28 February 2003: The United Nations Secretary-General's
Special Envoy for
Children
and Armed Conflict warned this week that, without the prospect of jobs or
education, Sierra Leone's youth could be a source of instability in the
country which is just emerging from a decade of civil war, Radio France
International reported. "This is a group of persons who are there as a
kind of potential force to be molded in any direction," Olara Otunnu
told reporters. "They could become bad criminal gangs. They could be
recycled back into conflict" in Liberia and Ivory Coast. "They
remain a potential danger to themselves and to society, which is why it is
so important to find productive means to engage them." During his
week-long visit to Sierra Leone which ended on Friday, Otunnu launched the
Voice of the Children, a U.N.-sponsored radio station run by young people,
and, together with President Kabbah, inaugurated the Commission for
War-Affected Children. He also visited the devastated mining city of Koidu.
Otunnu observed that in Koidu, "everybody has been chipping in" to rebuild
the schools, but that much more still needed to be done. But despite the
primitive conditions of some of the school buildings, he said, it was
better for the children to be there than to be mining diamonds. "I
wish (the children) were not sitting on rocks, but I’m happy that they
are in a class," he said. "There’s a teacher and there’s a
blackboard. That they’re not on the street. They are not in the
mines." Otunnu, who earlier met with child labourers in Kono's
alluvial diamond mines, said he was horrified by what he saw there. He
stressed that "something radical" had to be done to address the
problem. "I cannot believe that in this day and age so many children
have been forced to slave away in the diamond mines, earning next to
nothing and not attending school because they don’t have adequate
opportunities," he said. "When I spoke to the children and to
the young people, none of them wanted to be in the mines. Every single one
of them wanted to be in school, wanted vocational training and they all
said, ‘we need alternatives'."
The World Bank
approved $40 million in grants to Sierra Leone this week aimed at
rehabilitating the country's war-ravaged health and educational sectors.
The first of the two $20 million grants will be used to help restore what
the bank called "the most essential functions of the health delivery
system of Sierra Leone." The money will be used to rebuild primary
and first referral health services in four districts, to improve
programmes responsible for addressing the country's major health problems,
to strengthen health sector management to improve efficiency and to
decentralize decision-making to the districts, and to support the
development of the private health care sector. The second $20 million
grant will seek to provide basic education for the majority of Sierra
Leone's children through the rebuilding or refurbishing of damaged primary
and junior secondary schools. The World Bank grant complements a $20.32
million loan and $1.35 million grant from the African Development Bank to
Sierra Leone in January to finance the rehabilitation of the country's
basic,
non-formal and vocational education. In announcing the grant
Tuesday, the World Bank said the money would be used to fund basic
education by reconstructing damaged schools and building new ones, and to
provide teachers and educational materials. The Bank says it also wants to
assure an operational quality level of the schools, to build up management
capacity in the educational sector, and to
develop a partnership with the government and civil society to provide
educational opportunities to Sierra Leone's young people.
Renewed
fighting in Liberia has resulted in a major influx of Liberian refugees
into
Sierra Leone, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday. As of
Sunday, approximately 9,000 Liberians and a few hundred Sierra Leoneans
had crossed the border, and as many as 17,000 more could arrive in the
next few weeks. "If that should occur, the ability of the
humanitarian community to respond effectively, given the current level of
resources, would be severely handicapped," the agency said. Between
February 10 and 23, the WFP supported 120,400 people in Sierra Leone with
733 tons of food, distributed through a number of programmes for
vulnerable adults and children, and food-for-training and safety net
schemes.
27 February: In late February 1996 the Sierra Leone
Web made its first
appearance
on the internet with the launch of a news page, an online e-mail
directory, and a collection of 400 Krio proverbs. Sierra Leone was then in
the midst of a brutal civil war
– a conflict which seldom made headlines in the international press and
so went nearly unnoticed outside the country's borders. The Sierra Leone
Web turns seven years old this week. Still best known for its news page,
the Sierra Leone Web offers readers and researchers much more: scores of
documents, hundreds of photographs, an e-mail directory of more than 2,100
names, and sections on culture, government and literature. It also hosts,
for free, the website of Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission. Over the past few years the Sierra Leone Web has done
groundbreaking stories, including interviews with national leaders in
Freetown and RUF commanders in rebel-held territory in an effort to
understand, and to help readers to understand, the underlying causes of a
decade of conflict which devastated this once-peaceful country. Throughout
its existence, the Sierra Leone Web has worked to provide uncompromisingly
objective and accurate news coverage in the belief that Sierra Leone's
story is not just worth telling: It is a story which must be told.
The
deployment to Freetown last week of some 300 British
Gurkha troops "will show the people of Sierra Leone that we are
committed to carry on our support to them and their democratically elected
government, even at a time when people may perceive that the U.K.'s Armed
Forces are busy in other areas of the world," Task Force Commander
Brigadier Bill Moore said in a statement. A spokesman for the British High
Commission told the Sierra Leone Web last week that the deployment of the
Spearhead Lead Element from the 2nd Battalion, the Royal Gurkha Rifles,
was a demonstration of the 'over-the-horizon' reserve force which was
agreed in a June 1999 Memorandum of Understanding between the U.K. and the
United Nations. While in Sierra Leone, the British soldiers will train
alongside Sierra Leonean troops. It will also assist the British-led
International Military Advisory and Training Team (IMATT) which is working
to produce a professional and democratically-accountable army in Sierra
Leone. The land forces will be joined by a British frigate, the HMS Iron
Duke, and an accompanying support vessel. The exercise is expected to last
for approximately one month.
The Chief Prosecutor of Sierra
Leone's Special Court addressed members of the
military
Thursday and assured them that the war crimes tribunal's investigations
would focus only on "those bearing the greatest responsibility"
for violations of international humanitarian law, and not on the rank and
file in the military. "While I believe that accountability is the
cornerstone to democracy and a sustainable peace, the mandate given to me
by the international community asks me to only prosecute those who bear
the greatest responsibility," Crane said, adding: "I do
encourage citizens to talk to Truth and Reconciliation Commission, whether
they be victims or perpetrators." According to a statement issued by
the court, Crane told the forty-plus soldiers and civilian members of the
Ministry of Defence that "national, regional, and international"
were continuing. "I want our work to be absolutely thorough," he
said. "These cases are rather complex and I've instructed my staff to
follow the evidence wherever it leads." He added that investigations
would likely continue through the rainy season.
26 February: Sierra Leone's Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) has received in excess of 3,500 statements
from both victims and the perpetrators in
the country's decade-long civil
war, TRC Executive-Secretary Franklyn Bai
Kargbo said on Wednesday. Kargbo told the Sierra Leone Web that the
commission's three-week pilot phase in December netted about 1,400 statements
and revealed more than 3,000 violations against individuals and communities.
The process continued in January and February. "The statement-taking phase will
extend to the 31st of March," he said. "We are now preparing the
hearing stage." Kargbo said he met Wednesday with Eldred Collins
of the Revolutionary United Front Party (RUFP) over a submission by the
former rebel group which was deemed to be inadequate. "We’ve given
them guidance as to the format and details of what we expect them to tell
us," he said. "They are quite willing to cooperate with us, and
we meet with them again on Friday morning. This time they’ll form a
delegation of about four to five key people. We’ll emphasize to them the
importance of cooperating in terms of giving us a statement and lining up
for public hearings." Kargbo is due to meet with potential donors in
Geneva this weekend at a forum arranged by the U.N.'s Office of the High
Commission for Human Rights to add to the cash-strapped commission's
coffers. He added that he had received generally positive responses from
meetings in Freetown this week with the American ambassador, members of
the Lebanese Committee, and the visiting U.N. Secretary-General's Special Representative
for Children and Armed Conflict, Olara Otunnu. "(Otunnu) also urged
in particular that we pay special emphasis on children as they were
affected by the war," Kargbo said. "Indeed that has been one of
the planned
fanatic aspects that we hope the report will reveal."
The U.N. Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Children
and Armed Conflict
expressed
dismay Wednesday over the number of children working in Kono's diamond
fields, the Associated Press reported. "I was horrified to see
children mining for diamonds
– in this day and age, so many children forced to slave away in diamond
mines," Olara Otunnu told reporters after a tour of Koidu. "It
was a terrible scene." Otunnu urged the setting up of micro-credit
schemes and other aid programmes for the families of child miners, and for
help in putting the boys in school. Otunnu noted, however, significant
improvements over his last visit a year and a half ago, when families were
still emerging from hiding in the bush. "I saw some children going to
school
– even though some of them are sitting on rocks and logs
– but they are happy, singing, playing and in uniforms," he said.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) has
agreed to a waiver of its rules to allow for a global ban on the trade in
"conflict diamonds"
– the alluvially-mined and illicitly-traded gemstones which have been
blamed for fuelling wars in Sierra Leone, Angola and the Democratic
Republic of Congo, the Associated Press reported. "Trade in conflict
diamonds is a matter of serious international concern, which can be
directly linked to the fueling of armed conflict, the activities of rebel
movements aimed at undermining or overthrowing legitimate governments, and
the illicit traffic in, and proliferation of, armaments, especially small
arms and light weapons," the WTO said in a statement. The
organisation said it based its decision on what it called "the
extraordinary humanitarian nature of this issue and the devastating impact
of conflicts fueled by the trade in conflict diamonds on the peace, safety
and security of people in affected countries." The waiver request was
sponsored by an 11-member group of nations led by Canada, backed by Sierra
Leone, Australia, Brazil, Israel, Japan, South Korea, the Philippines,
Thailand, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. It creates an
exception to a founding principle of the 145-nation body, which is that a
government must offer the same conditions to all its trading partners, and
may not refuse to accept goods from one country that it accepts from
another.
25 February: President Kabbah formally inaugurated
a National Commission for
War-Affected
Children Monday, calling it "one of the most far-reaching decisions
we have made for the future of this nation." The commission was set
up at the urging of Olara Otunnu, the U.N. Secretary-General's Special
Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, who is visiting Sierra
Leone this week. Thousands of Sierra Leone's children who were abducted by
warring factions and forced to become fighters, porters or sex-slaves
still bear the physical and emotional scars of the war. Hundreds of
thousands more spent years of their young lives as refugees. In his
address, Kabbah called the commission a "concrete symbol" of the
government's commitment to war-affected children, but he
stressed that it
would need financial and material resources in order to succeed. "If
it is not afforded adequate financial resources for its operation; if it
fails to secure the support of our development partners, it will be a
commission only in name," the president said. "In fact, one can
venture to say that these would be tantamount
to a collective infringement of the basic human rights of the war-affected
children."
The United States Embassy Freetown
announced Tuesday the launch of a
website to provide information directly
from the Sierra Leonean capital. The new site includes embassy contact
information, press releases, transcripts of speeches by Ambassador Peter
Chaveas, reports, country
information and photographs.
Ghanaian security forces
raided the Buduburam Refugee Camp outside of Accra Sunday, looking for
evidence to substantiate allegations that the camp was being used to
recruit fighters for conflicts in Liberia and Ivory Coast, the Voice of
America reported. The camp is home, officially, to some 27,000 refugees,
most of them Liberian but also including "an appreciable number of
Sierra Leoneans," a former Sierra Leonean refugee told the Sierra
Leone Web. "We used to visit the camp to eat Sierra Leonean dishes at
a Sierra Leonean woman's 'cookery shop'," he added. Unofficially, the
camp may house thousands more people. In the early hours of Sunday
morning, soldiers surrounded the camp while policemen, accompanied by
sniffer dogs, searched the homes for weapons and drugs. The military
officer in charge of the operation said his forces had found what he said
was a training ground for fighters, but apart from one gun found in the
possession of a man claiming to be a Ghanaian, no firearms were found.
"Out of 16,000 adult males identified during the headcount, about
2,000 had not registered as refugees," the radio said. "Those
were handed over to immigration officers to be questioned and, where
appropriate, registered. The UNHCR office in Ghana said today however that
they have heard rumours of rebel recruitment at Buduburam, but they have
no evidence of systematic enlistment or training at the camp." The
camp was established in 1990 to house refugees from Liberia's civil war.
In recent years it has been a thorn in the side of the Ghanaian
authorities, who say it has become a breeding ground for crime, including
armed robbery, drug peddling and prostitution.
24 February: A Sierra Leonean lawyer and
children's rights advocate has been
named
one of five winners of this year's Reebok Human Rights Award. Mohamed Pa-Momo
Fofanah witnessed first-hand the horrors of Sierra Leone's civil war. He
saw children forced to become combatants and commit violent crimes against
their neighbours. And he decided to do something about it. In 1998, after
being admitted to the bar, he joined the Sierra Leonean office of Defence
for Children International, and provided free legal counsel to young
people who were arbitrarily detained and arrested, and to children who had
suffered abuse and rape. He also worked to reform the juvenile justice
system and to ensure children's rights in the judicial process. In 2001 he
was one of the founders of the Lawyers Centre for Legal Assistance (LAWCLA),
which offers free legal assistance to poor and vulnerable victims of human
rights abuses. "In a country that has been ravaged by war, human
rights atrocities, a collapsed economy and a fractured government, Pa-Momo
is dedicated to the relentless pursuit of children’s rights and stands
as a beacon of hope for Sierra Leone’s youth," Reebok said in
announcing the award. Reebok, which is better known as a retailer of
sports shoes, has presented the award each year since 1988 to human rights
activists 30 years old or younger who have made significant contributions
to human rights causes through non-violent means. The award comes with a
$50,000 grant from the Reebok Human Rights Foundation to allow the winners
to further their work. Since its inception, the award has gone to 76
activists in 35 countries. Fofanah is the first Sierra Leonean to win.
23
February: Olara Otunnu, the United Nations Special Representative for
Children
and Armed Conflict, visited Sierra Leone three times during the country's civil
war to appeal for the protection of children. This week Otunnu is back to
urge that children's issues be integrated into efforts to rebuild the
peace. "Sierra Leone is a particularly important case of a conflict
situation and a post-conflict situation in which children are being deeply
affected," Otunnu told reporters in Freetown. "It had been a
particular priority for us. In the middle of the conflict it was a
question of protecting children and ensuring that they were not being
victimized. Now in the post-conflict situation, we want to make sure that
children are a central aspect of any programme of peacebuilding,
reconstruction and healing." During his week-long visit, Otunnu will
inaugurate two projects to benefit Sierra Leone's youth: a National
Commission on War-Affected Children, and a "Voice of Children,"
to provide radio programming to benefit young people. In both cases, he
said, "Sierra Leone is the first country in which this has now become
a functioning and operational project." Otunnu noted that the
situation in Sierra Leone had improved significantly since his first visit
several years ago. The war has ended, refugees have returned or are
returning, and child soldiers have been demobilised and are being
rehabilitated. "There is clearly a transformation relative to the
situation several years ago," he said. "Now Sierra Leone is not
out of the woods. There are major challenges that need to be faced and
must address those continuing challenges in order consolidate the peace
which is in formation now."
22 February: West African leaders would prefer a
regional solution to the
conflict
in Ivory Coast, but lack the resources to carry it out, Sierra Leonean
Foreign Minister Momodu Koroma said during the Franco-African Summit in
Paris this week. "The ideal solution would have been to have ECOWAS
troops on the ground," Koroma told Radio France International.
"This is a conflict which threatens the region, and in the ideal case
it is these regional forces that should actually bring the conflict to an
end. Unfortunately, the situation is not ideal." After a military
uprising last September plunged Ivory Coast into civil conflict, West
African leaders pledged to send a 1,200 strong Senegalese-led ECOWAS
peacekeeping force to the country by mid November. It never happened.
Koroma said the reason was that ECOWAS simply does not have the resources.
"Willing as the heads of state might be, the resources are not just
there to deploy troops on the ground, to maintain them there, to ensure
that they can have the relevant equipment to keep the peace," he
said. "This is the problem that ECOWAS has. Any efficiency about
ECOWAS therefore has to be measured within that light. But willingness is
of course there, and I think a lot of meetings I have attended, the heads
of state of ECOWAS have shown a lot of willingness to step in and really
have a solution to the conflict."
21 February: A company of Gurkha soldiers from
Britain's 2nd Battalion Royal Gurkha Rifles has left London for Freetown in what Britain's Defence Ministry is calling "a demonstration
of the United Kingdom's continuing military commitment to supporting the
settlement process in Sierra Leone." A spokesman for the British High
Commission in Freetown told the Sierra Leone Web that the deployment,
including support personnel, would consist of about 300 people. "The
deployment is intended as a demonstration of our 'over-the-horizon'
reserve capability, underlining our continued support for settlement
process here in Sierra Leone," he said. "A small deployment now
to remind all concerned of the U.K.'s commitment, and our ability to
deploy quickly notwithstanding our commitments elsewhere in the world,
will help ensure that the situation here in Sierra Leone remains
stable." He added that the exercise had been welcomed by President
Kabbah and by UNAMSIL, the United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra
Leone. "The 'over-the-horizon' reserve is as a result of the terms of
the Memorandum of Understanding the U.K. signed with the U.N. in June
1999," the spokesman said. "We could offer a rapid reaction
capability of up to a brigade drawn from our pool of rapid reaction
forces." The Times newspaper in London, quoting Ministry of Defence
sources there, reported that the Gurkhas were being sent to Sierra Leone
due to increasing security concerns following cross-border incursions by
armed groups from neighbouring Liberia. While in Sierra Leone,
the Gurkhas will work alongside the U.K.-led International Military
Advisory and Training Team (IMATT), and will also link up with the Sierra Leone army and UNAMSIL. The
deployment is expected to last until mid-March. Meanwhile, the British warship HMS Iron
Duke (pictured right) will visit Freetown in the next few weeks "as a
further demonstration of U.K. commitment," the spokesman said. The
Iron Duke, a Type 23 frigate, is currently on the Atlantic Patrol
Task (North).
Liberian government forces battled LURD
rebels at the Sierra Leone border Friday in an effort to retake the
strategic Mano River Bridge and the town of Bo Waterside, the Reuters news
agency reported. "Fighting is going on in that area. Bo and Tiene are
being strongly contested right now," Defense Minister Daniel Chea
said. "LURD is present in that area and we are moving in to see how
best we can dislodge them." At talks brokered by ECOWAS
parliamentarians and civil society groups in Freetown this month, LURD
dropped its preconditions for peace talks with the Liberian government.
Meanwhile, however, the rebel group has launched offensives on four fronts
aimed at toppling the government of President Charles Taylor. The United
Nations refugee agency estimates that 36,000 people have been displaced in
the latest fighting, with some 6,000 Liberian refugees crossing into
Sierra Leone in recent days.
The United Nations refugee
agency (UNHCR) wants to repatriate some 34,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in
Guinea by the end of June, according to the U.N. Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). The opening in March of a new
route from Guinea's Languette, or "Parrot's Beak" into eastern
Sierra Leone with a footbridge is expected to expedite the repatriation
process.
Sierra Leone's Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) has recorded the stories of some 3,500 war victims and perpetrators since its statement takers first fanned
out across the country last December, the TRC's new Executive-Secretary
said on Friday. Franklyn Bai Kargbo, who took up his post on Tuesday, told
the Sierra Leone Web that the commission now hoped to begin public
hearings in early April. The statements, which detail atrocities both
committed and suffered during a decade of civil war, are confidential. But
Kargbo said the hearings would highlight interviews which document a
pattern of abuse. And the commission might go even further. "Part of
our mandate allows us, if we deem it necessary, to have perpetrators and
victims in some cases confront each other," he said. "I’m sure
that will be a very useful tool." Kargbo added that the TRC would
also work with local communities to help them heal the scars of the war.
"In some cases, apart from the individual reconciliation cases,
communities might need to be cleansed," Kargbo said. "The
various groups in Sierra Leone have ways in which over the centuries they
think some catastrophe that befell the community or society can be put in
the past." He added the commission would, whenever possible, work to
promote reconciliation through that traditional system. As the commission
prepares to hire investigators, researchers and translators, it is looking
at taking statements from Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea, Liberia, the
Gambia and Ghana. The TRC would like to reach out to victims living in the
West as well, he said
– if it can get the funding. "Certainly we would want to move
farther afield," he said. "That’s something to be
explored." Kargbo will meet with international donors in Switzerland
and the United States early next month. Meanwhile, Kargbo said he was
working to heal a rift which had opened between the TRC and its local
support base
– Sierra Leone's civil society groups. "I think there was a
misunderstanding there," he said. "The civil society
organisations perceived the commission as having been derailed from the
ownership concept that was originally designed to anchor the truth and
reconciliation." Kargbo said he met this week with a number of civil
society leaders to hear their concerns, and that several of the groups had
now pledged to support the commission. "I’m sure in the coming
weeks we should be able to successfully tap into this cooperation and
collaboration by civil society organisations," he said. "Through
that (we will) more effectively tap into local communities in getting them
to participate in the
process."
In a ceremony on Monday to inaugurate
the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission's
(TRC) new headquarters in Brookfields, U.N.
Special Representative for Sierra Leone Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji
(pictured left), said that about 1,400 people from all walks of life had
provided information to TRC statement takers, according to UNAMSIL. TRC
Chairman Bishop Joseph Humper (right) said the statements contained
information "about 3,000 victims who had suffered more than 4,000
violations," including 1,000 deaths and 200 cases of rape and sexual
abuse. He added that one third of the respondents were women and about ten
percent were children. Humper was quoted as saying that the
statement-taking would continue until March 31, which would be followed
immediately by the "institutional hearing."
70,000
Liberian refugees have entered Sierra Leone since September 2000, and
thousands more have continued to arrive in recent weeks to escape new
fighting in their country, UNHCR Public Information Officer Francesca
Fontanini told journalists in Freetown on Friday. About 45,000 of the
refugees are living in camps, she said, while about 8,500 more are
integrated into communities in Freetown, Bo and Kenema. Thousands of new
arrivals, including 12,000 in Kailahun District, remain in the border area
as the UNHCR works to increase the capacity of its camps. "The
situation for the moment is under control," she said, adding:
"We are dealing with refugees coming from official and unofficial
crossing points, which is a big effort because there are almost 27
crossing points. We shuttle them from the border areas to Zimmi station
which has a capacity of 2,000 people. From there they will be moving on to
the interior of the country, to the refugee camps. According to the U.N.
convention, the refugees should be at least 50 kilometers from the
border."
20 February: Members of the Paris-based press
watchdog Reporters Without
Borders
(RSF) have denounced the leaders of 23 African countries, claiming their
governments "abuse freedom of the press on a daily basis." 23
RSF "militants" demonstrated Thursday in front of the Palais des
Congrès, the venue of the 22nd Franco-African Summit, wearing t-shirts
with the photos of persons the organisation called "press freedom
dunces"
– the leaders of Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic,
Chad, Djibouti, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea,
Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Liberia,
Libya, Mauritania, Rwanda, Seychelles Sudan, Swaziland, Togo, Tunisia and
Zimbabwe. "Reporters Without Borders is urging France and those
African States that respect press freedom to tackle this issue at the
summit, and use whatever influence they have with the 23 countries
denounced by the organisation in order to see to it that freedom of speech
is secure throughout the continent," the group said in a statement.
United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan called on the international
community
Thursday to support peacekeeping efforts on the African continent. In his
opening address at the Franco-African Summit in Paris, Annan told French
and African leaders that progress was being made in settling conflicts in
Angola, Burundi, Sierra Leone, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo,
the Reuters news agency reported. "That makes it all the more
important for the international community to provide strong support to
Africa's peacekeeping and peacemaking mechanisms and institutions
– as set out, for example, in the G8 Action Plan for Africa," he
said. "Africa cannot afford further turmoil
– but if it erupts, Africa must have the capacity to respond."
United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has appointed a four-member Panel of
Experts to review Liberia's compliance with a two year old sanctions
regime on that country. The sanctions, which include a weapons ban, a ban
on international travel and an embargo on the sale of Liberian rough
diamonds, were imposed because of the Liberian government's alleged
backing for Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, and for its involvement in the
illegal arms-for-diamonds trade. The new panel will include Atabou Bobian,
a Senegalese aviation expert, Enrico Carish, a Swiss expert in financial
links, Damien Callamand of France, a member of Interpol; and British
diamond expert Alex Vines.
Sierra Leone's new High
Commissioner to the Gambia, Foday Abdulrahman Sesay, presented his
credentials to President Yahya Jammeh over the weekend, Banjul's Daily
Observer newspaper reported.
19 February: The United States government has
invited two senior Sierra Leonean police officers to attend an
international conference in the American capital next week aimed at
finding ways to combat the growing problem of human trafficking, the U.S.
Embassy in Freetown said on Wednesday. The four-day conference is
sponsored by the U.S. State Department in cooperation with the
non-governmental organization 'War Against Trafficking Alliance.' Senior
Assistant Commissioner of Police and Chief Superintendent of Police for Bo
District Amadu Kaikai will join about 250 law enforcement officials from
around the world to examine strategies which have proven successful in the
prevention and prosecution of human trafficking, and the protection of its
victims. "Coming out of war, with a large number of displaced persons
including refugees from other West African countries, Sierra Leone is a
target for human traffickers and therefore vulnerable to
exploitation," the embassy statement said. Human trafficking
– the illegal movement of people from one country to another
for
profit
– is now thought to be the third largest moneymaker for organized
criminal groups after drugs and weapons, according to Dr. Kevin Bales,
director of the Washington, D.C.-based group 'Free the Slaves.' Bales
(pictured left), who is also a consultant to the United
Nations Global Programme on Trafficking in Persons, told the Sierra Leone
Web that young African women
who turn to human traffickers in search of a better life often find
themselves forced into a life of prostitution on the streets of southern Europe. Children from Mali and
Burkina Faso, he added, can wind up as slaves on Ivory Coast's plantations
or in Ghana's fishing industry. In the aftermath of their country's civil
war, many Sierra Leoneans have joined the flood of Africans seeking to
enter Europe by sea from North Africa. Many of them never make it. "The
death toll is very high in that crossing from northern Africa to southern
Europe," Bales said. "We really don’t know how many, because
there are particularly rickety boats that have sunk in sight of land,
causing a number of drownings. But how many sank that no one ever knew
about?" Other dangers confront the victims of human traffickers as
well. "They may be paying someone to smuggle them, but once they get
into that conduit they in fact lose control over themselves," Bales
said. "Their documents are taken. They may be brutalized, and they
come under a violent kind of control. That kind of violence can also lead
to serious injury or even death." People from impoverished or
war-torn countries like Sierra Leone, Bales observed, are particularly
vulnerable to human traffickers. "At base, the rule is people in
human trafficking flow from poorer countries to richer countries," he
said. "When you’re coming from Sierra Leone, the richer countries
are almost every other country in the world."
Sierra Leone's Under-17 football squad eliminated rival
Burkina Faso in Ouagadougou over the weekend in the return leg of their CAF
first-round qualifying match, the official Sierra Leone News Agency (SLENA)
reported. The game ended in a 1-1 draw, sending the Sierra Stars through
on the away goals rule. Their earlier match in Freetown ended in a 0-0
tie. The return leg had originally been scheduled for January, but was
postponed due to a conflict with an Under-20 Nations Cup match. The
Burkinabes scored in the 17th minute, but the Sierra Leoneans equalized
three minutes later. Sierra Leone will play Tunisia next month in their
second round match for the opportunity to compete in the Under-17
Championship in Swaziland in May.
18 February: The United Nations refugee agency
(UNHCR) has expressed concern over fighting in western Liberia, which has
prompted an estimated 30,000 to flee their homes for the capital,
Monrovia. Another 6,000 Liberians have crossed into Sierra Leone, with
thousands more reportedly on the way. "This has caused alarm in
Sierra Leone, which is just recovering from a painful, decade–long war
itself," a UNHCR spokesman said in Geneva. Meanwhile, the agency said
it was making plans to airlift around 17,000 Sierra Leonean refugees
living in camps outside Monrovia back to Sierra Leone.
87 more Liberian soldiers have surrendered to Sierra
Leonean security forces, the BBC reported on Tuesday. According to
correspondent Lansana Fofana, 110 others, most of them soldiers of the
Armed Forces of Liberia, fled to Sierra Leone last week. "Mainly
(they crossed in) the Mano River Bridge area and then also the bypass
routes," Fofana said. "They are eventually taken over to Kenema
and interrogated, and then brought over to Freetown for encampment."
The Liberians are ultimately taken to the village of Mapeh on the Lungi
Peninsula. Meanwhile, Reuters quoted Sierra Leone's Chief of Defence Staff
as saying he had met with LURD commanders during a recent trip to the
border area and warned them to stay on their own side of the frontier.
"I told the commanders and other ranks of the LURD, who were heavily
armed, that now that they control that area, they should stay in their
area and not cross into Sierra Leone to cause any trouble to
civilians," said Brigadier Tom Carew (pictured right), adding:
"If they do, Sierra Leone troops deployed on the border will waste no
time acting on them robustly."
Spain wants to send back thousands of illegal African
immigrants who reach that country by sea via Morocco, the Deutsche Presse
Agentur reported on Tuesday, quoting Spanish press reports. Under a 1992
agreement between the two countries, Morocco is required to take back all
the occupants of boats which set out illegally from its coast. In
practice, however, Morocco has only agreed to the return of its own
nationals. "In most cases, Africans from countries like Nigeria,
Sierra Leone or Mali remain in Spain," the news service said.
"Repatriation for Spain is prohibitively expensive. In addition, the
African immigrants generally destroy their travel documents, so it is
impossible to determine their country of origin." Last year, more
than 16,000 people who set out from Morocco by sea succeeded in reaching
the coast of southern Spain or the Canary Islands. About half of these
came from Morocco, and the rest from countries south of the Sahara.
17 February: The commander of the United Nations
peacekeeping force in
Sierra
Leone said he met with Liberian rebels over the weekend and appealed to
them to act humanely to civilians in the areas under their control.
According to the Associated Press, Lieutenant-General Daniel Opande
crossed the Mano River Bridge, where he met with a commander of the
Liberian insurgency LURD. "One point I raised with the commander of
the LURD fighters and his men is the mere fact that they have taken over
that side of the bridge means they must behave in a humane manner to
civilians and not to harass them," Opande told reporters on Monday.
He said he had gone to the area to appraise the security situation, which
he described as "fluid." The general said rebel leaders assured
him that their fighters wouldn't move into Sierra Leone. Opande said he
saw child soldiers in the rebel ranks. "I was amazed at the youthful
looks of the LURD fighters, including child soldiers, some of whom were
armed," he said.
Saudi Arabia will fund the
construction of three referral hospitals in Sierra Leone and will write
off Sierra Leonean debt to the kingdom, clearing the way for further Saudi
aid to Sierra Leone's health sector, the official Sierra Leone News Agency
(SLENA) said on Monday. The pledge was made during President Kabbah's
just-concluded official visit to Saudi Arabia, during which the president
took part in the annual Hajj, or pilgrimage, to the Muslim holy
city of Mecca. President Kabbah has cancelled plans to attend the 22nd
Franco-African Summit in Paris this week because he was not feeling well
after his trip, a high-level source told the Sierra Leone Web. "It's
nothing serious
– just a cold," the source said. Kabbah was to have left for Paris
Monday evening for the two-day conference on on the 20th and 21st, and
then to have flown to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia for the five-day Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM) summit which opens this Wednesday. The NAM summit "is
still touch-and-go," the source said.
Motorists are
continuing to cue in front of petrol stations in the Sierra Leonean
capital as the government-owned news agency reported that a ship carrying
fuel was due to arrive either late Sunday or on Monday. "The fuel
scarcity is still biting. I was in the queue for hours and only ended
getting three gallons," one journalist told the Sierra Leone Web
Monday afternoon. The news agency quoted Trade and Industry Minister Dr.
Kadi Sesay as confirming that there would be in increase in the price of
fuel. Subsequent press reports in Freetown said the cost of a gallon of
petrol would increase from Le 4,900 (about $2.25) to Le 6,050.
The Italian clothing retailer Benetton and the United
Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said Monday they will team up for a
30-nation advertising campaign to raise awareness about world hunger. The
Food for Life campaign features stark images of vulnerable people in
Sierra Leone, Guinea, Afghanistan and Cambodia. One photo displays the
torso of a Sierra Leonean amputee with a spoon attached to the stump of
his arm. Themes for the $15 million campaign include "Food for
Peace" (Sierra Leonean ex-combatants), "Food for Education"
(Afghan children), "Food for Work" (Afghan women), "Food to
Go Home" (Afghan refugees), "Food for Protection"
(Cambodian girls and African prostitutes), and "Food for
Stability" (Liberian child refugees.). "Ex-combatants in Sierra
Leone receive food aid when they disarm," the WFP said in a statement
which accompanied the announcement. "Most of them are poor and
uneducated. If they are also hungry and with no hopes for the future it is
more likely that they will take up arms again, and the situation of peace
among the various factions is fragile enough as it is." Monday's
announcement follows a warning by the WFP that an $84 million funding
shortfall could cut off food supplies to some 1.2 million African
refugees. Previous Benetton advertising campaigns have highlighted the
death penalty and AIDS awareness, using controversial images of death row
inmates in the United States and AIDS victims.
15 February: 107 Liberian soldiers crossed into
Sierra Leone over the past two days to escape an offensive by LURD rebels,
the Associated Press reported on Saturday, quoting Senior Assistant
Commissioner of Police Francis Munu. The Liberians were said to have surrendered to Sierra
Leonean officers after crossing the Mano River Bridge, which divides the
two countries. "They said that they were...almost overwhelmed by the
rebels," Munu was quoted as saying. Most of the soldiers were taken
to Mapeh village, which now shelters 174 Liberian troops who fled their
country since fighting intensified last year. 16 injured soldiers,
however, were sent to Lungi for treatment. Meanwhile, the news agency
quoted UNAMSIL spokesman Masimba Tafirenyika as saying some 4,000 Liberian
civilians had crossed into Sierra Leone since Thursday to escape fighting
in the border area. Reuters quoted outgoing UNAMSIL military spokesman Major Mohamed
Shekari as saying late Friday that U.N. peacekeepers were on alert to
prevent the fighting from spilling over into Sierra Leone. "Thousands
of people are fleeing from Liberia through the eastern border and many of
them are women and children," he said. "The U.N., in
collaboration with the UNHCR, has been helping to evacuate the fleeing
refugees by transporting them to refugee camps, but this is done after the
refugees have been screened by Sierra Leone's police and armed
forces." In a press briefing on Friday, Shekari said it was the
responsibility of the Sierra Leone army to secure the country's borders,
but that UNAMSIL would not allow the country to be plunged back into
conflict. "As long as UNAMSIL remains and has a well-armed,
well-equipped force, we want to assure you that we will not fold our arms
and watch the security of this country be interfered with or
threatened," he said. A source who returned from the border area
subsequently told the Sierra Leone Web that more than 400 refugees turned
up at the Sierra Leonean coastal town of Sulima early last week. "On
the night of the 10th February to the afternoon of the 12th February 424
refugees had arrived in Sulima alone from Robertsport by 8 Ghanaian
fishing boats and 29 dugout boats," he said. "This population
comprised of 114 men, 200 women and 110 children. This included many Ghanaian
Fanti fishermen, Liberians, and a few Sierra Leoneans. On the morning of
the 13th February, the border town Bo (Waterside) on the Liberian side of
the Mano river bridge had also fallen by 11:00, with tens of Liberian
soldiers crossing into Sierra Leone and surrendering to Sierra Leonean
forces based at Gendema on the Sierra Leone side."
14 February: 1,800 Liberian refugees arrived
Thursday in the Sierra Leonean border towns of Gendema and Sulima, fleeing
fighting between rebels and government forces in northern Liberia, the
UNHCR said on Friday. Several thousand more are expected to follow.
Meanwhile, the UNHCR and the World Food Programme (WFP) expressed concern
Friday that a shortfall in funding could interrupt the supply of food to
some 1.2 million African refugees. According to a statement issued by the
two United Nations agencies, the WFP urgently needs 112,000 metric tons of
food worth an estimated $84 million over the next six months to avoid
severe hunger among refugees in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Tanzania, Uganda,
Kenya, Algeria and Sudan.
A Danish press photographer, Jan
Dagø, is the winner of this year's World Press Photo contest prize in the
'General News Stories' category for his reporting from Sierra Leone.
Another Dane, Jan Anders Garup, took second prize in the People in the
News Singles category for his photo "Liberian Refugees in Sierra
Leone." In the 'Portraits Singles' category, Brent Stirton of South
Africa took first place for his photo "Former Bushwife, Sierra
Leone." The jury for year's World Press Photo contest, the 46th,
considered a record 53,597 photos in nine categories, representing the
work of 3,913 professional photographers from 118 countries. A photo of a
boy mourning at his father's gravesite after an earthquake in Iran was
named the 2002 World Press Photo of the Year.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar,
pound sterling and Euro, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling]
Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2150 / 2350. [£] 3100 / 3350. € 2100 /
2300. Commercial Bank: [$] 2150 / 2350. [£] 3150 / 3350. Frandia: [$] 2350
/ 2500 [£] 3400 / 3800. € 2300 / 2400. Continental: [$] 2350 / 2500 [£]
3400 / 3800. € 2200 / 2450. Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2400 / 2450
[£] 3500 / 3600.
13 February: Tens of thousands of Sierra Leonean
civilians were the victims of
often
horrific abuse during the country's decade of civil war. Thousands
suffered mutilations or amputations; thousands more, many of them
children, were abducted by the warring factions and forced to become
combatants, porters or sex slaves. Tens of thousands of women and girls
were the victims of rape or other sexual violence. Millions had to flee
their homes, their villages burnt, their houses looted. Many of the
victims of these atrocities, and some of the perpetrators, are living
outside the country. Now, as the country struggles to come to grips with
its recent past, Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
wants to make sure that their voices are heard. The TRC has posted
statement forms on its website, maintained by the Sierra Leone Web, for
both victims and perpetrators to tell their stories. The reports are
confidential. The TRC was set up in 2002 to create an impartial historical
record of human rights abuses committed during Sierra Leone's civil war,
to address impunity, to respond to the needs of victims, and to prevent a
repetition of the violations and abuses suffered. To ensure
confidentiality, the TRC is requesting that the completed forms be mailed
to the nearest Sierra Leonean diplomatic mission, marked "TRC"
on the left hand corner of the envelope. The statements will then
be sent to the commission by secure diplomatic pouch.
In 1979, Aiah Melvin Ngekia left his
native Sierra Leone for the
United
States where, like many of the young Africans who flock to the West, he
hoped to further his education. For the next two decades he lived in the
Washington, D.C. area, where he studied, married, and supported himself as
a Certified Nursing Assistant and later as a driving instructor. And
although he never completed his university degree, he did earn a number of
educational certificates along the way. But what was important to Ngekia
is that he never lost touch
with his homeland. "I was going back and
forth," he said on Tuesday. "I only stopped going when the war
became intense." This Sunday, Ngekia is going home for good, as the
newly-elected chief of Kono District’s
diamond rich – and war-ravaged
– Kamara
Chiefdom.
12 February: United Nations peacekeepers and Sierra
Leone army troops conducted a joint patrol in Kambia District at the
weekend along the border with Guinea, UNAMSIL said in a statement. UNAMSIL
called the three-day patrol the first significant operation of its kind
involving U.N. and Sierra Leonean troops in that part of the country. The
operation was conducted by a platoon of troops from UNAMSIL's Kenyan
battalion at Masiaka and a platoon from the RSLAF (Republic of Sierra
Leone Armed Forces) Reconnaissance Unit.
Liberian
insurgents have captured the coastal town of Robertsport, close to
Liberia's border with Sierra Leone, the Associated Press reported, quoting
defence officials in Monrovia. LURD rebels reportedly entered the town of
13,000 on Wednesday morning using canoes taken from local fishermen. At talks in
Freetown last weekend, LURD agreed to negotiations with the Liberian
government aimed at ending more than three years of civil strife in their
country.
11 February: Security checkpoints set up along the
Freetown - Bo highway over the weekend were "just a normal
routine," a senior police official told the Sierra Leone Web on
Tuesday. While he acknowledged that part of the reason for the operation
was related to the search for fugitive former junta leader Johnny Paul
Koroma and others wanted for questioning in connection with last month's
armed attack on a military warehouse, the official insisted police had not
received any intelligence reports which would indicate further problems.
"Those checkpoints are set up so we just make checks," he said.
"You know we are investigating certain people that are now at
large." One journalist who returned from Bo on Monday reported
encountering a "significant army checkpoint" east of Waterloo.
"Curiously, the soldiers were wearing green face paint," he
said.
10 February: Long lines formed in front of petrol
stations in Sierra Leone's
capital
over the weekend after a shipment of fuel bound for Freetown failed to
arrive on time. Vice President Solomon Berewa told the Sierra Leone Web
Monday that the delay was caused by the current crisis in the Ivory Coast,
where Sierra Leone obtains its fuel. "It’s just a small hiccup. It’s
cleared already," Berewa said. "There was some delay in the
arrival (due to) this Abidjan problem. They used to get the fuel from
Abidjan in the Ivory Coast. There was a small delay in the arrival of the
fuel. It’s over now." Information Minister Septimus Kaikai said the
government had been informed last week that the fuel tanker ship was on
its way to Freetown. "Then on Saturday (there were) no sales of petrol at the
petrol stations," he said. "But they did indicate on Monday they
would start selling petrol, which they are doing – some of the stations.
As a matter of fact, yesterday some of the stations were already selling
some petrol."
Liberia's Information Minister has
welcomed an agreement by LURD rebels to
meet without preconditions with Liberian government officials for talks
aimed at ending three years of civil strife in their country. The LURD
statement came at the end of three days of talks in the Sierra Leonean
capital Freetown which were mediated by ECOWAS parliamentarians, and
religious leaders and civil society groups. Information Minister Reginald
Goodridge told the BBC that the talks should take place as soon as
possible, "hopefully sooner than a month," in Bamako, Mali.
"This is an elections year; we want reconciliation, our country needs
development," he said. "There would be lots to talk about, and I’m
certain that something positive will come out of these talks."
Fighting in Liberia has spilled over into Sierra Leone in recent months,
resulting in several raids on border villages. Tens of thousands of new
Liberian refugees have sought protection in Sierra Leone since the
beginning of last year.
9 February: Liberia's LURD rebels have dropped
their preconditions for negotiations with the Liberian government which
would seek to bring to an end three years of civil conflict in their
war-torn country, news services reported on Sunday. The agreement came at
the end of three days of talks in Freetown – one day more than
originally planned – which were mediated by ECOWAS parliamentarians,
religious leaders, and civil society groups. Two Liberian senators
represented the government of Charles Taylor. In a communiqué
issued at the end of the talks, LURD pledged to "commit itself to a
peaceful resolution of the crisis within...2003," the Associated
Press reported. The news service said a key stumbling block was removed
when the rebels dropped their demand that President Taylor resign before negotiations
could take place. According to the BBC, LURD pledged it was willing to
engage in dialogue with the Liberian government at any place and time to
be arranged by the ECOWAS parliament, the Inter-Religious Council of
Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, and the international community. The
ECOWAS parliamentarians and LURD delegates also agreed to maintain
dialogue through the Inter-Religious Council. LURD is still demanding that
the Armed Forces of Liberia be restructured "to be a broad spectrum
of the population, with geographic and ethnic balance," LURD
Secretary-General Joe T. Gbalah told the Associated Press. Gbalah, who
headed LURD's five-member delegation, contends that Taylor has packed the
army with loyalists from his former rebel faction, the National Patriotic
Front of Liberia. "LURD does not trust Charles Taylor with the
present structure of the Liberian army," Gbalah said.
One
of the ECOWAS parliamentarians mediating this week's talks between LURD
rebels and Liberian legislators was Nigerian representative Mao Ohua-Bunwa,
the chairman of ECOWAS parliamentary Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence
and Security. In an interview with the Voice of America, Ohua-Bunwa said
the parliamentarians had decided to take the initiative in trying to bring
the warring factions together because "what affects any country
within the sub-region affects the entire sub-region."
"We had to come on a fact-finding mission some time last year and
this is a follow-up mission," he said. "Luckily we have been
able to get the LURD to discuss with the Inter-Religious Council. We want
to talk with them – what are their problems, what are their grievances;
and we look for ways to agree with them on ways to move forward." The
next step, Ohua-Bunwa said, would be to carry the same message to Liberian
leaders in Monrovia. This week's meeting marked the first time that
representatives of LURD have emerged from the bush for talks of any kind.
Ohua-Bunwa said an earlier meeting in Nigeria collapsed when LURD
officials failed to turn up. He said the present initiative, conducted by
ECOWAS parliamentarians with the backing of regional leaders, promised
greater success. "This is the first time the parliamentarians are
coming in," he said. "And you know that parliamentarians are the
representatives of the people. We are the representatives so they are
members of our constituency. So as members of the people, we know how to
get them where we want them." Ohua-Bunwa said the purpose of the
talks in Freetown was to set the stage for future negotiations between the
Liberian government and the rebels. "We want the LURD and the
government to come to a round-table conference so that we can have
peace," he said. He added that if the conflict could not be
contained, "the whole sub-region will be in crisis, and it will not
do us any good."
8 February: Talks in Freetown aimed at bringing an
end to three years of fighting between Liberian government forces and LURD
rebels bogged down Friday over LURD demands that President Charles Taylor
resign and that the country's army be restructured, the Associated Press
reported late Friday. LURD Secretary-General Joe T. Gbalah said he had
presented the group's list of demands to ECOWAS mediators and to two
members of Liberia's parliament. "Charles Taylor must resign, since
he was not fairly elected," he told the news agency. Gbalah also
accused Taylor of packing the Armed Forces of Liberia with loyalists from
his former rebel group, the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL).
"LURD will not feel secure under the present structure, even if they
are offered positions in a transitional government," he said. A
mediator was quoted as saying the
negotiations had "not been easy." The talks are expected to
resume on Saturday.
Half a world distant from his home town of
Yengema, medical researcher Moses J. Bockarie leads a group
of scientists who are closing in on ways to control a debilitating
disease –
an effort which already promises to have
profound public
health implications for his native Sierra Leone. In a research paper published last December in the prestigious
New
England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Bockarie (pictured
left) and his fellow researchers describe their work in rural Papua New
Guinea to combat Lymphatic filariasis, a disfiguring parasitic
infection more widely known as Elephantiasis. Their findings, the
Journal notes, have
important implications for the worldwide effort to
eradicate the disease because they show that by simply administering
four rounds of an annual, single-dose, two-drug mass treatment, an
infection rate as high as 77 percent in some villages could be reduced
to almost nothing. In fact, the researchers found no new infections
after only one round of the treatment. After three rounds, the
transmission rate in even the most severely-affected areas was cut by 97
percent.
7 February: Two police officers who led the January
18 raid on the residence of Johnny Paul
Koroma have been suspended for failing to arrest the former junta leader, police sources said
on Friday. The two, who were suspended with pay, are Assistant
Superintendent A.M. Kamara, of the Operational Support Division, and
Inspector B.P. Lebbie, who is attached to the Criminal Investigations
Division. The police action followed a January 13 armed attack on a
military supply depot in the Freetown suburb of Wellington. Some 20
persons allegedly linked to the incident were detained at Koroma's residence, but Koroma himself was
allowed to escape. A police media source noted that the officers had been
instructed to detain everyone they found at Koroma's residence. Acting
Deputy Inspector-General of Police Brima Acha Kamara told the Sierra Leone
Web it was not clear whether Koroma was allowed to get away "through
negligence or otherwise," but he said the officers had been suspended
pending an investigation into their failure to take the
junta-leader-turned-parliamentarian into custody. "The investigating
team thought they have more questioning to be done and as a result,
pending the full completion of the investigation, they have been
temporarily suspended," he said. 77 people have so far been arrested,
Kamara said. He added that recommendations had been sent to the Director
of Public Prosecutions that some of those currently in detention should be
released.
A five-member delegation from the rebel group
Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) has begun talks
in Freetown with ECOWAS parliamentarians and members of the
Inter-Religious Councils of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, Kelvin Lewis
reported on Friday for Radio France International. The parliamentarians
and religious leaders are hoping to broker peace talks between the rebels
and the Liberian government. The rebel delegation, led by
Secretary-General Joe T. Gbalah, presented the LURD position on Friday
morning. "A communiqué is expected to be issued at the end of the
day (which) is expected to include an agreement (by LURD) to sit around a
table and talk peace with President Taylor," Lewis said. Meanwhile,
United Nations agencies working in Liberia report that Sierra Leonean
refugees and displaced Liberians outside the capital have fled the camps
where they were staying. Militias are reportedly harassing and robbing the
fleeing population of their valuables, and arriving displaced mothers are
reporting missing children, a U.N. spokesman said. The U.N.'s Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said that retreating rebels had
reportedly abducted a number of persons from the town of Cheesemanburg.
6 February: As fighting between LURD rebels and
Liberian government forces continues to rage only 40 miles from the
Liberian capital Monrovia, West African mediators are hoping to broker a
truce between the two sides in Freetown, the Associated Press reported.
The news agency said a LURD delegation arrived in the Sierra Leonean
capital on Thursday for two days of ECOWAS-sponsored negotiations, one day
after Liberian President Charles Taylor urged the rebels to join him for
peace talks, lay down their arms, and form a political party to compete in
next October's elections. LURD Secretary-General Joe T. Gbalah, the leader
of the rebel delegation, told participants that LURD was "prepared
for peace."
Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) has named Franklyn
Bai Kargbo as its permanent
Executive-Secretary, a TRC spokesman told the Sierra Leone Web on
Thursday. Kargbo, a British-educated lawyer, served briefly as Attorney-General and Secretary of State for
Judicial Affairs under the NPRC military regime. Since 2001, he has been Chief of the Human Rights Office for the United Nations peacekeeping
mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE). Kargbo's selection ends a search which
first began in mid-September, but had to be restarted two months later
after flaws were found in the recruitment proces. Kargbo, who holds
degrees from the University of North London, Lincoln's Inn & Council
of Legal Education School of Law and the University of Nottingham, is Head of Chambers for the law firm Kargbo
& Co. He was named Attorney-General and Secretary of State for
Judicial Affairs in July 1993, but resigned a year later. He returned to
Britain, where he received an LL.M degree in Human Rights Law from the University
of Nottingham in 1996. In 1997 and 1998 he was Deputy Director of Public
Prosecutions in the Gambia. Meanwhile, the
Commission finally relocated last week from temporary quarters on Pademba Road to
its permanent offices
at the old Brookfields Hotel, the spokesman said.
President
Kabbah left Freetown for Saudi Arabia shortly after midnight at the
head
of a group of pilgrims bound for the holy city of Mecca, Information
Minister Septimus Kaikai said on Thursday. The trip was made at the
invitation of King Fahd bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud, and will include talks
with Saudi officials. The pilgrimage, or Hajj, is the second for Kabbah, but
the first for a number of those accompanying him, including Foreign
Affairs Minister Momodu Koroma, presidential spokesman Kanji Daramy,
intelligence director Abdulai Mustapha, parliamentarian Ansu Kaikai,
presidential protocol officer Soulay Daramy, and Ambassador to Libya Ambassador Mohamed L.
Samura. Libya reportedly provided a presidential jet to fly the group to
Saudi Arabia. Meanwhile, Al-Bawaba news
reported that Kabbah was met on his arrival at the Red Sea port city of
Jeddah Thursday morning by Jeddah governor Prince Mishal bin Majed bin
Abdulaziz and other officials. Meanwhile, Kaikai said he expected the talks with
Saudi officials to result
in a "tangible result," but he did not elaborate. It was scheduling conflicts, Kaikai said,
which caused President Kabbah to miss
last week's ECOWAS summit in Senegal and this week's African Union (AU)
summit in Ethiopia. Sierra Leone was instead represented in Addis Ababa by
Vice President Solomon Berewa, and by a lower-level official in Dakar.
5 February: Actor and producer Michael Douglas
ended a five-day trip to Sierra
Leone
Wednesday by viewing the remains of weapons surrendered to the United
Nations, and talking to victims of the country's decade-long civil war,
the Associated Press reported. Douglas, who was named a United Nations
"Messenger of Peace" in 1998, is narrating a U.N. film about the
wartime experiences of child soldiers and their reintegration into their
communities. The 58-year old actor arrived in Sierra Leone on Friday, and
spent most of his time in Kono District, which suffered some of the worst
destruction during the country's decade of civil war. "I am impressed
with how many kids are keen on getting back to school, in places really
war-torn," Douglas was quoted as saying.
4 February: Police have made no progress in their
search for fugitive former
junta
leader Johnny Paul Koroma (pictured left) and others being sought for
questioning in connection with last month's armed attack on a military
supply warehouse in Wellington, Acting
Deputy Inspector-General of Police Brima Acha Kamara said on Tuesday. In
telephone interviews with the media shortly after he disappeared last
month, Koroma expressed fears for his safety, and he accused the
government of mounting a "witch hunt" to discredit him. In
an interview with the Sierra Leone Web, Kamara insisted that police would
treat the AFRC chairman turned parliamentarian as "an innocent
person," but he added: "He has to explain. If he gives himself
up we have to pose certain questions to him." Kamara described the police
investigation into last month's attack as "very
transparent." "We have the human rights people coming in
questioning," he said. "It’s not a secretive
investigation." Kamara said Tuesday he did not know how many
people had been arrested in connection with what the authorities have
called "a conspiracy to destabilize the security situation of
the
country," but one source in Freetown put the number at over 70.
Kamara said police were currently turning over evidence to the Law
Officers Department to build a case against some of those detained, while
others not deemed to be directly involved would soon be released.
Meanwhile, police are continuing to urge Koroma to surrender to the
authorities. "We have appealed for him to give himself up," he
said. "He will be treated fairly. This is a different police force we
are having now. We do respect the human rights of people. That is why it’s
better for him to give up than being caught by civilians or other people.
It will be in his own best interest to give himself up to the
authorities." Koroma has not yet been charged with any crime, and
Kamara said the fact that police are offering a ten million leones reward
(about $5,000) for his capture did not mean a presumption of guilt.
"He’s a very important person we want to question," he said.
"We are not only seeking him – we are seeking others equally. But
he is a public figure. He’s very important and we need him."
LURD rebels have captured
two key towns northwest of the Liberian capital, uprooting
Sierra Leonean refugees and displaced Liberians and causing residents to
flee toward the city, news services reported on Tuesday. The Reuters news
agency quoted sources who said the fighting had reached the town of
Cheesemanburg, eleven miles north of Monrovia, while the Associated Press
said government forces were rushing to reinforce their positions at the Po
River Bridge, twelve miles from the outskirts of town. Security forces
were
quoted
as saying that fighting was going on only a few miles beyond the bridge.
The Armed Forces of Liberia has ordered all soldiers to report for duty on
Wednesday, the news service said. According to the BBC, Defence Minister Daniel Chea
(pictured left) acknowledged that the towns of Bopolu
and Tubmanburg had fallen to LURD, but he insisted his forces were massing
for a counter-attack. Tubmanburg, the nearer of the two towns, is 40 miles
from Monrovia.
News services reported seeing jeeps loaded with armed men heading towards
the area. A number of refugee youths have been abducted from camps in
recent weeks, reportedly recruited as combatants. Chea insisted, however,
that there was no cause for panic in the refugee camps.
American-born film actor and producer
Michael Douglas is in Sierra
Leone
this week to narrate a U.N.-sponsored documentary on child soldiers.
Douglas arrived in Freetown on Friday and flew to Kono the following day,
UNAMSIL spokesman Yousef Hamdan told the Sierra Leone Web. The Sierra
Leone documentary is the second in a ten-film collaboration between the
U.N. Department of Public Information and RCN Entertainment. The 58-year
old actor is a vocal proponent of nuclear disarmament and, through his
non-profit Michael Douglas Foundation, has supported some 90 charities and
advocacy groups since its inception in 1991. In 1998, U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan named him a "Messenger of Peace."
Douglas will continue his advocacy work during his five-day visit to
Sierra Leone. "Tomorrow we are going to take him to Hastings in order
to do a public service announcement against arms, and the background for
this will be the destruction of arms," Hamdan said. Since 1969, Douglas has
appeared in or produced some 40 motion pictures, including the films Basic Instinct and Fatal Attraction.
The
United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, has expressed concern about the
continued destruction of shantytowns in Ivory Coast's commercial capital
of Abidjan. "Over the past week, we have received reports of armed
men bursting into at least two poor districts at night, threatening
residents and setting houses on fire," a spokesperson for the agency
said on Tuesday. So far, she added, this had not caused additional
refugees to turn to the UNHCR for assistance, but it has created
displacement among local people and foreign nationals. "In Abidjan,
UNHCR already cares for over 1,000 refugees of mostly Liberian and Sierra
Leonean origin who lost their homes during earlier razing of
shantytowns," she said.
The U.N.'s Special Representative
for Children and Armed Conflict has urged
countries affected by war to take inspiration from Sierra Leone, where a
peace agreement between the government and rebel forces paved the way for
a programme to demobilise and reintegrate about 7,000 former child
soldiers, the U.N. Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) reported
on Tuesday. Olara Otunnu spoke on Friday to West African leaders who
gathered for the ECOWAS summit in Dakar on children and conflict in the
sub-region. As a result of Sierra Leone's programme, Otunnu said, a
national commission on war-affected children was set up. He added that the
Special Court for Sierra Leone, set up to prosecute those guilty of war
crimes in the country, would pay special attention to crimes committed
against children.
Investigators for Sierra
Leone's Special Court will complete their work by June,
Chief
Prosecutor David Crane told residents of Port Loko on Tuesday. Since last
August, Crane and his staff have held town meetings in 11 of Sierra
Leone's 12 districts to explain the court's mandate and to solicit the
views of Sierra Leoneans on how he should proceed in prosecuting those
deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for war crimes. Later this
week, Crane will leave for Europe and North America for talks with senior
government officials and human rights leaders regarding cooperation and
coordination with his office, the court said in a statement. He is
planning additional diplomatic missions for late February and mid-March.
A
Sierra Leonean and three Nigerians are among ten alleged drug traffickers
arrested by Pakistan's Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) during the first two
weeks of this year, the Xinhua news agency reported on Tuesday, quoting
local Pakistani media. Between January 1 and January 15 the ANF also
seized huge quantities of illicit drugs, including 1,043 kg. of charas, 8
kg. of opium and 11 kg. of heroin, an ANF official was quoted as saying.
3 February: The Leone Stars' new coach, Jose
Antonio Nogueira, is looking to
arrange
tough friendly matches to prepare for next month's Nations Cup qualifier
with Morocco, Fajah Barrie reported for the BBC. "I think
Egypt would be a strong opponent, and it will be good for us if we have
them for a friendly in Cairo or Freetown," Nogueira was quoted with
saying. The Leone Stars meet Morocco's Atlas Lions in Freetown on March
29. Locally-based players are scheduled to begin training for that match
on February 10, the BBC said.
2 February: The leaders of 39 countries, including
the president of Sierra Leone, are expected to attend the first summit of
the African
Union (AU), which opens in Addis Ababa this week, conference organisers
told the Reuters news agency. (Sources in Freetown subsequently reported
that President Kabbah would not attend the summit.) The BBC put the number of expected African leaders at "at least
30." The
African Union, the successor to the Organization of African Unity, has 53
member states. African leaders are expected to discuss conflicts on the
continent and the role the AU should play in resolving them, as well as to
look at proposals for creating a common defence policy and pan-African
security council. A discussion of the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD) is also expected to be on the agenda.
1 February: Sweden's international development
agency, SIDA, announced Saturday it would donate 45 million kroner (about
$5.2 million) in humanitarian assistance to relief operations in West
Africa, the Associated Press reported. A third of the amount would go to
help several hundred refugees who fled their homes as a result of the
conflict in the Ivory Coast. The rest of the money will be divided between
Sierra Leone and Liberia.
President Kabbah formally
reopened Sierra Leone's premier tourist hotel Friday
at
a ceremony in the west Freetown suburb of Aberdeen. The once
bullet-scarred Bintumani Hotel had been the victim of war, vandalism and
neglect over the past decade. It was rebuilt by a Chinese company, the
Beijing Urban Construction Corporation. In his address, Kabbah said the
hotel would promote
business and tourism, which in turn would provide the
country with badly-needed foreign exchange and tax revenues. The result,
he said, would be
more jobs and and an increase in the production of local of goods and
services.