31 May 2002: The Sierra Leone Bar Association had
decided to challenge the swearing-in Monday of Eke Ahmed Halloway as
Justice Minister and Attorney-General, saying that his assumption of
office without parliamentary approval "raises serious constitutional
issues." In a press release issued following Thursday's
emergency general meeting, the Bar Association said it would immediately
institute an action in the Supreme Court "to test the
constitutionality of the procedure adopted by the president in
effectuating
the said appointment by way of an interpretation of inter alia
Sections 56,
57 and 64 of the 1991 Constitution." In a subsequent letter to the
Sierra Leone Web, Bar Association Secretary-General Yada Williams said
over 90 percent of the association's members felt the government's action
in swearing-in Halloway without parliamentary approval was
unconstitutional. "We are pursuing the matter in the Supreme Court
because this will create a dangerous precedent if left unchallenged,"
Williams wrote. "Of course, the Attorney-General will have to step
down if the Supreme Court rules in our favour. That will, however, not be
a bar to him going through the proper procedure — parliamentary
scrutiny, etc."
Sierra Leone's Permanent Representative to the United
Nations called on the
U.N.
Security Council Friday to be pro-active in addressing crises around the
world "before they escalate and become too complex and expensive to
manage or resolve." Ambassador Ibrahim M'baba Kamara cited in
particular the current strife in Liberia "and its consequences for
peace and stability in the Mano River Union sub-region." The
ambassador praised the United Nations for its role in supporting Sierra
Leone's just-concluded presidential and parliamentary polls, noting that
the Council's call for free, fair and transparent elections would have
been "meaningless" if UNAMSIL had not been authorised to provide
the necessary logistical support to Sierra Leone's National Electoral
Commission. "The next challenge is the sustained effort of the
international community to achieve the shared objective of sustainable
peace and security in Sierra Leone," Kamara said.
Sierra Leone's Mission to the United Nations was the
victim of vandals Thursday, when someone stole the Sierra Leonean flag
flying in front of its midtown Manhattan offices. The metal "Permanent Mission of Sierra Leone to the United
Nations" plate with Sierra Leone's engraved national insignia was
also taken. The thefts followed an incident last week where the United Nations flag was stolen
from in front of the mission. "We don't know whether both were acts
of vandalism or petty robbery, but it is a matter of concern," said
Ambassador Sylvester Rowe, the Deputy Permanent Representative for
Political Affairs. He added that the second incident had been reported to New
York police.
30 May: The Sierra Leone Bar Association was preparing to meet
in emergency session Thursday afternoon on the question of whether the
government acted constitutionally this week when it swore in Eke Ahmed
Halloway as the country's new Minister of Justice and Attorney-General.
"We are going to discuss the question of whether it’s
constitutional for him to take the oath of office without first obtaining
parliamentary approval," former Bar Association secretary-general Abdul
Tejan-Cole
told the Sierra Leone Web. Tejan-Cole is also interim director of the
civil society group Campaign for Good Governance (CGG), which issued a
press release Thursday questioning the constitutionality of the move.
Under Sierra Leone's constitution, the posts of Attorney-General and
Minister of Justice are indivisible. The CGG cited Section 56 of the
constitution which requires parliamentary approval for all cabinet
nominations. The government cited Article 64 in making its case for
swearing in the Justice Minister and Attorney-General without
parliamentary approval. Sierra Leone's
newly-elected parliament will not
convene until June 14. Tejan-Cole said the Bar Association could decide to
take the matter to the Supreme Court "for the Supreme Court to
interpret the provisions to determine whether we are right."
29 May: 19 paramount chiefs have been nominated for the 12
parliamentary
seats
reserved for Sierra Leone's traditional leaders, Radio UNAMSIL reported. Six of the nominees — P.C. Abu Mbawa Kongoba II (pictured
left) of Mafindor Chiefdom in Kono District, P.C. Sahr Francis Kabba-Sei
II of Penguia Chiefdom in Kailahun District, P.C. Samba Bindi Hindowa V of
Badgia Chiefdom in Bo District, P.C. Charles Caulker of Bumpe Chiefdom in
Moyamba District, P.C. Brima Victor C.D. Kebbie III of Malen Chiefdom in
Pujehun District and P.C. Sama Lamina Sam II of Loko Massama Chiefdom in
Port Loko District — were unopposed, and thus under Sierra Leone's
Electoral Laws Act (Article 34) were declared duly elected by the National
Electoral Commission. The other six seats will be filled in an election on
June 10. Nominees are: Bombali District: P.C. Kandeh Luseni III of Sella
Limba Chiefdom and P.C. Massa Yalie Tham II of Makari Gbanti Chiefdom;
Koinadugu District: P.C. Alhaji Alimamy Lahai Mansaray of Dembelia Sinkunia
Chiefdom and P.C. Sheku Magba Koroma III of Diang Chiefdom; Tonkolili
District: P.C. Bai Kurr Kana Gabro Sanka III of Kunike Chiefdom and P.C.
Bai Sunthuba Osara III of Gbonkolenken Chiefdom; Kambia District: P.C.
Bai Kelfa Sankoh II of Mansogbala Chiefdom and P.C. Bai Shebura Sumano
Kapen III of Mambolo Chiefdom; Bonthe District: P.C. Samuel Murana Koroma
of Bendu Cha Chiefdom and P.C. Madam Margaret Thompson Seibureh of Bum
Chiefdom; and Kenema District: P.C. Madam Mamie G. Gamanga of Simbaru
Chiefdom, P.C. Sally Satta Gendemeh of Malegohun Chiefdom and P.C. Alhaji
Amara Jobo Goway - Sama V of Tunkia Chiefdom.
Liberian soldiers are demanding money from refugees before allowing
them to
cross
the Dar-es-Salaam border crossing point to safety in Sierra Leone,
Liberian refugees told UNAMSIL force commander Lieutenant-General Daniel
Opande. Opande, who visited the eastern border area on Tuesday, listened
as some of the refugees related that they had fled their homes after
soldiers warned them of impending attacks by rebels. The Liberian
government claims it is locked in a defensive struggle with armed
dissidents backed by Guinea. Some Western sources, however, say the rebel
threat has been exaggerated in an attempt to get the United Nations to
lift sanctions, first imposed a year ago for Liberia's alleged support for
Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, and for its involvement in the illegal
arms-for-diamonds trade. The sanctions were renewed last month. Opande
then crossed the Mano River Bridge to the Liberian town of Bo Waterside
for a meeting with Liberian Defence Minister Daniel Chea. According to a
U.N. statement, he stressed that UNAMSIL, in collaboration with the Sierra
Leonean army, was doing everything in its power to police the Sierra
Leonean side of the border. "Peace in one of the Mano River Union
countries without peace in the others is no peace at all," Opande was
quoted as saying.
The trial of jailed RUF leader Foday Sankoh and 49 co-defendants was
moved to Sierra Leone's High Court Wednesday after High Court Justice
Patrick Hamilton accepted defence arguments that the severity of the
charges warranted the transfer from Magistrate's Court, Associated Press
correspondent Clarence Roy-Macaulay reported. Sankoh and the others face
70 counts of murder, attempted murder and related charges stemming from a
May 2000 incident at his Freetown residence, when his bodyguards opened
fire on a crowd of demonstrators in front of his residence. More than 20
persons died as a result. The defence also argued that the Magistrate's
Court did not have room to accommodate the large number of defendants.
Preliminary hearings began in Magistrate's Court on March 4. The former
rebel leader has denied all charges, but he has yet to enter a formal
plea. Justice Hamilton set the trial date for June 5. If convicted under
Sierra Leonean law, Sankoh could face the death penalty. It is widely
expected, however, that his case will be transferred to the Special Court,
a tribunal set up jointly by the United Nations and the Sierra Leone
government to prosecute a handful of persons deemed to bear the greatest
responsibility for war crimes committed in Sierra Leone since the end of
1996. The Special Court, which has precedence over Sierra Leonean courts,
does not have the death penalty. Meanwhile, in an interview subsequently
broadcast on the BBC, Sankoh's Nigerian lawyer welcomed the decision to
transfer the case to the High Court. "It is a matter we have pursued
vigorously both in the attorney-general’s office and even the UNAMSIL,
that the matter should be taken to High Court," Edo Okanya told BBC
correspondent Lansana Fofana. "Otherwise we waste too much time in
the preliminary inquiries in the Magistrates’ Court. And then there
might be a way that I will be moving to London by next week to liaise with
the other lawyers who are coming to join me to make a formidable defence
team." Okanya insisted he would pursue the case in the High Court
"to its logical conclusion."
28 May: The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said Monday
it was concerned for the safety of Sierra Leonean refugees in Liberia, who
are in danger of being cut off by fighting between Liberian security
forces and armed LURD dissidents. According to a UNHCR statement, last
week's fighting in Gbah and Medina has cut the road the main roads to the
Liberian capital and stranded some 11,000 Sierra Leoneans and 8,000
displaced Liberians sheltering at the two refugee camps in Sinje. Aid
workers have been unable to reach the camps for the past two weeks, the
statement said. UNHCR spokesperson Delphine Marie, in a statement
broadcast Tuesday by the Voice of America, said the Sinje camps were of
particular concern. "It is specifically that one that is causing
problems because the road has been cut off by fighting for two weeks
now," she said. "We have no access to the camp. We cannot
deliver any aid. We only have radio contact with the refugee
leaders." She said that refugees had begun to panic as the fighting
moved closer to the camps. The deteriorating security situation means that
land repatriations to Sierra Leone, which were to resume following this
month's presidential and parliamentary elections, have had to be put on
hold. Meanwhile, the UNHCR is making plans to charter a ship to repatriate
the Sierra Leoneans by sea. The ship, which has the ability to return just
200 people a week, would be a temporary measure pending the reopening of
the Monrovia - Sierra Leone. "Hopefully, we should have a solution in
the next few days to hire a boat from Guinea that would come to Monrovia
and then to Monrovia to Freetown and return," Marie said. "But
that would only be one boat per week and, of course, [they are] much less
productive than the land convoys." The UNHCR says there are 39,000
Sierra Leonean refugees in six camps in Liberia, plus an estimated 15,000
refugees outside the camps. About 18,000 Sierra Leonean refugees have
returned home since the beginning of the year.
Britain formally announced Tuesday a contribution of
$500,000 for
Sierra
Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).
In a statement released in London, Baroness Amos (pictured left), the
Foreign Office's Minister for Africa, noted the TRC's role in promoting a
healing process in Sierra Leone by building long-term reconciliation.
"(Britain's) commitment has helped the Government of Sierra Leone
secure peace," she said. "But this is just a beginning. We must
build on our success, and together work hard to ensure that Sierra Leone
does not falter through lack of resources." Today's contribution had
already been mentioned in statements from the TRC's interim secretariat.
It comes on top of a $365,000 British donation in January 2000 which went
to fund preparatory work in setting up the Commission. Baroness Amos
observed that donor response to funding
the TRC had thus far been
hesitant, and she expressed hope that other donors would now step forward.
Last week the United States announced a similar donation, but a diplomatic
source warned that the U.S. was uncomfortable with the TRC's $9.6 million
price tag. Pointing to the Special Court, which saw its proposed budget
slashed from $114 million to $58 million, he suggested there might be some
areas of the TRC where costs could be cut. A UNAMSIL source noted that the
Special Court budget was reduced when it was decided to eliminate the
second chamber. "If they have to respect U.N. scales, the TRC as a
totally independent body will not have to apply U.N. rules," he said,
adding: "The TRC budget is quite realistic and shortage in funds will
mean that they will have to considerably reduce the number of staff."
27 May: Amid the furor in Freetown over the results of the May
10 special vote which suggested that military voters had thrown their
support in large numbers to the former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul
Koroma, President Kabbah has assured Sierra Leone's soldiers that he does
not doubt their loyalty, Voice of America correspondent Kelvin Lewis
reported. Members of the military, police and other security forces, along
with persons who were directly involved in conducting the elections, cast
their ballots four days before the rest of the country went to the polls.
The results were supposed to have been combined with the election day
results. Instead, they were reported separately, drawing the ire of those
who voted on the Special Polling Day and expressions of concern from the
international community that the right of some citizens to cast their
votes in secret had been compromised. "The president told the
soldiers
that
he does not doubt their loyalty, even though they did not vote for
him," Lewis said. "The president called on the officers to
dialogue with their superiors and go directly to him if their problems
were not solved. He assured them of his fullest cooperation as their
commander and chief." In an interview with BBC correspondent
Josephine Hazeley, Kabbah (pictured left) said he addressed the country's
soldiers Wednesday in Freetown, Makeni, Yengema and Kenema. "I spoke
to them frankly and openly," he said. "The choice of the
exercise by the soldiers to vote is not a matter for me to question.
Everybody has a constitutional right to vote for whoever you want."
Kabbah said that some persons had made what he described as
"unrealistic promises" to the solders to persuade them not to
vote for his Sierra Leone People's Party. "I explained to them that
some of those promises that were made were unrealistic, and they
understood," he said. "But
what
really bothered me, why I went and spoke to them, is that these soldiers
have been trained at considerable cost, and the people were getting a bit
angry with them, the soldiers. So I think things are normal."
Meanwhile, Ernest Bai Koroma (lower left), the presidential candidate of
the opposition All People's Congress, also played down suggestions that
the military's support for Johnny Paul Koroma, himself a former military
officer, was cause for concern. "I don’t believe it is a threat to
our peace," he said. "It was an expression, the wish of the
military. But if at the end of the day that the totality of the Sierra
Leoneans are saying otherwise, then by all means I think we have to move
forward in the manner in which the majority of the people are
thinking."
Greek police detained 43 illegal immigrants, including an undisclosed
number of Sierra Leoneans, when they stopped and searched a truck outside
Athens Sunday, the Associated Press reported. The police said they
believed the would-be immigrants had travelled by boat from neighbouring
Turkey where they had been transferred to a truck to be taken to the Greek
capital. Many illegal immigrants from Africa discard their documents and
claim to be Sierra Leoneans in the hope of receiving a more favourable
consideration of their asylum requests because of the country's decade
long civil war.
The Pakistani government says it has begun the process of recalling
some 4,000 soldiers from peacekeeping duties in Sierra Leone as relations
with neighbouring India continue to deteriorate, the Reuters news agency
reported from Islamabad. UNAMSIL spokesman Margaret Novicki told the
Sierra Leone Web late Monday that while there had been some communication
between Pakistani government officials and U.N. headquarters in New York,
she was unaware that any decision by Pakistan to withdraw its troops had
been reached.
24 May: The United States will contribute $500,000 for Sierra
Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), a diplomatic source
told the Sierra Leone Web. He said the U.S. State Department informed
Congress on May 15 of its intent to donate the funds, and that the
notification had now cleared Congress without comment. The money comes on
top of a $500,000 pledge from Britain, with Sweden reportedly planning to
contribute $200,000 as well. But the source expressed skepticism over the
TRC's published budget of $9.6 million for its twelve months of
operations. "While the cheque is being written, we are going to look
closely at the TRC’s budget to see if there are some economies that can
be realised," he said, adding: "Potential donors will be
reviewing the budget same as they did with the Special Court." He
pointed out that the court's original $114 million budget request was eventually
scaled back to $58 million.
The commander of the United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra Leone,
Lieutenant-General
Daniel Opande, has warned against complacency in Sierra Leone's peace
process. "Peace is still fragile here in this country," Opande
told BBC reporter Tom McKinley. "One cannot say that we have
everything behind us. Let’s say the worst is perhaps behind us, but the
peace that is reigning here needs to be built upon and to be strengthened.
Fires can still be lit, and they can burn."
Convoys carrying Liberian refugees across the border to Sierra Leone
resumed on Wednesday following a two-week suspension during Sierra Leone's
presidential and parliamentary elections, a spokesman for the United
Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said in Geneva. Although the border between
the two countries remains officially closed, Liberian refugees seeking to
escape fighting in their country have been allowed to cross. The Liberians
are being transported to existing refugee camps around Zimmi, Kenema and
Kailahun. So far, some 15,000 refugees have been relocated to various
sites away from the border since fighting in Liberia escalated earlier
this year. Another 9,000 are thought to be staying in border villages.
Another 5,000 people are displaced in the adjacent Porkpaa District of
Liberia and may be heading for the border, the spokesman said
23 May: President Kabbah flew to Conakry Thursday to discuss
the latest
fighting
in Liberia with Guinean President Lansana Conte. In a press conference on
Sunday, Kabbah told reporters in Freetown that Liberian President Charles
Taylor had asked him to intercede with Conte, whom Taylor accuses of
backing Liberian insurgents in northwestern Liberia. "I hope that now
this situation is behind us we can spend some more time thinking on this
how best to get the two of them together, President Taylor and President
Conte," Kabbah said. According to the Associated Press, Kabbah met
for over an hour with Conte
Thursday before returning to Freetown. On Monday, Liberian Information
Minister Reginald Goodridge (right) rejected an ECOWAS appeal for negotiations
between the Liberian government and the LURD rebels fighting to overthrow
President Taylor, saying it was "the policy of most democratic
governments in the world not to negotiate with terrorists." But
Kabbah left little doubt Sunday what his advice to the Liberians would be.
"Even up to the time we met in Morocco (for the Mano River Union
summit) I suggested that he should talk to the rebels just the way we did
in Sierra Leone," Kabbah said. "I also reminded him that he was
one of those who at that time when we were discussing the peace process
suggested strongly that I should talk to the rebels. But as of two weeks
ago when we met in Morocco he was still hesitant."
Pakistan is considering the possibility of pulling its
troops out of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Sierra Leone as relations
continue to deteriorate with neighbouring India, the Associated Press
reported on Thursday from the Pakistani capital Islamabad. "This is
one of the many options," an official was quoted as saying. "We
are also considering recalling 500,000 reserve soldiers and officers to
face any situation in the event of a war with India." Pakistani
battalions are deployed in the sensitive eastern part of Sierra Leone, in
the former rebel-held districts of Kono and Kailahun.
22 May: Only six of 22 ministers have kept their former cabinet
posts amid sweeping changes announced late Tuesday by President Kabbah,
two days after he took the oath of office for a second presidential term.
Dr. Alpha T. Wurie will remain as Minister of Education, Science and
Technology; Mohamed Swarray Deen as Minister of Mineral Resources; Alpha
O. Timbo as Minister of Labour, Industrial Relations and Social Security;
Dr. Alfred Bobson Sesay as Minister of Country Planning, Forestry and the
Environment, and Shirley Gbujama Minister of Social Welfare, Gender and
Children’s Affairs. Okere Adams retains his Marine Resources post, but
the agriculture portfolio has been spun off as a separate Ministry of
Agriculture and Food Security to be headed by agriculturalist Dr. Sama
Sahr Mondeh. Kabbah himself keeps the portfolio of Defence Minister.
Meanwhile, lawyer Eke A. Halloway takes over as Justice Minister and
Attorney-General from Solomon Berewa who was sworn in Sunday as vice
president, while former Minister of State for Presidential Affairs Momodu Koroma replaces Dr. Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya as
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. Joseph B. Dauda
moves from Local Government and Rural Development to Finance, replacing
Peter Jiwa Kuyembeh, and former Deputy Finance Minister Mohamed B. Daramy
takes over as Minister of Development and Economic Planning from Dr. Kadi
Sesay, who becomes Minister of Trade and Industry. Former Deputy Defence
Minister Sam Hinga Norman is the new Minister of the Interior. At the
Ministry of Health and Sanitation, Dr. Agnes Taylor-Lewis takes over from
Dr. Ibrahim I. Tejan-Jalloh. Emmanuel O. Grant, who served in a previous
cabinet as Minister of Works and Technical Maintenance, is the new
Minister of Energy and Power, replacing Dr. Chernor Jalloh, who moves to
head the Ministry of Tourism and Culture. SLPP secretary-general Dr.
Prince A. Harding, who entered the cabinet as Interior Minister earlier
this year, takes over as Minister of Transport and Communications. Dr.
Caiser J. Boima was named Minister of Works, Housing and Technical
Maintenance, Sidikie Brima as Minister of Local Government and Community
Development and one-time Minister of Information and Broadcasting George
Banda Thomas is now
Minister of Parliamentary and Political Affairs. Presidential
spokesman Septimus Kaikai replaces Dr. Cecil Blake as Minister of
Information and Broadcasting. Dr. Dennis Bright was named to head the new
Ministry of Youth and Sports, and Morikeh Fofana will be Minister of
Public Affairs. All the posts reportedly went to supporters
of Kabbah's Sierra Leone People's Party, which won a landslide victory in
last week's parliamentary elections, ending a series of so-called
"inclusive" cabinets which featured
members of the
opposition in key ministries. The cabinet must still be approved
by parliament, which convenes on June 14.
MINISTERS OF STATE: Foday Yumkella (Presidential Affairs), S.U.M. Jah
(South), Dennis Sankoh (North), Sahr Randolph Fillie-Faboe (East).
DEPUTY MINISTERS: Dr. Mohamed Kamara (Foreign Affairs and International
Cooperation), Theresa Koroma (Trade and Industry), Pascal Egbenda
(Transport and Communications), Abass Collier and Martin Banya (Education,
Science and Technology), Ibrahim Sesay (Development and Economic
Planning), Francis Ngebeh (Agriculture and Food Security), Ibrahim Sesay (Health
and Sanitation), Sia Ngougou (Works, Housing and Technical Maintenance),
Memuna Koroma (Social Welfare, Gender and Children's Affairs), Joe Kallon
(Labour, Industrial Relations and Social Security), Morlia Bai Kamara
(Marine Resources).
NEW FACES: Dr. Dennis Bright (Youth and Sport), Dr. Caiser J. Boima
(Works, Housing and Technical Maintenance), Eke A. Halloway (Justice and
Attorney-General), Emmanuel O. Grant (Energy and Power), George Banda
Thomas (Parliamentary and Political Affairs), Dr. Sama Sahr Mondeh
(Agriculture and Food Security), Dr. Agnes Taylor-Lewis (Health and
Sanitation), Memuna Koroma (Deputy - Social Welfare, Gender and Children's
Affairs), Martin Banya (Education, Science and Technology), Ibrahim Sesay
(Deputy - Development and Economic Planning), Ibrahim Sesay (Deputy -
Health and Sanitation), Pascal Egbenda (Deputy - Agriculture and Food
Security), Francis Ngebeh (Deputy - Transport and Communications), Joe
Kallon (Deputy - Labour, Industrial Relations and Social Security), Morlai
Bai Kamara (Deputy - Marine Resources).
DROPPED FROM CABINET: Osman Kamara (Trade and Industry), Dr. Cecil
Blake (Information), Dr. Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya (Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation), Dr. Ibrahim I. Tejan-Jalloh (Health and
Sanitation), Abu Aiah Koroma (Parliamentary Affairs), A.B.S. Jomo-Jalloh
(Tourism and Culture), Peter Jiwa Kuyembeh (Finance) and Foday Sesay
(Minister of State-South).
The United Nations Security Council has welcomed Sierra Leone's
"peaceful and orderly" elections, in a statement
read out on Wednesday by Council
President Foreign Minister S. Jayakumar
of Singapore, called on all political parties and their supporters
"to work together to strengthen democracy and thereby assure
continuing peace." The next challenge for Sierra Leone and the
international community, the Council statement said, is the further
consolidation of peace. "There
is much still to do, including the extension of public services to make
real the restoration of government authority throughout the country, the
further enhancement of the operational effectiveness of the security
sector, and the effective reintegration of all ex-combatants.
20 May: The United States Embassy in Freetown praised Sierra
Leone's just-concluded presidential and parliamentary elections Monday,
noting particularly the absence of violence, and has called on both
winners and losers "to accept the results in a manner that will
assure continuing peace and stability." An embassy statement noted
that the election "was not without its shortcomings" and cited
the separate release of the Special Polling Day results which, it said,
compromised the right of some Sierra Leonean citizens to vote in secret.
The separate publication of the results caused a stir in
Freetown when it became apparent that a large part of the military had
supported former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma, the candidate of
the Peace and Liberation Party. "International
observers have said that the election was a positive step towards building
democracy and assuring a peaceful and more prosperous future," the
statement said. "But it is only one step in a process that will require the
long-term dedication, integrity and hard work of Sierra Leone’s
political leadership and the active involvement of every citizen. The
United States looks forward to being an active partner in Sierra Leone’s
efforts to build upon this success."
19 May: President Kabbah took the oath of office for a second
time Sunday, five
days after Sierra Leone's historic presidential and parliamentary
elections, and a bare two hours after Chief Electoral Commissioner Walter
Nicol certified the results, giving Kabbah some 70 percent of the vote. A
small group of between 100 and 200 supporters quickly gathered at the
presidential lodge to see Kabbah and his new vice president, former
Justice Minister and Attorney-General
Solomon Berewa, swear and subscribe the presidential and vice presidential
oaths before Chief Justice Abdulai Timbo. The
ceremony was brief and somewhat muted. As the president pressed the Koran
to his lips after signing his oath, a tinny rendition of Sierra Leone's
national anthem sounded through electronic speakers. Below on the streets
of Freetown, however, the mood was less staid. At 3:15 p.m., as Nicol
announced the final results over state radio, a sustained shout went up
throughout the capital from supporters of Kabbah's ruling Sierra Leone
People's Party. By late afternoon, hundreds of persons were headed for the
city centre, many of them singing, dancing, and waving palm fronds. By
nightfall thousands had gathered to take part in impromptu street parties around the
city.
With Sierra Leone's decade of civil war officially at an end, President
Kabbah
said
Sunday that his government would turn in his second term to the task of making sure that the citizens
of Sierra Leone, officially one of the world's poorest countries, get enough to
eat, with an emphasis on agricultural development. "I pledge to work...to ensure that within the next
five years no Sierra Leonean should go to bed hungry," Kabbah said in
his inaugural address, adding: "We must have
the capacity to feed ourselves." In a press conference following his
speech, Kabbah told reporters he would focus on areas such as
education and health in his efforts to alleviate poverty. But addressing a
suggestion that the just-concluded elections might have raised expectations among
his supporters to an unrealistic level, Kabbah said he would avoid making
extravagant promises. "I mentioned today a very realistic goal of doing something about feeding our people," he said. "I
mean, just to make sure that somebody goes to bed having eaten something
is not unrealistic, particularly in a country like this." Kabbah also
acknowledged the problem of government corruption, which has begun to
strain relations with Western donor nations. "We all acknowledge that
corruption has over a long period been eating deep into the fabric of our
society," he said in his address. "This fight against corruption
will continue to be one of my major preoccupations." The newly
re-elected president reached out to his political opponents, inviting them
to join him in building what he called "a new coalition for national
development." But Kabbah hinted that his
future cabinet may be
less inclusive of opposition members than has been the case in the past. "I certainly believe that it’s in the best
interests of the country for
us to have a strong opposition, and I will try to encourage that," he
told reporters.
83 of the 112 ordinary seats in parliament went to the Sierra Leone
People's Party (SLPP), giving it an absolute majority even after the
addition of twelve seats reserved for paramount chiefs. The All People's
Congress (APC) took 27 seats in the north and the west, while the SLPP
took the largest share of seats in the Western Area and swept the south
and the east. Johnny Paul Koroma's Peace and Liberation Party took two
seats in the West-West electoral district; none of the other seven political
parties,
including the former rebels of the Revolutionary United Front,
reached the 12.5 percent threshold in any electoral district necessary to
enter parliament.
Presidential candidates from Sierra Leone's major opposition parties
conceded
defeat.
Ernest Bai Koroma (pictured left) of the All People's Congress issued a
statement, however, expressing concern about what he alleged were
widespread irregularities in the election, including widespread underage voting and allegations that some of his
party's supporters were prevented from voting in SLPP strongholds. Johnny Paul Koroma of the Peace and Liberation
Party, Pallo Bangura of the Revolutionary United Front Party and Zainab
Bangura of the Movement for Peace all
accepted the results of the election
on behalf of their parties and pledged to work in opposition. United
National People's Party leader Dr. John Karefa-Smart (right), in
congratulating President Kabbah on his victory, said he was committed to
using "every effort...to find practical, non political ways to
contribute to solving the many serious social, moral, and economic
problems that, if left unsolved, will deny our people and our country
their rightful place as models in our region, continent, and world."
Meanwhile Pallo Bangura
(below left), in an interview with the Sierra Leone Web, said he felt the results of
the election did not reflect the will of the Sierra Leonean people. "But
we accept it in the spirit of good will so that we move the country
forward, so that all us will now sit down and concentrate on what to do
instead of sulking over what has gone wrong," he said. Bangura said
the
elections had been deficient in many respects,
such as reports of
polling agents being barred from polling stations, and of ballot boxes
being stuffed. "But that notwithstanding, my own personal
disposition is, looking at the number of people who went out to vote, and
judging the mood and the international community’s — especially the
observer teams’ — position so far in the perception of the elections,
and given the background of the perception of the RUF as spoilers, and
still the distrust and suspicion of the RUFP, I thought the best we could
do is accept the result and then correct the deficiencies and whatever the
problems as we go along," he said. "After all, democracy is a
process."
The Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) swept Kailahun and Pujehun
Districts to pick up another 16 seats in Parliament. Elected in Kailahun
are Sallieu Ahmed Ndoleh, Mohamed Lansana Kallon, Agnes Kobba, Jusu Q.B.
Sawie, Lydia Yaryu Kutubu, Francis S.D. Tengbeh, Momoh Pujeh and Dominic
A. Ngombu. In Pujehun District, the winners were Lawrence M. Kamara, Ansu
J. Kaikai, Sidie M. Kallon, Dr. John M. Kallon, Siaka A.B. Magona, Momoh
C. Koya, Mary Massalay and Mana Kpana. The SLPP split with the All
People's Congress in Kambia District (APC), with the APC picking up three
seats to the SLPP's five. Elected for the APC were Dauda Sulaiman Kamara,
Ibrahim Sorie and Dr. Jengo Stevens. For the SLPP, the victors were Isattu
B. Kamara, Ibrahim S. Sesay, Marray Conteh, Aliusine A. Fofanah and Samba
Amara Sheriff Conteh.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw congratulated President Kabbah
Sunday on his election victory, and the people of Sierra Leone for turning
out in high numbers to participate in peaceful elections, held just four
months after the formal end of a decade of brutal civil war. "These
elections mark an important milestone on Sierra Leone's return to peace
and democracy," Straw said in a statement. "The people of Sierra
Leone have given President Kabbah and his new government a mandate to
strengthen the peace and undertake the enormous challenge of rebuilding
Sierra Leone's shattered institutions and infrastructure.
We will continue to help Sierra Leone towards a lasting peace."
18 May: President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah seemed assured of
re-election in the
first round Saturday as official results in twelve of Sierra Leone's
fourteen electoral districts gave him nearly 67 percent of the vote and a
commanding lead over his nearest rival, All People's Congress candidate
Ernest Bai Koroma, who had just over 25 percent. Kabbah needed 55 percent
to avoid a runoff election. When the Independent Radio Network's
provisional figures from Pujehun and Kailahun were factored in, Kabbah's
lead increased marginally, to 68.29 percent as compared with 23.03 percent
for Koroma. Trailing the frontrunners at a distance were Johnny Paul Koroma (Peace and Liberation
Party) with 3.28 percent, followed by Alimamy Pallo Bangura (Revolutionary United Front
Party)
with 1.45 percent, Dr. John Karefa-Smart (United National People's Party)
with 1.16 percent,
Dr. Raymond Kamara (Grand Alliance Party) with 0.66 percent, Zainab Hawa
Bangura (Movement for Progress Party) with 0.61 percent, Raymond Bamidele
Thompson (Citizens United for Peace and Progress) with 0.53 percent, and
Andrew Duramani Turay (Young People's Party) with 0.22 percent.
The National Electoral Commission released results in three more
electoral districts on Saturday. In Kenema District, Moyamba and Kono
Districts the Sierra Leone People's Party picked up all 24 parliamentary
seats, with no other party reaching the 12.5 percent threshold. Elected in
Kenema District were Mohamed M. Makaya, Brima Mourie Kamanda, Dr.
Bernadeth Lahai, Andrew Lungay, Dominic Kenie Vandy, Dr. Phrancis Bobor Momoh,
Musa Conteh and Bintu Myers. In Moyamba District it was Mohamed S. Fofana,
Alex M. Koroma, Musa Tarasid Tarawally, C.J. Wongbo-Betty, Sheku
Tejan-Sankoh, Jonathan J. Dambo, Samuel B.M. Margai and Joseph N. Kaindoh.
Elected in Kono District were Sahr Matturie, Emmanuel William Tommy, Kai
Abdul Foday, Komba Eric Koedoyoma, Augustine Bockarie Torto, Komba
Claudius Gbamanja, Aiah Sonsiama Fasuluku and Tamba E. Kaingbanja.
17 May: The All People's Congress maintained its strength in its traditional
northern stronghold, taking six of eight parliamentary seats in Bombali
and Tonkolili Districts, and five seats in Port Loko District. The other seven
seats were won by the Sierra Leone People's Party. Elected in Bombali
District for the APC were Ernest Bai Koroma, Edward M.
Turay, Abdul F. Serry-Kamal, Dr. Moses O. M. Sesay and Rev. Marie Yansaneh.
The SLPP elected Col. (Rtd.) A.O. Kamara and Hardy Bun Abdulai Sheriff. In
Tonkolili District, the APC is sending to parliament Musu Kandeh, Edward
Sembu Koroma, Usman S. A. Kargbo, Abdulai E. Fornah, Mabel N. Turay and
Alie Salieu Sankoh. The SLPP will be represented by Emmanuel O. K. Tholley
and Dr. Fatmata Hassan. In Port Loko District, the APC elected Ibrahim
Kemoh Sesay, Alpha B. S. Kanu, Ibrahim Bundu, Alhaji Buya Kamara and
Alfred Kumbu Smart. The SLPP representatives will be Ibrahim Kanu, A. B.
Wurie and Husman Kanu.
The Sierra Leone People's Party took 98.7 percent of the vote and all
eight parliamentary seats in Bonthe District, according to figures
released by the National Electoral Commission. Elected to parliament were Agnes Bassie, Thomas P. Kaine, Solomon Tua, Arthur Harvey, Jonathan Sama,
Dr. Samuel Maligie II, Brimah Conteh and Solomon Bangali. The SLPP also
took all eight seats in Bo District, garnering 93.9 percent of the vote.
Elected were R.E.S. Lagao, Elizabeth Alpha Lavalie, Cecil Hanson, Patrick
Mustapha Kamara, Amidu Nallo, John Ngewo Moriba, Mathew G.B. Alpha and
Janet Mamie Sam King.
The Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) and
the All People's Congress (APC) are the two winners in the West East
electoral district. Five SLPP candidates, Sheikh I. Kamara, Josephus K.
Johnson, Princess Baba Jigida, Manso Dumbuya and Zainab L. Kamara, and three APC candidates,
Minkailu Mansaray, Haja Afsatu Kabba, and Sheku Dumbuya, will claim seats
in parliament. The APC list had previously been headed by vice presidential candidate
Alhaji Abubakar Jalloh, but the National Electoral Commission disqualified
him over questions as to whether he had properly registered as a voter
last February. None of the other eight parties contesting in the
parliamentary polls received the requisite 12.5 percent of the vote to
elect a candidate. Final totals: SLPP - 73,642 (45.5%), APC 55,331
(34.2%), PLP - 12,281 (7.6%), MOP - 5,731 (3.5%), PDP - 3,868 (2.4%), RUFP
- 3,525 (2.2%), GAP - 2,545 (1.6%), UNPP - 2,341 (1.4%), NDA 1,909
(1.2%), YPP - 809 (0.5%).
Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) will depart
from the South African model and will be driven by testimony from the
victims of Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war, TRC Interim Executive
Secretary Yasmine Jusu-Sheriff told reporters on Thursday. Jusu-Sheriff
said that since the 1999 Lomé Peace Accord granted a blanket amnesty to
all those who committed war crimes during the war, "the purpose and
one of the main objects of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in
Sierra Leone will be to validate and prioritize experiences of victims. It
will be a victim-led process, not a perpetrator-prioritizing process."
In her first press conference since the opening of the TRC's Interim
Secretariat, Jusu-Sheriff expressed frustration that out of a budget of $10
million for the twelve months the commission will operate, the commission
had so far received commitments for only a twentieth of that amount — a
$500,000 pledge from Britain. "Without firm commitments, the commissioners would
not be able to plan on exactly how they intend to carry out their work,"
she said. "It will be an unfortunate distraction from fulfilling the objects of the
commission for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to be
fundraising simultaneously with its other activities." In recent
months RUF leaders have expressed concern that testimony given before the
TRC could be used by the Special Court, while will prosecute a handful of
persons deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for war crimes in
Sierra Leone. Jusu-Sheriff played down fears that the commission could
become an adjunct of the court. She noted that the TRC's statute did not
require cooperation with the Special court, and that the two
institutions had different temporal jurisdictions and mandates. "I don’t think the Special Court is really going
to concentrate its mind on what the TRC is doing," she said. "They have to gather
evidence that would satisfy an international standard of criminality"
before handing down indictments.
Exchange rates for the leone against the
U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying /
Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 2530 / 2970.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2550 / 3050. [£] 3000 / 3250. Frandia: [$] 2100 /
2250 [£] 2700 / 2950. Continental: [$] 2120 / 2340 [£] 2900 / 3250.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2150 / 2200 [£] 3000 / 3050.
16 May: Latest unofficial figures from the
presidential election, compiled by the Independent Radio Network:
Ernest Bai Koroma (APC) - 247,476; Raymond Bamidele Thompson (CUPP) -
5,459;
Dr. Raymond Kamara (GAP) - 7,429; Zainab Hawa Bangura (MOP) - 6,880; Johnny
Paul Koroma (PLP) - 29,428; Alimamy Pallo Bangura (RUFP) - 19,025; Alhaji
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah (SLPP) - 793,153; Dr. John Karefa-Smart (UNPP) - 9,308; and Andrew
Duramani Turay (YPP) - 2,088. Total - 1,120,246. Posted at 19:30 GMT.
Former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma is poised to
enter parliament,
as
the first official results from the National Electoral Commission show his
Peace and Liberation Party (PLP) winning 18.4 percent of the vote and two
seats in the West-West electoral district. Eyebrows were raised in Sierra
Leone's capital when figures from Friday's special vote suggested that
Koroma had received a strong boost from the military. The Sierra Leone
People's Party (SLPP) took four seats under the District Block system of
voting, with 46 percent of the vote; while the All People's Congress (APC),
with 25.1 percent, took the other two seats. Elected for the SLPP are
Victor Reider, A.O.D. George, Bamie Cheedy and Kabba Kamara. The APC will
send Cecil A. Osho-Williams and Victor Chukuma Johnson to parliament, while the PLP elected
Johnny Paul Koroma and Hassan Kamara. In West-East, meanwhile, the APC
picked up three seats and the SLPP took five. Elected for the APC are
Minkailu Mansaray, Haja Afsatu Kabba and Sheku Dumbuya, while for the SLPP,
Sheik I. Kamara, Josephus K. Johnson, Princess Baba Jigida, Manso Dumbuya
and Zainab L. Kamara will go to parliament.
Presidential votes by region (based on incomplete results
posted at 19:30 GMT): EASTERN REGION: APC - 4,462 (1.7%); CUPP - 174
(0.1%); GAP - 7,429 (0.1%); MOP - 325 (0.1%); PLP - 1,672 (0.6%); RUFP -
4,941 (1.9%); SLPP - 246,433 (95.1%); UNPP - 832 (0.3%); YPP - 155 (0.1%).
NORTHERN REGION: APC - 199,457 (52.8%); CUPP - 4,660
(1.2%); GAP - 5,810 (1.5%); MOP - 4,141 (1.1%); PLP - 20,616 (5.5%); RUFP
- 12,100 (3.2%); SLPP - 123,124 (32.6%); UNPP - 6,207 (1.6%); YPP - 1,571
(0.4%).
SOUTHERN REGION: APC - 14,782 (3.8%); CUPP - 297
(0.1%); GAP - 900 (0.2%); MOP - 1,341 (0.3%); PLP - 1,215 (0.3%); RUFP -
1,182 (0.3%); SLPP - 368,870 (94.5%); UNPP - 1,466 (0.4%); YPP - 125
(0.0%).
WESTERN REGION: APC - 28,775 (30.9%); CUPP - 328
(0.1%); GAP - 481 (0.5%); MOP - 1,073 (1.2%); PLP - 5,925 (6.4%); RUFP -
802 (0.9%); SLPP - 54,726 (58.8%); UNPP - 803 (0.9%); YPP - 237 (0.3%).
Ballot boxes were taken to a remote area of Tonkolili
District Thursday where voting had not yet taken place, the Independent
News Network reported. On Wednesday, voting also took place in some remote
areas of Kono District.
Preliminary reports from the field suggest that Sierra
Leone's just-concluded presidential and parliamentary elections were
relatively trouble free, National Election Watch chairman Rev. L. B.
Rogers-Wright told the Sierra Leone Web on Thursday. "But one big
observation was that again there was not much of a coordination, and NEC
(National Electoral Commission) continued to change instructions, and
these instructions caused some confusion," he said. Rogers-Wright
noted that none of
the over 2,000 National Election Watch observers deployed in all fourteen
electoral districts had reported any significant trouble. "In fact,
we said in our preliminary statement that there are no breaches of
security, no violent incident was reported so far," he said.
"Preliminary, it doesn’t seem as if there was any attempt at
rigging or getting an unfair result. But as I said, we could not ascertain
that until we’ve been able to get our reports from the different
districts." At a Thursday morning press conference, representatives
of European Union, the Commonwealth and the Carter Center observer groups, told reporters that the elections had been as free and fair as was
possible in a country which only emerged from a decade of civil conflict
in January, BBC correspondent Josephine Hazley reported. They acknowledged
there had been problems in the process, but said none of them had been
serious enough to affect the outcome of the election. "The elections
in Sierra Leone were violence free, allowing free campaigning and voting
in most of the country," said Johan van Hecke, the leader of the
European Union delegation. "Initial shortcomings in the registration
process, and the organization, and the intimidation and coercion in some
areas during the pre-election period, and huge logistical constraints did
not undermine the determination of the people to express their right to
vote."
The U.S. Embassy in Freetown congratulated Sierra Leoneans
Thursday on presidential and parliamentary election which, along with the
campaign which preceded it, were marked by a nearly total absence of
violence. "The United States hopes that this spirit of non-violence
and reconciliation will continue as the votes are counted and the winners
announced," the embassy said in a statement, adding: "It will
take some time for all the votes to be counted. We urge all involved to
continue their hard work in this area and applaud the spirit of openness
that has so far marked the counting."
15 May: Latest unofficial figures from the
presidential election, compiled by the Independent Radio Network:
Ernest Bai Koroma (APC) - 21,046; Raymond Bamidele Thompson (CUPP) - 258;
Dr. Raymond Kamara (GAP) - 422; Zainab Hawa Bangura (MOP) - 452; Johnny
Paul Koroma (PLP) - 4,692; Alimamy Pallo Bangura (RUFP) - 1,502; Alhaji
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah (SLPP) - 72,822; Dr. John Karefa-Smart (UNPP) - 600; and Andrew
Duramani Turay (YPP) - 191.
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and his Sierra
Leone People's Party took an early lead as unofficial and still incomplete
results began to trickle into the capital overnight from thousands of
polling stations. The SLPP led by a large margin in Freetown. It also did
well in the south and east, its traditional strongholds, with some areas
recording a 90 percent or higher vote for the ruling party. That situation was
reversed in Makeni, where Ernest Bai Koroma's All People's Congress showed
considerable strength. Early returns suggested that after ten years of
war, Sierra Leonean voters were staying with the two familiar parties
which, aside from several interludes of military rule, have governed the
country since its independence in 1961. They also suggest that, whatever
the final result, the next parliament will have a more united and vocal
opposition than the previous one. The rest of the field of ten parties,
two of which contested only in the parliamentary polls and one of which
fielded only a presidential candidate, was led by former AFRC junta
chairman Johnny Paul Koroma's Peace and Liberation Party. The Revolutionary
United Front Party, which this year transformed itself from a rebel
movement into a political party, appeared to be struggling to find votes
in areas where it had been expected to show some strength. Meanwhile, the
National Electoral Commission announced Wednesday that voter turnout in
the country exceeded 80 percent. Previously, the NEC said it expected to have complete results
available by
Thursday evening or Friday morning.
All People's Congress presidential candidate Ernest Bai
Koroma said
Wednesday
that he was "reasonably happy" with the election results so far,
which unofficially have his party in second place behind the Sierra Leone
People's Party "only that they are results to me that are
questionable, but on the whole I feel okay with them." Koroma told
the BBC his party was gathering reports on "certain shortcomings in
the elections," such as presiding officials not allowing people to
vote as they wanted, but he declined to go into specifics. He said,
however, that the inroads he believed he had made in the south and the
east were not being reflected by the results coming out. Koroma said his
party would accept the results of the election if it were transparent, if
everyone feels he has not been marginalised, and the final results had not
been manufactured. "The whole idea of democracy is to have an
effective government and an effective opposition," he said. Koroma
predicted that the election would go to a run-off in two weeks time.
"I don't see the possibility of anybody emerging with more than 55%
of the votes," he said. "At the end of the run-off if we emerge
to be the winners, then we've already told the people of Sierra Leone our
message and we have a manifesto that we have presented and we are going
into action immediately in keeping with the promise we have made to the
people."
Britain's foreign secretary hailed Sierra Leone's peaceful
elections Wednesday
as
marking "a new chapter of politics and peace in Sierra Leone's
history." Jack Straw (pictured left) recalled that only two years ago, the U.N.
peacekeeping effort was on the brink of collapse after RUF rebels
abandoned the Lomé Peace Accord and attacked U.N. peacekeepers. Straw
noted that preparations for the elections had been carried out in difficult
circumstances. "People have been able to vote in areas which were
still inaccessible to government authorities at the beginning of the
year," he said, adding: "These elections mark another milestone on Sierra
Leone’s return to peace. Britain remains committed to working with the
people of Sierra Leone to help them rebuild their country."
Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said in parliament that it
was "moving" to see that with British assistance, Sierra Leone
had been returned to democracy. "People
there value their democracy," he said. "I agree that that sends the right signal
across the world about the prospects for Africa, and that is as important
as anything else. I hope that, as part of the partnership initiative that
we take to the G8 this year, we can get stronger measures to deal with
some of the outstanding conflicts in Africa that blight the lives of
people, notably in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Angola and Sudan."qa
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan congratulated Sierra
Leoneans
Wednesday for voting "in their numbers and in a sprit of mutual
respect and reconciliation," saying that the election was a sign that
the people of the war-torn country were ready to make a break from their
tragic past. "It is also a major step on the road to lasting,
sustainable peace," the secretary-general said in a statement. Annan
appealed for continued calm and restraint as the election results were
being collated and announced. He also urged political leaders and their
followers to be magnanimous both in victory and in defeat. Annan noted
that Sierra Leone still faced major challenges in reconstruction and
national reconciliation. He pointed to extending state authority
throughout the country, restoring government control over natural
resources, reintegrating ex-combatants and resettling returning refugees
as tasks which would require support by both the Sierra Leone government
and the international community.
Sierra Leone's just-concluded presidential and
parliamentary elections, backed
by
massive resources from the international community, are already being
hailed as the most peaceful in the country's 41-year history. Local and
international election observers have yet to give their verdict on whether
the elections were free, fair and transparent, but the Special
Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General, Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji
(pictured left) said that in an election day tour of the country he had
not received any complaints from party agents monitoring the polls.
"As a matter of fact, talking to the [counting] agents, they all
expressed satisfaction as to the conduct of the election," Adeniji
told Radio UNAMSIL. Asked why the polls had gone so smoothly, Adeniji
credited the Sierra Leonean people. "Number one is that I think most Sierra Leoneans
have learnt a lesson from the inconveniencies, the dangers, posed by the
eleven-year crisis," he said. He also said that meticulous planning
by the National Electoral Commission and its external partners, logistical
assistance from UNAMSIL in distributing voting materials, and "the very visible presence of UNAMSIL troops in
every place, including at the chiefdom level," all contributed to
making the election a success. Adeniji acknowledged having received a report that
one presiding
officer at a polling station in Kabala had attempted to stuff a ballot
box. "I was not surprised actually that we would find
one such case in these thousands of polling stations," he said,
adding that the man had been apprehended through the vigilance of a
polling agent, and that police immediately took him into custody.
14 May: Voting continued to proceed peacefully
throughout the country
Tuesday,
with no major problems reported by Independent Radio Network reporters
deployed throughout the country. At the Sierra Leone Muslim Brotherhood
Secondary School, polling officials told the Sierra Leone Web they had
experienced no problems. The capital was virtually empty of traffic due to
the closing of shops and businesses for the election day holiday. In Kissy
and Kissy Mess-Mess, lines had shortened somewhat by the early afternoon
as many people who arrived at the crack of dawn had already voted. Moses
Conteh, the presiding officer at the Police Primary School polling station
in Kissy Mess-Mess (pictured left) said voting there had gone smoothly. He
showed a list of some fifteen names of persons whose names did not appear
on the register, but who were allowed to vote after displaying their voter
registration cards. One blind voter had made use of the braille ballot
holder to assist him in casting his ballot, Conteh said.
Following reports of voters discovering
that their names did not appear
on the voter registration list at their polling station, or that the name on the register did not
match that on their voter identity card, Chief Electoral Commissioner Walter
Nicol has instructed presiding officers to let all voters with valid
voter ID cards to cast ballots. "If their names are not on the register,
(presiding officers) should make sure they record their names, voter ID
number, and PS code and allow them to vote," Nicol said in a
statement. Meanwhile, angry voters from up-country protested at the
National Electoral Commission's Wallace Johnson Street headquarters, the Independent
Radio Network reported. The protesters claimed that their names had not been
properly transferred to registration lists
in Freetown, resulting in their disenfranchisement. An SSD officer on the
scene told the Sierra Leone Web that the protesters left after they were
assured they would be allowed to vote.
United Nations peacekeepers and police
officers took up positions around
Freetown as voting began at 7:00 a.m. Tuesday. At a dozen polling
stations in the city centre observed by the Sierra Leone Web, voters
waited in orderly lines to cast their ballots. Problems were reported
early on at Fourah Bay College and at one other polling station, where
polling officials had apparently received the wrong voter registers, Radio
UNAMSIL reported. Just before 8:00 a.m., Chief Electoral Commissioner
Walter Nicol told the Independent Radio Network that voters with valid
registration cards would be allowed to vote, but that polling officials
should take down their voter ID numbers. Around the country, voter turnout
early in the day was reported to be high and voting was proceeding
peacefully. A few glitches have been reported in the early going. There
was some confusion in Bo when a number of people turned up at polling
stations only to find that their names were not on the voter's register,
or that the names on the register did not match the names on their voter
ID cards, evidently due to errors by registrars. The problems are being
reviewed on a case-by-case basis, the Independent Radio Network reported.
At a polling station in the Freetown suburb of Aberdeen had not received
its ballot box by 8:30 a.m. Some locations report that polling officials
have had to instruct voters in the use of the paper ballots.
Freetown voters began gathering at polling stations before
dawn on Tuesday,
and by 6:00 a.m., still an hour before the start of
voting, long lines had formed in front of polling stations in the city
centre. At the Government Model School polling station on Circular Road
the queue stretched for several blocks, while at other stations scores of
persons stood in line or sat on the ground to await the opening of the
polls.
All People's Congress candidate Ernest Bai Koroma announced a new
running mate late Monday, Dauda Sulaiman Kamara, who will replace Alhaji
Abubakar Jalloh on the APC ticket. Jalloh was ruled ineligible to contest
by Sierra Leone's National Electoral Commission over questions as to
whether he had properly registered as a voter.
13 May: United Nations peacekeepers blocked some
roads leading to the Revolutionary United Front Party's (RUFP) vandalised
Freetown headquarters Monday morning as tensions which followed clashes on
Saturday between supporters of the RUFP and the Sierra Leone People's
Party (SLPP) began to ease.
When Zainab Bangura hears the words "Madam
President" she laughs. Hard.
Bangura,
a long time human rights activist and former head of the civil society
group Campaign for Good Governance, is looking forward to being a thorn in
the side of whichever party forms the next government, and on working for
the issues that she is passionate about. And although her tiny Movement
for Progress Party is fielding only 32 candidates in just half of the
country's fourteen electoral districts, Bangura suggested that in
opposition it is not size that counts, but volume. "Our focus is on
anti-corruption, accountability, transparency and rebuilding the
institutions of state," Bangura told the Sierra Leone Web. "And
this of course includes a new of politics based on issues rather than on
personalities, and moral leadership in politics, and this we have
demonstrated in our campaign. Our campaign is different. And we have told the people that we will run the country like we have run our
campaign."
A month short of his 87th birthday, United National
People's Party presidential
candidate
Dr. John Karefa-Smart appears frail as he reminisces about his
participation in more than forty years of national and pre-independence
politics in Sierra Leone. But looks can be deceiving. Karefa-Smart is
still an active campaigner, an insistent advocate for his party's views,
and he has a handshake like a vice-grips pliers attacking a stubborn bolt.
To those who ask why Karefa-Smart is back on the campaign trail at an age
when most men have long retired from public life, Karefa-Smart says they
are asking the wrong question. This campaign is not about his personal
ambitions, he says. It is about unfinished business. "When I came
back (to Sierra Leone) there was no political activity of any kind in the
provinces," he said. "I started SOS, got our people with the
support of the chiefs to start it, and it’s only because I went away to
Nigeria that Sir Milton Margai took my place. I started something, I want
to see it finished in the right direction. And until I die I will continue
to see that the path I started which led me to take the country to London
to negotiate our independence, which led me to the United Nations to
negotiate our entrance, is not finished. I see all kinds of interruption.
That’s why I’m staying." In 1996 Karefa-Smart and his UNPP party
finished second in the polls to the Sierra Leone People's Party. This
year, many see a resurgence of the former ruling All People's Congress,
which could be expected to cut deeply into the UNPP's voter base in the
north. Karefa-Smart disagrees. "I don’t see a resurgence of APC,"
he said. "If it happens, then that’s the will of the people. But I
don’t see myself losing ground to APC for any reason." In a country
where most decision-making functions have come to be centralized in the
capital, Karefa-Smart says he favours a more limited role for government.
"The people of Sierra Leone should expect from their government only
two things: one is managing the resources of the country right; two,
providing opportunities for every Sierra Leonean to attain the best that
they can be in life," he said. "That’s all government should
do. If you’re not doing things which will enable the individual Sierra
Leonean to improve his status in life, you are not succeeding as a
government." Asked whether he expects to be president after Tuesday's
vote, Karefa-Smart chooses his words carefully. "I hope our party
will do well," he says. But win or lose, he says, he intends to
remain a force in Sierra Leonean politics. "If I am the leader of the
opposition, if I am second in number, yes, I’ll be leader," he
said. "If I am not, if my party is third or fourth or fifth, I have
said I am going to stay here. That doesn’t mean I am going to sit down
in Sierra Leone, because I’m a free man. I know the world. I go
traveling...Till I die I might not even own a house in Sierra Leone. That
doesn’t mean I am not staying in Sierra Leone. I have a Sierra Leone
passport, I keep it. That means I’m a Sierra Leonean." Karefa-Smart
describes himself as "100 percent" patriotic, "200
percent" principled, and "100 percent" uncompromising on
principle. Others suggest this translates into an unwillingness to bend on
policy matters, but Karefa-Smart denies this. "Compromise on things
you may have to do, but you cannot compromise on principles," he
said. "My definition of principle is something which is firm, which
is rigid, you don’t change it, different principles today and tomorrow.
So that the fact that I don’t compromise on principles does not mean
that I do not compromise. I compromise all the time. In my party I do
that. In my dealings with other people I do that." Only after the
microphone has been turned off, Karefa-Smart admits there are times when
he wonders whether he should just admit that he has failed and give up.
But he doesn't sound like he means it. He says that his wife of 52 years
knew when she married him that he was devoted to Sierra Leonean politics
"and it's too late to change." And however Tuesday's elections
turn out, it sounds very unlikely that 2002 will be this veteran
statesman's last crusade.
The Sierra Leone government announced on Monday the
appointment of four Sierra Leoneans and three non-Sierra Leoneans as
commissioners for the country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).
The TRC is charged with documenting human rights abuses and helping to
heal the wounds caused by a decade of brutal civil war. The commissioners
announced Monday are Sylvanus
Torto, a
Teaching Fellow and Director at the Institute of Public
Administration and Management in Freetown; Rev. J.C. Humper, Bishop of the
United Methodist Church in Sierra Leone; Justice Laura Marcus-Jones
(pictured left), a member of the Sierra Leone Court of Appeals; Prof.
John A. Kamara, former principal of Njala University College; Yasmin Louise Sooka,
Director of the Foundation for Human Rights in South Africa; Prof. William A. Schabas,
Professor of Human Rights Law at the National University of Ireland; and Satang
Ajaaraton Jow, former Gambian Minister of Education.
12 May: Leaders of seven political parties and
the National Electoral Commission signed a joint statement Sunday
condemning Saturday's violent clashes between supporters of the ruling
Sierra Leone People's Party and members of the former rebel Revolutionary
United Front Party. The statement referred to "recent unfortunate
incidents" and pointedly did not refer to the parties by name.
Instead, it urged supporters of political parties "to refrain from
any acts or threats of violence and intimidation." The statement was
signed by leaders of the All People's Congress, the National Democratic
Alliance, the Peace and Liberation Party, the Revolutionary United Front
Party, the Sierra Leone People's Party, the United National People's Party
and the Young People's Party, and by Chief Electoral Commissioner Walter
Nicol. Dr. John Karefa-Smart, who attended the meeting as leader of his
United National People's Party, said a number of party leaders expected to
meet on Monday with Police Inspector-General Keith Biddle, and would
insist that police investigate Saturday's election violence and not simply
sweep it under the rug.
Hundreds of RUF Party supporters milled around their
vandalised offices at the corner of Lightfoot Boston and Charlotte Streets
Sunday morning, a day after clashes between members of the RUFP and the
ruling Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) left an unknown number injured
on both sides. On Charlotte Street, a short distance from the party
office, RUFP members had erected a barricade adjacent to the construction
site which provided a ready
supply of stones thrown in Saturday's rioting. Half a block across
Lightfoot Boston Street, a white UNAMSIL armoured personnel carrier kept
an eye on the situation. Meanwhile, RUF interim secretary-general and
presidential candidate Pallo Bangura (pictured left) called Saturday's
fighting "a provocation, just as happened in May (2000)." But in
an interview with the Sierra Leone Web early Sunday afternoon, Bangura
insisted that the clashes would not endanger the peace process.
"Really, there have been young men who are very angry, but every
effort is being made to calm them," he said. "We’re trying to
get them to understand that having come this far, it doesn’t make any
sense at all. It’s in nobody’s interest — certainly not in the
interest of the people of this country who now want peace — to
piece their lives together again." Bangura was cautious over the
number of casualties in the fighting. The BBC reported at least 15 wounded
on both sides, and rumours of those killed in the fighting range from none
to five. So far, no
deaths have been confirmed. "I am trying to get confirmation of all
of that because I do not want to just make wild accusations without being
able to substantiate them," he said. Bangura said that RUF interim
leader Issa Sesay and others had been to the party offices to calm the
former combatants, and that Jonathan Kposowa (right) was being sent to
take control of the situation. "We want a senior person to be there
with them whilst we are trying to get things organized officially,"
he said. Bangura said he was busy preparing a report to present at a
consultative meeting between the National Electoral Commission and the
various political parties scheduled for Sunday afternoon. "So I
really want to get all of this information before that meeting," he
said.
Final figures released by Sierra Leone's National
Electoral Commission late Sunday show that 2,329,161 persons have
registered to vote in Tuesday's presidential and parliamentary elections,
including 13,386 returned refugees who were eligible for late
registration. Western Region: West-East - 237,636 (132 returnees).
West-West - 171,161 (72 returnees). Total - 408,797 (204 returnees).
Southern Province: Moyamba - 125,954 (6 returnees). Bo - 282,067 (107
returnees). Pujehun - 113,469 (1,860 returnees). Bonthe - 71,050 (32
returnees). Total - 592,540 (2,005 returnees). Northern Province: Kambia -
122,339 (804 returnees). Bombali - 195,525 (118 returnees). Koinadugu -
102,353 (44 returnees). Tonkolili - 196,638 (134 returnees). Port Loko -
191,249 (30 returnees). Total - 808,104 (1,130 returnees). Eastern
Province: Kono - 128,145 (2,262 returnees). Kailahun - 113,878 (6,447
returnees). Kenema - 291,083 (1,338 returnees). Total - 533,106.
At 52 years of age, Young People's Party (YPP)
presidential candidate Andrew
Duramani Turay barely qualifies any longer to be described as
"young." But Turay's rapid-fire delivery and his obvious passion
for his issues might be calculated to make one forget, if only for the
moment, the fact that many of his party's supporters are little more than
half his age. "The whole thing is that over the last 40 years of
politics in this country, the old political parties have misused young
people," Turay told the Sierra Leone Web. "They do not seem to
have a future for us. Okay? And what they will do here is during
electioning time they are not talking of issues, they’re not talking of
direction for this country." Turay decried political campaigns based
on handing out money, alcohol and drugs to voters, or on appeals to tribe
and region, and he accused the two political parties which have governed
Sierra Leone since its independence of not doing enough to help the
country's youth. "All the income-generating activities in this
country have been closed down, and all the job-creating activities in this
country have been closed down," he said. Turay said the YPP would
present a vision that would see decentralization of government and of
government services, with significant functions of governance devolving to
the district and chiefdom levels. "We have power centralized in
Freetown, and the interior part of the country is left out," he said.
"You see, what I normally tell people, you don’t start building a
house on the rooftop downwards. You start building a house on the
foundation upwards." Local affairs would be run by councillors and
management teams, he said, adding that this should attract educated people
to go back to their villages and work there. The YPP would also seek to
reform the civil service to rid it of corruption and inefficiency, and
"to push the democratic process far more strongly" than has
hitherto been the case. Turay, an agriculturalist who holds a masters
degree from McGill University in Canada and degrees from Njala University
College and Bradford University in the United Kingdom, said that if there
was no intimidation and if the elections were free and fair, then he
expected to make it into a second round presidential runoff. At the
parliamentary level, where the party is fielding 71 candidates in just
eight of the country's 14 electoral districts, Turay predicted that the
YPP "might have 15, 16, but not more than 20" seats. But if the
YPP finds itself in the parliamentary opposition after Tuesday's
elections, he said, the party will provide a loud opposition voice.
"We know what we stand for and we know the programmes that we pursued
in this country," he said. "We believe that we can influence
this country by negotiating with other political parties to put pressure
on whatever government is in place to rethink and redo what is necessary
for Sierra Leone to develop."
President Kabbah appealed for restraint and
tolerance Saturday as
tens of thousands of Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP)
supporters gathered at Freetown's National Stadium for a final campaign rally
before Tuesday's presidential and parliamentary elections. "Security is the responsibility of all of
us," the Associated Press quoted Kabbah as saying. "Let us
behave like civilized people...All ex-combatants who have come forward
begging for forgiveness, let us receive them as brothers and
sisters." Meanwhile, Sierra Leone's smallest political party
announced Saturday that it would back Kabbah for re-election. The National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) is fielding just 32 parliamentary candidates in
only three of the 14 electoral districts, and has no presidential
candidate of its own.
11 May: Sierra Leone's election campaign was
marred by violence Saturday as
supporters
of the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) and the former rebel
Revolutionary United Front Party (RUFP) clashed in central Freetown. By
mid-afternoon the streets were littered with large stones and broken glass
as far east as Percival Street. At 3:30 in the afternoon, hundreds of
angry former rebel combatants stood in the street outside their party
offices, some of them still holding rocks in their hands. Armed police and
U.N. peacekeepers watched warily from a distance. I pushed through a crowd
of angry RUFP supporters and saw that the offices I had visited only hours
earlier were completely vandalised and looted. Hassan P. Kamara, the
RUFP's assistant secretary-general for the Western Area, said SLPP members
"including Kamajors" pursued demonstrators taking part in an
RUFP Women's Rally near Upgun and followed them back to their party
offices. He claimed that "$4,000 and some leones," along with
four computers, a television and video equipment had been stolen. Each
side blamed the other for starting the violence. A BBC correspondent on
the scene witnessed RUFP members beating SLPP supporters with sticks and
stoning them. Inside the office, furniture had been visibly destroyed and
shards of glass lay covered the floor. Kamara displayed what he said was a captured CDF
identity card identifying the owner as a member of the former
pro-government Kapra
militia. There was no immediate word on the number of casualties, but I
saw wounded on both sides. At Connaught Hospital, medical personnel were
attempting to treat several injured persons, most`of them suffering from head
wounds. One young man was still wearing his green and white SLPP t-shirt. As
I waited, a
police vehicle rushed through the hospital gates carrying yet another wounded man.
Thousands of supporters of the ruling Sierra Leone
People's Party (SLPP)
demonstrated
in the streets of Freetown Saturday, the last official day of campaigning
ahead of Tuesday's presidential and parliamentary elections. In the late
morning, groups of demonstrators took
to the streets singing, dancing and waving leaves from the palm tree
— the SLPP party symbol. By afternoon the crowd, overwhelmingly youths, had
swollen to perhaps tens of thousands. In the middle of the town, SLPP
members clashed with RUFP supporters (above story), but outside the city
centre away the mood was festive and noisy as the
crowd moved westward along Siaka Stevens Street toward the National
Stadium, where a mass SLPP rally was scheduled to take place. Among
the marchers were families with small children, while along the side of
the street small boys sold bags of cold water. As I walked back and forth
through the crowed, a few youths joked about how they would defeat the
rival APC party, and one small group dragged what appeared to be a long
red sock to represent their rivals. The march was orderly, however, and a
small number of people lining the streets to watch the demonstration
openly wore their red APC shirts and APC party insignia. As one group of singing SLPP
supporters passed within inches of a Fourah Bay College student and known
APC supporter along Bathurst Street, several of the singing demonstrators
— his fellow students
— pointed at him and laughed. He smiled back.
Voting passed off peacefully Friday as security officials
and others
responsible for conducting Tuesday's presidential and parliamentary
elections cast their votes around the country, Radio 98.1 (state radio)
reported. (Photo: election officials sealing ballot boxes.) Voter turnout
was reported by be high. In some areas there was up to a two hour delay
before the voting got underway, the radio said. Meanwhile, political
parties prepared for their final day of campaigning on Saturday. In
Freetown, the United National People's Party held its final rally on
Friday, with the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party scheduled to
demonstrate on Saturday. The UNPP is due to hold their final rally at
Lungi. Following voter registration in February, there were fears that
voter apathy might be the dominant theme of the 2002 elections following
ten years of war. But in offices and on the streets of Sierra Leone's
capital the upcoming vote was the dominant topic of conversation this
week. In Kissy, a youth loading taxis at the wharf proudly displays his
APC head scarf to passengers. A few miles closer to Freetown, a young
woman passing by vehicles caught in one of the city's frequent traffic
jams says quietly "Wutehteh (the SLPP slogan) yah?" through an
open car window. A young UNPP activist with a bullhorn passes among houses
in Freetown and urges residents to "vote for the lamp." The
campaigning, both official and unofficial, is nearly swallowed up amid the
activity of Freetown's busy streets and competition with announcements for
an upcoming concert.
The appeal by All People's Congress candidate Alhaji
Abubakar Jalloh against the National Electoral Commission's (NEC) decision
barring him from standing as a candidate will now go to the Supreme Court,
Radio 98.1 (state radio) reported.
10 May: Voting got underway Friday in Sierra
Leone's presidential and
parliamentary
election as members of the country's security forces, election officials,
reporters, and others responsible for conducting next Tuesday's vote gathered at polling
stations across the country to cast the first ballots since the end last
January of ten years of civil war. In
Freetown, hundreds of police officers stood for hours in a line around two
sides of Freetown's burned-out City Hall to cast their ballots (see
photo). Members of the armed forces, fire fighters and even prison
officials also voted at various locations around the country.
British High Commissioner David Alan Jones has warned that
would attempt to thwart the democratic process in Sierra Leone that it
would not be tolerated by the international community
— or by Sierra Leoneans. In a recorded message in advance of Tuesday's
presidential and parliamentary elections, Jones urged registered voters to
exercise their right to vote.
9 May: A total of 2,309,277 Sierra Leoneans
registered to vote in next week's presidential and parliamentary
elections, according to the latest provisional figures released by the
National Electoral Commission on Tuesday. Western Region: West-East -
235,796. West-West - 168,118. Total - 403,914. Southern Province: Moyamba
- 125,052. Bo - 279,057. Pujehun - 111,408. Bonthe - 70,883. Total -
586,400. Northern Province: Kambia - 120,757. Bombali - 193,219. Koinadugu
- 101,645. Tonkolili - 195,246. Port Loko - 190,120. Total - 800,987.
Eastern Province: Kono - 125,495. Kailahun - 107,206. Kenema - 285,275.
8 May: United Nations peacekeepers could pull out
of Sierra Leone by the end
of
next year if all goes well after next week's elections, the Deputy Special
Representative of the Secretary-General told Reuters. But Behrooz Sadry
(pictured left) said the U.N. didn't want to give the impression that the
elections were part of UNAMSIL's exit strategy. "For the initial three months after
elections, we pretty much wouldn't touch UNAMSIL," Sadry said on
Tuesday. He said any scaling down of forces would be done in the context
of normal troop rotations. If a battalion were to leave it wouldn't be
replaced. Remaining forces would be concentrated in strategic areas, like
Sierra Leone's diamond mining fields. "Elections are the 75-percent line for a peacekeeping mission,
we cannot pack up and go because of elections," he said. "In a best case scenario. If everything goes absolutely well
and all the conditions you put on it can be met, I would say (we could
leave) by mid to end of 2003." Sadry also noted that a pullout of
U.N. forces could lead to an economic shock in a country where much of the
economy is supported by the estimated $2 million a day spent on the
peacekeeping effort. This, he said, could create further problems for
Sierra Leone, where unemployed youths could once again be
recruited into armed rebel groups. "We are not talking about the RUF doing
something again, we're talking about the youths," Sadry said.
6 May: The United Nations Security Council has
voted unanimously to extend sanctions against Liberia for another twelve
months, saying the government of Charles Taylor "had not yet fully
complied" with Council demands that it halt its support for Sierra
Leone's RUF rebels and for other armed rebel groups in the sub-region. It
noted also the conclusion of a U.N. Panel of Experts that there was
"credible evidence" that Liberia has continued to violate an
arms embargo
— a fact admitted by the government, which says it needs the weapons to
defend itself from an armed rebellion in the north. Monday's Council
decision leaves the arms embargo in place, along with a pared-down travel
ban on senior Liberian officials, and a prohibition on the import of rough
Liberian diamonds by U.N. member states. The resolution
goes on to say, however, that the sanctions could be lifted with immediate
effect if it were determined that the Liberian government had complied
with U.N. demands. The Council called again for Liberia to implement an
effective Certificate of Origin scheme or ensure that
illicit diamond revenues do not go to fund armed rebel groups. The
decision to extend sanctions was not unexpected, and drew fire a week ago
from the Liberian president. According to the Associated Press, Charles
Taylor (pictured right) told several hundred churchgoers that the
sanctions would be extended because the United Nations plans for Liberia
had failed. "They want to see all of us dead," he said.
"They want us away from our homes. They don't want a Charles Taylor
here. They want a puppet that they can manipulate." In the runup to
the U.N. decision, the Liberian government insisted that it had complied
with the U.N. demands, and sought to portray the sanctions as rebounding
against ordinary Liberians. "God will bring his wrath upon all those
perpetrating evil against Liberia," Taylor said.
Sierra Leone's child delegate to this week's
United Nations General Assembly's Special Session on Children was refused
a visa to travel with the Sierra Leonean delegation to New York because
the U.S. consulate in Conakry said she was too young. 16-year old Fatmata
Baila-Leigh was to have
participated
in the three-day Children's Forum which got underway on Sunday. Ambassador
Sylvester Rowe (pictured left), who is President Kabbah's personal
representative for the summit, said that seven other members of the
delegation, including Baila-Leigh's chaperone, were issued visas. Rowe
said the UNICEF office in Freetown had asked the U.S. Embassy to review
the case "on an exceptional basis." Baila-Leigh and her
chaperone were expected to return to Conakry on Sunday in hopes of
obtaining a visa on Monday morning. "This means that they could fly
to New York via Paris Monday night, arrive here Tuesday afternoon
— too late for the Children's Forum," Rowe said. "It's a
shame. There are a number of side events, but the Forum is the highlight
of the General Assembly's Special Session on Children." In New York
Sunday, U.N. Secretary-General opened the Children's Forum saying it was
"right and necessary" that youths should play a part in the
coming General Assembly session. 179 of the 300 gathered children
participated as representatives of official government delegations from
101 countries. The rest were part of accredited NGO delegations. Still
more were expected to sign up. "We all want a better world for
children, but so far it is adults that have called the shots," Annan
said. "Now, we are going to build a better world with children. It's
high time we adults hear what you have to say." The secretary-general
urged the youths to continue to work in support of children's issues after
they returned home. "I hope you will help us to follow up afterwards
to make sure we keep our promises," he said. "It is when the
talking ends that the really hard part begins. I look to you to continue
to watch out for children's rights when you go back home, and keep a close
eye on progress in your countries."
5 May: Supporters of the Revolutionary United Front
Party (RUFP) held their first rally in the capital Freetown Sunday ahead
of the May 14 presidential and
parliamentary
elections. Scores of RUFP members, many wearing photographs of their
imprisoned leader Foday Sankoh or carrying placards, marched from Hastings
to the city centre for a rally outside the party offices. There, RUFP
public relations officer Eldred Collins (pictured left), himself a
parliamentary candidate in the West-East electoral district, told BBC
correspondent Lansana Fofana he expected the former rebel group's party to
win the elections because, he said, they fought a war of liberation for
the Sierra Leonean people. "We know that definitely for ten years
past we have been fighting for the people’s power," he said.
"And the
people
did not understand why we took up arms against the system. The people have
now had awareness that we are fighting against a system that has derailed
the progress of this country." But the party's interim
secretary-general and presidential candidate, Pallo Bangura (left),
acknowledged to a crowd of 2,000 supporters in Makeni Saturday that he
stood little chance of wining the presidency, Reuters correspondent
Christo Johnson reported. "We know we as the RUFP can not win the
presidential elections, but we are certain we can win seats in the
parliamentary elections," he told supporters in the former rebel
headquarters. "We want you, former combatants of the RUF and
civilians who have been supporting the RUF, to join the RUFP in the
national political process of our country...The war is now over."
Fofana noted that the RUFP's campaign has been hindered by defections from
the party and by a shortage of funds. "They have certainly lost most
of their former strongholds to rival parties, and there have been some
significant defections from their ranks," he said. "All this is
made worse by the fact that the former rebels don’t have the financial
capability to mount serious campaigning in a country where they are yet to
win the hearts of the people."
3 May: A 30-member ECOWAS election monitoring team
is due to arrive in Freetown on May 6 ahead of this month's presidential
and parliamentary elections, the U.N. Integrated Regional Information
Network (IRIN) reported on Friday. The delegation will be led by Theresa
Striggner-Scott of Ghana, one of the ECOWAS Council of Elders. The
delegation
— the largest team of election observers ECOWAS has ever fielded
— includes legislators, lawyers, political scientists and diplomats from 13
of the economic community's 15 countries. An advance team of four members
of the group was expected in Freetown on Friday, with the rest to arrive
on Monday. The entire delegation will depart Sierra Leone on May 20, one
week after the elections.
The United States and Sierra Leone signed an agreement
Monday which would reschedule payment of some $15 million in debt. The
rescheduling implements an agreement reached last October between Sierra
Leone and the Paris Club group of creditors. Monday's bilateral Paris Club
agreement reschedules concessional debt maturing between 1 October 2001
and 30 September 2004, and arrears arising from payments as of 30
September 2001. Sierra Leone currently owes the United States about $62
million.
The number of Sierra Leonean refugees returning home has
dropped to a trickle
as
many of the estimated 165,000 remaining in the sub-region are adopting a
wait-and-see attitude until after the May 14 elections, a spokesman for
the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Friday. Since September
2000, the UNHCR and its implementing partners have helped nearly 90,000
Sierra Leonean refugees, mainly in Guinea and Liberia, return home by sea,
by road, or on foot. 51,000 of those returnees were helped to return to
their home areas, while 25,000 are being housed in displaced camps. The
rest did not seek any aid. An estimated 70,000 people are believed to have
returned home on their own, bringing the total to about 160,000. During
the first five months of this year, nearly 30,000 refugees have returned
home by land convoys from Guinea and Liberia. All such convoys will cease
during the election period beginning on May 7 in order to avoid
disruptions to the electoral process. Meanwhile, the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) said Friday it assisted 12,174 internally
displaced persons in April to leave camps around Freetown, Bo and Kenema
and return to areas of the north declared safe for resettlement. The IOM
also arranged special transportation for vulnerable persons, such as the
elderly and 120 amputees from the Murray Town Amputee Camp and the Grafton
War Wounded camp, to their home communities. In the past year, the IOM has
helped 28,000 displaced persons return to their homes.
Exchange rates for the leone against the
U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying /
Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 2670 / 3195.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2200 / 2350. [£] 3000 / 3250. Frandia: [$] 2200 /
2350 [£] 3000 / 3250. Continental: [$] 2200 / 2350 [£] 2900 / 3200.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2200 / 2250 [£] 3000 / 3050.
2 May: All People's Congress vice presidential
candidate Alhaji Abubakar Jalloh
will ask the courts Monday to overturn a ruling by the National Electoral
Commission (NEC) that he is ineligible to stand as a candidate, a source
close to Jalloh told the Sierra Leone Web. The NEC questioned whether
Jalloh had properly registered as a voter, since he was reportedly out of
the country during February's voter registration exercise. Under Sierra
Leone's electoral laws, a person who is not registered to vote is not
eligible to be voted for. The source acknowledged that Jalloh had
registered late, but said the candidate would argue in court that he was
properly registered in the presence of the Chief Electoral Commissioner,
and that the Chief Electoral Commissioner had even provided him an orderly
to accompany him in getting his photograph taken for the voter
registration card.
Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman (pictured left)
warned soldiers
Thursday
to remain neutral in this month's presidential and parliamentary
elections, citing fears that Peace and Liberation Party presidential
candidate Johnny Paul Koroma was trying to rally support within the army,
Associated Press correspondent Clarence Roy-Macaulay reported. Koroma, who
retired from the army in early 2000 at the rank of lieutenant-colonel, led
the short-lived AFRC military junta between May 1997 to February 1998. He
joined the government following the signing of the 1999 Lomé Peace Accord
and until last year served as chairman of the Commission for the
Consolidation of Peace. Norman cited concerns that Koroma was claiming in
campaign speeches that the army was backing his candidacy. The Associated
Press was unable to reach Koroma Thursday for comment. Norman said he had
told his top commanders that the army would support whatever government
the people of Sierra Leone elect. "The army will not take power for
themselves," he said. "The army he is talking about is a changed
army."
1 May: As the United Nations Security Council
prepares to deliberate this week on whether to extend sanctions against
Liberia, New York-based Human Rights Watch has accused Liberia's security
forces of war crimes against civilians, and called on the U.N. to maintain
an arms embargo against the Liberian government. The group urged that the
embargo be extended to cover
the LURD rebels, and it called for an end to
Guinea's support for LURD. In a 23-page report,
"Back to the Brink: War Crimes by Liberian Government and Rebels, A
Call for Greater International Attention to Liberia and the
Sub-Region," Human Rights Watch warned that instability in Liberia
could spill over into neighbouring Sierra Leone and threaten that
country's fragile peace. Peter Takirambudde, the executive director of
Human Rights Watch's Africa Division pointed to the possibility of a
widening of the Liberian conflict as growing numbers of Liberian refugees
and combatants cross into neighbouring countries. And with peace coming to
Sierra Leone, he said, hundreds of combatants from all sides in Sierra
Leone's civil war are crossing into Liberia to fight as mercenaries either
on the side of the Liberian government or for LURD.
The United Nations will need to remain in Sierra Leone for
some time to come in
order
to help the country cope with the consequences of ten years of civil war,
the former U.N. Assistant
Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Manfred Eisele told
reporters in New York. Eisele, who led a fact-finding mission to Sierra
Leone last month to assess the effectiveness of the recently-concluded
disarmament and demobilisation process, said what remained in Sierra Leone
was a very poor, dilapidated infrastructure and a lack of shelter
— a situation, he noted, which will be aggravated by the coming rainy season.
Eisele said there was also a need for the continued presence of U.N.
peacekeepers as the country restructures its security forces. Only when
the police and the army have reached the required levels of
professionalism, he said, would the situation allow for the downsizing and
eventual withdrawal of the U.N. presence.
United Nations and Sierra Leonean officials met with
international donors in New York Tuesday, and urged them to support Sierra
Leone's peace process by getting behind efforts to establish a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) for the war-torn West African nation.
"We believe that the establishment of the Commission is an important
step to building a truly sustainable peace in the country," said
Jean-Marie Guehenno, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations.
"This is a matter of great concern to everyone working to ensure the
sustainability of peace in Sierra Leone. After all the international
community has invested in Sierra Leone, We cannot afford to be complacent
about its future." The establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission was agreed three years ago, in the 1999 Lomé Peace Accord
signed between the Sierra Leone government and the Revolutionary United
Front. The TRC's estimated cost of operation for the first 15 months is
$10 million. With the start-off date just a month away, there has thus far
been no firm commitment from the international community to provide the
needed funding. Meanwhile, seven commissioners have been identified and
confirmation of their appointments is expected to take place soon.
Hearings are scheduled to begin in September. TRC Interim Executive
Director Yasmin Jusu-Sheriff said donors had been very generous and that
this was reflected by the positive changes which had taken place in Sierra
Leone. She urged them to "go the extra mile to make sure that their
huge investment in peace will not be lost." Jusu-Sheriff explained
that the TRC was meant as a counter-balance to the Lomé Accord's amnesty
provision, which let those guilty of gross human rights violations off the
hook. "It is necessary to address the needs of the victim," she
said. "TRC is seen as a mechanism for promoting reconciliation and
help consolidate peace at the national, regional chiefdom and village
levels...There were high expectations placed on the TRC. Now the TRC must
manage those expectations. We must listen to the victims who are now
saying 'we who had no hand in the war, what do you have for us?'" She
explained that the scope of the Special Court, mandated to prosecute
persons who bear the greatest responsibility for war crimes committed in
Sierra Leone, would be limited to trying a handful of the "big
fish," but that many of those who committed atrocities would escape
prosecution. She said there was a need for another forum where the
victims' stories could be validated. "Since war in Sierra Leone was
part of a sub-regional conflict, the TRC will provide an opportunity for
others in the sub-region, including refugees, to participate in the
healing process, and in creating the conditions that will ensure peace and
stability in the sub-region," she said. The donors' briefing was
hosted by the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations and the U.N. High
Commission for Human Rights.