30 April
1997: The Sierra Leone embassy in Ethiopia is one of 15 African embassies being
threatened with eviction for arrears in rent. The Agency for the Administration of Rental
Houses, which administers state owned houses in Addis Ababa, said that Sierra Leone,
Tanzania, Equatorial Guinea, and Congo each owe between $314,569 and $166,565. Gabon owes
$423,985, Guinea $348,275, Sudan $331,131, and Niger $302,846. Other countries in arrears
are Mali, Uganda, Chad, Mozambique, Burundi, and Zaire. "Unless they settle their
long-standing arrears in the shortest possible time, the agency will be forced to sever
power, water, and telephone services and later terminate their rent contracts -- which
will be followed by eviction orders," the agency said.Officials of the Central
Medical Stores and police are cracking down on quack doctors and illegal peddlers who sell
expired drugs and offer unprofessional health care to the public. On April 28 and 29 a
special police unit and Central Medical Stores officials raided dozens of small stores in
eastern Freetown. Several boxes of expired drugs were seized and will be burned in public,
according to Chief Pharmacist Bassie Turay. "We figure that this development is
becoming alarming and the vulnerable members of the public may die in the hands of these
quacks," Turay said. "Our operations are not going to be limited to Freetown
alone. If it weren't for the volatile security situation, we would be traversing the
length and breadth of the country, seeking these quacks," he added. It is in the
interior of the country where, because of the destruction of hospitals and the medical
infrastructure, the situation is most serious. During NPRC rule, the government decreed
that drug sellers must obtain licenses and be certified, and laboratory tests were
required to test the quality of all drugs entering the country. This forced unqualified
medical practitioners underground. But the war and the change in government has allowed
them to re-emerge. "I believe this is why the quack doctors are having a field
day," said Sahr Mondeh, senior dispenser in Kono District. "Indeed, medical
costs are high and so most rural people resort to buying drugs from illegal doctors, or
'peppe doctas' as they are called." A police spokesman added, "Today, all they
have to show for their pharmacies are little briefcases which are studded with an
assortment of drugs, many of which are expired anyway. When we arrest them, we confiscate
their drugs and charge them in court. We have dozens of such cases." Chief Pharmacist
Turay explained that regulating the interior presents problems for authorities. "We
don't have the requisite manpower, not to talk of the financial resources," he said.
"Our problems are made even more difficult because of sporadic bursts of violence in
the interior." For now, the authorities are concentrating on Freetown, and relying on
a sensitization campaign over radio and television which shows people dying at the hands
of unqualified doctors, and police raids, trials, and imprisonment of fake doctors.
29 April: Foday Sankoh claimed Tuesday that RUF combatants remain
loyal to him despite attempts to oust him last month. "All RUF combatants are loyal
to me...There is only one command, only one RUF," Sankoh said. "There is no
faction. Only a few criminals trying to cause trouble...To cause problems with the peace
accord for their own selfish aims, because they want money, they want ministerial
posts," he said. These "so-called coup-makers" who include Fayia Musa,
Ibrahim Deen-Jalloh, Mohammed Barrie, and "Captain" Philip Palmer, are being
held at the RUF's stronghold in Kailahun, Sankoh said. He alleged that his ousting was a
conspiracy involving President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, the Sierra Leonean People's Party
(SLPP), and "the so-called coup makers". "These are trouble-makers.
Support? If they had support why would they be arrested?...I will not be responsible for
their fate. We have structures, rules and procedures, a high command, a people's war
council, a people's court." Sankoh denied that he had ordered the execution of
Palmer. "We don't behave like that. We can't just kill people like that. We can't
just arrest people and execute them. They will be tried," he said. Sankoh denied that
he is being detained against his will by the Nigerian government. "I am not in
detention. I can go anywhere I like." He added that he will soon return to Kailahun.
"I am here on a peace accord mission. (Nigerian President) Sani Abacha is the
chairman of ECOWAS (the West African Economic Community) and I am here to brief him on the
peace process," he said. He did not reveal whether he had met with Abacha. Sankoh
said he had nothing to do with a threat faxed from Accra, Ghana on April 20, purportedly
from RUF Major Morris Kallon, saying that the RUF would attack Freetown if Sankoh were not
repatriated within seven days. Sankoh termed the fax "disinformation" and noted
that Kallon barely speaks English, is deep in the Sierra Leone bush, and is nowhere near a
fax machine. "If we wanted to attack anywhere, we would not announce it to
journalists first," he said.
27 April: Nigeria is increasing its contingent of military trainers to
137, according to Lieutenant Colonel Bashiru Conteh, director of training for the Sierra
Leone army. He said 21 trainers arrived in Freetown Saturday, joining a group of 16
Nigerians already in place. 100 more trainers are expected to arrive in May. The trainers
are being deployed under a memorandum of understanding between the two countries known as
the Status of Forces Agreement. Conteh said the team will be headed by a brigadier general
and will also include a one-star general, a colonel, and seven lieutenant colonels.
Personnel of the training team will come from the Nigerian army, the navy, air force,
police, and other security units, Conteh said. Nigerian security personnel are guarding
key installations in Freetown including the external telecommunications facility, the
broadcasting service and television station, as well as State House, and the residence of
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah.
Morocco defeated Sierra Leone by a score of 1 - 0 in a World Cup qualifying match held
in Freetown. Morocco's Bassir Salaheddine scored after a mistake by Sierra Leone defender
Mohammed Kanu. Other scores: (Group 1) Nigeria 2, Burkina Faso 1; Kenya 1, Guinea 0 (Group
2) Egypt 3, Namibia 2; Tunisia 2, Liberia 0 (Group 3) South Africa 2, Zaire 1; Zambia 3,
Congo 0 (Group 4) Cameroon 2, Togo 0; Zimbabwe 0, Angola 0 (Group 5) Ghana 3, Gabon 0.
The Finance Ministry has removed 4,000 "die-man" (ghost) workers from the
government payroll. Eight senior civil servants have been under "indefinite
suspension" since February in connection with the scandal, and 70 mid-level civil
servants face criminal charges. They are all out on $5,000 bail. Officials said the
central bank will soon take over from the treasury the task of issuing salary payments to
civil servants.
25 April: RUF rebels who are holding members of a breakaway movement
hostage denounced the government Friday for abrogating the ceasefire. "Our patriotic
forces have no option but to resume the liberation war," according to a statement
faxed from Ghana by Major Morris Kallon, the RUF special envoy to the Popular War Council.
Kallon called on Nigerian President Sani Abacha "to immediately repatriate"
Foday Sankoh. "So long as Corporal Foday Sankoh is kept in Nigeria against his will
by arch-dictator (General) Sani Abacha, with the active connivance of Kabbah, we view the
peace agreement as not worth the paper it is written on. In other words, it is
abrogated." The statement said that if Sankoh were not released within a week, RUF
rebels would march on Freetown. "Without our leader and commander-in-chief Foday
Sankoh, peace can never return to Sierra Leone. Nothing can abort or derail our march on
Freetown."
24 April: Two key RUF leaders have given themselves up in the past
three days, government sources said Thursday. Timothy Serry, former chief bodyguard to
Foday Sankoh, flew to Freetown from Abidjan on Tuesday. State House sources said it took
"weeks of persuasion" for Serry to give himself up and not face prosecution.
Serry reportedly spent three weeks in the Sierra Leone consulate in Abidjan for security
reasons before flying to Sierra Leone. The second to surrender was identified as Ibrahim
Barrie, a leading escort to Sankoh, who surrendered to tribal leaders on Wednesday.
The human rights group Amnesty International has called for the "safe and
immediate release of hostages" held by a faction of the Revolutionary United Front.
"Hostage taking is totally unacceptable. The taking of hostages and the ill-treatment
of captives violate the fundamental principles of international humanitarian
standards," the group said in a statement released on Thursday. Special presidential
security advisor Sheka Mansaray stated on Thursday that, "We have gone far with
negotiations with the RUF commandos holding them to seek their release." He added
that the RUF hostages "are well...I spoke with (Philip) Palmer last Saturday and he
sounded very cheerful," he said.
23 April: China has supplied Sierra Leone with Lassa Fever drugs to
help combat a growing epidemic of the disease in the eastern province. On Wednesday,
Ambassador Qu Wenming handed 40 cartons of Ribavirini over to Health Minister Mohamed
Turay. Turay said that Sierra Leone had requested "emergency assistance" from
the Chinese Red Cross after a U.S. pharmaceutical company notified the country that it is
phasing out production of the drugs. "It was a dilemma until China stepped in and got
120,000 tubes of Ribavirini from a medical company in Shangai," Turay said. Between
January and March about 239 cases of Lassa Fever were treated in Sierra Leone and 35
patients died.
Eight African countries, including Sierra Leone, will benefit from a $10.2 million
United Nations Development Program (UNDP) grant to develop internet services. To benefit
from the grant, the country will have to provide 50% matching funds. 31 countries
currently have internet access, but most can only access it through foreign service
providers. Only South Africa, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Mauritius, Senegal, Zambia, and
Zimbabwe have full internet access. The other countries covered by the UNDP grant are
Nigeria, Gambia, Burkina Faso, Gabon, Congo, Sao Tome and Principe, and Cape Verde.
Sierra Leone will play Morocco in a World Cup soccer qualifying match on April 27th in
Freetown.
22 April: Hundreds of secondary school students rioted in Makeni on
Sunday and caused heavy damage to the government hospital. The unrest followed the death
of one of their classmates, for which the students blamed medical authorities. The
student, Victor Kanu, had just finished a long distance race in an inter-house sporting
event Saturday when he fainted. He was taken to the government hospital where he showed
signs of recovery, but his condition later deteriorated and he died the following day.
Students damaged the hospital and the nearby residence of a doctor, causing damage
estimated to run to several thousand dollars. A hospital spokesman said that the hospital
will function at about 70 percent of capacity until the damage is repaired.
The Canadian company AmCan Minerals Limited announced Tuesday that it has begun pumping
gravel on its Sandia property. During the first day of operations, the company reported,
it recovered 10 gem quality diamonds with a total weight of over 20 carats. The company
was formed exclusively for diamond and gold mining operations in Sierra Leone.
21 April: Information Minister Abdul Bangura said Monday that Foday
Sankoh is "a guest of the Nigerian government" and that he is not under house
arrest in Nigeria. This counters a claim by the Nigerian High Commission in Freetown which
had claimed that Sankoh was being detained following his arrest in Lagos on weapons
charges. Over the weekend, Sankoh loyalists within the RUF holding a number of
high-ranking RUF hostages and Sierra Leone's ambassador to Guinea, warned that unless
Sankoh were released they would attack Freetown. "How can they say so when dozens of
their colleagues are surrendering to tribal chiefs in the north?" Bangura asked.
19 April: The Sierra Leone government has warned a Revolutionary
United Front group holding a number of hostages that they will be held responsible for the
captives' welfare. The warning came after a seven-day surrender ultimatum passed unheeded.
Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman said, "We are anxious that the abducted men are
released quickly." He added that the ultimatum has been extended indefinitely. He
said the government had been assured by Sam Bockarie, Foday Sankoh's right-hand man, that
the hostages were "safe and sound." "I've warned Bockarie that should any
harm come to the abductees, his group would be held responsible," Norman said.
18 April: Seven prostitutes drowned Tuesday when the small boat that
was carrying them to foreign trawlers capsized in a storm. The incident happened off the
town of Yelibuya. The boat was also carrying traders.
17 April: Sierra Leone and the United Kingdom have signed an agreement
under which British military experts will train two battalions of the Sierra Leone army.
Senior and junior officers, as well as soldiers of other ranks, will receive discipline
and conduct training and receive instruction on the role of the army in a democratic
society. President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, who signed the agreement for Sierra Leone, said
that the training was an indication of London's desire for "sustainable development
and peace" in Sierra Leone. British High Commissioner Peter Penfold, who signed for
the United Kingdom, said that under the terms of the peace accord, former RUF fighters are
entitled to take some of the training slots. Sierra Leone military authorities have not
indicated whether former RUF rebels will take part.
About 400 RUF fighters are now estimated to have surrendered to government troops at
Magburaka, according to journalists, aid workers, and government officials. Government
officials admit that they have lost count, but put the number at nearly 400. "We
don't have the personnel and the logistics to cope," one official said. One rebel
fighter said that hundreds of rebels are sitting idle in RUF camps in the north and south,
in appalling conditions. "We decided to take the risk of giving ourselves up as we
were slowly dying from hunger," another said. "There is hardly any food in the
(rebel) bases and we were just starving." International relief agencies have rushed
food and medicine to Magburaka to head off what one official has termed "an impending
humanitarian disaster." The World Food Programme (WFP) in Freetown said that it is
cleaning up the former Arabic College in Magburaka to house the former combatants.
Rex Diamond Corporation has announced the discovery of several large diamonds in Kono,
including a 28.59 carat octahedron-shaped diamond which, when cut, will be worth an
estimated $100,000. The company has completed the stockpiling of gravel in anticipation of
the delivery of a 30 ton per hour washing plant which will be delivered to Kono in two
weeks. The plant was constructed to specification and tested in South Africa. The total
cost of the project so far has been $1.8 million. Production is expected to begin in early
June. The company also expects to begin production at Tongo Field in 12 months time, after
completion of the infrastructure and mine development.
16 April: 33 civil servants charged with corruption appeared before a
magistrates court in Freetown Wednesday. The accused, mainly mid-level accountants from
the ministries of health, fisheries and marine resources and the treasury, are alleged to
have participated in a "die-man" (ghost employee) scheme which cost the
cash-strapped Sierra Leonean government tens of thousands of dollars. The prosecution,
which is being led by Attorney General Solomon Berewa said the defendants "falsified
the government roll to include people who were not employed by the state and stole
millions of leones from the state coffer from 1994 to 1996." Berewa said that, due to
corruption, the gap between revenues and expenditures has been growing for years.
"Part of this has to do with dishonesty by public officials who operate within a
complex conspiratorial web, particularly in the treasury," he said. Berewa said that,
"Within the scheme, only a fraction of the revenue collected on behalf of government
by individuals was reported." He said that ghost workers were "making the
government keep paying huge sums into the pockets of a few fraudulent individuals."
The government, which has repeatedly blamed corrupt civil servants for its financial
problems, has had difficulty in paying salaries in recent months and is faced with the
threat of strikes.
15 April: More that 100 RUF rebels surrendered to government forces in
Magburaka on Monday and Tuesday. An official of the Sierra Leone Red Cross said the former
combatants "are haggard looking, malnourished and had advanced stages of skin
diseases." A military spokesman said that all RUF members who surrender, who tend to
be teenagers, are given hotel accommodation and relief supplies. Military sources believe
that RUF forces remain in three places: Kailahun in the east, Kangari Hills in the north,
and Bradford in the south. Despite an internal power struggle within the RUF, the security
situation in Sierra Leone is reported to be improving. In the past month, and Interior
Ministry source said, "Incidents of ceasefire violations and ambushes have in fact
drastically reduced. Commuters are travelling daily from and to the interior and
everything is calm."
FIFA, world soccer's governing body, will consider Ghana's protest of their 1-1 tie
with Sierra Leone in a World Cup qualifying match in Freetown on April 5. Sierra Leone
scored the equalizer on a penalty in the 85th minute after a Ghanaian defender was called
for a handball. FIFA will also decide what action to take over two other African games:
Gabon-Morocco, in Libreville, which had to be abandoned in the 55th minute when debris
rained down on the field and fans invaded the pitch, and Nigeria-Guinea, in Lagos, where
five fans were reportedly crushed to death trying to leave the stadium.
14 April: The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) has
stepped up its attacks on the proposed new press bill which will be debated by parliament
on Tuesday. In a statement released on Monday, the SLAJ said the bill "reflects a
slant in favour of political rather than professional interest." SLAJ President Frank
Kposowa accused Information Minister Abdul Thorlu-Bangura of "betraying the
confidence of SLAJ which had the feeling it enjoyed the cooperation with the authorities
to effect the necessary improvement of press laws." Bangura said the bill "is
necessary to bring sanity to the profession and save the trade from being swamped by dead
woods." In an previous interview, Bangura said, "There are many young unseasoned
journalists who didn't go through the right apprenticeship. The older and more experienced
ones are much more reasonable. When dealing with some of our journalists, you have to
treat them like 18-year-olds."
Nord Resources Corp, a 50% owner of Sierra Rutile, said on Monday that its Sierra
Rutile Ltd. unit is negotiating a new financing package for rehabilitation and expansion
programs as well as a restructuring of its existing debt. The company said there is no
guarantee that the negotiations will be successful, but anticipates that the company could
restructure its finances by July 1997. Nord Resources and Sierra Rutile aims to
rehabilitate the company's assets, resume production of rutile, and complete an expansion
program when financing is received.
OAU Secretary-General Salim Ahmed Salim, speaking in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, said
there is hope of resolving the conflict in Sierra Leone.
12 April: The Sierra Leonean parliament will debate a tough new press
bill which would "regulate newspapers, their proprietors and publishers to enhance
the role of journalists with a view to protecting the reputations, rights and freedoms of
other persons." Under the new law, a new independent press council would be
responsible for registering all newspapers and dealing with complaints, including alleged
libel. The law also requires that newspaper editors have 10 years experience, as well as a
degree or diploma in journalism. The local press has termed the proposed law a
"killer bill," and asserts that only 8 of the current 46 newspapers in Freetown
would be likely to survive. According to Attorney-General Solomon Berewa, "Most of
the proposals (in the bill) came from the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ).
We made some embellishments as the profession has to be thought of from a national
perspective." Berewa added, "Like every profession, there must be minimum
academic and professional qualifications, more so to be a journalist, people who are
reporting on events which become the basis on which editors have to write editorial
comments." A senior member of SLAJ explained, "We've been having a lot of quacks
poaching into the profession. They carry briefcases, they have no office, no recognised
location, no staff but yet they publish newspapers libeling people and getting away with
it. We want to stamp that out." However, SLAJ President Frank Kposowa denied Berewa's
assertion that the organisation is supporting the proposed law. "We are not a party
to the killer press bill," he said. "We will resist all attempts to muzzle the
press...We oppose the 10 and 15 years' experience imposed on editors as it was not among
the rules and regulations submitted to the information ministry."
Following is commentary on the proposed press law. Victor Foh, APC parliamentarian: "The
press must not be seen to be muzzled and as a democratic state, there should be a free
press." Joe Conteh, UNPP parliamentarian: "Journalists should forward a
written statement to MPs pointing out all the obnoxious clauses of the bill so that we can
thoroughly scrutinise." Weekly Point newspaper: "Government should
realise that stifling the press by introducing draconian acts and laws for the practice of
journalism will never augur well for this newly found and much cherished democracy."
Pathfinder newspaper: "The press bill is not bad. Journalism is like any other
profession that requires some guidelines. We have no quarrel with these regulations."
Expo Times newspaper: "The bill is set to kill a very large chunk of the
independent press and increase the level of unemployment." Foday Fosky, Weekly
Echo: "This is the worst era for vocal journalists and I believe the frequent
arrests and detentions, raids on newspaper houses and the new press regulations have all
combined to make a mockery of our new democracy." Pan African Association for
Human Rights and Democracy: "The bill is a direct step to muzzle if not censure
the press." Sorie Fofana, Vision: "The SLPP government is hell-bent on
killing the vibrant and independent press in the country by invoking such
conditions." Sheka Tarawali, Spotlight: "The conditions are too hard and
are obviously aimed at shutting down the most vocal papers which publish uncomplimentary
things about the government. They know that some of us cannot meet the requirements."
11 April: Liberian security officials seized a Sierra Leonean naval
vessel Friday in Monrovia after it was found to be carrying drugs. A military spokesman
said seven baskets of marijuana were found in the vessel's hull. The ship had traveled to
Monrovia directly from Freetown, carrying food and other logistical supplies. A Sierra
Leonean naval officer has been detained by ECOMOG military police. His name and rank have
not been disclosed. The military spokesman termed the incident a "major embarrassment."
ECOMOG Field Commander Major-General Victor Malu is quoted as saying, "This is not
the first time that officers have betrayed the confidence (placed in them)." He
advised all ECOMOG troops to shun all acts of indiscipline, saying that all cases of
misdemeanor would continue to be severely punished. The arrested officer claimed that the
baskets were given to him by a woman trader in Freetown who told him that they contained
foo-foo for friends in Monrovia.
Supporters of UNPP leader John Karefa-Smart have demonstrated in Freetown, and
presented a letter to President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, asking him to intervene. Karefa Smart
was suspended from parliament for a year by legislators who accused him of contempt after
he urged the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in London to expel a Sierra Leonean
delegate.
The faction of the Revolutionary United Front loyal to Foday Sankoh has denied
collaborating with the London-based NGO International Alert to derail the peace process.
9 April: Namibia's Minister of Defence has accused the South African
mercenary group Executive Outcomes of recruiting Namibians to undergo training in Sierra
Leone in order to destabilize Namibia. Phillemon Malima told the National Assembly on
Tuesday that the training was being conducted from Angola, and that members of South
Africa's former West Africa Territory Force (SWATF) were preparing to destabilize Namibia.
On April 3, some members of the group threatened "suicide attacks" and
"bombs" within ten days unless their pensions were paid. The Namibian government
has rejected the ultimatums. Executive Outcomes left Sierra Leone in February, and has
denied any involvement in Namibia. "The corporation strongly condemns and indeed
resists such activities on the continent of Africa and elsewhere," the company said
in a statement released in Pretoria, South Africa.
8 April: The United Nations Human Rights Commission will continue to
privately monitor gross violations in five countries including Sierra Leone, according to
a U.N. statement released Tuesday. The decision was taken by the 53 member commission
behind closed doors Monday. 11 other countries were dropped from the list. The other four
countries under scrutiny are Saudi Arabia, Chad, Gambia and Kyrgyzstan.
The Secretary-General of the London-based NGO International Alert has termed the Sierra
Leone government's decision to cut relations "extremely unfortunate." Kumar
Rupesinghe termed as "complete nonsense" the government's claim that the
organisation had provided communications equipment to Foday Sankoh. "During the peace
process we assisted communication. For example we were taking messages from one side to
the other, from the RUF to the government, etc. We have not provided any equipment
whatsoever," he said. He also denied that International Alert had played any role in
the coup against Sankoh within the RUF, saying that IA believed "that any attempt to
fragment the RUF is dangerous and it could lead to a Liberian situation." Rupesinghe
stated that both the Sierra Leone government and the RUF had acknowledged with gratitude
IA's role in the peace process. "We now have no operations on the ground (in Sierra
Leone)," he added.
7 April: John Karefa-Smart, head of the United National People's Party
(UNPP) has been suspended from parliament for one year and stripped of his parliamentary
privileges and immunities. Legislators accused Karefa-Smart of contempt after he urged a
meeting of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in London to expel a Sierra Leonean
delegate. This is the first time in history that a Sierra Leonean legislator has been
suspended from parliament.
Sierra Leone's high court has granted bail to three Expo Times editors arrested March
19 on charges of espionage. Bail was set at Le 10 million each for Ibrahim
Seaga Shaw,
Charles Roberts, and Gibril Koroma. The three are accused of obtaining "secret
official documents or extracts containing secret military information which might be used
directly or indirectly by an enemy against the state." If convicted, they face up to
15 years in prison. The case has been adjourned until April 15.
The Sierra Leone government has severed ties with the London-based conflict mediation
group International Alert, and declared its representative in Freetown,
Akyaaba Addai-Sebo, persona
non grata. Presidential Peace Advisor Sheka Mansaray gave no reasons beyond citing the
group's "negative role and influence," but diplomatic sources indicate that the
group gave communications equipment to Foday Sankoh which allowed him to contact RUF
rebels in the bush and to announce that he is still in control of the RUF. "Sankoh's
interviews have embarrassed the Nigerian authorities," a diplomat said. International
Alert played a prominent part in the negotiations between the government and the RUF which
led to the peace accord signed last November.
6 April: Sierra Leone and Ghana drew 1-1 Saturday in their second
round World Cup qualifying match held in Freetown. Ghana's score came in the 23rd minute
on an own goal scored by defender Abubakar Kamara. Sierra Leone equalized in the 88th
minute when Lamin Kamara scored on a penalty shot. The game was played before a crowd of
70,000. Other scores: (Group 1) Nigeria 2, Guinea 1; Kenya 4, Burkina Faso 3; (Group 2)
Liberia 1, Egypt 0; Namibia 1, Tunisia 2; (Group 3) Congo 2, South Africa 0; (Group 4)
Angola 3, Togo 1; Cameroon 1, Zimbabwe 0; (Group 5) Morocco 4, Gabon 0; Zaire 2, Zambia 2.
5 April: Foday Sankoh Friday accused the Sierra Leone government of
plotting to overthrow him, and said that the plan to oust him as RUF leader was
"hatched" by President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. Sankoh's charges were rejected by
Presidential Adviser on Peace Sheka Mansaray, who termed them ludicrous and baseless.
"The Sierra Leone government would never undertake such a venture, he said." He
said that the kidnapped members of the Commission for the Consolidation of Peace were only
interested in advancing the peace process, after "so much life had been lost and
massive destruction done to their motherland...There was no question of our urging them to
overthrow Sankoh or promises of ministerial posts and directors of parastatals."
There was no word about the fate of the seven senior RUF officials and Sierra Leone's
ambassador to Guinea, who were abducted at Nongowa in Kailahun District last week by RUF
field commanders loyal to Sankoh. It is believed that Ambassador Mohamed Diaby, who before
his diplomatic appointment six years ago was Commander of the Sierra Leone Navy, will be
used as a bargaining chip for Sankoh's release from Nigeria where he is being held on
weapons charges. In a rally in Freetown on Thursday, President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah said he
is "prepared to beg Nigeria to free Sankoh in the interest of peace in the
country."
4 April: The World Food Programme is to open a regional office in
Ivory Coast to serve West Africa, with special emphasis on Sierra Leone, Liberia, and
Guinea.
3 April: United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Wednesday
that U.N. observers would be deployed in Sierra Leone as soon as the United Nations can
secure the consent of the Revolutionary United Front. "I am aware of the change in
the leadership of RUF and my special representative in Sierra Leone is in touch with the
new leadership," Annan said. "We have indicated that when the new leadership is
established our military experts will brief them on our operational concept and the plans
we had in mind for the implementation of the peace process and we will move ahead with the
deployment." Lack of consent to the operation has delayed the implementation of the
peace agreement signed between the government and the RUF in November.
RUF leaders loyal to Foday Sankoh have called for his immediate release from detention
in Nigeria. Vice President Joe Demby, Attorney General Solomon Berewa, and Presidential
Peace Advisor Sheka Mansaray travelled on Wednesday to Nigeria, where they met with
Nigerian leader Abacha and other senior government officials. The subject of the talks was
not disclosed, but Mansaray said that the government in Freetown is in contact
"directly and indirectly" with RUF bases in eastern Sierra Leone. The government
is "trying to persuade the abductors to release the men as the method is not
conducive to the peace process," Mansaray said. Sierra Leone's ambassador to Guinea,
Mohammed Diaby, is reported to be safe. Two of the RUF members captured, Fayia Musa and
Ibrahim Deen-Jalloh, are reported to be on trial in an RUF people's court for
"plotting to overthrow the lawfully constituted authority" of Foday Sankoh. The
two are delegates to the Commission for the Consolidation for Peace, which was set up
under the Abidjan peace accord. Fears have been expressed about the fate of Captain Philip
Palmer, who signed the announcement of the coup against Sankoh and who was part of the
group captured by the hardliners. "My fear is that they have killed Palmer,"
Alieu Mustapha, spokesman for the breakaway group, said Wednesday in Freetown. "He
knew all the RUF's secrets. He did all Sankoh's little jobs. Sankoh would not hesitate to
order his execution," he said.
Sierra Leone will play Ghana in Freetown on Saturday in a World Cup qualifying match.
Other matches to be played from April 5th to 9th in Africa are Nigeria vs. Guinea (Lagos);
Kenya vs. Burkina Faso (Nairobi); Liberia vs. Egypt (Accra); Namibia vs. Tunisia
(Windhoek); Congo vs. South Africa (Pointe-Noire); Zaire vs. Zambia (Harare); Cameroon vs.
Zimbabwe (Yaounde); Angola vs. Togo (Luanda); and Gabon vs. Morocco (Libreville)
2 April: Three Expo Times journalists were denied bail for a
third time Wednesday, and have been returned to Pademba Bay Road Prison. Magistrate Naomi
Tunis adjourned further hearings until Friday. The three are facing four counts of spying
and possession of a military document which the prosecution maintains would be useful to
an enemy or to the Revolutionary United Front. Justice ministry officials say the case
will be transferred shortly to the high court where the accused will be tried in secret
because the documents allegedly concern state security. The Sierra Leone Association of
Journalists (SLAJ), in a press release signed by over 35 editors and addressed to
President Tejan Kabbah, has pleaded for the three editors to be freed.
RUF Commander Morris Kallon, in a written statement, said the rebels are still loyal to
Foday Sankoh, and branded those who announced his ouster last month as traitors. Sankoh
"remains the leader and commander-in-chief of the RUF and is the only person who can
either disarm or order us to lay down our arms because he gave us these arms," the
statement said. The group who announced his ouster "are renegades, treacherous and as
such a danger to society," he said. Kallon disputed reports that seven senior RUF
officials, along with Sierra Leone's ambassador to Guinea, had been abducted. "They
have not been kidnapped but simply arrested for plotting to overthrow the lawfully
constituted authority of our leader...These rebels will soon be arraigned before a special
military court which will try them under the military Court of Justice." Mohamed
Diaby, Sierra Leone's ambassador to Guinea, "was captured by our gallant commandos
after a fierce gun battle during which the armed column he was leading to launch an attack
on our positions fell into an ambush." The statement said that 11 members of the
"Freetown armed gang" and two RUF fighters were killed. The faxed statement
purported to come from the RUF stronghold in Kailahun, but bore an Accra, Ghana telephone
number.
1 April: The United Nations has appealed for $68.2 million in
humanitarian aid for Sierra Leone. The funds, which would cover the period from March 1997
to February 1998, would be used to promote the consolidation of peace and to assist the
affected population in becoming self-sufficient. The assistance will include food aid,
designed to assist the resettlement of those who have been displaced or impoverished by
the war, as well as nutritional supplements, vaccines, and educational services for
displaced children. The appeal covers the programmes of several U.N. agencies, including
the World Food Programme, the U.N. Children's Fund, the U.N. Development Programme and the
World Health Organisation. The aid would provide a foundation for the Sierra Leone
government's National Resettlement, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Program.