
"It was when we began to search the town this morning that we discovered the true
extent of the massacre that took place in heavy fighting over the weekend," he said.
"Many of the bodies are lying in the streets and beginning to rot." Local relief
workers reported meeting Kamajor militiamen retreating from Tongo with their wounded on
makeshift stretchers. They quoted the Kamajors as saying they had lost control of the
town, but would return with a larger force to recapture it in the next few days. Under
Secretary of State for Information Allieu Kamara accused the Kamajors of setting fire to
Tongo as they left. "Our men are in full control of Tongo Field although they are
trying to put out the fires the Kamajors started to burn down the town when they
fled," he said. Civil Defence Forces leader Sam Hinga Norman told the BBC he was
unaware of the current situation, denied that the loss of Tongo would be a blow to the
militia. "Tongo is going to be a tug of war," he told the BBC. "I can tell
you that all civil defence fighters throughout the country will be summoned to retake
Tongo."
Military commanders in Bo said Monday they recaptured the town of Grima, near
Koribundo, in a dawn raid on Sunday, killing 50 Kamajors. Aid workers in Bo reported an
influx of refugees from the town.
18 January: The Kamajor militia captured the diamond mining town of
Tongo on Saturday, disrupting a key revenue source for Sierra Leone's military junta and
forcing thousands of residents to flee their homes. Military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel
John Milton said Sunday the Kamajors had besieged the town for two weeks, ending in
"three days of bitter fighting" with many casualties. "It is not clear how
many of them finally attacked, but our men defending the town said there were close to
1,000," he said. "Yesterday, finally, the Kamajors overpowered our troops and
drove them out of town, but skirmishes are still going on the outskirts...The 200 soldiers
based in Tongo Field put up a brave fight before they ran out of ammunition and were
forced to make a tactical retreat to Panguma." Milton said reinforcements were being
sent from various towns with orders "to take back Tongo Field at any cost."
Milton described the Kamajors as "well-armed with G3-type weapons used by the
Nigerian contingent in the ECOMOG base in Freetown." There was no immediate response
from ECOMOG, but in the past the peacekeeping force has denied suggestions that it was
providing assistance to the Kamajors. Aid workers said the dead and wounded were being
taken to Kenema, 12 miles away. About 20 bodies had been brought there from Tongo, most of
them civilians, they said. Civilians who fled to Kenema seeing dozens of corpses on the
roads leading from the town and in the bush. Soldiers who returned to Freetown told of
bodies of army troops, Kamajors, and civilians littering the streets. Three diamond
merchants--a Lebanese and two Malians--were reported to be among the dead. International
Committee of the Red Cross Relief Coordinator (ICRC) Diego Thorkilsson said in Freetown
that thousands of residents were fleeing along the road to Kenema, bound for refugee camps
organised by international and local relief agencies. He said it was not yet clear how
many people had left Tongo, as the exodus was still underway. Staff of other aid agencies
working in the area were quoted as saying that 8,000 to 10,000 had fled so far; local
journalists put the number who had reached Kenema at 4,000. Thorkilsson said staff from
the ICRC, Merlin, the World Food Programme, Africare, and other non-governmental
organisations were co-ordinating their efforts to provide food, shelter, and medicine for
the thousands of refugees arriving at the camps. "We have food stocks in our camps in
Kenema and Segbwema that can feed 2,000 families (of six) for one month," Thorkilsson
said. He said the agencies would take blankets, plastic sheeting, and buckets to the camps
by road as soon as possible. "The Kamajors issued a press release yesterday in which
they said they would not attack or interfere with any transport carrying humanitarian
aid," he said.
17 January: The Kamajor militia captured the diamond mining town of
Tongo Saturday, after a three day battle with government troops, the BBC reported.
Two Herald Guardian journalists arrested in Freetown last week are still being
held without charge, the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) said Saturday.
"They should either be charged and released on bail or set free," an SLAJ
statement said. "There is no case against them." Sylvanus Kanyako, a reporter
for the Herald Guardian and David Kamara, the newspaper's owner, were said to be in
poor health and have bruises on their hands. Production Editor Mohamed Kallon, who had
also been detained, was reportedly released on January 15. The Paris-based Reporters
Sans Frontieres linked the arrests to an article calling on parents not to send their
children to school because of insecurity in the country.
All newspapers will have to re-register starting at the end of January, according to a
Department of Information, Broadcasting, Tourism and Culture press release. The statement
said the decision was taken as a result of "recent disturbing developments leading to
the brutalisation of journalists by some sections of the public." It warned printers
and vendors to verify that the newspapers they sell were registered "to avoid any
further embarrassment."
16 January: United Nations Special Envoy Francis Okelo said Friday
that news talks between Sierra Leone's military junta and ECOWAS were needed to put the
peace process back on track, and called for all parties to the Sierra Leonean conflict to
redouble their efforts for a peaceful solution. "We are recommending that the ECOWAS
Committee of Five and the AFRC meet as early as possible to iron out the problems the
military government say are hampering implementation of the peace plan," he said.
"If we don't do that we might fall behind the deadline of April 22, 1998 for the
return of constitutional order to the country." Okelo said he continued to hope that
both sides were committed to implementing the accord within the framework of the Conakry
Peace Agreement, adding that this meant the restoration of the civilian government of
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. "We are now at the half way point. We have three months
to go. We are calling on all the parties...to assist vigorously in the implementation of
the accord," Okelo said. He described as successful the eight-member United Nations
technical team's three day visit to assess the infrastructures in the country for the
deployment of U.N. military observers.
The Kamajor militia has stepped up raids in the south, east, and north, according to a Reuters
news report Friday, which quoted civilians as saying that the bodies of civilians or
soldiers killed in ambushes lie alongside the main highways. Travellers reaching the
capital Friday said they counted over 25 bodies along the Bo-Freetown road. One witness
said Kamajors ambushed a commercial truck near Bo, killing 6 passengers. Others claimed
the Kamajors were diverting trucks carrying vegetables to Freetown. According to the
Democrat newspaper, "About 15 villages between Sumbuya and Moyamba Junction have been
completely burned down" in clashes between junta forces and Kamajor militiamen.
The Ministry of Trade, Industry and State Enterprises issued a statement Friday
accusing Nigerian ECOMOG troops at Jui of detaining commercial vehicles passing their
checkpoint. "Sierra Leoneans have every right to engage in any commercial activity in
their God-given land without hindrance from any external aggressor, and we view the action
of the Nigerians as an act of piracy," the statement said. Local journalists report
that Nigerian soldiers have confiscated bags of locally-grown rice and garri from traders,
accusing them of violating the sanctions. The sanctions imposed on Sierra Leone's military
government by the United Nations Security Council and ECOWAS cover only fuel, arms, and
ammunition.
AFRC Chairman Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma Friday stressed the junta's
"overwhelming commitment" to the Conakry Peace Plan, and proposed the immediate
formation of a number of technical committees to address "salient issues"
contained in the agreement, according to a SLBS news release. Koroma told the United
Nations technical team, led by U.N. Special Envoy Francis Okelo, that membership of the
committees "must reflect the major stakeholders, as well as the technical and
political realities on the ground." The proposed committees would include the
Coordinating and General Purpose Committee, the Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration Committee, the Humanitarian Assistance Coordinating Committee, and the
Committee on the Formation of the Broadly Based Government of National Unity. The proposal
was first alluded to by AFRC Secretary-General A.K. Sesay in a January 9 press briefing,
which sources close to the military government indicated would form the basis for the
junta's working paper for the talks with the United Nations technical team.
15 January: AFRC Chairman Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma told
U.N. Special Envoy Francis Okelo Wednesday that Sierra Leone's military government could
have problems in meeting the deadline to restore the country's civilian government,
according to sources close to the talks. Koroma reiterated junta demands for the release
of RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh from detention in Nigeria, for a diminished role for
Nigeria in ECOMOG, and for the non-disarmament of the Sierra Leone army. Koroma told
Okelo he was not prepared to disarm Sierra Leone's armed forces, but that he would
cooperate in restructuring the military. Okelo, who is leading an eight-member United
Nations technical team to assess modalities on returning Sierra Leone to civilian rule,
described the three issues as "legitimate." He said he had taken "very
careful" note of the junta's concerns and suggestions, and would report them to U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan. "I think that one of our recommendations will be that
there shall be a meeting between the two sides as soon as possible to review these
concerns," Okello was quoted as saying.
The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Wednesday contributed $500,000 toward the
disarmament of warring factions in Sierra Leone. The donation, which was taken from the
OAU's Peace Fund, was made to the Economic Community of West African States Peace
Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), OAU spokesman Ibrahim Dagash said.
14 January: An eight-member United Nations technical team led by U.N.
Special Envoy Francis Okelo arrived in Freetown Wednesday to hold talks with Sierra
Leone's military junta on returning the country to civilian rule. The team will assess
prospects for the deployment of U.N. peacekeepers, and an increase in humanitarian aid.
The visit, which was originally to have taken place Friday, was postponed over a
disagreement on whether the team should operate from ECOMOG-held territory in Lungi, or in
Freetown proper. Okelo, after misgivings on security grounds, is staying at "a major
hotel" in Freetown. Shortly before the team arrived by helicopter, ECOMOG troops
turned back a junta welcoming committee.
U.S. President Bill Clinton on Wednesday signed a proclamation suspending entry into
the United States of any members of Sierra Leone's military junta or their families. The
proclamation followed Wednesday's issuance by the United Nations Security Council of its
first list of junta members and their families, to be affected by a travel ban imposed
under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1132. The list will be transmitted to
Member and Observer states of the United Nations, as well as international organisations
and agencies, and will be updated on a regular basis. The Security Council is currently
considering the additional names provided to it, including adult members of the immediate
families of junta members.
The United Kingdom will sponsor an ad hoc donors meeting in New York on Thursday, 15
January for donors and others interested in Sierra Leone. In a letter of invitation dated
9 January, Britain's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Sir John Weston,
stressed that the task of disarming and demobilising the warring parties in Sierra Leone
will require both material and financial support. "We therefore believe it would be a
good moment for potential donors and others with a close interest in Sierra Leone to
consider what more can be done by the international community to support ECOWAS
efforts," Weston wrote. A statement issued by the exiled government of President
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah welcomed the British initiative, and acknowledged the role played by
Britain in the international community in seeking the restoration of the country's
civilian government. The statement also welcomed the British foreign secretary's
appointment of John Flynn as his Special Representative for Sierra Leone.
A five-member delegation from the Coalition for Democracy in Sierra Leone (CODISAL) and
Ukrainian Embassy officials met in Washington, D.C. Wednesday to discuss reports about
Ukrainian involvement in Sierra Leone's crisis. Ukrainian Embassy First Secretary Vasyl
Holovenko acknowledged that he had heard unconfirmed reports of activities by Ukrainians.
"These allegations are very serious, and because Ukraine is a member nation of the
U.N. my government will do everything possible to investigate fully," Holovenko was
quoted as saying. Because Ukraine is a "young democracy" trying to build a
market economy, it was difficult for the government to control "certain facets"
of the economy, Holovenko explained, adding that people might be selling arms and
assisting illegal regimes for commercial gain. "These are criminal behaviours. If any
groups or businesses are found to be part of these activities, they would be
prosecuted," he said.
New ECOMOG force commander Major-General Timothy Shelpidi said Wednesday that he will make peace in
Sierra Leone his top priority. "My priority is going to be on the implementation of
the Conakry Accord in Sierra Leone and to see to the peaceful coexistence in the
area," Shelpidi said before leaving for ECOMOG headquarters in Monrovia.
Some 400 prisoners freed during the May 25 coup have voluntarily returned to jail,
Secretary of State Ajibola Manley Spaine said on Wednesday. Many of the prisoners
"just walked back to the prison and gave themselves up," Spaine said. Police are
still searching for another 300 prisoners, some on death row, Spaine added.
13 January: Guinea will recall its estimated 600 troops serving in the
ECOMOG force in Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to an unnamed military source in
Conakry quoted Tuesday by the news service Xinhua . The pullout from Liberia was in
line with the withdrawal of the ECOMOG force from that country, while the departure from
Sierra Leone was to save money, the source was quoted as saying. A diplomatic source
questioned the report's accuracy, saying that Guinea has not made any decision to withdraw
its troops from the ECOMOG force.
Kamajors have attacked two villages near the town of Rotifunk, 55 miles from Freetown,
according to junta spokesman Amidu Bailor Bah, quoting travellers arriving in Freetown.
"People arriving in Freetown yesterday from villages around Rotifunk said they saw
heads dripping with blood, hung on stakes at Kamajor roadblocks," Bah said. There was
no independent confirmation of the attack. A diplomat, citing an account by a humanitarian
source who described the attackers was wearing dreadlocks, suggested that the attack may
have been carried out by elements of the disbanded Liberian ULIMO militia, rather than by
the Kamajors.
Paramount Chief Krogba Bangura, Section Chief Alimamy Oluia Mala Sesay, and two tribal
councilors were shot to death Tuesday in Tonko Limba Chiefdom in an apparent robbery. Four
other persons, including the paramount chief's wife, were wounded.
Soldiers beat a number of teachers at the Collegiate Secondary School compound on
Wilkinson Road Monday, after students reported that the teachers were refusing to hold
classes, according to a source in Freetown. The Sierra Leone Teachers Union (SLTU) has
been on strike since the May 25 coup, citing lack of pay, educational, and security
concerns.
The European Community Tuesday approved ECU 1.9 million for medical and food aid for
Sierra Leone. The money is intended to provide basic health care and food aid in Freetown,
Bo and Kenema, as well as assistance in remote rural areas. The aid will be distributed
through Concern Universal, the British Red Cross, Medicens Sans Frontieres, Merlin, and
Action Aid.
12 January: The planned visit to Sierra Leone by a United Nations
technical team led by U.N. Special Envoy Francis Okelo has been postponed over
differences in where the team should stay, junta spokesman Amidu Bailor Bah said Monday.
"The problem of where the U.N. special envoy to Sierra Leone will stay and work from
in Sierra Leone remains a problem that has not yet been resolved," Bah said. "We
welcome his permanent transfer from Guinea to here. What we are against...is his position
of coming to Sierra Leone and setting up his office in Lungi." Diplomats were quoted
as saying that the junta, ECOMOG, and the United Nations were discussing where
Okelo should be based. "There seems to be fear on the part of the envoy and the assessment
team about their security in Freetown, but they have said that they will leave for
Freetown before the end of the week," one diplomat said.
The Paris-based organisation Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) has reported the detention
of Daily Guardian journalist Sylvanus Kanyako on January 10. No reason was given
for Kanyako's arrest, which followed an article urging parents not to send their children
to school because of "insecurity in the country." On Friday, The arrest
Secretary of State for Information Kandeh Bangura warning journalists against
"destructive practices." Any newspaper not following government regulations
"will pay the price," Bangura was quoted as saying.
Outgoing ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu said in Lagos Monday he was
hopeful the April 22 deadline for the restoration of the civilian government in Sierra
Leone could be met. "There are five thousand ECOMOG troops already in Sierra Leone,
and once they are joined by the 10,000 soldiers from Monrovia, disarmament of all factions
in Sierra Leone and other assignments will be completed without delay," Malu said.
"It is clear that ECOMOG will have to redouble its efforts, but I can assure you that
once the order is given by the ECOWAS leaders, the troops will move in and the job will be
accomplished in record time."
10 January: British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook has appointed former
Ambassador to Angola John Flynn as his Special Representative to Sierra Leone. Flynn will
work to galvanise regional and international efforts to restore the democratically-elected
government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah.
9 January: AFRC Secretary-General Colonel A.K. Sesay told reporters on
Friday that Sierra Leone's military junta is still committed to returning power to
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah by 22 April 1998, the date stipulated in the Conakry Peace
Accord. Sesay said AFRC Chairman Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma's statement to the
BBC on December 18 that the junta is unlikely to meet the deadline for handing over power
had been misinterpreted. "The Chairman of the AFRC made it clear that if all the
issues are are to be addressed, then the deadline of April 22, 1998 might not be met for
handing over," Sesay said. "For us to meet this deadline, all concerned must
work harder conscientiously." Sesay reiterated the three concerns which have been
raised by the AFRC: the release of RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh from detention in
Nigeria, the non-disarmament of the Sierra Leone Army, and the dominant role played by
Nigeria in ECOMOG. Sesay said the "contentious issues," which have been widely
interpreted by the international community as an attempt by the junta to block
implementation of the Peace Agreement, had been raised during the negotiations in Conakry
with the expectation that they would be clarified at a later date. "Time was not in
our favour and therefore (we) settled at the consensus that they be settled by
ECOWAS," Sesay said. "For us not to return without signing the Peace Plan (would
have sent) the wrong signals to our people." In order to meet the schedule for
implementation of the Peace Accord, Sesay called for an immediate cessation of
hostilities, relocation of the U.N. Secretary-General's Special Envoy Francis
Okelo from
Conakry to Freetown, the immediate convening of an ECOWAS summit to consider the release
of Corporal Foday Sankoh and a programme of restructuring, rather than disarming, the
Sierra Leone Army, and a review of the dominant role of Nigeria in ECOMOG. Sesay proposed
the formation of four committees, each to be chaired by a member of the ECOWAS Committee
of Five: Committee on Disarmament, Demobilization and Re-Integration of Ex-Combatants;
Committee on the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance; Committee on the Formation of
the Broad-Based Government; and Committee for the Coordination of all the Above
Activities. Sesay's proposals reportedly will form the basis of the working document the
AFRC will present to Okello and the United Nations technical team. "It is hoped that
the U.N. and the rest of the international community will give every support in terms of
resources for the effective and quick implementation of the Conakry Peace Plan,"
Sesay said.
Exiled President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah travelled to Abuja, Nigeria on Thursday to hold
discussions with Nigerian leader General Sani Abacha in advance of the ECOWAS Committee of
Five foreign ministers meeting scheduled for next Wednesday. Abacha was said to have met
Kabbah personally at the airport and escorted him to State House.
Sierra Leone's military government expressed concern Friday about the continued
detention of vehicles and travellers by Nigerian ECOMOG troops at the Jui checkpoint
outside of Freetown. A Department of Information statement read over SLBS (state radio)
appealed to ECOWAS and the international community "to urge Nigeria to stop this
complete affront to the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1132." A Ministry of
Information, Tourism and Culture press release called on Nigerians troops "to stop
this act immediately as it goes against the Conakry Peace Plan. Sierra Leone is a
sovereign state and her territorial integrity should be respected." Over 15 trucks,
some with Guinean license plates, are still at the checkpoint since being impounded nearly
a week ago. The trucks, including a state-owned National Petroleum tanker carrying 1,800
gallons of petrol, were bound either for Guinea or for the interior. A Nigerian captain at
the checkpoint explained that there was evidence that the their cargoes, including cocoa
and coffee, were being taken to Guinea for sale overseas. "When we inspected the
trucks, we found papers signed by the inspector-general of police for the vehicles to go
through checkpoints manned by Sierra Leone soldiers and documents from Sierra Leone Trade
officials giving clearance for the goods to be shipped overseas," he said.
"Obviously, these violate the sanctions and embargo now in force in the
country."
Outgoing ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu expressed regret Friday that
he was unable to leave Liberians with a national army that was acceptable to all.
"Remember that the eight armed factions who fought in Liberia were only disarmed and
have not disappeared completely," Malu said during a departure ceremony in Monrovia.
"What we see here is that the present restructuring exercise is an attempt to
transform the factions into the army. This poses a new security threat to the peace
process in Liberia." He called on his troops to work to cement the peace to prevent
"our return to start it over." Malu then left for Freetown to address ECOMOG
troops at Lungi International Airport. Malu said his replacement, Major-General Timothy
Shelpidi, would arrive in Liberia next week.
8 January: A United Nations technical team is expected to leave New
York for Freetown on Friday. The mission, which will be led by U.N. Special Envoy Francis
Okello, will assess the conditions on the ground and the role of the United Nations in
implementing the Conakry Peace Accord. The team will present its findings to United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who is expected to issue his second 60-day report on
Sierra Leone in early February.
AFRC Public Relations Officer Amidu Bailor Bah welcomed the visit by the United Nations
technical team, but questioned the timing of the plan to restore civilian rule in Sierra
Leone. "We need to revisit the entire timing of the peace plan," Bah said,
emphasising that the timetable agreed to in the Conakry Peace Plan was behind schedule.
Diplomats in Conakry, Guinea said the U.N. team would assess the prospects for
humanitarian assistance and the deployment of ECOMOG and United Nations peacekeepers.
"The U.N. is gravely concerned about the deterioration of the humanitarian situation
in Sierra Leone and with the increasing clashes between the Sierra Leone military and the
civil defence forces in the country," one diplomat said. The U.N. has decided to take
urgent steps to avert a humanitarian catastrophe."
Paris-based Action Contre la Faim said its feeding centre at Durbar, near Bo, was
ransacked Sunday. The group urged both sides not to block humanitarian aid.
Information Director of the ECOWAS Executive Secretary Adrienne Yande Diop on Thursday
called on Sierra Leone's military government to respect the peace plan to end the
country's crisis, and called for strengthening of the sanctions against the junta. Diop
said the ECOWAS Committee of Five foreign ministers has reiterated that the Conakry Peace
Accord, signed between the junta and ECOWAS on October 23, remains the best framework for
the restoration of constitutional order.
Former BBC reporter Foday Fofanah was expelled from Guinea on Wednesday, after being
detained without charge for three months. Fofanah, who worked for an independent newspaper
in Conakry, was escorted across the border to Sierra Leone. Journalists have accused the
Guinean government of targeting reporters critical of the administration in the run-up to
forthcoming elections, the BBC reported.
The Secretary of State East A.Y.K. Mansaray Thursday deplored as "undemocratic and
inhuman" the Kamajor militia's blocking of roads in the country. "They are also
killing innocent civilians and impeding the free movement of people and goods with the
support of Nigerian troops in ECOMOG," Mansaray told the executive members of the
Amalgamated Transport Union in Kenema. Mansaray warned that his administration "will
not hesitate to take action against Kamajor supporters," including any paramount
chiefs suspected of covertly aiding the Kamajors.
A battle between army troops and a well-armed Kamajor militia band reportedly continued
a second day near Zimmi on Thursday, after a lull in the fighting on Tuesday. The military
high command in Kenema confirmed the fighting, but was unable to give casualty figure. A
military communiqué said sporadic fighting was continuing near Tongo, with the army
"consistently beating them back." The army account is disputed by the Kamajors,
who say they have killed over 20 soldiers and surrounded the government forces. There has
been no independent confirmation of either claim. Military forces in Bo say they killed 35
Kamajors and lost 5 army troops in fighting on the outskirts of the city. Residents
reported that the fighting died down on Tuesday, but that the area remained tense.
RUF War Council Chairman Solomon Rogers dismissed reports Thursday of a split between
the military government and the RUF following disciplinary action taken against looters of
the Iranian Embassy. Of the eight men implicated, six were from the army and 2 were from
the RUF People's Army. RUF Captain Browne was dismissed from the People's Army, while RUF
Battle Group Commander Lieutenant-Colonel Issa Sesay will lose three months pay.
"There is no split because of the decision," Rogers said. "This action will
not in any way bring cracks in the alliance since the Anti-Looting Decree was agreed by
all in the alliance." Rogers is also Secretary of State for Agriculture and Forestry.
7 January: Sierra Leonean troops fired anti-aircraft guns at a
Nigerian Alpha fighter jet at about 8:00 Wednesday morning after it twice flew over
Freetown. Reuters quoted "witnesses and military sources" who said the
plane, which is attached to the ECOMOG force, returned fire at gun placements in the
Aberdeen Beach area of western Freetown. Reports filed by the Xinhua and AFP news
services said that the jet dropped at least three cluster bombs on the city. The firing
lasted less than ten minutes and briefly created panic in the city, but there were no
reports of injuries. Troops were quickly deployed to the area to restore order. Director
of Defence Information Lieutenant-Colonel John Milton denied reports that the plane
dropped bombs. "The jet flew suspiciously over Freetown as if it wanted to drop bombs
on the city," Milton said. "That was a violation of the cease-fire and
provocation. That is why our anti-aircraft guns opened fire on the jet. We wanted to scare
it away." AFRC spokesman Amadu Bah, in a BBC Focus on Africa interview, denied
that junta troops had fired on the jet, and asserted that the plane dropped its bombs into
the ocean. Outgoing ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu insisted that there
had been no attack. He confirmed that a plane had been dispatched to check reports of
sanctions violations by ships in the area, but had returned to Monrovia because of poor
visibility. IRIN quoted humanitarian sources in Freetown who expressed skepticism
that the plane had dropped bombs on the capital. "I heard a crackle of gunfire--the
usual anti-aircraft shots, but no detonations," one source said. "If a bomb had
been dropped we would have known about it," another source was quoted as saying.
Outgoing ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu confirmed Wednesday that
ECOMOG will increase its military presence in Sierra Leone to 15,000 troops, from its
current strength of around 5,000. The Concord Times quoted Nigerian Director of
Defence Information Colonel Godwin Ugbo as saying that the military buildup was in
response to "intelligence reports from Sierra Leone that the junta is still importing
arms into the country through the northern region."
Under-Secretary of State for Information Allieu Kamara confirmed on Wednesday news
reports that a group of soldiers and RUF fighters, led by several dismissed AFRC members,
were involved in a shoot-out near AFRC Chairman Lieutenant Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma's
Sport Road residence on Sunday evening. Residents and security personnel attached to
Koroma's residence reported hearing sporadic gunfire for about 30 minutes until troops
loyal to the junta restored order, Kamara said. The Expo-Times newspaper reported
Wednesday that Lance Corporal Tamba Gborie and five others dismissed for their role in the
looting of the Iranian Embassy, along with a number of their supporters, are being
detained at Pademba Road Prison.
Professional Drivers Association president Abu Sillah said Wednesday he is negotiating
with Nigerian ECOMOG troops for the release of 15 drivers detained at the Jui checkpoint
since Saturday. Sillah said ECOMOG troops impounded five trucks carrying produce and
essential foodstuffs from from Kono, Kenema, and Bo. A National Petroleum tanker headed
for Makeni with 1,800 gallons of diesel fuel, and 9 trucks bound for Guinea were also
intercepted, Sillah said. He said passengers were allowed to remove perishable foodstuffs,
but were not allowed to take away cash crops such as coffee or cocoa. Some of the drivers
were airlifted without explanation to the ECOMOG base at Lungi International Airport,
Sillah added. Sillah said he visited the ECOMOG base at Jui to make enquiries, but was
referred to the ECOMOG Military Intelligence Unit at Kossoh Town, two miles away.
"The officers said they had received orders from the ECOMOG High Command in Liberia
to intercept commercial vehicles," Sillah said. He quoted the officers as saying that
their action was part of the enforcement of sanctions against Sierra Leone.
Sierra Leone's military government has protested to ECOWAS headquarters in Nigeria
about what it referred to as "the inhuman treatment" of two RUF People's Army
lieutenants on Sunday. Defence sources said the two, in separate incidents, were punched,
kicked, and stripped naked by Nigerian ECOMOG troops when they found a pistol and some
light arms on board their vehicles.
6 January: AFRC Public Relations Officer Amidu Bailor Bah on Tuesday
denounced a statement made by outgoing ECOMOG force commander Major-General Victor Malu,
who said he expected that 10,000 additional ECOMOG troops would be deployed in Sierra
Leone "with or without the consent" of Sierra Leone's military junta. "The
statement disregards Sierra Leone's territorial sovereignty and tantamount to a
declaration of war," Bah said. "It is an act of aggression which we as a
government are capable of resisting. ECOMOG has no such mandate of unilaterally bringing
in troops just like that. It proves how Nigeria is taking unilateral decisions in the
guise of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)."
A Reuters report Tuesday, quoting a source close to Sierra Leone's military
junta, said that Tamba Gborie and over a dozen of his supporters tried to storm the
residence of AFRC leader Lieutenant-Colonel Johnny Paul Koroma on Sunday evening, but were
disarmed after a brief exchange of fire. Gborie, who first announced the coup over SLBS
(state radio) last May, was dismissed from the AFRC Supreme Council and reduced in rank
from sergeant to lance-corporal earlier in the week for his role in looting the Iranian
Embassy. The source said the supporters included disaffected members of the RUF. All are
said to be detained at Pademba Road Prison. A conflicting report was filed by the Agence
France-Presse (AFP), which said Gborie had been arrested in connection with the
embassy looting. The AFP report quoted a military official who said five persons had been
arrested along with Gborie for encouraging RUF fighters to mutiny. A military spokesman
interviewed by the Voice of America denied the Reuters report, and said that
Gborie had not been arrested.
Nigerian Director of Defence Information Colonel Godwin Ugbo Tuesday denied AFRC claims
made Saturday that a number of Nigerian ECOMOG officers of Yoruba extraction had been
arrested in Sierra Leone and brought back to Nigeria for trial. "There is no iota of
truth in the allegation," Ugbo said. He described the junta's claims as
"mischievous and malicious," noting that it was aimed at causing disharmony
among the Nigerians. Ugbo accused the junta of using the claims to cover a break-up in its
ranks, citing the arrest and dismissal of several leading AFRC members for their role in
the looting of the Iranian Embassy in Freetown.
5 January: Nigerian Defence Headquarters named Major-General Timothy
Shelpidi as the eighth commander of ECOMOG on Monday, replacing current ECOMOG force
commander Major-General Samuel Victor Malu. The change takes effect on Thursday. Shelpidi
is currently Chief of Military Training, Operations and Planning. Malu, who has headed the
ECOMOG force in Liberia since September 1996, and who earlier served as ECOMOG Chief of
Staff in 1992/93, returns to Nigeria to take command of the Nigerian Army's Second
Division, based in Ibadan. Malu told the BBC Monday he expects an ECOWAS decision shortly
which would allow the ECOMOG force to deploy 10,000 more troops in Sierra Leone, in
addition to the approximately 5,000 already in the country. Malu said ECOMOG would deploy
the new troops with or without the consent of Sierra Leone's military junta and, if
necessary, by force of arms.
Director of Defence Information Lieutenant-Colonel John Milton said Monday that the
army repelled a Kamajor attack on government troops at Bo and Gondama on Saturday and
Sunday, killing scores of Kamajor militiamen. "We have so far found the bodies of 10
Kamajors killed yesterday in heavy fighting for Bo," Milton said, adding that 25 more
Kamajors were killed south of Bo by pursuing troops. He put the army's losses at two dead.
There was no independent confirmation of the casualty figures. Milton said government
troops and RUF fighters used heavy guns mounted on jeeps as well as rocket-propelled
grenades to battle the Kamajors. He said traffic into Bo resumed on Monday, "because
we had been able to push the Kamajors off the the Bo-Kenema-Moyamba highway," Milton
said. "The road is no longer closed and commercial vehicles are now going
through." In a press release issued Monday, Secretary of State South Major A.F.
Kamara denounced Sunday's BBC Focus on Africa report, which described the fighting
at Bo. Kamara described the report as "not only unfounded and misleading, but geared
to create unnecessary panic and undermine the effort of the Secretary of State Education
to present schooling in the country."
Director of Defence Information Lieutenant-Colonel John Milton said Monday that
government troops killed 25 Kamajor militiamen in a "hot pursuit" battle at
Dodo, near Kenema. Milton said the Kamajors were "pursued from Dama in the south to
Dodo where the battle took place." Two soldiers died in the fighting at Dama Tongay,
he said. Milton said Kamajor militiamen attacked army positions at Tongo Field early
Monday, but were repelled. The army captured 15 Kamajor militiamen, Milton said, adding
that there were no army casualties. Milton accused ECOMOG troops in Liberia of
"making their way towards villages on the border with Sierra Leone to team up with
the Kamajors to launch attacks on Sierra Leone government soldiers." He said large
numbers of ECOMOG troops were being airlifted to ECOMOG positions at Jui and at Lungi
International Airport. "These movements are in complete violation of the Conakry
Peace Agreement, which outlawed any troop movement or violation of the ceasefire. They are
bent on derailing the ceasefire," Milton said.
AFRC Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Alimamy Pallo Bangura held secret talks in
Abidjan Monday, saying he was seeking ways to break the deadlock in efforts to bring a
peaceful end to military rule in Sierra Leone. Bangura said he team, which included
Secretary of State for Development and Economic Planning Victor Brandon, was not on an
official mission for the military junta. Bangura would not say which officials he met with
in Abidjan, but he suggested that his consultations were preparatory to an anticipated
ECOWAS Committee of Five foreign ministers meeting on Sierra Leone. "We are wasting
time and lives are being lost in the process. Destruction is taking place. We do not think
that should really be allowed to continue," he said. Bangura said that the peace
process has stalled because the junta has been excluded from talks on Sierra Leone,
including the December 17 ECOWAS summit in Lomé, Togo. He said his talks in Abidjan are
aimed at seating a junta delegation at a meeting of the ECOWAS Committee of Five, to be
held in Abidjan before March. "Cote d'Ivoire has been involved in the Sierra Leone
crisis much before any of the other countries," Bangura said. "It's role is more
historical and a lot more positive. But it's caught in a situation where it is part of the
(Committee of) Five. It is part of the decisions within the Committee of Five and it
cannot go outside that, which is unfortunate," he added. There has been no comment
from the Ivorian government on the talks.
Dozens of primary and secondary schools remained closed in Freetown Monday, despite
appeals from the military government for them to reopen. Teaching in Kenema and Makeni was
reported to have resumed. Schools in Sierra Leone have been closed since the May 25 coup,
after the Sierra Leone Teachers Union (SLTU) ordered teachers to stay away from classes
until democracy was restored to Sierra Leone. "We are utterly shocked over the
development as the Department of Treasury had fully met one of the conditions of the
teachers, which is the payment of all delayed salaries. We now owe them just the salary
for December," a senior Department of Education official said. SLTU Secretary Alpha
Timbo said "problems still remain which are hampering the commencement of effective
schooling." He said the government should pay school and examination fees for
students who were unable to sit for public exams because of insecurity following the coup.
"Many of the students forfeited their cash because they could not go to the various
examination centers due to insecurity at the time," he said, adding that the
government must either pay or provide a loan to the West African Examinations Council
(WAEC) to facilitate the marking of examination papers. In December, the SLTU cited
security concerns, saying that schools would reopen if combatants were disarmed under the
Conakry Peace Accord and armed fighters occupying school premises were removed.
Education officials have published the 1998 schedule for the primary and secondary
school terms. The first term for primary schools will run for a 14 week period from
January 5 to April 8, the second term from April 20 to June 30 with a break from July
1-10, and the third term from July 13 to September 18. The first term for secondary
schools will run from January 5 to April 8 with Easter break from April 10-14. The second
term will be from April 20 to July 30 and the third term from August 4 to September 18.
4 January: Army troops and the Kamajor militia fought for control of
Bo on Sunday, according to international aid workers in Freetown who contacted their
colleagues in Bo by radio. Soldiers using using heavy guns and rocket propelled grenades
fought Kamajors armed with AK-47 rifles, machetes, and spears. "Heavy fighting
between the Sierra Leone army and several hundred Kamajors has been going on since last
night and has continued well into the afternoon today," one aid worker said.
"The Kamajors have not been able to push the heavily armed junta troops holding the
town. Likewise the junta troops have been unable to repel the Kamajors." Aid workers
reported several deaths on both sides, but were unable to determine the extent of
casualties because of the ongoing fighting. Hundreds of Bo residents were leaving the town
to seek shelter in outlying villages, the aid workers said.
Hundreds of youths attacked six soldiers who had seized bags of corn meal from a trader
in Freetown on Sunday. The youths chased the soldiers into a church, where Sunday services
were in progress, and dragged them into the street. They attacked the soldiers with sticks
and stones before a military intelligence patrol intervened. A similar clash took place at
Susan's Bay Wharf on Saturday, but soldiers were able to disperse the civilians by firing
into the air.
3 January: Seven senior members of the AFRC have been disciplined in
connection with the looting of the Iranian Embassy in Freetown on December 31. Hassan
Bangura, Foday Kallon, Brima Kamara, Mohamed Kallon and Alfred Brown (RUF People's Army)
have been sacked from the AFRC Supreme Council of State and the armed forces,
Under-Secretary of State for Defence Colonel A.B.Y. Kamara said in a statement issued on
Saturday. Tamba Gborie, who first announced the coup on SLBS (state radio) May 25, has
been reduced in rank from sergeant to lance-corporal, and has been sacked from the Supreme
Council and the AFRC government. Lieutenant-Colonel Issa Sesay has been deprived of three
months salary "and will be dealt with severely if he embarks on any further
anti-revolutionary inclination," the statement said. Kamara called the looting
"a deliberate act of sabotage," adding that the Department of Foreign Affairs
had issued a letter of apology to the Iranian government.
Soldiers and Kamajors clashed at a town in the southeast Friday, causing civilians to
flee across the Liberian border, about 20 miles away. Several soldiers were reported
killed during two hours of heavy artillery exchanges. Kamajor reinforcements were seen
Saturday heading for another town occupied by junta forces.
2 January: Military authorities in Freetown said Friday that a number
of people were killed near Bo Thursday night in a Kamajor attack on the country's
second-largest refugee camp. They declined to give casualty figures, but a civilian source
said he counted about 35 dead. "Some of them were hacked to death by the Kamajors,
while others were killed by crossfire (with the army)," the source was quoted as
saying. Aid workers in Bo confirmed the attack by Kamajor militiamen armed with AK-47
rifles, machetes, and spears. "We have no idea of casualties, although we know that
people in the camp and the village were killed," one aid worker said.
1 January: Two soldiers and six Kamajors were reported killed New
Year's Eve in a shoot-out at a village ten miles east of Kenema. Bo was described as calm,
despite reports of Kamajor militiamen gathering near the outskirts of the town. Government
troops are searching all vehicles entering or leaving the town. A source in Freetown
quoted reports that Kamajors have also searched vehicles along the Freetown-Bo highway,
but have allowed them to pass. The Kamajors have threatened to prevent government buses
from travelling in the interior, claiming they are earning revenue for the junta.
Currently, only private vehicles are said to be travelling up-country. In the north, the
Secretary of State for the Northern Region said "it is the quietest of all
times." News service reports say Kamajors have seized several roads in the northeast.
Freetown was reported quiet, as soldiers and RUF fighters obeyed a directive from the
Department of Defence not to fire their guns to celebrate the New Year. Gunshots fired
during New Year's celebrations a year ago killed 10 civilians and wounded over 30.
ECOMOG force commander Major-General Malu said Thursday that ECOMOG would resolve the
crisis in Sierra Leone during 1998. In his New Year's message delivered in Monrovia,
Liberia, Malu commended ECOMOG soldiers for their exemplary conduct, enthusiastic
dedication to duty, honesty, and loyalty. He pointed to ECOMOG's success in bring peace
and security to Liberia, and said the same could be done in Sierra Leone. Malu called the
ECOMOG force West Africa's first attempt at conflict resolution, adding that he wished the
force would make ECOWAS proud of it at all times.
Rice has become increasingly expensive in Freetown, with a cup now selling for Le 350.
Bags of rice are said to be hard to find, but sold just before the New Year for Le 50,000.
On Wednesday, soldiers at barracks in Wilberforce and Murray Town were reportedly asked to
share bags of rice, but refused, demanding their full ration. At the police barracks in
Kissy, 38 bags of rice were delivered to supply 200 policemen. A shortage of petrol in
Freetown has caused taxi fare to increase to Le 500.