31 May 2003: The Liberian authorities say they have
released the body of the
notorious
former Sierra Leonean rebel commander, Sam "Mosquito" Bockarie
(pictured left) after completing an investigation into how he died, the
BBC reported on Saturday. The Liberians claim Bockarie was killed in a
shootout with their security forces nearly a month ago when he tried to
enter Liberia from Ivory Coast with the aim of further destabilising the
country. Sierra Leone's Special Court, which indicted Bockarie for war
crimes in March, alleges that Bockarie was in fact executed on the orders
of President Charles Taylor, and prosecutors have demanded the Liberians
turn the body over to them for forensic identification. Foreign Minister
Monie Captan said the release of Bockarie's remains followed the
conclusion of Liberia's own investigation and the completion of necessary
paperwork. "We have turned it over and it is leaving," he was
quoted as saying. Sierra Leone's Ambassador to Liberia, Patrick Foyah,
confirmed the handover, and told the BBC arrangements were being made to
fly the body back to Freetown late Sunday morning.
Sierra
Leone's Under-17 footballers held Egypt to a scoreless draw Saturday,
guaranteeing the Sierra Stars a place in the U-17 championship
semi-finals. Guinea hammered host Swaziland 6-0, but with just a draw and
a loss in their first two games, the Guineans will return home empty
handed.
30 May: The Sierra Leone government's Oil Exploration
Bid Evaluation
Committee
opened its first bids Friday from companies interested in exploring for
oil in the country's coastal waters. The committee, which is headed by
Vice President Solomon Berewa, now has until mid-July to consider bids
from three companies: Repsol YPF of Spain, 8 Investment Inc. of the United
States, and Oranto Petroleum Sierra Leone Ltd. Winners are expected to be
awarded blocks after July 15. According to Sierra Leone Association of
Journalists President Ibrahim el-Tayyib Bah, Berewa said he hoped the
results of the exploration would be positive to help the country get out
of the woods financially. He pledged that the entire process would remain
transparent and open. The ceremony at State House was witnessed by
journalists and members of the public.
Sierra Leone's
journalists have called for the reform of Sierra Leone's media laws
in
a way which would create an environment for a pluralistic and quality
media and ensure debate on issues of interest to the public. Last month, a
committee set up by the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) met
in Freetown to hammer out a series of recommendations at the request of the
government's Law Reform Commission. Those recommendations have now been
submitted to the commission over the signature of SLAJ President Ibrahim
el-Tayyib Bah (pictured left), and they were made public on Friday. The
13-member committee, which included representatives from both the
government-owned and private media, urged that Sierra Leone's
much-criticized criminal libel laws be expunged from the books, and that
measures taken to ensure that the country's civil libel laws are enforced.
The journalists also recommended that the Sierra Leone's Independent Media
Commission be made fully functional, with steps taken to make it both more
effective and more efficient. They called for legal recognition of SLAJ as
the professional media organization for all media policy and reforms in
Sierra Leone, and urged that the journalists' group itself should be given
responsibility for enforcing a Code of Practice for journalists.
Britain's
Department for International Development (DfID) pointed Friday to progress
in Sierra Leone since the end of the country's civil war, including the
maintaining of peace, positive economic growth and the holding of
elections. The publication, Africa Action Plan: UK Progress Report, noted
a ten-year Memorandum of Understanding signed earlier this year which
commits Britain to providing £40 in development assistance each year, in
addition to the £14 spent on military advisory assistance. Britain also
provides £34 million in funding for UNAMSIL along with the provision of
additional military observers and key personnel. The DfID report also
noted British backing for Sierra Leone's Anti-Corruption Commission and
support of judicial, governance and public sector reform programmes.
Sierra
Leone signed an agreement with Vietnam Friday on economics, commerce,
culture and technology, the Xinhua news agency reported. The pact was
designed to boost trade between the two countries, and came at the end of
the Vietnam-Africa Forum for Opportunities in the 21st Century in the
Vietnamese capital Hanoi.
29 May: Bids from oil companies interested in
exploring for oil in Sierra Leone's coastal waters will be opened at State House on
Friday, a source in Freetown told the Sierra Leone Web. Journalists and
members of the public have been invited to witness the noon ceremony.
Sierra
Leone's war crimes tribunal announced Thursday the indictment of a former
senior AFRC commander and the arrest of two members of the pro-government
Civil Defence Forces militia pending possible charges. Brima "Bazzy"
Kamara, a one-time Sierra Leone Army staff sergeant and "honourable"
in the AFRC military junta, was arrested at the behest of the Special Court
on Tuesday. Later, under the self-proclaimed title of
"brigadier-general," he led the AFRC splinter group popularly
known as the West Side Boys. The group gained notoriety in August 2000
when Kamara and his followers abducted some 40 U.N. military observers,
ECOMOG soldiers, aid workers and journalists at the West Side Boys in an
effort to force the RUF rebels to free their leader, former AFRC junta
leader Johnny Paul Koroma. Kamara will make his first appearance before
the court next week. Also Thursday, the Special Court said it had
provisionally detained two other persons under a rule which allows for a
suspect to be held up to 30 days before being charged. Moinina
Fofana was Director of War for the Civil Defence Forces, and Allieu Kondewa
(or Kondua) was Chief Initiator and High Priest of the Kamajors, a
component militia of the CDF. Kondewa was sacked by then CDF coordinator
Sam Hinga Norman in November 2000 for insubordination and for alleged
abuses against civilians. The Special Court is mandated to prosecute the handful of persons deemed
to bear the greatest responsibility for atrocities committed during Sierra
Leone's civil war. To date the court has indicted ten persons, with one of
the indictments still sealed. Seven of the indictees – Foday Sankoh,
Issa Sesay, Morris Kallon and Augustine Gbao from the RUF, Alex Tamba
Brima and Brima "Bazzy" Kamara of the AFRC, and former Internal
Affairs Minister Sam Hinga Norman from the CDF, are in court custody. Two
others, Johnny Paul Koroma and Sam Bockarie, were being sought under
international warrants. Bockarie is reported to have been killed in
Liberia earlier this month, but the indictment will remain open until the
court can do a forensic identification to verify that the body is indeed
that of the former RUF commander. So far the Liberians have refused to
return the remains to Freetown.
With Thursday's departure
of UNAMSIL's Guinean peacekeepers from Bo, the United Nations peacekeeping
force in Sierra Leone will have scaled back to just about 13,100 troops,
UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker said on Thursday. GUINBATT 3 was due to
leave for home by road on Thursday. A Nigerian battalion, NIBATT 13,
completed its withdrawal on Tuesday. The drawdown
marks
the end of Phase 2 of the U.N.'s scheduled force reduction from a peak
strength of nearly 17,500 troops last year. Coker (pictured left) told the
Sierra Leone Web that the Guineans would be replaced by soldiers from the
Bangladeshi 7th Battalion (BANATT 7), which is currently deployed in the
northern city of Kabala. U.N. peacekeepers will continue to patrol to
Kabala, but the primary responsibility for security there will now fall to
Sierra Leone's army, which is fully deployed in the town. As the U.N.
mission draws down, it is also restructuring to allow for a rapid response
to any potential security problems which may crop up. UNAMSIL has
designated two units, the Ghanaian 7th Battalion (GHANBATT 7) at Lungi and
the 10th Kenyan Battalion (KENBATT 10) at Masiaka, as a Force Reserve
which could be rapidly deployed to meet any contingency anywhere in the
country. On Friday and Saturday, GHANBATT 7 will be joined by Sierra
Leonean soldiers and police and UNAMSIL's Russian aviation unit of
helicopter gunships for a security exercise along Sierra Leone's
southeastern border, near the towns of Pujehun and Zimmi. The exercise,
codenamed "Diamond Ring," "is geared towards
preparing our units to be deployed into an area which requires our Force
Reserve, and will also exercise together with the Sierra Leone security
agencies on how to respond quickly to any security threat anywhere in the
country within a record time," Coker said. He said the U.N. mission
was very conscious of concerns that the pullout of peacekeepers could
leave a security vacuum, and so UNAMSIL was working closely with the
government of Sierra Leone "to ensure that their part of the
benchmarking are met and that (their security forces) live up to all the
expectations." The U.N. peacekeeping force is scheduled to
become still smaller in coming months. Phase 3 of UNAMSIL's troop drawdown
is due to commence in August and, depending on the situation on the
ground, should be complete by the end of 2004, or in early 2005.
Prosecutors
for Sierra Leone's war crimes court had strong and essentially "trial
ready"
cases in hand before filing indictments against those they believe most
responsible for atrocities committed during Sierra Leone's civil war, the
Special Court's Chief Prosecutor said late Tuesday. David Crane spoke at a
forum in Washington organized by the group Friends of Sierra Leone.
"Before I signed the indictments...each and every element of each
charge had to be provable beyond a reasonable doubt – not ‘reason to
believe’ or what have you," Crane said. "We set the standard
already very high, so that when the indictments were signed they were
beyond a reasonable doubt. Largely, they were trial-ready so that we have
evidence to prove each and every element of each charge." Crane noted
that prosecutors had to do more than file charges, however. They also have
to prove them. The Prosecutor's Office is only one element of the court,
alongside the Judiciary, the Registry and the Office of the Public
Defender, and Crane pledged that there would be a level playing field for
the defence. "In this system you are innocent until proven
guilty," he said. "It is my job to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt, before a dispassionate and neutral magistrate, that these
individuals are guilty." Crane denied charges by the supporters of
former Internal Affairs Minister Sam Hinga Norman that conditions at the
Bonthe Island lockup where the prisoners are held were so harsh as to
violate their human rights. "If they were hellish conditions,
certainly the ICRC and other human rights organizations would have called
us on that," he said. "It is not a pleasant place. It is a
detention facility. But it is a place that does meet all the international
standards, and we’ll continue to work to keep it that way." Crane
stressed that his office, both under the Special Court statute and in
practice, was entirely independent from both the United Nations and from
the Sierra Leone government. Decisions on the timing of indictments and
arrests, he said, were the prosecutor's alone. "We are not working
with the government as it relates to (prosecutions), nor do they expect us
to work with them regarding that," he said. "We’re not here
just to arbitrarily arrest people. What we’re trying to show is that not
only is no one above the law, but also that if anybody is in fact brought
before the law that they are treated fairly and decently and
transparently." Some have questioned whether war crimes prosecutions
may ultimately serve only to open old wounds and disrupt the process of
reconciliation in Sierra Leone after ten years of brutal civil war. Crane,
for one, has no doubts. "Why is it important that the people of
Sierra Leone and international communities stand up and say ‘wait a
minute, no more, never again’ to the impunity that took place wantonly
for the past ten years?" he asked. "Because it has to be done.
No one, no human being, should go through what (Sierra Leoneans) have gone
through, regardless of the reason, whatever the reason may be. So why is
it important? Because impunity cannot stand and it should not stand
anywhere, and to include West Africa."
Leaders
and representatives of the 15-member Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) ended an extraordinary one-day summit in the Nigerian
capital Abuja Thursday with a declaration designed to reinforce previous
peace initiatives in the sub-region and to address the security and
political causes of conflicts in West Africa. The declaration called for
additional troops for strife-torn Ivory Coast to meet an expanded ECOWAS
mandate for that country. For Liberia, ECOWAS leaders said they would
explore with the United Nations and the International Contact Group on
Liberia ways to institute an appropriate monitoring mechanism for a
ceasefire and the stabilisation of that country. Summit participants also
resolved to activate standby units within the armed
forces
of ECOWAS member states for the establishment of rapid response force. The
leaders reiterated their commitment to an ECOWAS ban on the import, export
and manufacture of light weapons, and they reaffirmed their commitment to
the promotion and consolidation of democracy, good governance and the rule
of law through respect for constitutionality and human rights. President
Kabbah (pictured left) attended for Sierra Leone, along with the leaders
of Nigeria, Ghana and Benin. Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea and Liberia
were represented by lower-level officials.
28 May: Sierra Leone's Under-17 footballers
defeated Swaziland 2-0 in Mbabane Wednesday, handing their Swazi hosts
their second straight loss and dashing their hopes of moving on to the
next round. The Sierra Stars' goals came in the 39th minute from Sesay
Hassan and in the 62nd from Mohamed Kamara. Egypt, with wins over
Swaziland and Guinea have already clinched a place in the next round,
leaving Sierra Leone and Guinea to compete for the second slot from Group
A. The Sierra Stars match with Guinea on Sunday ended in a 3-3 draw.
Sierra
Leone's human rights situation improved significantly during 2003,
Amnesty
International said in its latest Annual Report which the group unveiled on
Wednesday. The report cited the end of a decade of civil war and progress
made towards addressing abuses inflicted by both sides in the conflict.
But the report said progress was needed in in strengthening the justice
system and
to promote and protect human rights. Amnesty International also
noted that the court proceedings last year against Foday Sankoh and some
100 other persons on murder and related offences "were repeatedly
postponed and international standards of fair trial were not met."
Some 20 other members of the former armed opposition were held without
charge or trial, the human
rights
group added.
President Kabbah and the presidents of
South Africa, Ghana and Mozambique were in the Nigerian capital Abuja
Wednesday ahead of Thursday's inauguration of President Olusegun Obasanjo
for a second term, the Associated Press reported. The opposition claims
the election was rigged, and his main opponent, former Nigerian military
ruler Muhammadu Buhari says he will not recognize the government beyond
May 29. News services say tight security measures have been put in place
for the inauguration.
For the past three weeks the Liberian
government has been locked in a standoff with Sierra Leone's Special Court
over the remains of former RUF rebel leader Sam "Mosquito"
Bockarie. The body was put on display in the Liberian capital Monrovia
early this month after the Liberian authorities claimed Bockarie was
killed in a shootout with their security forces while trying to enter
their country from neighbouring Ivory Coast. The Special Court, which
indicted Bockarie last month for war crimes committed during Sierra
Leone's civil war, is demanding that Liberia send the body back to
Freetown so investigators can make a positive forensic identification. So
far, that demand has fallen on deaf ears. Liberian officials announced May
9 they would only release the body after completing their own
investigation into how the rebel leader died. Now the Liberians say that
investigation has uncovered evidence
that Bockarie had been hired to overthrow the government of President
Charles Taylor. In a press conference in Monrovia Tuesday, Liberian
Defence Minister Daniel Chea (pictured left) told reporters Bockarie had
crossed into Liberia with "a huge cache of arms and ammunition,"
and that evidence gathered at the scene of the shootout had revealed the
reasons for Bockarie's arrival in the country. "His presence on
Liberian soil was part of a larger plan by higher-ups in certain regional
countries to bring reprisals against the people and government of Liberia
for what they consider as Liberia’s role in the Ivorian crisis,"
Chea said. According to the Voice of America, the minister refused to say
when Bockarie's body might be returned to Freetown. The Special Court,
however, isn't buying the Liberian version of events. Court officials maintain
Bockarie had been in Liberia all along, and they say he was executed on
the orders of the Liberian president
himself. "Liberians did kill Sam Bockarie. Why do we know that?
Because we have the ability to know that," Special Court Chief
Prosecutor said in Washington late Tuesday. "They also killed his
family a week later. Sam Bockarie was not killed fighting resisting
arrest. He was murdered." Crane stressed it was still important that
the body be returned to Freetown to put Bockarie's death beyond doubt.
Until that happens, he said, the court will officially assume that
Bockarie is alive and the indictment will remain open. Crane said the
court was pursuing all available avenues to get the Liberians to return
Bockarie's body to Freetown, and also to arrest and hand over former AFRC
junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma, whom the court says is also in Liberia.
Crane declined to elaborate on what measures the court might take, but he
blasted Taylor for what he said was the Liberian leader's failure to live
up to his international responsibilities. "We are exploring all
options as to how this plays out, but the bottom line is President Taylor
knows his international legal obligations," Crane said. "We have
called him on it. The world now sees how this individual approaches the
rule of law, and we’ll continue to press forward with various options
that are available to us."
Leaders of ECOWAS countries are set to meet to discuss
instability in Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone, the Ivory Coast, the Voice
of America reported on Wednesday.
27 May: Former RUF leader Foday Sankoh's health has
deteriorated, and in his
current condition he would not be fit to stand trial before Sierra Leone's
war crimes tribunal, the Special Court's doctor said on Tuesday. Dr.
Donald Harding told the BBC that the rebel leader was paralyzed and unable to
speak, but he said Sankoh's condition remained stable and that he was
receiving treatment. "He’s being fed, he’s having his treatment
for his hypertension, he’s having treatment for his trauma, and he’s
having liquid diet," he said, adding: "He is not at death’s
door." Harding acknowledged that Sankoh would be unable to get the
medical attention he needed in Sierra Leone, and he said there were
already plans to take him to an undisclosed third country for an
assessment of his mental capabilities. "We have to assess the
function of his brain which we can’t
do
in Sierra Leone," he said. Dr. Harding also addressed accusations by
the supporters of jailed former Internal Affairs Minister Sam Hinga
Norman, who has been indicted for war crimes allegedly committed by his
Kamajor militia during Sierra Leone's civil war. Norman is currently in
the eleventh day of a hunger strike to draw local and international
attention to his plight. His relatives and supporters have accused the
court of holding him in conditions so poor as to violate his human rights.
The court denies the charges. Harding said Norman was drinking fruit
juices and water, and that despite the hunger strike he was still in good
health. "He has been moving about," he said. "Yesterday he
walked about four times to the telephone, answered telephone calls, he
went to the clinic to see the sister there." Harding said
Norman's weight had dropped from 96 kilograms to 88, but that he was still
overweight. He also denied allegations that the former minister was being
kept in a mosquito-infested cell. "That’s not true," he said.
"It’s not mosquito-infested because apart from the fact that they
have mosquito nets there, the cells have been sprayed every evening."
The
president of the National Football Association of Swaziland said Monday
that the majority of the eight teams competing in the African Under-17
championship have overage players, the Reuters news agency reported.
"Most of the countries have over age players," he told the Times
of Swaziland. "Our junior squad played very well and were unfortunate
not to win, but if they were up against players their own age then maybe
they could have done so." Swaziland, which is hosting the tournament,
lost 1-0 in the opening game. Following Sunday's 3-3 draw between Sierra
Leone and Guinea, team officials traded similar charges. "Guinea
players are giants, they are not Under-17s," said Sierra Leonean
coach Musa Kallon. "They are big, strong and definitely over-aged. We
were playing against giants." Guinea's coach, Syllay Duara, dismissed
the accusation. "Sierra Leone have a player with a beard and clearly
over-aged," he told the Swazi Observer. "My players are all
schoolgoing kids and are within the required age limit." The Sierra
Stars' next match is against Swaziland on Wednesday.
Liberia's
LURD rebels say they will participate in peace talks next week with the
Liberian government, but it is unknown whether a second rebel group,
MODEL, will attend, the Reuters news agency reported. A LURD delegation
met in Freetown this week with an ECOWAS-designated mediator, former
Nigerian leader Abdulsalami Abubakar, but a MODEL delegation failed to
show up. "We will attend the peace talks in Ghana...but ECOWAS should
make sure that Taylor attends that meeting because our LURD leader Sekou
Conneh will attend," LURD Secretary-General Joe Gbalah told Reuters
correspondent Christo Johnson. Taylor has said he plans to attend the
talks. Gbalah also called on MODEL to take part. In a separate interview
with IRIN, Abubakar said a ceasefire was essential, adding that LURD
wanted an international stabilisation sent to Liberia to Liberia to ensure
that any truce was not violated. He said the talks with LURD had gone well
""in the sense that they gave me their demands on what they
think is wrong with Liberia and what the government should do to allow
peace." "If they are sincere in what they told me, I
believe we would soon have peace in Liberia because everybody is yearning
for peace," Abubakar said. "What I would say to Liberians and
the whole region is, give peace a chance. Our people are tired, there is
hunger, there is disease, wanton destruction." Gbalah called
the talks with the ECOWAS mediator "fruitful," but he expressed
concern about immigration and security arrangements for the upcoming talks
in Ghana. "ECOWAS should arrange travel documents [and] security for
us to be protected, considering the man we are dealing with," he
said.
26 May:
President Kabbah convened a meeting of senior officials from the
Finance
Ministry, Customs and Excise Department, Income Tax, Central Tender Board,
the Ports Authority and Anti-Corruption Commission Friday and berated them
in front of journalists for inefficiency and "intolerable"
levels of corruption
in their departments, the official Sierra Leone News Agency reported.
Presidential spokesman Kanji Daramy (pictured right) told the Sierra Leone
Web on Monday that the president "spoke strongly against those
government officials" who put impediments in front of business
people, often for no other purpose than soliciting a bribe. These
circuitous processes, he said, frustrated business people and created more
overhead which was passed on to consumers in the form of exorbitant
prices. "The president therefore called on the Commissioner-General
of the newly-created National Revenue Authority, Dr. Donald Karimu, to
ensure that steps were taken urgently to address these needlessly long and
cumbersome processes and procedures," Daramy said. "(He)
stressed that the processes must be simplified and rationalised in such a
way that there should not be more than one desk officer or point at
customs to ensure clearance of one consignment through customs."
Kabbah called on the Anti-Corruption Commission to be more alert in
identifying and dealing with corrupt practices. He outlined steps being
taken to strengthen the commission by adding professional staff,
particularly in the area of investigations, with the assistance of the
Commonwealth Secretariat in London. "The president warned that there
will be no place in government for inefficient and ineffective officials,
and stressed that government did not have the capacity to employ
everybody," Daramy said. "(He said) those citizens who make
their living as business people in the private sector must not be unduly
harassed and discouraged through the creation of unnecessary roadblocks in
their way."
An ECOWAS-appointed mediator arrived in
Freetown Monday for talks with Liberian rebel groups before next week's
direct talks between the rebels and the Liberian government, the Reuters
news agency reported. Former Nigerian leader Abdulsalami Abubakar, who has
been mandated by the West African community to seek an end to Liberia's
civil war, met with a five-member delegation led by LURD Secretary-General
Joe Gbalah. Representatives of a new rebel group, the Movement for Democracy in
Liberia (MODEL), failed to show up in the Sierra Leonean capital. The
rebels are scheduled to begin face-to-face negotiations with Liberian
government representatives next week in Accra. Upon arrival in Freetown,
Abubakar told journalists he was in Freetown to see "how to move
peace forward" in Liberia. "First and foremost, we need a
ceasefire, after that any other thing can follow," he said, adding:
"I am going to do my best to see that peace comes to Liberia but this
peace can only be achieved by those involved in the war." According
to Reuters, Gbalah said he was optimistic that a settlement could be
reached. "I believe that we are going to have a positive
result," he said. "We are here as LURD because we are committed
to the peace process."
Two persons who claim to be on hunger
strike to protest their detention by Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal
are in fact eating normally, while a third, former Internal Affairs
Minister Sam Hinga Norman, is continuing to eat biscuits and drink fruit
juice, court officials said on Monday. "The health of the detainees
is good," Special Court doctor Donald Harding said in a statement.
"Norman’s body weight has dropped in recent days but he weighs more
now than he did after he was first arrested." Norman's supporters and
his lawyer have claimed that the former minister, who was indicted by the
court last March for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, has
been held in conditions which
violate his human rights. Court Registrar Robin Vincent (pictured right)
dismissed the charges, noting that the Bonthe Island lockup where five of
the six prisoners are being held has been visited by the International
Committee of the Red Cross, members of UNAMSIL's Human Rights Section, and
a
delegation from the Sierra Leone parliament's
Human Rights Committee. Vincent said Norman's lawyers had the option of
filing a formal complaint with the court, but that they had not done so.
"Saying things about their client’s detention that are exaggerated
and untrue is not helpful," he added.
25 May:
Jailed former Internal Affairs Minister Sam Hinga Norman told family
members
and supporters over the weekend that he is on a hunger strike to protest
his detention by Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal. Norman (pictured
left) was arrested by the court last March on an indictment which alleged
that, as leader of the pro-government Kamajor militia during Sierra
Leone's civil war, he knew or ought to have known about crimes allegedly
committed by those under his command, and that he failed to take necessary
measures to prevent such crimes or to punish the perpetrators. The court
also accused Norman of approving the use of child soldiers. Norman's
lawyer and family members have countered by accusing the court of
mistreating the 63-year old former minister, and of holding him under
deplorable conditions at the Bonthe Island lockup. Court officials deny
the charges. One of Norman's supporters is Britain's former High
Commissioner to Sierra Leone, Peter Penfold. Penfold (right) spoke to
Norman by telephone on Sunday – coincidentally the sixth
anniversary of the 1997 AFRC military coup against Sierra Leone's civilian
government. "(Norman) has been on a hunger strike for the past ten
days and is somewhat weak, but otherwise in good heart," Penfold told
the Sierra Leone Web. Penfold, who has been a critic of the Special Court,
said he thought Norman should be set free. "I firmly believe that it
is a great wrong for him to be imprisoned," he said. "What
message does this send to anyone who fights for the cause of democracy and
peace for his/her country?" In a BBC interview Sunday, Norman's
London-based son Sam Norman described a conversation with his father on
Saturday. "He couldn’t even speak to me for that long because he’s
getting
weak and he cannot stand for long," he said. Norman said his
father had gone on hunger strike "because he’s thinking that no one
is paying attention to him and nobody is doing anything about his
condition." Said Norman: "He can’t bear it any more. If he
goes on hunger strike, people might tend to listen to him, but now no one
seems to care." Norman accused the court of dragging the procedures
out, and of treating his father as if he had already been found guilty. He
added that family members and supporters planned to put pressure the
Sierra Leone government, the Special Court and the United Nations to bring
about his father's release. "I don’t want me to wake up in the
morning and get the phone that, oh, your dad has gone on hunger strike and
is dead," Norman said.
The Special Court for Sierra
Leone has to date handed down nine war crimes
indictments
including one which is sealed, a top court official told the Voice of
America last week. Six of the eight public indictments accuse the
defendants of acting directly or indirectly in concert with Liberian
President Charles Taylor, and Chief Prosecutor David Crane has frequently
hinted that the Liberian leader could himself be a target of court
prosecutors. But in his interview with VOA journalist Josephine Kamara,
Crane wasn't saying whose name appeared in the sealed ninth indictment.
"We are currently continuing this international investigation against
what we call a ‘joint criminal enterprise'," he said. "We’re
looking at all those who we think who bear the greatest responsibility and
we will follow the evidence wherever we think it may lead, both in Sierra
Leone, regionally, as well as internationally." The court is involved
in a standoff with the Liberian authorities who have so far refused to
hand over the remains of former RUF commander Sam "Mosquito"
Bockarie, whom the Liberians claim was killed in a shootout with their
forces three weeks ago. Crane said the court had the appropriate
scientific tools to make a positive identification of Bockarie's body, and
that it was necessary they do so "so the people of Sierra Leone and
West Africa can feel that in fact he truly is dead and they can rest
assured that one of the individuals who has brought such pain and
suffering in this region is in fact gone." Until that is done, Crane
said, the indictment will remain open and the court will assume that
Bockarie is still alive. Prosecutors are also demanding that Taylor arrest
and hand over former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma, who they allege
is commanding a contingent of Taylor's security forces in the Liberian
town of Foya Kamala. The Liberians deny that Koroma is in Liberia. Trials
of the accused are due to begin later this year, and Crane said the
proceedings would be transparent and open to all. "One of the key
aspects that we wanted to do in the Special Court is to show the people of
Sierra Leone and the people of West Africa that no one is above the
law," he said. "But should they in fact be indicted, then they
will have an absolute right to a fair and open trial so that the people of
Sierra Leone and the victims can see justice done before their eyes."
The Sierra Stars played their Guinean
rivals to a 3-3 draw Sunday at the CAF Under-17 championship in Mbabane,
Swaziland. In the opening match of the tournament, Egypt defeated host
Swaziland 1-0.
24 May: A five-member delegation from the Liberian
rebel group LURD arrived in Freetown Saturday for two days of talks with
an ECOWAS-appointed mediator seeking to end Liberia's civil war, former
Nigerian leader Abdulsalami Abubakar, the Associated Press reported. A new
rebel group fighting in eastern Liberia, the Movement for Democracy in
Liberia (MODEL), is expected to send its own five-member team to the
Sierra Leonean capital on Monday. The Associated Press quoted diplomatic
sources close to the talks as saying Abubakar was expected to sound out
the rebel groups on their willingness to agree to a ceasefire. Direct
talks between the rebels and the government are scheduled to take place
June 4 in Accra, Ghana.
The Confederation of African
Football (CAF) U-17 organizing committee has fined the Sierra Leone
Football Association $3,000 for failing to submit their team list on time.
Under confederation rules, the final 18-member list must reach the CAF
secretariat ten days before the opening of the tournament. This is the
Sierra Leonean U-17 team's first appearance in the finals. The Sierra
Stars are due to take the field against Guinea in Mbabane on Sunday,
following the opening match between host Swaziland and Egypt.
Sierra
Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) this week held
"thematic hearings" in Freetown on the abuses suffered by women
and girls during Sierra Leone's civil war. One of those who appeared to
testify on Friday was Kenyan lawyer Binaifer Nowrojee, who flew in from
the U.S. city of Boston on behalf of a consortium of human rights groups
known as the Coalition for Women’s Human Rights in Conflict Situations.
After her testimony, Nowrojee told the BBC that violence against women was
not just incidental to the conflict, but was routinely used as a tool of
war. "Sexual violence was used in a widespread and systematic way as
a weapon of conflict in the Sierra Leonean war, and women were raped in
extraordinarily brutal ways," she said. "Sexual violence was
used to terrorize, to humiliate, to push people into submission as a way
for rebels to use and dominate control over areas." Nowrojee said
that most of the perpetrators had been rebels from the RUF, the AFRC or an
AFRC splinter group known as the West Side Boys, but that to a lesser
extent members of the pro-government CDF militia and even peacekeepers had
been responsible for rape and sexual violence. Violence against women
during Sierra Leone's decade of war was widespread and often brutal, but
it has received less attention than that given other victims, notably the
amputees. Nowrojee said she knows why. "Historically, sexual violence
has been downplayed, trivialized or dismissed as the unfortunate acts of
soldiers as opposed to being a serious crime under international
law," she said. "The second thing is because of the stigma and
shame that’s attached to sexual violence, women are reluctant to come
forward to talk about what happened to them. What you get is a culture of
silence that surrounds this crime and inaction, not only to prevent it but
also then to assist the victims." The Coalition for Women’s Human
Rights in Conflict Situations is calling on the TRC to ensure that the
experiences of Sierra Leone's women are fully reflected in its final
report. Nowrojee said her group also wants the Sierra Leone government to
assist women victims with education, skills training and trauma
counseling. The group is also urging Sierra Leone to amend or repeal laws
which discriminate against women, and to institute judicial and police
reforms so that victims of sexual violence can find redress with the
police and the courts.
23 May: The United States will donate $75,000 in
support of a programme to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS in Sierra Leone by
making high-quality low-cost condoms available to everyone, the U.S.
Embassy said Friday in Freetown. The money will come from the U.S. Agency
for International Development, and the programme will be administered by
the aid agency CARE. Initially, the programme will target persons of
reproductive age (15-49 years old) in the Western Area before reaching out
to the provinces. Last July a United Nations
study
estimated the HIV infection rate in this group at seven percent, meaning
that as many as 170,000 Sierra Leoneans may be infected with the deadly
virus. In a statement Friday, U.S. Ambassador Peter Chaveas (pictured
left) said the embassy would collaborate with CARE by sponsoring a series
of radio and television ads and community-based educational campaigns
covering topics such as condom use, purchase locations and living with
HIV/AIDS. "By combining a world-class product made affordable to
everyone and a strong educational program, we hope to make a real
difference in this important effort," Chaveas said. "Sierra
Leone can beat the threat of HIV/AIDS. Sierra Leoneans must lead the way
but we intend to be part of the solution." The programme will be
launched on May 30.
22 May: The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists
(SLAJ) has announced its
first annual media awards for excellence in
reporting on national reconciliation and the fight against HIV/AIDS, SLAJ
president Ibrahim El-Tayyib Bah (pictured left) told the Sierra Leone Web. The launch
ceremony will take place Thursday evening at the Lagoonda Complex at
Aberdeen. The winners in each of the three categories – newspaper, radio
and television – will receive half a million leones (about $250) and a
certificate of recognition. The closing date for nominations is June 6,
and the winners will be announced on June 21. Meanwhile, SLAJ has finished
a workshop on media reform and is sending its recommendations to the Law
Reform Commission. "We have just finished the radio policy workshop,
the first towards the development of a comprehensive national media
policy. Hopefully this will be concluded by the end of July this
year," Bah said.
Sierra Leone's average monthly
diamond exports for the first quarter of this year averaged $5.1 million,
the Awoko newspaper reported on Thursday, quoting the Government Gold and
Diamond Office.
The Liberian government has failed to
comply with a request by Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal to hand over
the remains of indicted war criminal Sam "Mosquito" Bockarie,
Special Court Chief Investigator Dr. Alan White said on Thursday. "As
of today, they are not in compliance with their international
obligations," White said in a statement. "We have given them
more than enough time to meet our demands. This is completely
unacceptable." The Liberian authorities say the former RUF field
commander was killed in a shootout earlier this month while attempting to
cross into Liberia from the Ivory Coast. The court has demanded that
Liberia turn Bockarie's body for forensic identification, but so far the
Liberian government has failed to comply. The official request, which was
signed and hand-delivered to Liberia's Permanent Mission to the United
Nations on May 19 by court Registrar Robin Vincent, called on Liberia to
comply fully with two Security Council resolutions which mandated that all
states, and specifically the government of Liberia, cooperate with the
court. Deputy Prosecutor Desmond de Silva called Liberia's failure to hand
over the body "a flagrant disregard of the United
Nations." "Security Council Resolutions 1470 and 1478 have
been flouted by Charles Taylor with the contempt one has come to associate
with his pariah regime," de Silva said. "It is difficult to
determine whether he is an adult playing childish games or a child playing
stupid games."
21 May: Prosecutors for Sierra Leone's Special
Court say they want the United
Nations
Security Council to intervene in a standoff with Liberia over the remains
of former RUF field commander Sam "Mosquito" Bockarie (pictured
left), the Associated Press reported on Tuesday. The Liberian authorities
claim Bockarie, whom the court indicted last March for war crimes in
Sierra Leone, was killed in a shootout with their security forces earlier
this month when he tried to enter Liberia from the Ivory Coast. Court
officials have demanded that the body be turned over to them for forensic
identification, but the Liberians have so far refused – first saying
Liberia had no direct dealings with the court, and later claiming they
first wanted to do their own investigation into the circumstances
surrounding the rebel commander's death. Prosecutors have expressed
skepticism over the Liberian version of events. They say they have
credible reports that Bockarie, and later his family, were executed on the
orders of Liberian President Charles Taylor. "It looks as if we are
at an impasse," said court Chief Investigator Dr. Alan White.
"We are going to take up the matter with the U.N. Security Council to
seek their support to intervene. The Liberian government seems not to be
playing the game according to international rules." Meanwhile, Sierra
Leone's Ambassador to Liberia told the Voice of America he had written to
Liberia's Foreign Ministry asking the authorities to confirm or deny the
deaths of members of Bockarie's family, who had until recently resided in
the Monrovia suburb of Paynesville. "As an ambassador, it’s my
responsibility to also secure the interest of my people in this
country," Patrick Foyah said. "Sam Bockarie’s family are
Sierra Leoneans. The mom, the dad, the children (are) all Sierra
Leoneans...I have made an official request that I would like to meet these
people. The rumor is very persistent, from the Liberian people, from the
Sierra Leoneans, from the international community. Even the Liberian
government officials are hearing this rumor. The only way to put this to
rest is to make available the family to me to identify them, to have a
talk with them, and to tell the whole world that the rumor is not true and
that the family are alive and kicking."
19 May: Liberian President Charles Taylor is
"not only the center, but the icon" of the wars and the refugee
crisis plaguing West Africa and should be forced from power, the head of
the United Nations refugee agency said on Sunday. United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers spoke to reporters in Conakry at
the end of a five-nation visit which took him to Ivory Coast, Ghana,
Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. "If you're serious about democracy
in the rest of the world, then you should be serious about democracy in
West Africa as well," Lubbers said. "My preference is that one
would force Taylor to step down." According to the Associated Press,
Lubbers called on the United States and the United Nations to help resolve
the conflict in the war-torn country. "If the British felt
responsible in Sierra Leone, and the French in Ivory Coast, I can't
imagine that the U.S. doesn't feel some responsibility in Liberia,"
he said, adding: "I prefer in the first place to look into the
peacekeeping capacity of the U.N." The former Dutch prime minister's
remarks did not go down well in Monrovia. "I think that Mr. Lubbers
has stepped way out of his arena, out of the humanitarian business, in
talking about politics," Information Minister Reginald Goodridge told
the BBC. Goodridge blamed Liberia's problems on two rebel groups fighting
the government, LURD and MODEL, and he blamed the UNHCR for failing the
Liberian people. "We have not heard Mr. Lubbers condemning the
activities and the atrocities of these groups," he said. "They
are amputating the limbs of innocent civilians, they are killing and
maiming people, they are burning and slashing all over the country...We
think that Mr. Lubbers has to really be evenhanded in this matter and he
has to cater to the humanitarian crisis of the innocent people and leave
the politics to the politicians." The Liberian government has come
under increasing military and political pressure in recent weeks.
Pro-government forces have lost ground to rebel groups, which are now said
to occupy some 60 percent of the country, and there were reports Monday
that Guinean soldiers shelled the Liberian border town of Ganta over the
weekend. Aid groups estimate that a million Liberians have been displaced
within the country, and 300,000 have sought refuge in neighbouring
countries. Earlier this month the United Nations Security Council renewed
sanctions against the Taylor regime, extending an arms embargo and slapped
a ban on Liberian timber sales, which have allegedly funded Liberia's
illegal arms purchases. The Liberian government is also locked in a
standoff with Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal, which is demanding that
Taylor hand over the body of former RUF commander Sam Bockarie for
forensic identification. The court wants Taylor surrender former AFRC
junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma, who they believe is commanding a
contingent of Taylor's security forces in northwestern Liberia. Both
Bockarie and Koroma were indicted in March for war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
16 May: Parliament on Thursday approved the
nomination of Brima Acha Kamara as Inspector-General of Police, local
newspapers reported in Freetown. Kamara succeeds Keith Biddle, whose
contract ends at the end of the month.
Sierra Leone's
cabinet met in Kenema this week as part of an initiative to make rural
people feel part of their government, the BBC reported. BBC correspondent
Siaffa Moriba said residents lined the streets of the eastern provincial
capital to see the ministers as they arrived by road from Freetown.
"(There was) dancing all over the place, people are jubilating,
people here are really supporting the idea of the cabinet moving from the
capital to the provinces, and this is the first place that this sitting is
taking place," Moriba said. Future cabinet meetings are planned for
the other provincial capitals.
The head of the United
Nations refugee agency called post-war Sierra
Leone
Friday "an island of stability" in the midst of a still chaotic
region, the Associated Press reported. United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees Ruud Lubbers spoke to reporters in Freetown at the end of a
three-day visit to the country. "There has been an enormous
difference," Lubbers said. "I commend Sierra Leone for being an
island of stability. I depart with a good feeling of what I have seen, as
compared with 27 months ago when I was last here, when Sierra Leone was a
refugee-producing country." Lubbers, who is on an eight-day
assessment mission to West Africa, met with President Kabbah in Kenema on
Thursday. According to a UNHCR statement, he urged Kabbah to continue to
support the return of Sierra Leonean refugees from neighbouring countries.
Also Thursday, Lubbers met with Liberian refugee women at the Tobanda
Refugee Camp in Kenema District. Later, in Koidu, he visited the Alladura
Primary School for returned refugee children from Guinea, and a settlement
which houses Sierra Leoneans who had their limbs hacked off during the
country's civil war. In his press conference Friday, Lubbers said he was
concerned about "the substantial number of refugees coming in from
Liberia." There are currently some 70,000 Liberian refugees in Sierra
Leone, and the High Commissioner said it was important to see that the
number did not rise. Lubbers told reporters President Kabbah had expressed
his willingness to meet with Liberian rebel leaders if it would help to
resolve that country's conflict. Lubbers said his meeting with Kabbah
"confirms my impression that (Liberian President Charles Taylor) is
losing friends by the day," the Associated Press said.
The
Special Court has evidence that Liberian President Charles Taylor is
harbouring fugitives from the terrorist al-Qaeda network, and has turned
that evidence over to the appropriate law enforcement authorities, Chief
Prosecutor David Crane said Friday at an American Bar Association
breakfast in Washington. "I know that they are moving about. I know
that they are trading in diamonds, washing money and being protected by
Charles Taylor," the Reuters news agency quoted Crane as saying.
Crane said that members of the group were moving freely throughout West
Africa, and that it was time for the world to examine the region and its
"terrorist" links. "No one is checking on them," he
said. "This is a place where they come to relax because no one is
bothering them and I am talking about all of West Africa. We have ignored
it and now we may be ruing the day."
Former Nigerian
leader Abdulsalami Abubakar will meet with leaders of the Liberian LURD
rebel movement in Sierra Leone, Radio France International reported on
Friday, quoting U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers. Abubakar
was designated by ECOWAS to try and negotiate an end to the Liberian
conflict. Liberian officials say they were scheduled to hold talks with
LURD in Accra, Ghana on June 2, but LURD has reportedly backed out of the
meeting over security fears.
15 May: Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal has
turned up the heat on Liberian President Charles Taylor, accusing him
Thursday of harboring Middle Eastern terrorists and of having ordered the
execution of former RUF field
commander
Sam Bockarie and his family. "Charles Taylor is harboring terrorists
from the Middle East, including al-Qaeda and Hezbollah, and has been for
years," Special Court Chief Prosecutor David Crane (pictured left)
said in an interview with the Washington Post. "It is time for the
world to know this and who Charles Taylor really is. He is not just a
regional troublemaker; he is a player in the world of terror and what he
does affects lives in the United States and Europe." The Washington
Post and human rights groups have long alleged Liberian government
complicity in selling illicit Sierra Leonean diamonds to representatives
of the al-Qaeda Network. Liberia has denied the allegations. Crane also
told the Post he had evidence that Sam Bockarie had been executed by
Taylor's Chief of Security, General Benjamin Yeatan, and not killed in a
shootout with Liberian security forces as the authorities there have
claimed. Bockarie, often known by his nom de guerre of
"Mosquito," was indicted by the Special Court last March for war
crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the civil war in
Sierra Leone. The rebel commander's death came barely a day after court
officials pinpointed his location in the border town of Kahnple and
demanded that the Liberians hand him over. According to the official
Liberian account, Bockarie and a handful of bodyguards were intercepted
while trying to cross into Liberia from Ivory Coast. An attempt to arrest
the group resulted in a firefight with casualties on both sides. A
diplomat in Monrovia cast doubt on the Liberian version, however, telling
the Integrated Regional
Information Network (IRIN) that Bockarie was actually killed in the
Liberian capital after a violent argument with Taylor. Now, in a statement released on
Thursday, the court's Chief Investigator said there was evidence that the
Liberian president had ordered Bockarie's mother, wife and two children killed as well. "We
have credible information that Bockarie's family has been murdered at the
direction of Taylor," Dr. Alan White said. "This latest
development casts serious doubts about his claims regarding the
circumstances of Sam Bockarie's death." In an interview with Radio
France International (RFI), White noted that the family had been missing
for the past couple of days, and that the court had "some very strong
valid information" that they were in fact dead. RFI quoted Liberian
Information Minister Reginald Goodridge as saying he had know information
about the alleged killings. A Western diplomat contacted by the Sierra
Leone Web said his office could not confirm either the presence of al-Qaeda
members in Liberia or of the execution of Bockarie's family and expressed
skepticism over the claims. White, however, said he had little doubt the
reports were true. "Our information has been incredibly accurate,"
he told the Sierra Leone Web. Meanwhile, Deputy Prosecutor Desmond de
Silva expressed frustration over the Liberian government's continued
refusal to hand Bockarie's body over to the court for forensic
identification. Last week, the Liberians said they would honour a Sierra
Leone government request to send his remains to Freetown, but later
changed their mind. Liberia's Defence Minister announced his government
would hold on to the body until Liberia completes an investigation into
the circumstances under which Bockarie died. He declined to say when such
an investigation might be complete. But de Silva said the Liberians didn't
need the body for that. "We want the body," he said. "If
the Liberians claim it is Bockarie's body, there is no justification for
holding it, as he was a Sierra Leonean national. We are extremely
concerned that if the information regarding the murder of his family is
true, it was carried out in order to avoid possible DNA profiling."
White agreed. "Clearly the family would have been used as part of our
forensic examination to confirm in fact that the body was or was not Sam
Bockarie," he told RFI. The Liberian authorities have maintained they
have no direct dealings with the Special Court and claim the court has no
authority in Liberia. Last week, however, the United Nations Security
Council called on all states and "in particular the Government of
Liberia to cooperate fully with the Special Court for Sierra Leone."
United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers met with
President
Kabbah Thursday morning in Kenema, a UNHCR spokesman said. The two men
reportedly discussed their concerns about the situation in Liberia.
Lubbers is on an eight-day mission to West Africa. He arrived in Sierra
Leone late Wednesday for a two-day visit. Earlier in the day, Lubbers met
with Sierra Leonean refugees on the outskirts of the Liberian capital
Monrovia and urged them to return home, the Integrated Regional
Information Network (IRIN) reported. "Your future is not in Liberia,
but there," he told them. In a statement presented to Lubbers, the
refugees said some of them were afraid to go back to Sierra Leone.
"Our concern is our desire to return home, but some of us are afraid
that we could face persecution," the statement said. Lubbers told
journalists that Liberia had become "a country where people have no
safe place to go anymore" and he said a solution had to be found to
end Liberia's civil war. Liberian President Charles Taylor "has to
share power with others. It's an illusion to think otherwise," he
said. Taylor refused to meet with Lubbers during his stopover in Monrovia.
Lubbers had harsh words for the Liberian authorities. "You are
killing your own people," he told a government delegation.
13 May: The United Nations Security
Council have called off a planned eight-day mission to West Africa one day
before it was to depart so ambassadors can be in New York for negotiations
on a resolution that would lift sanctions on Iraq, news services reported.
Council president Munir Akram of Pakistan said some governments wanted
their top envoys to be present at the United Nations during what are
expected to be tough negotiations on the resolution, but he said the
mission to West Africa was only postponed. "The situation in West
Africa certainly deserves attention – and urgent attention – and that
is why the mission was being sent," he said. "At the same time,
I think the representatives on the mission also felt – at least some of
them – that they were required by their governments to be here at this
time. It's a question of determining governmental priorities...but I can
tell you this is not an indication of any loss of priority for West
Africa. The commitment is there. The mission will go very soon." The
mission had been scheduled to leave on May 15 and would have visited Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau and
Sierra Leone.
243 Sierra Leonean refugees arrived at the
Queen Elizabeth Quay in Freetown Saturday after a 30-hour trip by sea from
the Liberian capital Monrovia. A second boat carrying 147 returnees is due
to arrive in Freetown on Tuesday. A UNHCR spokesman said that with the
resumption of repatriations by sea, the costly air repatriation exercise
from Monrovia has been discontinued. 909 Sierra Leoneans were returned
home by air since February 28. Since 2001, some 63,000 Sierra Leonean
refugees have been repatriated from Liberia, 48,000 with the assistance of
the United Nations refugee agency. Another 16,000 Sierra Leoneans are
still living in five refugee camps around Monrovia, with about 800 of them
registered to go back on the next boats. An exercise to send home Sierra
Leonean refugees in Guinea is also continuing, both through Pamelap into
Sierra Leone's Kambia District and via Gueckedou into Kailahun District.
Since the beginning of the year, 16,500 people have returned from Guinea –
half of them over a new causeway over the Moa River which opened on April
4. Since the end of 2000 an estimated 160,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in
Guinea have gone home – 70,000 of them with UNHCR assistance. An estimated
25,000 Sierra Leoneans remain in refugee camps in Guinea. The UNHCR
expects to complete Sierra Leonean repatriation from all countries in the
region within the next twelve months.
Special Court Chief
Investigator Dr. Alan White renewed his demand Tuesday
that
the Liberian government turn over the body of former RUF commander Sam
Bockarie to the court for identification. In a statement released in
Freetown, White called Liberia's refusal to release Bockarie's body
pending an investigation into the circumstances of his death "an
attempt to obstruct the work of the court." The court indicted
Bockarie in March for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed
during Sierra Leone's civil war. On Monday, Liberian Defence Minister
Daniel Chea said the rebel commander's remains would be sent to Freetown
only after the Liberian authorities had completed their probe into what
they claim was a shootout between security forces and rebels on Liberia's
border with Ivory Coast. He gave no timeline for completion of the
investigation. The Liberian government has refused to deal directly with
the court, but said it would comply by a Sierra Leone government request
to return the body to Freetown. White said there was no reason now for the
Liberians to delay. "An examination of the body has already been
conducted by the Government of Liberia, and there is no logical reason for
them to retain it," he said. We are calling on Taylor to release the
body immediately to Sierra Leonean authorities." White also called
again on the Liberian government to hand over former AFRC junta leader
Johnny Paul Koroma – alive. The court says it has reliable reports that
Koroma is in western Liberia. The Liberians deny the claim. Koroma also
faces indictment by the court. He fled Freetown last January during a
police raid on his residence in connection with what the Sierra Leonean
authorities now say was a failed coup attempt.
12 May: Liberia will release the body of former RUF
field commander Sam
"Mosquito"
Bockarie only after it finishes its own investigation into his death,
Defence Minister Daniel Chea (pictured left) told the Associated Press on
Monday. "It is right for our people to know what actually went
wrong," Chea was quoted as saying. He added that the investigation
would "require some time" but that his government had no reason
not to hand over the body. Sierra Leonean authorities had expected the
remains to be returned to Freetown on Saturday, a diplomat told the Sierra
Leone Web. In an interview with the BBC, Chea denied there was any delay,
and he insisted that Liberia's action was in the best interests of the
region. "Sam Bockarie "Mosquito" – we all knew him, so to
speak," Chea said. "We knew what he represented to peace in this
region. What has unfolded in the last few days will require some
investigation so that at the end of the day both the Liberian government
and the government of Sierra Leone will be on the same wavelength."
According to the Liberian authorities, Bockarie was killed a week ago in a
shootout with Liberian security forces who attempted to arrest him as he
crossed the border from Ivory Coast. Chea said that the Liberian
investigation was necessary because Liberian soldiers had died in the gun
battle with Bockarie and his bodyguards. "We cannot just write their
deaths off," he said. "We have to establish what went wrong
because they went in there to do a simple job...Once that has been
established, the Foreign Minister, I believe, will take it over from there –
whether the body will be taken to Sierra Leone or whatever else is
necessary." Chea said the Liberian defence ministry was moving
speedily with other agencies to move the investigation forward, but that
he could make no promise as to the time frame for completion. "I don’t
want to be very quick to say in a day or two, because this thing requires
some time," he said. "Even if you were bundle up the former
rebel leader’s body and send to Sierra Leone, there will still be a lot
of questions unanswered. And we are a government. I believe the Sierra
Leonean government, being a government itself, will appreciate our stand
on this matter, because at the end of the day they will realise that
whatever exercise we are running will be in the best interest of the two
countries." Chea told the BBC that a team of investigators would be
sent to the Liberian border town of Bin-Houye where Bockarie was said to
have been killed. A Defence Ministry statement said Bockarie's death was
being investigated because "the orders given through the Ministry of
National Defence to the men in the field concerning the arrest and
detention of General Mosquito were not implemented accordingly." Chea
has reportedly demanded a report from the commander in charge of the
Liberian security forces at the time Bockarie was killed. "The reason
behind the investigation is to determine whether excessive force was used
in bringing General Bockarie to book, if his death could have been
avoided, or if he could have been subdued without being killed," the
statement said.
President Kabbah will testify before the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission before it wraps up its public hearings
phase in August, the Agence France-Presse reported on Monday. Kabbah's
testimony was said
to be
scheduled for July. Former president Joseph Saidu
Momoh and former NPRC chairman Julius Maada Bio will also testify.
According to the TRC thematic hearings schedule, Kabbah will first testify
on July 21 about the May 1997 AFRC coup. He will be followed by former
AFRC Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs turned RUF Party
Secretary-General Pallo Bangura. The president is also
scheduled to have the last word when the hearings wrap up on the fifth of
August.
The United Nations refugee agency in Liberia resumed
repatriation of Sierra Leonean refugees from Monrovia to Freetown by boat
Saturday, the UNHCR said on Monday.
The Chief Investigator
for Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal reiterated his
demand
Monday that Liberian President Charles Taylor hand over former AFRC junta
leader Johnny Paul Koroma. Koroma was indicted by the Special Court in
March for war crimes and crimes against humanity he and his followers were
alleged to have committed during Sierra Leone's civil war. Koroma fled
Freetown during a police raid on his residence last January in connection
with what the authorities now say was a failed coup attempt. The court
says the former junta leader is commanding a contingent of Taylor's
security forces in the Liberian town of Foya Kamala. "I am demanding
that President Taylor arrest and turnover Johnny Paul Koroma alive,"
Dr. Alan White told the Sierra Leone Web. "I continue to receive
credible information that confirms he is in Liberia, as previously
reported despite repeated claims by President Taylor." White called a
claim by Taylor's press secretary that Foya Kamala is on the Sierra
Leonean side of the border a delaying tactic, and he said the Liberian
leaders' failure to turn Koroma over "only casts doubt about
President Taylors sincerity about securing peace and stability" in
the sub-region. "President Taylor's failure to arrest Johnny Paul
Koroma only highlights his apparent unwillingness to cooperate with the
international community in pursuit of international justice," White
said. "The world is watching to see what President Taylor does, and
we hope that he will do the right thing."
10 May: Ambassador Ibrahim M'baba Kamara presented
his credentials to U.S.
President
George W. Bush on Thursday as he officially took up his post as Ambassador
to the United States. Kamara formerly served as Sierra Leone's Permanent
Representative to the United Nations. He succeeds former Ambassador John
Leigh, who left the post last year. In his remarks, Kamara stressed the
historic ties between the two countries, from the Gullah people of Sierra
Leonean descent and the Amistad Africans to the contributions of Peace
Corps Volunteers who served in Sierra Leone. Kamara took the opportunity
to urge the American president to reopen the U.S. Embassy's consular
section in Freetown, pointing out that its seven-year closure had created
a hardship for Sierra Leoneans wishing to travel to the United States.
Bush, in his statement, noted the "close friendly ties between the
two nations." "Increasingly, our two countries share ties of
family as well," he added. Bush praised Sierra Leone's efforts in
recovering from
a decade of civil war, and he commended the role of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, the Special Court and the government's Anti-Corruption Commission in
holding persons responsible for wrongdoing and seeking an end to a culture of
impunity. In an interview with the Sierra Leone Web on Friday, Ambassador
Kamara described current relations between Sierra Leone and the United
States as "very, very good." The United States, Kamara said, was
a key sponsor of the Special Court, and is the largest financial contributor to the United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra
Leone. With improvement of conditions in Sierra Leone, Kamara said his
government would like to see the U.S. administration encourage American
companies to invest in Sierra Leone. He said he would like to see the
Americans play an expanded role in bringing peace to the West African
sub-region by supporting the ECOWAS contact group on Liberia "to see
that sanity prevails in that country." Said Kamara:
"Something has to be done in Liberia, definitely. They are our
neighbours. We want to see peace in that part of the world." Kamara
said the stood ready to assist Sierra Leoneans with consular services, and
he appealed to Sierra Leoneans in the United States to register with the
embassy – whatever their legal status in the country. "We cannot
render assistance to Sierra Leoneans...when they have not registered with
the embassy," he said. "The sooner you arrive in this country,
try to let us know where you are. We are not going to expose you. We are
not here as spies on Sierra Leoneans. We are here to assist Sierra
Leoneans. That’s why the embassy is here." Along with processing of
passports and lobbying the State Department on immigration matters, Kamara
said, the embassy has managed to facilitate assistance to a handful of
Sierra Leonean students in need. But only, he added, when the students
pledged to return home after their studies to help their country. "If
we’re going to spend taxpayers' money on people, definitely they owe it
to the people to go back to the country and pay them back," he said.
9 May: United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees Ruud Lubbers leaves
Saturday
for an eight-day mission to five West African nations sheltering some
400,000 of the region's estimated 520,000 refugees. Lubbers last visited
the area in early 2001 during his first official trip as High
Commissioner. During his current trip, he is slated to meet with
government leaders, United Nations officials, and the staff of the UNHCR
and its implementing partners in Ivory Coast, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone
and Guinea. Lubbers is scheduled to visit Sierra Leone on Thursday, where
he will meet with President Kabbah and other officials before travelling
to the Tobanda Camp. He will also view other other refugee settlements and
programmes for both returnees and Liberian refugees.
Britain's Permanent Representative to the United Nations,
Sir Jeremy
Greenstock,
will lead a United Nations Security Council mission to six West African
countries between May 15 and May 23, to explore new opportunities for
peace and stability in the region. Greenstock led a similar mission to the
region in October 2000, which included a three-day stopover in Sierra
Leone. During this month's eight-day mission, Security Council members
will visit Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau and
Sierra Leone. At each stop they will examine country-specific issues while
urging more cooperation among the countries in the region. The mission
will also assess progress towards Security Council objectives on the
protection of civilians and children affected by armed conflict.
The
Bellu/Dandu causeway linking Guinea's Gueckedou Prefecture with Sierra
Leone's
Kailahun District has been repaired, and repatriation of Sierra Leonean
refugees has resumed at the accelerated rate of 500 a day, the World Food
Programme (WFP) said on Friday. Since April 22 more than 2,400 Sierra
Leoneans have been repatriated through Kailahun District. Aid agencies had planned to use the bridge to return about
20,000 of the 30,000 remaining refugees in Guinea. Another 9,000 or so
were slated to return via Pamelap via the Kambia/Port Loko axis to Kono District.
That operation is continuing, and with the WFP providing food for some
3,000 returnees at the Port Loko way station. In Liberia, the UNHCR is
looking after 16,105 Sierra Leonean refugees located in camps near
Monrovia, and repatriation efforts are continuing. So far, more than 1,000
Sierra Leonean refugees have been sent home. In Sierra Leone itself, the
WFP distributed 561 tons of food to 116,399 persons in Sierra Leone
between April 21 and May 4. Due to an ongoing strike at the Bo Government
Hospital, a ten-day food ration was issued to the Sierra Leone Red Cross
Society and the UNHCR to ensure cooking for Liberian refugees admitted to
the hospital.
Liberia will hand
the body of former RUF field commander Sam
"Mosquito" Bockarie over to the Sierra Leonean authorities as
soon as the paperwork is complete, Information Minister Reginald Goodridge
told the BBC on Friday. "There are processes involved where the
Ministry of Health together with the Foreign Ministry and the Sierra Leone
Embassy in Monrovia have to do a positive identification of the body. And
they have confirmed that indeed it is Sam Bockarie," Goodridge said.
"Now the Ministry of Justice has to do all of the proper legal
documents. We understand that the Sierra Leonean government has made a
formal request for the body, and as I speak assurances are being made for
the eventual turning over of the body to the Sierra Leonean
government." Goodridge said his government would hand Bockarie's
corpse over to the Sierra Leone government, but not to Sierra Leone's war
crimes tribunal, the Special Court, which wants the body for forensic
identification. Bockarie was one of eight persons indicted by the court
for war crimes committed during Sierra Leone's civil war. But Goodridge
said this should not be an issue. "It is very clear that there’s no
direct dealings with the court," he said. "We have relations and
dealings with the Sierra Leonean government, and I don’t see any
controversy in this matter." The minister acknowledged it would have
been better if Bockarie had been captured alive because "maybe there
might have been some revelations to have settled this whole
matter." "But I think that the fact that this matter
has been resolved, although it was resolved tragically, has brought a lot
of relief to the Liberian people and I’m certain to the Sierra Leoneans
as well," he added. Goodridge said what Bockarie might have told the
court was "a matter of conjecture and pure speculation," and he
rejected a suggestion that the warlord might have been executed in order
to prevent him from linking Liberian officials to war crimes. "That
is so far fetched that I couldn’t even begin to address that," he
said. "You know, people have pointed all sorts of fingers at Liberia,
and we expect that they will point fingers because it is convenient for
people to use Liberia as a whipping-boy."
The press secretary for Liberian President
Charles Taylor said Thursday he hoped that the death of former RUF field
commander Sam Bockarie would lead to an improvement in relations between
Liberia and Sierra Leone, the Voice of America reported. The Liberian
authorities say Bockarie, who had been indicted for war crimes by Sierra
Leone's U.N.-backed Special Court, was killed in a shootout with security
forces who tried to arrest him as he attempted to cross into Liberia from
Ivory Coast early Tuesday morning. Court officials, however, maintain that
Bockarie was staying Liberia's northeastern Nimba County. His death came
just hours after the court pinpointed the rebel commander's location in
the border town of Kahnple. Press Secretary Vaani Paasewe said the
Liberian authorities had no reason to want Bockarie dead. He denied
Liberia was worried that Bockarie could give information about Taylor's
alleged links to the RUF during Sierra Leone's civil war. "Foday
Sankoh who is at the top, he could also divulge information on us, but we
know that we are clean," Paasewe said. The Special Court has also asked
Liberia to hand over former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma, who the
court says is commanding a contingent of Taylor's security forces in the
town of Foya Kamala. Paasewe claimed that the town is, in fact, inside
Sierra Leone. "Foya Kamala is on the Sierra Leone side and Foya on
our side," he said. "The Foya Kamala where they might have
spotted him is a business centre that is not just far from the Liberian
border area. So when that comes up, then he tells me that there is
misgiving with reading of the geography." Maps place Foya
Kamala inside Liberia. Paasewe said that if Koroma were to cross into
Liberia "he will find it an unwelcome place. He will be arrested and
turned over."
Political weakness in West African diamond-producing
states will prevent them from instituting the kind of regulation which
will make international oversight of diamond exports unnecessary,
Partnership Africa Canada said in a new report
published on Friday. Last
year, diamond producing and importing countries, together with
representatives of the industry and human rights groups, hammered out a
mandatory certification system designed to prevent illicit gems from
reaching the world market. Of especial concern were "conflict
diamonds" mined by rebel groups to finance conflicts in Sierra Leone,
Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Non-governmental
organizations and human rights groups have criticized the system for its
lack of an independent monitoring mechanism, which they say will allow
illicit diamonds to enter the system, or be laundered through third
countries. The report, which was researched in six countries in West
Africa, calls for a credible and independent review of these countries'
ability to comply with the new system's minimum standards. It also urges a
regular system of independent monitoring for all national control
mechanisms for countries taking part in the system. "Without this,
(the certification system) will have little meaning in countries where a
long-corrupted diamond trade simply ignores borders and regulations,"
the
report
said.
8 May: The body of former rebel commander Sam
Bockarie will be flown back
to Sierra Leone, President Kabbah told journalists on Thursday. Bockarie was killed
earlier this week in what the Liberian authorities say was a shootout
between his followers and Liberian security forces along Liberia's border
with the Ivory Coast. According to news services, Kabbah said the
Sierra Leonean ambassador in Monrovia had "positively identified the
body of Sam Bockarie." At Liberia's request, the remains will be examined by the
International Committee of the Red Cross before being flown to Freetown.
Kabbah's announcement came as the Special Court for Sierra Leone made an
official request that the Sierra Leone government turn the body over the
court for forensic identification, a court spokesman told the Sierra Leone Web. The
Special Court is also asking Liberia to
turn over a second man indicted for war crimes, former AFRC junta chairman
Johnny Paul Koroma. Koroma, who was elected to parliament a year ago,
vanished in April during a police search of his residence in connection
with what the Sierra Leonean authorities now say was a failed coup
attempt. According to the court, Koroma is now in Liberia's Lofa
County. "For our country's own security, the whereabouts of Koroma is
very important to us and we, too, would like him to be here to answer
certain questions," Kabbah said.
7 May: Liberia will send the remains of former
rebel commander Sam Bockarie to Freetown once it receives a formal request
from the Sierra Leone government to do so, Liberian Information Minister
Reginald Goodridge said on Wednesday. "Bockarie was a Sierra Leonean
citizen and we are in excellent terms with that government. Arrangements
will be made to take the body as soon as we get a formal request,"
Goodridge told the Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN), adding:
"The Sierra Leone ambassador has already identified the body. It is
now up to his government." In fact the Sierra Leone ambassador didn't
(see next story), but one Liberian journalist said that he at least had no
doubt the corpse on display in a Monrovia mortuary was that of the former
RUF field commander. "The body that I saw
there was no different from the Sam Bockarie that I interacted with here
in Liberia on numerous occasions before he was expelled, except that he’s
put on some weight lately," said BBC stringer Jonathan Paye-Lahleh. "But by looking at his face
I can say that the body I saw was that of Sam Bockarie I knew in Liberia
here...He was very famous, with a particular haircut, and everybody who
knew him could tell from that haircut and his face." A Western
journalist who interviewed Bockarie in early 2001 confirmed
that his appearance had changed from his days
in the bush. "He had put on a lot of weight, so much I didn't
recognize him when I saw him last in Monrovia," the journalist told the
Sierra Leone Web on Wednesday. In Freetown, the Chief Prosecutor for the
Special Court renewed his request that the Liberian government turn
Bockarie's remains over the court for identification,
and he called on the authorities to
back up their account of how he died. "Until we are able to do a forensic
examination and positively identify the body, we will assume Bockarie is
alive," David Crane (pictured left) said in a statement. But a
Liberian official told Paye-Layleh that Liberia may be unwilling to turn
the body over to the war crimes tribunal. "I talked to an official in the government who said that,
yes, there is no problem with turning the body over, but he did not see
any reason why the body should be turned over to the court in Sierra Leone
instead of the government," Paye-Layleh said. "(The officials) said the
Liberian government does not have any dealing with the court, and the
turning over of the body should be to the government and not to the
court." Crane also repeated the court's demand that Liberia turn over
fugitive former AFRC junta chairman Johnny Paul
Koroma, whom the court believes is commanding troops in Liberia's Lofa
County. Crane had a personal message for Koroma.
"Turn yourself in," he said. "You are an indicted war
criminal and an international fugitive. There's nowhere to hide."
Goodridge, too, had a warning for the former AFRC leader. "We have
not seen him in Liberia," he said. "If we find him, he will be
arrested. But if he resists arrest like Bockarie, he could be
killed."
Diplomats and reporters have been shown a
bullet-riddled body in
Monrovia
purporting to be that of the notorious former RUF rebel commander Sam
"Mosquito" Bockarie, but several who saw the body said they had
not known Bockarie well enough to make a positive identification. "To
be very frank with you, the last time I saw Sam Bockarie was in 1997, and
his body was not as big as the one I saw today," said Patrick Foyah,
Sierra Leone's Ambassador to Liberia. Radio France International reporter
John Collie said the ambassador's driver, Jim Sawyer, said he knew
Bockarie and confirmed that the body on
display in a Monrovia funeral home
appeared to be that of the rebel commander. Ambassador Foyah (pictured
right) told the BBC
it would have been preferable for Bockarie to have been captured alive,
because the former RUF field commander had "a lot of questions to
answer" before Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal. "If this body
is indeed the body of Sam Bockarie, it would have been very nice for us to
have got him alive," he said. "But again, it shows perhaps the
commitment on the part of the Liberian government to be moving in the
direction that we expected them to move." Meanwhile, the Special
Court, which in March indicted Bockarie for war crimes, said it wants the
Liberian authorities to hand over the body for identification by forensics
experts. "He has an outstanding arrest warrant for war crimes, and we
would like to confirm through forensic examination a positive
identification of Sam Bockarie," Chief Investigator Dr. Alan White
told the BBC. "It’s reasonable and customary in the investigative
law enforcement world to have bodies examined to in fact confirm that they
are who they are purported to be, so this would be a normal and customary
practice to confirm the identity of this indicted war criminal."
Liberian officials say Bockarie was killed in a shootout with Liberian
troops after crossing the border from the Ivory Coast.
"(Bockarie) crossed into the town of Bolay, we tried to apprehend
him, he resisted and killed one of our soldiers, so we brought him
down," Defence Minister Daniel Chea told the Associated Press. White
said he was unconvinced. "I find it highly suspect," he said.
"(Bockarie) has been in Liberia since April 27, 2003. So how can he
enter Liberia if he is already there?" The Chief Investigator also
repeated the court's demand that Liberia hand over a second man indicted
for war crimes, former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma. The court
says Koroma is currently in the Liberian town of Foya Kamala.
Liberia's Information Minister has denounced Wednesday's
unanimous vote by the United Nations Security Council to extend sanctions
on his country, calling it "a wicked act" based on double
standards, the BBC reported. In voting to extend the sanctions, which
include an arms embargo, a ban on the sale of rough diamonds and travel
restrictions on senior Liberian officials, and the
addition of a new ban on the sale of Liberian timber, the Security Council
cited Liberia's "active support" for rebel groups in the
sub-region, and its flouting of sanctions already in place. Information
Minister Reginald Goodridge (pictured right) complained that Liberia was
being unfairly singled out. "Other countries in this region are doing
much worse than us," he was quoted as saying. The sanctions were
originally imposed two years ago because of Liberia's alleged support for
Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, and for its involvement in the illegal
arms-for-diamonds trade.
6 May: Former RUF field commander Sam
"Mosquito" Bockarie has been killed
in
a gun battle with Liberian troops along Liberia's border northeastern
border with Ivory Coast, Liberian government officials said in Monrovia
Tuesday. According to the BBC, Defence Minister Daniel Chea said Bockarie
was killed late Monday night when he was intercepted while trying to cross
into Liberia's Nimba County accompanied by a unit of his bodyguards. An
attempt to arrest the rebel commander was met with resistance, and
Liberian forces returned fire, killing Bockarie and several of his
followers, Chea was quoted as saying. The minister said the bodies had
been brought to Monrovia and deposited in a funeral home. Earlier,
Liberia's Information Ministry said Bockarie had been seriously injured in
a Tuesday morning shootout, but Information Minister Reginald Goodridge
now says the rebel commander was killed. "He is dead. The body is
right here," Goodridge said. The reports come days after Special
Court officials in Sierra Leone said they had received credible reports
that Bockarie and 40 to 50 former RUF fighters were staying in the
Liberian border village of Kahnple. Liberian officials denied that
Bockarie was in their territory. In March, the Special Court indicted
Bockarie for war crimes committed by his forces during Sierra Leone's
civil war and has been seeking him under an international arrest warrant.
In a statement Tuesday, Special Court Chief Prosecutor David Crane called
on the Liberian government to back up its claims. "If reports of
Bockarie's death are true, I ask Liberian authorities to provide proof and
request that they turn his body over to us for forensic examination and
positive identification," he said. Bockarie, a one-time hairdresser
and professional dancer in Liberia before he joined the rebels, broke with RUF leader Foday Sankoh in December 1999, resigned
from the RUF, and fled into exile in Liberia. In February 2001, under
threat of United Nations sanctions and ignoring demands from Sierra Leone
and from ECOWAS to hand Bockarie over, the Liberian authorities announced he had left their country, but refused to say where he went. More
recently, there were reports that Bockarie and his group of mercenaries
were fighting alongside rebel groups in the Ivory Coast. The Sierra
Leonean rebel reportedly had a falling out with one of these groups.
Officials of the rebel group MPIGO last week implicated him in the ambush
and execution of their leader, Sergeant Felix Doh.
Sierra
Leone's parliament voted by an overwhelming margin Tuesday to
ratify
an "Article 98" agreement with the United States, under which
the two countries agree not to turn over each other's nationals accused of
war crimes to the newly-formed International Criminal Court (ICC) in the
Hague. The agreement was approved despite
heavy lobbying from local and international human rights groups who accuse
the United States of seeking impunity for its citizens, a charge the U.S.
denies. Reportedly, only one parliamentarian, Ibrahim Sorie (APC-Kambia
District) voted against ratification. The United States has refused to ratify the Rome Statute which
established the ICC, and has expressed fears that the court could be used
to prosecute American citizens for political purposes. The Rome Statute
gives the ICC jurisdiction over persons accused of genocide, crimes against humanity, war
crimes and the crime of aggression where the accused is a national of an
ICC member state or where the crime takes place within a member state's
territory. Under the agreement, persons accused of such crimes would face
prosecution either in the United States or in Sierra Leone.
Citing
Liberia's "active support" for rebel groups destablising West
Africa, the
United Nations Security Council voted unanimously Tuesday to extend existing sanctions
on Liberia for another year, and will impose an additional measure to ban the export of
Liberian timber. Current sanctions,
which date from March 2001, include an arms embargo, a ban on the sale of
rough Liberian diamonds, and international travel restrictions on senior
Liberian officials. The ban on timber was added because the Liberian
government had not shown that revenue from its timber industry "is
used for legitimate social, humanitarian and development purposes." Human rights
groups have long argued that the Liberian regime was using profits from
timber sales to fund illegal arms purchases and to enrich government
officials. The ban takes effect on July 7, but it will
be reviewed on September 7 to determine its effect on Liberia's timber
industry, the country's largest employer. The resolution would allow
timber exports to resume to fund humanitarian programmes. The sanctions
could also be terminated immediately if the Security Council determines
that the Liberian government has complied with its demands. Meanwhile, a U.N. Panel of Experts said it had traced thousands
of automatic rifles, grenades and mines and millions of rounds of
ammunition from Serbia to Liberia, in violation of the arms embargo. The
weapons shipments were reportedly brokered by a Belgrade-based company,
Temex, and were delivered to Monrovia in June and August 2002 using a
false end-user certificates. The panel said it suspected Temex was now preparing to send an
additional 50 tons of Serbian military equipment to Liberia via the
Democratic Republic of Congo. In its report to the Council, the Panel urged a
"more comprehensive approach" towards West Africa, noting that
the region was "awash with weapons," while combatants were
crossing borders to fight as mercenaries for armed factions in
neighbouring countries. "Armed youths from Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and now Ivory Coast,
who have become accustomed to a life of conflict, banditry and
lawlessness, have joined armed groups in Liberia and in western Ivory
Coast," the panel said. "Combined, they pose new risks of a
vicious cycle of violence." A Security Council mission is scheduled
to visit Liberia later this month. The sanctions against Liberia were
originally imposed because of Liberia's support for Sierra Leone's RUF
rebels, and for its alleged involvement in the illegal arms-for-diamonds
trade.
5 May: The United States announced Monday it will
provide more than $40,000 
to
improve the capacity of Sierra Leone's police force. Under
an agreement signed by U.S. Ambassador Peter Chaveas (pictured left) and
police Inspector-General Keith Biddle (right), the two countries agreed to
set up and support a joint project aimed at strengthening the police
force's ability to manage crises and provide security protection. In
addition, Sierra Leonean law officers will receive training and
instruction for U.S. government technical advisors through scholarships,
fellowships and participant training. The Sierra Leone government, for its
part, is responsible for ensuring the effective day-to-day operation of
the police force by providing adequate funding to cover normal
administrative and related expenses.
A Liberian Information
Ministry spokesman denied Monday that two men wanted for war crimes were
in Liberia. "(Sam) Bockarie and (Johnny Paul) Koroma are not in
Liberia. The government had denied this before and I would like to state
once again that they are not here," Jeff Mutada told the Integrated
Regional Information Network (IRIN). On Sunday, Special Court Chief
Prosecutor David Crane said he had pinpointed Bockarie in the village of
Kahnple, while Koroma was said to be in Foya Kamala, allegedly commanding
a unit of Charles Taylor's security forces. Mutada denied it. "The
waters are getting muddy in the region," he told IRIN. "The
borders are porous and there are mercenaries moving from one country to
the other. Liberia is busy trying to consolidate peace now and we have not
seen these two."
4 May: Last week Sierra Leone's Special Court
called on Liberian President Charles Taylor to hand over two men sought
for war crimes in Sierra Leone or to
face
possible prosecution himself for harboring them. The court said it had
multiple credible reports that Sam Bockarie (pictured left) and Johnny
Paul Koroma (right) were on Liberian territory. The claim brought swift
denials from Liberian officials. Then on Thursday, Taylor telephoned
President Kabbah and pledged to turn the pair over to the authorities in
Freetown if they were indeed found to be in Liberia. Now, the court's
Chief Prosecutor says he knows exactly where they are. "We have
credible information that as of this morning, Koroma continues to be
located in the Foya Kamala area, located in Lofa County," David Crane
(below right) said on Sunday. He added that Bockarie was staying in
Kahnple, a small village in Liberia's Nimba County, accompanied by 40 to
50 armed former RUF
rebels. According to Dr. Alan White, the court's Chief of Investigations,
Koroma is allegedly commanding a new unit set up by President Taylor
called the "Special Monitoring Group." The unit is said to be
comprised of about 3,000 heavily armed former RUF fighters and members of
the Anti-Terrorist Unit, Marine forces and militia forces. "Sam
Bockarie and Johnny Paul Koroma are international fugitives hiding in
Liberia. I expect Mr. Taylor to deliver on his offer to arrest and turn
them over to the Court," Crane said. "The time has come for him
to fulfil his international obligations and immediately transfer these war
criminals to the Court. Any credibility he still has with the
international community is now linked to this promise. He knows where they
are." Sam Bockarie, the brutal RUF field commander who fought for the
rebels under the nom de guerre of "Mosquito," broke with
the RUF in 1999 and was forced into exile in Liberia. Recent reports have
him leading a band of Sierra Leonean and Liberian mercenaries fighting in
western Ivory Coast. Opposition parliamentarian and former AFRC junta
leader Johnny Paul Koroma vanished from Freetown this January after police
raided his residence in connection with what the authorities now say was
likely a failed coup attempt. Crane, meanwhile, called on all West African
nations to seize, arrest and surrender Koroma and Bockarie to the court.
"There can be no hiding place for them," he said. "There
can be no peace for West Africa until this is done. They must be brought
to justice."
2 May: President Charles Taylor of Liberia has
promised President Kabbah to find and turn over two men indicted for war
crimes if they are on Liberian territory, presidential spokesman Kanji
Daramy told the Sierra Leone Web. The two leaders spoke by telephone on
Thursday. The Chief of Investigations for Sierra Leone's Special Court
called on Taylor this week to hand over former AFRC junta leader Johnny
Paul Koroma and former RUF field commander Sam "Mosquito"
Bockarie, saying he had received multiple credible reports that the two
men were on Liberian soil. Taylor's spokesman had previously denied the
allegations. Daramy said Taylor also promised to do everything possible to
restore peace and calm in the sub-region. In a press release, the Liberian
government quoted Taylor as assuring the Sierra Leonean president that any
fugitive who crossed into Liberia would be turned over to the authorities
in Freetown. According to the Monrovia newspaper The News, the Liberian
government reaffirmed its commitment to ridding the sub-region of
non-state actors who use violence to achieve their aims.
Heavy rains on April 20 washed away a new earthen causeway
across the Moa River which was being used to expedite the repatriation of
Sierra Leonean
refugees from Guinea, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday.
Repatriation convoys are being rerouted through western Port Loko District
until the Bellu/Dandou bridge linking Guinea to Kailahun District can be
repaired. Aid agencies had planned to use the bridge to return about
20,000 of the 30,000 remaining refugees in Guinea. Another 9,000 or so
were slated to return via Pamelap to Kono District. That operation is
continuing. Before the bridge's failure, nearly 5,000 people were
resettled in their home areas, the WFP said. Meanwhile, 83,119 persons in
Sierra Leone received 834 tons of WFP food aid during the second half of
April.
The United Nations Security Council has scheduled
consultations on Liberian sanctions for Monday, May 5. The sanctions are
due to expire on Tuesday. The council first imposed the sanctions in March
2001 because of the Liberian government's backing for Sierra Leone's RUF
rebels and for its alleged involved in the illegal arms-for-diamonds
trade. The sanctions include an arms embargo, a ban on the sale of
Liberian rough diamonds, and travel restrictions on senior Liberian
officials.
1 May: In a
ceremony at State House Wednesday to
launch Statistics Sierra Leone and to proclaim the upcoming census, Vice
President Solomon Berewa said President Kabbah would announce the date for the census in the
government Gazette, Statistician General H.B.S. Kandeh told the Sierra
Leone Web. "(The president) was deputised by the vice president at
the launching ceremony, which was a short one-hour ceremony at State
House," Kandeh said, adding: "The census will now be held early
in 2004." Sierra Leone's last census took place in 1985. Wednesday's
ceremony was attended by government ministers, parliamentarians, United
Nations officials and diplomats.
A meeting of 70 diamond
producing, processing and trading countries ended in Johannesburg
Wednesday with a decision to exclude from the international diamond trade
any country not in compliance with the Kimberley Process Certification
Scheme by July 31. The Kimberley Process, which was launched in the South
African mining centre of Kimberley more than two years ago, seeks to curb
the global trade in "conflict diamonds," blamed for fueling wars
in Sierra Leone, Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Under
the scheme agreed last November, diamonds are required to be exported in
tamper-proof parcels and must be accompanied at all stages by certificates
of origin meant to exclude illicit stones from international diamond
markets. 56 countries met the original deadline of January 1. 14
countries, including Angola and the DRC, have not yet had their diamond
certification process approved. According to the Voice of America,
Kimberley Process chairman Abbey Chikane of South Africa said that
countries would have until the end of May to pass laws showing they were
in compliance. On July 31 he will issue a complete list, and any country
not on it will be "marginalised and isolated from the Kimberley
Process." Said Chikane: "Effectively what it means is that
that particular country will not be able to trade with major diamond
producing, processing and exporting countries around the world, which
means it will not have access to large markets such as United States and
Japan. It will also not have access to trading centers such as India,
Israel, Belgium, etc." Liberia asked the Kimberley Process group to
send a monitoring team to Monrovia so that it could apply for membership,
but the request was turned down. Chikane said the group could not send
monitors or take any other action to legitimise Liberia's diamond trade so
long as the country is subject to a U.N. embargo on rough diamond sales.
Meanwhile, non-governmental organisations which have been monitoring the
Kimberley Process complained that there was still no independent
monitoring mechanism to ensure that illicit stones were excluded from the
system. "NGOs are deeply disappointed that no action was taken on
establishing a regular, effective monitoring mechanism to assess over time
all national diamond control systems and meet the threshold of trust and
credibility consumers want," the groups said in a statement. Global
Witness campaigner Corinna Gilfillan told the Voice of America that such a
system was essential to ensure that the Kimberley Process worked properly
and was not open to abuse. "As far as we’re concerned, having a
credible, regular monitoring mechanism is absolutely crucial to the whole
credibility of the system and to stopping the trade in conflict
diamonds," she said. Chikane said such a system might eventually
become necessary, but for now the plan is for a system of peer reviews
which require individual countries to report other members they suspect of
breaking the rules.
President Charles Taylor
of Liberia could be prosecuted by Sierra Leone's
Special
Court if he fails to turn over Johnny Paul Koroma and Sam
"Mosquito" Bockarie, the court's Chief of Investigations told
the BBC. "What I am asking him to do right now is to locate, arrest
and turn over these two indicted war criminals," Dr. Alan White said.
"If President Taylor refuses to turn over these people to the Special
Court, and we have direct knowledge that he is aiding and abetting these
two indicted war criminals, Charles Taylor could be charged with
obstruction of justice in terms of the Special Court for Sierra
Leone." Taylor's Press Secretary, Vaani Passawe, told the Associated
Press that the two men "are nowhere in Liberia," but promised
they would be arrested if they did arrive in the country. But White said the court had information that former AFRC junta
leader Johnny Paul Koroma had been in Liberia "for at least the last
two to four weeks," while Bockarie, who until December 1999 was the
RUF's field commander, had been pinpointed by multiple sources as being in
the Liberian town of Gbinta on the border with Ivory Coast. White said the
Special Court's statute gave it the authority to indict and arrest a head
of state for war crimes investigations. "We have the authority to go
back to the United Nations Security Council and directly request their
intervention in executing an arrest warrant should one be issued by the
Special Court for Sierra Leone if any head of state fails to honour or
acknowledge an arrest warrant that has been issued by the Special Court
for Sierra Leone." There has been widespread speculation, fueled in
part by hints from the court's Chief Prosecutor, that Taylor could be
indicted in any event for his backing of the RUF during Sierra Leone's
civil war. Indictments of four other alleged war criminals – Foday
Sankoh, Issa Sesay and Morris Kallon of the RUF and Alex Tamba Brima of
the AFRC – accuse them of having "acted in concert" with
Charles Taylor.
The Special Court has rejected allegations
by Nigerian lawyer Edo Okanya that he was roughed up by court officials
last week while waiting to board a helicopter flight to Bonthe. In a
letter to the Sierra Leone Bar Association on Tuesday, Okanya claimed to represent former RUF Security
Chief Augustine Gbao, who was indicted for war crimes earlier this month.
Gbao made his first appearance before the Special Court at a Bonthe
courthouse on Friday. Last year, Okanya attempted to represent RUF leader
Foday Sankoh before Sierra Leone's High Court, but his application to
practice law in Sierra Leone was denied. After Gbao's arrest in March, he
asked for Okanya to represent him. Subsequently, however, Gbao pleaded
indigence and another lawyer, British barrister and law professor Andreas O’Shea,
was appointed for him by the court. In a statement Thursday, the court
denied that Okanya was manhandled at the helipad and maintained that the
Nigerian lawyer had merely been asked to leave a restricted area since he
did not have a boarding pass for the flight and he had not signed a waiver
for travel. The statement added that, despite his assertions, Okanya was
never assigned as Gbao's legal representative. When a defendant tells the
court he cannot afford a lawyer, the Defence Office appoints counsel for
him from a list of persons who meet the necessary requirements and who do
not have a conflict of interest. Okanya's name was not on the list, since
he did not submit his papers to the court until the day before the
hearing. But even if he had submitted the required documents earlier, the
court said, Okanya would not necessarily have been assigned to represent
Gbao. The Defence Office seeks to appoint a lawyer "with the highest
qualifications and experience in international criminal law," and the
defence counsel must not have an actual or potential conflict of interest.
Since Okanya stated on his application that he had represented Foday
Sankoh before the High Court, and since Sankoh is a defendant in the
Special Court proceedings, "that represented a potential conflict of
interest which automatically barred his assignment, even if he possessed
the necessary breadth of experience in international criminal law,"
the statement said. The court also dismissed Okanya's contention that Gbao
had rejected his court-appointed lawyer. "Mr. Gbao has stated that he
is happy with the assignment and has not requested that Mr. Okanya be
assigned to him," the statement said.
Press freedom
"suffered notable worldwide deterioration" in 2002, in part due
to political and armed conflict and increased government restrictions on
independent media houses, Freedom House said in a new report released on
Wednesday. In a study of 193 countries (including the Israeli occupied
territories) in which the legal environment for the media, political
influences and economic pressures are assessed by the assigning of points,
41 percent of the countries were rated "free," with no
significant restrictions on the news media. 24 percent were deemed
"partly free" with some media restrictions, while 35 percent
were rated "not free," with state control or other obstacles to
a free press. Eleven countries declined in category, with just two
advancing. In rating Sierra Leone "not free," Freedom House
cited the country's criminal libel laws which, it said, are occasionally
used to jail journalists. The report was also critical of the government's
Independent Media Commission for attempting to suspend a newspaper in
March and denying a license to a private broadcasting station in November.
Journalists, the report said, sometimes face harassment and intimidation
at the hands of the security forces. Freedom House was also critical of
the Freetown press itself. "Dozens of newspapers are printed in
Freetown, the capital, but most are of poor quality and often carry
sensational or undocumented stories," the report said, adding that
corruption and bribe-taking continue among poorly-paid journalists
continues to be a problem. In West Africa, the media in Benin, Botswana,
Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Ghana, Mali and Sao Tome and Principe was rated
free; Guinea-Bissau, Niger, Nigeria and Senegal were called partly free,
and Equatorial Guinea, Gambia, Guinea, Ivory
Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Togo and Mauritania were rated not
free.