31 May
1997: Two military transport planes from Ghana and Guinea landed in Freetown
Friday night, carrying troops along with rocket-propelled grenade launchers, bombs,
automatic rifles, and tanks. Guinea reportedly also sent three battalions of troops to
Sierra Leone where they will join ECOMOG forces. "They left Guinea by road and will
link up with Nigerian troops already in Sierra Leone," a senior officer said.
Military sources said the Guinean troops could number up to 1,500, joining 3,000 Nigerians
already in the country. Nigeria continued as well to land more soldiers and military
hardware in Sierra Leone throughout the day Saturday. A Nigerian Air Force plane brought
fresh troops and armoured personnel carriers to Hastings Airport, near a Nigerian military
base. Nigerian Alpha fighter jets flew over Freetown Saturday, intensifying the pressure
on the AFRC. It was earlier reported that the arrival of Ghanaian troops being sent to
Freetown via Monrovia had been delayed by logistical problems, and they were expected to
arrive in the country late Saturday or Sunday. The Ghanaians will secure the airports at
Lungi and Hastings, freeing Nigerian troops for military action. AFRC leaders said
Saturday that they had sent representatives to talk to the Nigerians and other ECOWAS
members. The coup leaders also announced over SLBS (state radio) that the government will
resume paying salaries to soldiers.The French navy ship Jean Moulin evacuated about 250
foreigners Saturday who were left behind in previous evacuation efforts by the Americans
and British. Nigerian soldiers guarded the bridge leading to the Mammy Yoko Hotel where
the operation took place. About 100 of the evacuees were British nationals. Another 130
British citizens left the country Saturday after diplomatic efforts were made on their
behalf, and 31 others arrived in Conakry, Guinea aboard an American aircraft. The evacuees
leave behind a capital city that is tense, but reported to be relatively quiet. Roadblocks
have been erected all over the city, but with most of the petrol stations closed or burned
down there are few vehicles on the roads apart from those having been commandeered by
soldiers. Stores and businesses have not reopened, and civil servants have ignored the
AFRC's orders to return to work. The Red Cross has reportedly suspended operations, and
conditions are worsening as supplies of food, drinking water, kerosene, and firewood
dwindle. Prices of essential goods are skyrocketing: The cost of a pint of kerosene
Saturday was reported to be five times its price before the coup.
The AFRC released a statement read over SLBS (state radio) on Friday night saying that
negotiations are underway to avert an attack by ECOMOG forces. "The AFRC wishes the
public to know that while it is aware of a possible threat to public security by likely
invasion of Freetown by foreign troops tomorrow, negotiations are going on with
them," the statement said. "The public therefore has no reason to be unduly
alarmed and people are advised to continue their normal day-to-day activities."
Tensions rose in Freetown Friday after UNPP leader John Karefa-Smart revealed that the
military had intercepted a message saying ECOMOG was planning an attack for Saturday
morning under the code name "Wild Chase." Since Friday, SLBS has carried a
series of statements by Revolutionary United Front leaders. "We are advising the
Nigerians and all foreign forces to stop bringing war materials to threaten the peace for
our people," said a statement by RUF official James Coleman. Another statement from
RUF spokesman David Collins said the RUF had brought 5,000 fighters into Freetown in
support of the "revolution." An RUF colonel said Friday that Foday Sankoh had
ordered him to support the Army if the Nigerians should intervene. "We are ready to
comply. We are now for peace and nothing should erode this," he said. A Nigerian
newspaper, the Daily Times, reported Saturday that the United States government through
its Charge d'Affairs in Freetown is backing any action taken by Nigeria to restore the
civilian government in Sierra Leone. However, U.S. State Department spokesman John Dinger
said Friday that the U.S. opposes a violent solution. "There has been enough violence
in Sierra Leone. We hope democracy is quickly restored there by diplomatic means and
through international pressure," he said.
Acting Ghanaian Foreign Minister Kwamena Ahwoi urged coup leaders to respond to
diplomatic efforts, and warned that West African leaders might have to use force if they
did not. "It could be 24 hours, it could be a week," he said. Ahwoi said
Ghanaian President Jerry Rawlings has been in telephone contact with AFRC leader Major
Johnny Paul Koroma to impress upon him the need for a political settlement of the crisis.
"The contacts are at a very delicate stage now," Ahwoi said. President Rawlings
has cancelled his plans to attend next week's OAU summit meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe in
order to seek a solution to the crisis. Ahwoi said ECOMOG's experience in Liberia had
taught important lessons. "Ghana's approach, therefore, has been to stress more on a
negotiated political settlement which upholds the respect of the democratic choice of the
people of Sierra Leone," he said. On Friday the Nigerian government reaffirmed its
support for President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, whom Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi
described as "a great leader, upright in stature, and a man of peace." Ikimi
disclosed that Nigerian Head of State General Sani Abacha, as Chairman of ECOWAS, has been
holding intensive consultations with other countries in the sub-region to ensure the
restoration of Sierra Leone's legitimate government and a quick return to peace and
stability. Nigeria deplores "the loss of lives and the wanton destruction and looting
of property which have accompanied the incident in Sierra Leone," Ikimi said.
"We have a responsibility as a country, Nigeria and General Abacha as the Chairman of
the ECOWAS, to assist Sierra Leone to resolve its conflicts and find a durable
solution."
Reaction: Senegalese President President Abdou Diouf: "I take this opportunity
to tell you that I strongly condemn what has happened in Sierra Leone." Ruth
Perry, Chairwoman of Liberia's National Transitional Council "I condemn the coup.
War isn't good, war brings destruction and loss of life." U.S. National Security
Advisor Sandy Berger: "Obviously we have deplored and condemned the coup and the
overturning of the first democratic election in Sierra Leone in a very long time. But I
think we would prefer to see this thing restored through political rather than military
means."
30 May: ECOMOG has reportedly ordered its troops to go on the
offensive tomorrow, 31 May, in a bid to oust the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council. The
news was announced to the nation by United National People's Party Leader John
Karefa-Smart Thursday morning in an address carried over SLBS (state radio). Karefa-Smart
said he had learned of the invasion plans from message intercepted by the military.
"I am concerned with the possibility for the first time in the history of our country
to be invaded by an outside force," he said. "I think we, as Sierra Leoneans,
ought to do whatever we can to make our friends abroad and our friends in this country
know that we will not--will not--be pleased if this happens." He called upon Sierra
Leoneans to respond to the crisis, to "let us know what you feel like and what you
want to do about this threat to our country and countrymen." In an urgent appeal to
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma has
called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council to address Sierra Leone's
concerns about ECOMOG "aggression" against the country. He said ECOMOG's
military buildup constitutes interference in Sierra Leone's internal affairs, and is a
contravention of the United Nations Charter. Koroma warned that any intervention by ECOMOG
"would be viewed as an illegitimate act of aggression." Military and diplomatic
sources report that the RUF rebels who have joined the coup leaders are rejecting any
mediation which would restore the civilian government. "It is a serious problem
because the rebels have rejected any mediation. They say they are ready to fight to the
end and are prepared for anything," one diplomat said. The diplomat said UNPP party
leader John Karefa-Smart, who is acting in the capacity as non-affiliated mediator, met 50
RUF commanders when he went to mediation talks at military headquarters Thursday night.
"They were sitting with the coup leaders, who had their military ranks stripped from
their uniforms," the diplomat said, citing Karefa-Smart. Karefa-Smart has denied the
incident, and says it's not true that the RUF has taken control. An ECOMOG officer was
quoted as saying, "The RUF leaders came out the the bush and entered the town. Now it
seems the soldiers have got more than they bargained for because the rebels are now
calling the shots." Nigeria continued to fly in jeeps, armored personnel carriers,
and more troops Thursday, and there were reports that Ghana and Guinea might join the
effort. In Abuja, the Nigerian government has cut off Foday Sankoh's communications, and
the RUF leader is now being held incommunicado. Ghanaian President Jerry Rawlings spoke
with Major Johnny Paul Koroma by telephone Thursday in an effort to persuade the coup
leaders to negotiate a political settlement. Freetown remained tense Thursday as soldiers
drove through the streets in stolen vehicles, firing into the air and shouting, "If
you don't want us, then you are going to die."
Marines from the U.S.S. Kearsarge today evacuated some 900 people from Freetown. About
330 of those were Americans, and the rest are from more than 40 other countries, including
Sierra Leone, Zaire, Russia, Britain, Lebanon, Belgium, Israel, Italy, Germany, Guinea,
Ireland, and Cuba. An estimated 200 were children. The evacuees were picked up at the
Mammy Yoko Hotel and ferried to the Kearsarge aboard CH-46 and CH-53 helicopters. Although
the Marines flew 85 sorties, about 100 people were left behind. Among the evacuees were
members of Sierra Leonean civic groups, and the former Deputy Minister of Defence and the
Minister of Planning. After the operation was concluded, at 15:30 GMT, the United States
closed its embassy and withdrew all diplomatic and military personnel from the country.
About 1,000 Kamajors gathered in Bo Thursday, four days after coup leaders had ordered
them to disband. A confrontation between the Kamajors and soldiers was averted on
Wednesday night after a truce between the two groups was brokered by Paramount Chief
Joseph Boima and members of the Concerned Citizens Group. "It would have been a
bloody clash if we had not intervened. We had to make shuttles to the Messima Shrine (the
residence of the Kamajors) and the Brigade headquarters to quell the situation,"
Chief Boima said. Witnesses say the main streets of Bo are now being patrolled by Nigerian
soldiers. Kenema was reported to be calm Wednesday. Brigade Commander Lieutenant Colonel
Falla Sewah said the Army had peacefully disarmed over 500 Kamajors in their stronghold at
Kailahun town.
A few hundred youths marched in Freetown Friday to demonstrate in favor the the
military coup. The demonstrators, some carrying banners condemning Nigerian intervention,
marched from the east end of Freetown to the National Stadium, singing and beating drums
on the way. The demonstrations had been called for by the AFRC the previous day, and some
witnesses claimed that many of the marchers had been hired by the coup leaders. The
demonstrators were protected by security forces and traffic policemen. Hundreds of people
also took part in a candlelit demonstration Thursday night in support of the AFRC.
29 May: The AFRC sent soldiers armed with AK-47's and rocket-propelled
grenades into Koidu Town Thursday in a move to seize control of Sierra Leone's diamond
mining industry. Police and community leaders said that soldiers have taken over the
foreign-owned mines. This report was disputed by Michael Grunberg, a director of
London-based Branch Energy Ltd., owned by DiamondWorks Ltd. "The Koidu area is
peaceful and quiet and the relationship between the military and DiamondWorks is good.
There is no aggressive action by the military. All commercial diamond activities have
ceased but some artisanal mining is continuing," he said. At Masingbi, the soldiers
ambushed a number of Kamajors and killed 20 of them. Witnesses report that the Kamajors
have vowed to take revenge and are massing for a counterattack. A similar clash in Bo has
reportedly left one soldier dead.
Foreign Minister Shirley Gbujama was taken away at gunpoint by soldiers early Thursday
morning, and her whereabouts are unknown. The 61 year old Gbujama was Sierra Leone's first
woman ambassador.
Amid rumors that ECOMOG has delivered a deadline to the AFRC to restore the civilian
government, soldiers, joined by hundreds of RUF fighters, have erected checkpoints all
over Freetown. The AFRC has lifted the curfew on the city, but ordered Sierra Leone's
borders closed and banned all flights over Sierra Leonean airspace after one or possibly
two Nigerian fighter jets made very low level passes over the Ministry of Defense Thursday
afternoon. The coup leaders have called upon Sierra Leoneans to gather and demonstrate in
favor of the military government on Friday. The Voice of Nigeria (Nigerian state radio)
Thursday warned coup leaders that Nigeria is committed to restoring democracy to Sierra
Leone. "Nigeria is not pretending about sympathy for embattled President Ahmad Tejan
Kabbah," the statement said. "He is the elected leader of his country and
Nigeria recognizes him as such. If there are problems that he has not been able to solve,
military incursion will only compound them rather than help...Major Johnny Paul Koroma and
his comrades should consider the party over and negotiate their return to the barracks. It
will be the wisest thing to do, because ECOWAS wants the military quickly out of
politics." A statement from the coup leaders read over SLBS (state radio) on Thursday
night warned that "any foreign intervention will be against our integrity...We are
appealing to all Sierra Leoneans to support the peace that has already been gained."
Nigerian troops continue to control Lungi Airport, but there was a confrontation today
between the Nigerians and Sierra Leone soldiers who control one end of the runway. The
airports at Lungi and Hastings Field are now being used primarily as military staging and
support areas. ECOMOG troops and supplies continue to pour into Lungi and are being
dispatched by helicopter to areas within Freetown. The buildup has intensified since
Wednesday evening. Unconfirmed reports Thursday evening said soldiers from Mali, Guinea,
Ghana, and Senegal are reinforcing ECOMOG troops, and that Nigeria and Guinea are bringing
in substantial air support. Witnesses reported hearing the sound of jets over Freetown at
about 18:00 GMT. Another unconfirmed report relates that ECOMOG forces have reached Bo.
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma, acknowledging that democracy "is a vogue in
the modern world" said he would soon announce a new government of national unity and
a schedule for elections. "The AFRC is not here to antagonize anyone," he said.
Streets remained deserted Thursday except for heavily armed AFRC soldiers and businesses
remained closed, despite an appeal by the coup leaders for people to return to work. The
Sierra Leone Labour Congress released a statement saying, "We advise all our workers
to stay home in the current situation because of the insecurity in the country, especially
with the release of hardened criminals from the Pademba Road prison."
Britain evacuated 392 of its citizens aboard a Boeing 747 aircraft Thursday, and the
United States has announced that 250 of an estimated 400 American citizens will be
evacuated by helicopter to the U.S.S. Kearsarge. Four Marines from the U.S.S. Kearsarge
landed by helicopter at the Mammy Yoko Thursday in preparation for the evacuation, which
will begin at 8:00 a.m. Freetown time. Sporadic gunfire was heard throughout the day
Thursday. "It's not stable at all," said a U.S. Pentagon spokesman. The U.S.
State Department has decided to suspend operation of its embassy in Freetown and evacuate
its embassy staff after all American citizens who want to depart Sierra Leone have been
assisted to leave.
The AFRC Defense Headquarters announced on Thursday the formation of a joint military
and police team to deal with the problem of widespread looting. In a statement read over
SLBS (state radio), the coup leaders blamed the violence on criminals who "broke out
the the Central Prison, Pademba Road, and other prisons in the provinces" on May
25th. They also cited "some retired and dismissed officers and soldiers and well as
some civilians" who have put on uniforms and are carrying weapons. A number of
telephone hotlines have been set up to address complaints of "harassment, looting,
any distress suffered or required security assistance."
An estimated 1,500 persons demonstrated in Washington, D.C. Thursday against the
military coup in Freetown. At a rally before the U.S. State Department, Sierra Leone's
Ambassador to the United States appealed to the U.S. to "work with other nations and
international organisations to act decisively to end the crisis, by force of arms if
necessary." Ambassador John Leigh told about 50 Sierra Leonean demonstrators that the
1,200 Marines on board the helicopter ship Kearsarge should support ECOMOG forces and end
"a reign of terror" by the AFRC. However, a U.S. State Department spokesman said
that the role of the Kearsarge will be limited to evacuating American citizens. Leigh said
he expects ECOMOG forces to end the coup even without U.S. assistance, but that it would
be "faster and less bloody" with American support. In Freetown, U.S. charge
d'affaires Ann Wright has reiterated demands that the coup leaders surrender power
immediately.
28 May: The Revolutionary United Front High Command today ordered its
fighters to back the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council. A statement from RUF leader Foday
Sankoh was read over SLBS (state radio) at 10:00 GMT, ordering the rebels to stop all
attacks and to adopt a defensive posture. "Be on the defensive. All
instructions--former instructions--for operations should be cancelled. All commanders
should be on the defensive," the statement said. Sankoh ordered RUF fighters to
cooperate with the military to defend Sierra Leone's sovereignty. "We ask you to work
with (the army) so that peace will prevail in our beloved motherland. So I will like you
all to work with them as brothers; we are no more enemies. The enemies are the
politicians, not the soldiers." Field commanders were instructed that their orders
from Sankoh will now come through Major Johnny Paul Koroma, the leader of the AFRC.
The AFRC banned all public demonstrations and public meetings Wednesday after learning
of a planned protest against last Sunday's coup. "The government has been reliably
informed that some members of the public are planning to stage a mass demonstration
today," a statement said. "In consideration of the present situation in the
country, particularly in the capital, Freetown, government will not permit the holding of
such demonstration, public meeting, or procession until further notice." On Tuesday
the AFRC suspended the constitution and banned political parties. "As from now on,
all legislation will be by military decrees," AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma
said. SLBS (state radio) announced Wednesday that Koroma wishes to meet with the
presidents or representatives of the following organisations at Defence Headquarters on
June 3rd: The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists, the Sierra Leone Bar Association,
the Medical and Dental Association, the Catholic Mission, the Islamic Council, the Council
of Churches, the National Union of Sierra Leone Students, and the Sierra Leone Chamber of
Commerce. He has also asked that representatives of the Indigenous and Petty Traders
Association, the Indian Community, and the Lebanese Community meet with him on June 5th.
The radio also reported that effective immediately, the 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew has been
relaxed to run from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
The Kamajor militia says it will march on Freetown unless Nigerian troops restore the
civilian government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The Kamajors have rejected an order
by the coup leaders to disband, and there were clashes Tuesday between the militia and
soldiers at Daru. "We are awaiting word from President Kabbah and we will be in
Freetown to help restore order and democracy," said Kamajor commander Eddie Massalay.
"We went to the polls and democratically elected President Kabbah and until his term
is over, no one can remove him. Nigeria or ECOMOG is welcome in any part of Sierra Leone,
provided their coming is to restore democracy. Bring back the president or we do it
ourselves," Massalay said.
A Nigerian newspaper reported Wednesday that ECOMOG is negotiating with the coup
leaders to give up power peacefully, and AFRC spokesman Captain Paul Thomas acknowledged
that the soldiers are coming under heavy pressure by the Nigerians to abandon their coup.
He said Nigeria's Defence Minister and Army Chief of Staff are expected to arrive in
Freetown today to discuss restoring the civilian government of President Ahmad Tejan
Kabbah. Nigerian officials have remained silent on their diplomatic efforts. "We
can't be making public statements when we are trying to to see that the crisis is resolved
without further bloodshed," said one senior Nigerian official in Abuja. RUF leader
Foday Sankoh said the Nigerians should remain neutral and let Sierra Leoneans resolve
their own problems. "The issue is not democracy," he said. "It is peace and
security. Democracy will come after peace and security." The Nigerians yesterday
landed 720 troops in Freetown, reinforcing 900 who were already in the country under the
Status of Forces security agreement. A military source said the Nigerians are demanding to
deploy to protect key installations, such as the radio and television stations and State
House. He said the Sierra Leoneans tried to limit the disembarking Nigerians to one rifle
and one magazine each, but that the Nigerians had insisted on landing with all their
weapons.
Major Johnny Paul Koroma and the ruling council of the AFRC met Wednesday with
ambassadors and United Nations officials who are trying to organise an evacuation on a
U.N. chartered ship. More than 400 foreign nationals are crowded in hotels in Aberdeen
District, and about 2,000 Lebanese took refuge at the Lebanese Embassy. A Middle East
Airlines plane left with 178 Lebanese nationals, under the protection of ECOMOG forces.
The Boeing 707 also carried the bodies of two Lebanese citizens who were killed Sunday by
soldiers who ransacked their homes. 11 South Koreans were evacuated to Guinea aboard a
fishing boat. The United Nations Development Programme has reportedly completed the
evacuation of its non-essential personnel.
In his second address to the nation since Sunday's coup, AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul
Koroma repeated AFRC charges that President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah's government had polarized
the country into regional and tribal factions. "The former president had lost total
control of the situation as atrocities spread throughout the country," he said. He
also repeated the charge that the Kabbah government had favored the Kamajor militia over
the army. Koroma also criticized Kabbah's treatment of civil servants and teachers.
"The teachers remained unpaid for a long time to the extent that many teachers would
no longer pay their way to work. This situation is not tenable, and we promise to change
this immediately," he said.
27 May: The Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) has suspended
the constitution and banned political parties and activity. They promised to announce a
timetable for elections soon.
Following a direct request for help from President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, Nigerian leader
Sani Abacha has pledged to restore the Kabbah government. "ECOWAS has pledged to
restore democracy in Sierra Leone," he said. Sierra Leone's United Nations
Representative James Jonah confirmed Tuesday that President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah has asked
West African states to provide troops to "restore democracy" in Sierra Leone. In
answer to whether the troops should oust the AFRC, he replied, "If possible yes,
because what else do we have in the country. We have a bunch of corporals who opened the
prisons wide open and 600 people came out, criminals, and they are roaming the streets
right now." He said all the West African countries have made a "firm
commitment" to restore the Kabbah government. "The president of the republic has
made an appeal to the ECOWAS and the information which I have is that, indeed, it is true,
they are trying to take action to reverse (the coup)," he said. Jonah said he will
attend the OAU conference in Harare, Zimbabwe next week to request sanctions against the
coup leaders, including non-recognition of their government and a travel ban on the
non-commissioned officers who organised the revolt. "We are going to make it
difficult for any military leaders to make a coup," he said. There have been some
reports that President Kabbah, who fled to Guinea on Sunday, had re-entered Sierra Leone
Monday. In an interview Monday, Kabbah expressed confidence that Sierra Leoneans support
his government, and said he is returning to Sierra Leone because it is "where I
belong."
Three Nigerian frigates docked at Government Wharf in Freetown today carrying hundreds
of soldiers, fueling speculation that Nigeria is ready to intervene in Sierra Leone. A
statement from AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma dismissed the speculation as baseless.
"The AFRC is concerned over rumors that our brothers, the Nigerian force, are about
to launch an attack. The AFRC is hereby informing the general public to know that it is a
baseless rumor. The situation is under control, and all and sundry are hereby requested to
go about their normal duties." AFRC spokesman Captain Paul Thomas had earlier warned
Nigerian troops not to challenge the coup leaders again. "We will not appreciate any
foreign intervention in our internal affairs to jeopardize the security of our
people," he said. Nigerian troops and the coup plotters clashed Sunday morning; the
Nigerians have reportedly now redeployed at Jui, 12 miles from the center of Freetown.
United Nations Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs Kieran Prendergast said the
Nigerians were in Sierra Leone "in cooperation" with the coup leaders "to
bring the situation under control and restore law and order." A Nigerian diplomat
called the arrival of the ships routine. "Sierra Leone is part of ECOWAS and so there
is no need for alarm," he said. "As a member of ECOWAS we can stop by and visit
member states from time to time." The new Nigerian troops reinforce ECOMOG troops in
control of Lungi Airport. There have now been reports that the rebels have taken the
airport, formerly controlled by Nigerian and Guinean soldiers, by timing their takeover to
coincide with a rotation of the other African troops. Hundreds of fighters in ragged
camouflage uniforms were seen to enter Freetown from the rural areas Tuesday, asking the
way to the military barracks. They did not identify themselves, but are believed to be
members of the Revolutionary United Front who have come to reinforce the AFRC in the event
of an attack by Nigerian forces.
Looting by soldiers continued through Monday night, according to a report from
Freetown. "The looting has not stopped and there are abandoned wrecked cars lining
the streets everywhere. They have stolen engines and tyres from some and needlessly
wrecked the others by running them into buildings and into drainage ditches. After
wrecking one car, they simply steel another. They are still going to every house belonging
to government ministers and directors and literally destroying them. The Lebanese houses
also have been looted and ransacked." Heavy fire from mortars or grenade launchers
could be heard in Lumley into Monday night. Electricity has been out since Sunday morning,
and there is no kerosene available. More fires have been set, and many buildings have been
either gutted or are still burning, the report said. The offices of the World Health
Organisation, Action Contre la Faim (Action Against Hunger), Catholic Relief Services,
Medecins sans Frontiers (Doctors Without Borders), Handicap International and the World
Food Programme (WFP), as well as other U.N. agencies were looted. Looters broke into the
WFP warehouse and stole 1,650 metric tons of food aid, along with 15 light vehicles and
trucks. The Ghanaian diplomatic mission was also looted. A statement by a U.S. Defense
Department Spokesman in Washington Tuesday said that the situation in Freetown is now
calm. Connaught Hospital has reported 40 people killed in the fighting Sunday, and the
hospital has also treated more than 80 wounded. Other estimates say as many as 100 people
may have died. Businesses remained closed Tuesday, despite the coup leaders' appeals for
people to return to work. The AFRC has ordered government workers to report to work
immediately.
A United Nations chartered ship, the El Salvatore, has arrived in Freetown from Liberia
and officials expect to evacuate non-essential U.N. personnel and their families on
Wednesday. The United Nations Development Programme reportedly began removing
non-essential U.N. staff members to Guinea on Tuesday. A United States Naval helicopter
ship, the Kearsarge, with 1,200 Marines on board will arrive in Freetown in 24 to 48 hours
to help with the evacuation of Americans if it becomes necessary. "It (the Kearsarge)
is planning to stop probably 20 or so miles off the shore and wait and see what
happens," a Defense Department spokesman said. "There has been a (State
Department) request for us to be available if necessary, but no request to be more than
available." He said there are thousands of foreigners in Sierra Leone, but that the
United States had not received any requests to help with their evacuation. "Our hope
is that the situation will remain calm in Freetown and that the threat to Americans or any
other foreigners will go away and that democratically-elected government will
return," he said. U.S. State Department Spokesman John Dinger said there are no
immediate plans to evacuate the approximately 400 U.S. nationals in Sierra Leone. The
Freetown-based air carrier Inter Tropic Airlines Ltd. also announced Tuesday that it will
assist in the evacuation from Hastings Field to Lungi International Airport and to nearby
countries of all government officials and foreign nationals. AFRC spokesman Captain Paul
Thomas said today that Sierra Leone's borders have been reopened to allow foreigners to
leave. He said that Major Johnny Paul Koroma had met with U.S. and U.N. diplomats Monday
to reassure them about the safety of foreigners in the country. Thomas said the military
regretted the looting and is taking measures to prevent further violence. The AFRC has
empowered special army and police units to search homes for looted goods, with the
authority to arrest and detain those found in possession of stolen property. Hundreds of
people have taken shelter in Freetown hotels, waiting for a chance to leave the country.
Many Lebanese have sought refuge at the Lebanese Embassy, where they are reported to be
running short of food and water. Two Lebanese were killed Sunday when their homes were
looted, and two were wounded. Two Americans received non-life threatening injuries.
Between 5,000 and 8,000 persons demonstrated in Bo against the coup Tuesday, and at
least one person--a member of a civilian militia--was killed when soldiers used live
ammunition to break up the protesters. At least one other person was injured. The
demonstration started when some 300 women took to the streets early in the day, and they
were quickly joined by other residents. The crowd was angered by the discovery of large
quantities of looted goods in the army's possession. Nearly all the shops in Bo and an
Action Contre La Faim (Action Against Hunger) warehouse were looted in Bo on Sunday. The
soldiers also released all the inmates at the prison in Bo Sunday, including some accused
or convicted of committing violent crimes. The Kamajors (hunters militia) have rejected an
AFRC order to disband, and there have been clashes between soldiers and Kamajors in the
eastern town of Daru.
Reaction: Germany: "The Federal government condemns this fresh, violent
take-over of power by the military in Sierra Leone in the sharpest way,"
according to a German Foreign Ministry Statement. The ministry called for the restoration
of constitutional order and said the safety of civilians, members of the deposed
government, and foreigners in the country had to be guaranteed. United Nations Security
Council: "The Security Council is deeply concerned about the military coup d'etat
in Sierra Leone, especially when the United Nations is assisting the process of
reconciliation in that country. It strongly deplores this attempt to overthrow the
democratically elected government and calls for an immediate restoration of constitutional
order...The Security Council strongly condemns the violence which has been inflicted on
both local and expatriate communities, in particular the United Nations and other
international personnel serving in the country. It recalls obligations of all concerned to
ensure the protection of United Nations and international personnel in the country, and
calls for an end to the looting of premises and equipment belonging to the United Nations
and international aid agencies. Canada: Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd
Axworthy condemned the coup in Sierra Leone as "unacceptable" and called for
speedy restoration of constitutional order. "It is all the more tragic after
Sierra Leone's real progress toward democracy, peace, and economic reconstruction since
early last year," he said.
26 May: Soldiers have arrested 5 former ministers of former civilian
government, and are conducting house-to-house searches for others. The five, whose names
have not yet been released, are being detained at military headquarters. AFRC spokesman
Captain Paul Thomas urged people to return to work, but businesses have remained closed.
Hundreds of people have ventured out to view the damage from fighting around the
presidential offices. Thomas said that persons whose vehicles had been commandeered by
soldiers could now come to collect them, and he apologized for the inconvenience. The coup
leaders have asked that students be allowed to take their GCE examinations, and soldiers
have been observed escorting children to school. Foday Sankoh has remained noncommittal on
the AFRC's invitation for him to join their government. "You have to watch the
situation before you talk," he said.
Sources in Freetown report that both Lungi and Hastings Airports are open, despite
orders for their closure by the AFRC coup leaders, and that ECOMOG troops and equipment
are arriving in large numbers. Preparations for the deployment had been made Saturday
after ECOMOG commanders were alerted to the coup plot. UNIFOR forces are also arriving,
most of them American Army and Marines from bases in Germany. The ECOMOG forces have not
recognized the legitimacy of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council, and the airports
remain under the control of Nigerian and Guinean troops. Top ECOMOG officials have been
flown in from Monrovia, and personnel and equipment are being brought in from Liberia.
ECOMOG forces in Liberia have sealed the border with Sierra Leone, and two naval vessels
with hundreds of battle-ready ECOMOG troops aboard left the Monrovia Sunday night,
presumably headed for Freetown. ECOMOG deputy force commander Brigadier-General Joe
Kwateng confirmed that troops in Liberia's Cape Mount County had been ordered to close the
border. He declined to comment on the departure of the naval vessels, but said, "The
situation in Sierra Leone is an internal matter, but our men are there going about their
assigned duties."
Reports from Freetown suggest that the AFRC does not have the complete backing of the
army, and that the success of the coup was due to the arming of inmates released from
Pademba Road Prison. The coup leaders are becoming increasingly isolated in Sierra Leone
and abroad, with talk in Freetown of a possible counter-coup. In an interview on Monday,
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah stated that he was on his way back to Sierra Leone. Sources
say that he has left Guinea.
No politicians or army officers have voluntarily reported to military headquarters as
ordered by the AFRC, and foreign forces have reportedly not returned to their barracks as
requested by the coup leaders. State House is still reported to be guarded by Nigerian and
Guinean troops.
A forum at the Sierra Leone Embassy in Washington, D.C. tonight drew an estimated 1,000
persons in support of the civilian government. Ambassador John Leigh told the gathering,
"The coup is illegal, the guys are destructionists and they must be held responsible
for their actions." The participants resolved to support the Kabbah government either
in Sierra Leone or in exile, and determined to recognize Ambassador Leigh as the sole
representative of Sierra Leone in the United States. Sierra Leonean leaders in Washington,
D.C. are planning a protest for Thursday morning, to begin at the U.S. State Department,
move to the Nigerian Embassy, and end at the Sierra Leone Embassy. A press release states,
"We are no longer allowing military rule in Sierra Leone; they (the military) must
leave now and return the country to democratic rule." Police and secret service
agents were called to the embassy shortly before 6:00 p.m. when 5 coup sympathizers
confronted about 150 people who supported restoration of the civilian government. There
were no arrests.
The coup leaders have now named their government the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council
(AFRC). Captain Paul Thomas, who has replaced Corporal Gborie as their spokesman, told the
nation that all of Sierra Leone's air, land, and sea borders are closed until further
notice. He repeated calls for army and police officers to report to military headquarters
and for foreign troops to return to their bases. He also called upon the international
community to show restraint. "A designated head of state would brief them in due
course," he said.
Profile: Major Johnny Paul Koroma, 33, the head of the AFRC, is one of those officers
freed by soldiers from Pademba Road Prison early Sunday, where he was being held on
charges of attempting to overthrow the Kabbah government last September. His accusers have
testified that Kabbah and his senior ministers would have been assassinated in that coup.
The trial has repeatedly been adjourned, and no verdict has been rendered. Koroma has been
in the army for 10 years, and is reported to be popular with the junior officers. He has
trained in London, Nigeria, and Ghana, and was commanding officer of the battalion
attached to Sierra Rutile's bauxite mine in Moyamba District. Koroma is a Limba. He is
married with four children.
Looting soldiers in stolen vehicles roamed the streets of Freetown for a second day
following a coup which overthrew the government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The
center of the city has been gutted by fighting, looting, and arson. The Treasury building
has been burned and the Bank of Sierra Leone was reported at midday to be on fire. One
report says all the shops in Kissy Street have been looted. At least 15 persons are
confirmed dead and 40 injured. Freetown remains under a 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. dusk to
dawn curfew. The situation is reportedly somewhat calmer than Sunday, and people have
begun to venture out.
ECOMOG forces were reported to have begun landing shortly after midnight at Hastings
and Lungi Airports, which were secured by the Nigerian and Guinean forces respectively.
ECOMOG was tipped off to the coup a day in advance by a former detainee at Pademba Road
Prison, according to ECOMOG officers, and had moved heavy military equipment into place to
counteract the coup attempt. ECOMOG now states that they are in Sierra Leone only to
support Nigerian troops in the country under a military cooperation agreement. The
Nigerians, who clashed with coup leaders earlier in the day, are now reportedly
cooperating with coup leaders and have returned to their barracks.
Hundreds of inmates released from Pademba Road Prison have been issued military
uniforms and weapons, and now claim they are the army "as the army should have
been." Reports from Freetown say that no officers have yet reported to military
headquarters as ordered by the coup leaders.
Reaction: French Foreign Ministry Spokesman Jacques Rummelhardt: "France
deplores that a group of military officers has seized power by force...France calls for
the quick restoration of constitutional legality in Freetown." OAU Secretary
General Secretary-General Salim Ahmed Salim: "The United Nations and the
international community firmly uphold the principle that the will of the people shall be
the basis of the authority of governments, and that governments, democratically elected,
shall not be overthrown by force...It is lamentable that some soldiers who have no mandate
to rule at all should decide to challenge the legitimate position of the people. It is a
setback for Africa's transition to democracy...This development is a loss for Africa. This
development will not be welcome in Africa." Zimbabwean Foreign Minister, Stan
Mudenge: "The government of Zimbabwe condemns in the strongest terms the
perpetrators of this betrayal of the will of the people of Sierra Leone and calls upon the
international community to urgently render all the necessary support to help the people of
Sierra Leone regain their inalienable right to democracy and the rule of the law."
The South African Foreign Affairs Department issued a statement expressing hope that
Sierra Leone's elected government will be restored to power without delay. It called the
military takeover a setback to the democratization process in Sierra Leone, as well as to
the expansion of democracy on the continent as a whole. "This is a major setback
to a process of democratization in Sierra Leone to which the international community
attached great importance," the statement said. United States State Department
Spokesman John Dinger: "The United States condemns the coup which overthrew Sierra
Leone's first democratically elected government in three decades, and calls on those
claiming power in Freetown to return authority promptly to the country's elected
leadership and parliament." The British Foreign Office: "We deplore this
attempt to overthrow the elected government of Sierra Leone and strongly urge the
restoration of a democratic civilian government in accordance with the Commonwealth's
Harare principles. We have made clear to the military leaders in Sierra Leone our serious
concern over the level of violence against both local and foreign communities."
25 May: Soldiers this morning overthrew the civilian government of
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The coup was led by Major Johnny Paul Koroma, who announced
Sunday that he had taken control of the country. "As custodians of state security and
defenders of the constitution (we) have today decided to overthrow the Sierra Leone
Peoples Party government because of their failure to consolidate the claims achieved by
the brokers of peace," Koroma told the nation. He accused Kabbah's government of
being "nurtured on tribal and sectional conflict." Koroma said he has invited
RUF leader Foday Sankoh to join his government. "In this regard we appeal to the
international community and the Nigerian government in particular to release Corporal
Foday Sankoh," he said. Gunfire continued into the evening hours as looting soldiers
moved around the city in vehicles commandeered from civilians, NGO's, and the government;
soldiers also burned down the Treasury building. Freetown is under a dusk-to-dawn curfew,
and coup leaders have said that looters, military or civilian, will be shot on sight. The
country's borders have been sealed and Lungi Airport and the seaports have been ordered
closed. Coup leaders and a Guinean newspaper said President Kabbah has fled to Conakry,
Guinea. Connaught Hospital reported 5 dead--including 2 civilians--and 21 injured by
midday, but said more casualties were expected.
Heavy shooting was reported in Freetown some time after 4:00 a.m. Sunday from the
direction of State House and military headquarters, and continued for several hours.
Witnesses reported fighting near the national assembly between soldiers and Nigerian
troops who are in Sierra Leone under a military cooperation agreement. A spokesman for the
coup leaders, Corporal Tamba Gborie, made a statement Sunday morning over SLBS (state
radio): "The Tejan Kabbah government has been removed from power following the
successful coup today," he said. "I will inform the nation of further
developments. I am just an ordinary man and also the spokesman for the coup." Gborie
said the Nigerian forces were now cooperating with the coup leaders, and he called on the
Nigerian and Guinean troops assisting the army to keep out of the fighting, saying it was
an internal matter. He condemned the Tejan Kabbah government, saying "We want
democracy but not this democracy...Enough is enough, we have to build our nation. We want
a democracy but...the government has introduced tribalism." A second reason for the
coup, he said, was the poor wages soldiers receive, particularly when compared to the
compensation received by the Kamajors, a militia comprised of traditional hunters. He said
the activities of the Kamajors would be banned. "We are the national army," he
said. "They are not, any more." He accused Kabbah of "crying down" the
army. All ministers, politicians, and senior officers in the armed forces above the rank
of lieutenant colonel were ordered to report to Cockerill Barracks in Freetown. Gborie
said that the rebel war is over, implying an RUF connection to the coup. He said that the
coup leaders will appeal to Nigeria for the release of RUF leader Foday Sankoh, who is
being detained by the Nigerians in Abuja.
The coup began early Sunday morning when three or four pickup trucks carrying about 20
heavily armed soldiers in civilian clothing drove up to Pademba Road Prison. An explosion
followed, evidently from grenades used to blast open the steel gates. The soldiers freed
hundreds of prisoners, including 9 soldiers on trial for previous coup attempts against
President Kabbah. Nigerian troops who were guarding a nearby broadcasting station
approached the prison, but withdrew. Truckloads of soldiers then drove up in their
ceremonial uniforms, firing in the air around the prison, then withdrew toward the center
of Freetown.
In their first decree since assuming power, the coup leaders abolished the Kamajors, a
civilian militia of traditional hunters. They have also called for the return to Sierra
Leone of Captain Solomon "SAJ" Musa, who was linked to coup allegations in 1993,
and General Julius Maada Bio, the leader of the NPRC until the military handed over power
to the civilian government last year. An unconfirmed report from Freetown says the coup
leaders have called upon United National People's Party (UNPP) leader John Karefa-Smart to
join them, a suggestion strongly rejected by a family member.
Update: Shooting continued in Freetown Sunday evening as soldiers went on a looting
spree. The soldiers have been seen in Sierra Leone government vehicles, as well as
vehicles "commandeered" from the United Nations, religious missions, the Red
Cross, ASSP, Farmco, North Central Agricultural Project (NCAP), and those belonging to
civil servants and members of parliament. In the wake of the coup, a number of unconfirmed
rumors have been circulated. One unconfirmed report says that soldiers have broken into
the World Food Programme warehouse in Kissi and looted the rice stores. Another claims
that President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and his wife Patricia fled to Guinea with a 62 carat
diamond which was in Kabbah's possession pending the resolution of a dispute over its
ownership.
Reaction: Ambassador to the United States John Leigh: "This is totally
surprising and totally uncalled for. There is no need for a coup in Sierra Leone today.
Now Sierra Leone is going to be in a difficult condition...All the aid and all the job I
have been doing over here to bring economic development to Sierra Leone are now on hold
until this matter is resolved...These people are out to line their pockets...It's going to
bring more hardship and difficulty to the country, and that is not the way to make
change." United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan: "The United Nations
and the international community firmly uphold the principle that the will of the people
shall be the basis of the authority of governments, and that governments, democratically
elected, shall not be overthrown by force...The United Nations and the international
community attach the greatest importance to a democratic order for Sierra Leone...The
United Nations continues to stand ready to assist the people of Sierra Leone in their
quest for a society grounded in democracy, the rule of law, respect for human rights, and
the pursuit of peace and national reconciliation." Annan expressed concern about
the safety of the civilian population, and said he "strongly condemns taking into
custody" Sierra Leonean U.N. staff and the looting of U.N. offices, vehicles, and
equipment.
23 May: The Sierra Leone authorities have raised $16,000 in fines from
80 illegal immigrants arrested over the past week. "We would have liked to deport
them, but this normally involves rigorous court procedures. We prefer this method of
raiding them to augment our revenue collection," Assistant Police Superintendent
Patrick Farma said. The illegal immigrants were primarily Gambians, Guineans, Lebanese,
and Indians.
22 May: The SIEROMCO bauxite mine, owned by Alusuisse-Lonza Holding AG
and closed since it was overrun in a 1995 rebel attack, has found a potential U.S. buyer
which would allow mining operations to resume, SIEROMCO's director said Wednesday. James
Westwood said that Alusuisse had agreed to sell its shares on its Sierra Leone Ore and
Metal Co. subsidiary to Innovest Capital Sources Corp, a Colorado corporation based in New
Orleans, Louisiana. He said that Alusuisse had agreed to assign its lease and operations
agreement to the company, although the deal still needs the approval of the Sierra Leone
government. The lease has ten years remaining. "We have entered the agreement in good
faith and we hope that government approval comes quickly so that operations can resume
before there is further deterioration of the mines," Westwood said. Innovest has
financial backing from Fuci Metals USA Inc, located in Northbrook, Illinois. SIEROMCO
began bauxite mining in Mokanji in 1964. In 1984-88 it exported an average of 1.7 million
tons of ore a year. By 1992, exports had fallen to 1.3 million tons. The company lost
about $30 million in assets when the mine was overrun and looted in 1995, and it
reportedly also lost a major customer in Ukraine, causing the company to decide that it
was not economically viable to resume mining operations.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported 353 cases of Lassa Fever during the first
four months of 1997, with 43 deaths (12.2%). The reported number of cases rose from
January to March, but fell in April. This decrease might have been caused by
under-reporting caused by the brief closure of the Kenema Government Hospital during the
unrest there. During 1996, 470 cases with 110 deaths (23.4%) were reported. Most were
treated in Kenema, but four cases were identified in Freetown. Those seeking treatment in
Freetown were initially transported to Kenema, but an isolation ward has now been set up
in Freetown using health staff trained at the Lassa Fever isolation ward at Kenema. The
Ministry of Health and Sanitation, WHO, and MERLIN are planning activities to prevent the
spread of the disease and to manage cases, and are planning a nationwide training
programme on Lassa Fever control for later in 1997. The Ministry of Health and Sanitation
is studying a plan for rodent control, and is establishing a national Lassa Fever control
programme to be based in Kenema. Treatment with Ribavirin was resumed in mid April when
new supplies arrived. Stocks of the drug had been depleted in February.
OAU Secretary General Salim Ahmed Salim said Thursday that, despite some setbacks in
the implementation of the Abidjan peace accord, the peace process itself is basically on
course. He made the statement on the 34th anniversary of the founding of the Organization
of African Unity. Salim stressed that African people have the capacity, the will, and the
determination to forge ahead to an era of peace and development in the continent. "We
should always remind ourselves that whenever our peoples stood united, they were able to
make great achievements," he said.
21 May: The Army has restored order in Northern Province and the
situation is now calm, Defence Spokesman Abdju Sesay said Wednesday. "The region is
now relatively calm and we are now pursuing remnants of the rebel group who are on the
run," he said. On Tuesday, Guinean troops assisting the Sierra Leone Army arrested 22
suspected RUF members near the town of Gbinti, which was attacked last weekend. A
statement from the president Tuesday said that it was now safe for people to return to
their villages and towns, but asked people "to keep a watchful eye on all suspect
persons who may seek refuge in the Gbinti, Rogbaka, and Feredugu areas." The
statement also said that Kamakwie is now safe. Brigadier General Amidu Ojokojo, commander
of the Nigerian troops who are aiding the Sierra Leone Army, asserted that, "The
current rebel war in Sierra Leone will soon be a thing of the past...Recent disturbances
in the north are now under control."
At least 10 people were reported killed during the attack on Kamakwie. More than 30
were reportedly killed early last week in Bomaru, in eastern Sierra Leone.
An official of Moscow's Chief Interior Department said in a briefing on illegal drug
trafficking that distributors of "tough" drugs there--cocaine and heroin--are
mostly from Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and Tanzania. Vladimir Charykov said that Africans
involve Russians in the illegal drug trade by buying them air tickets to India and Brazil,
where they can easily buy narcotics.
Pademba Bay Road Prison holds 60% more inmates than its capacity, according to Chief
Superintendent of Prisons Benson Thomas. He said the prison is designed to hold 324
prisoners, but currently has 579. The majority of those, 328, are on remand, outnumbering
those who have been convicted.
19 May: The foreign ministers from Sierra Leone, Benin, Burkina Faso,
Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Mali, and Senegal met in an
extraordinary session of the ECOWAS Committee of Nine on Liberia Monday in Abuja, Nigeria
to set a new date for the Liberian elections. Several delegates reported that a consensus
had been reached to reschedule the elections for July. The delegates are expected to set a
concrete date during Wednesday's session. The elections had originally been scheduled for
May 30, but were postponed when most of the parties concluded that the timetable could not
be met.
Reports from northern province indicate that the rebel attack on Gbendembu last week
left the town virtually leveled. Only 6 houses were left standing; over 130 homes and the
clinic were destroyed. Monday's attack on Kamakwie left the town heavily damaged, with 60
homes destroyed and the hospital damaged and looted. The army, which had been sent to
provide security, "ran in full retreat." Many of the towns in northern province
are reported to have been deserted, with residents taking refuge in the bush. The rebels
reportedly number about 400, mostly teenagers, but heavily armed. Recent rebel attacks
have also been reported in Southern and Eastern Provinces. It was reported last week that
60 people were killed in the town of Kailahun, in eastern Sierra Leone.
15 May: RUF leader Foday Sankoh said Thursday that he wants to return
to Sierra Leone to help advance the peace process, and he denied that he is being detained
by the Nigerian government. "The government in Sierra Leone thinks keeping me out of
the peace process will solve the problem but they are mistaken," he said. "My
immediate return to my area of control in Sierra Leone will help put the peace process
back on track." Sankoh, who has been staying at a luxury hotel in Abuja since March,
said that he had come to Nigeria to meet Nigerian leader Sani Abacha, but that a meeting
has not yet been possible. "I came here to see President Abacha, the chairman of
ECOWAS, for his contribution to the peace accord. There is a delay and I have not yet seen
him. I think the government in Sierra Leone has a hand in the delay...we can call it
psychological warfare," he said. Sankoh denied reports that he had been arrested for
weapons violations at the airport in Lagos. "Four pistol bullets were found in the
suitcase of my bodyguard," he said. He added that he was initially lodged at a
government guest house for three weeks, waiting to see Abacha. Sankoh said he is not under
any restrictions in Abuja. "I can call anyone and I can go wherever I want," he
said. He reportedly is staying alone except for protocol officials in a $500 a night suite
at the top of one of Abuja's leading hotels.
Former NPRC military ruler Valentine Strasser may soon be a law student at Warwick
University in the United Kingdom. The university was approached by the United Nations
Development Programme a year ago about the prospect of Strasser furthering his education
there. Because of Strasser's lack of qualifications, he will have to take part in the
Higher Educational Foundation Programme, according to a university spokesman. "He was
27 years old when he was running his country, but because of his choice of career he
didn't have the opportunity to do A-levels," the spokesman said. "He is in the
middle of his exams. If he passes his exams he will then be able to come to us and study
law at our law department." Strasser is currently studying at a local college, and
will complete his exams next month. Strasser was educated at Sierra Leone Grammar School
and qualified for the university, but instead opted to join the military academy in 1986.
14 May: RUF fighters captured Kamakwie Tuesday after seven hours of
heavy fighting which left many persons dead. "Government soldiers fought bravely to
stop the rebels taking the town, but the rebels attacked in large numbers and they were
also heavily armed," army spokesman Col. Abdul Sesay said on Wednesday. He said that
corpses were left lying in the streets, but that casualty figures were not available for
either side. A church source who fled to Makeni reported that many people were killed in
the fighting. "I ran past 18 bodies as I escaped. Many of them were young boys, about
14 to 16 years old, carrying guns and machetes. But there were also the bodies of soldiers
and civilians," the source said. The rebels reportedly destroyed the hospital,
dispensary, and pharmacy, and burned more than 60 houses. Wesleyan church sources report
that there are 8,000 refugees at the Wesleyan Conference Center in Makeni, and that
supplies of food and medicine there are running low. There have been more than 10 attacks
on northern towns and villages in the past week, according to military sources.
14 May: The Sierra Leone parliament has passed the Media Practitioner
Act, the second part of the Newspaper Act, which places new restrictions on the press.
Under the law, journalists must register with the authorities every year or face a fine.
The act also requires journalists to have certificates of registration.
13 May: About 100 members of the Sierra Leone Association of
Journalists (SLAJ) picked parliament Tuesday to protest against a bill they say would shut
down newspapers and radio stations. Parliament last week passed the Newspaper Act, the
first part of the new restrictive legislation. The second part of the act, the Media
Practitioner Act, is currently before parliament.
12 May: A joint task force has been set up by the Special Services
Division (SSD) and Criminal Investigation Division (CID) to fight rampant armed robberies
in Sierra Leone. The team, headed by Senior Assistant Commissioner of Police Christopher
John, arrived in Kono on Sunday, where a Guinean businessman was killed and three Russian
nationals wounded in the past two weeks. Two Russians were shot in their residence by
armed robbers, and a Russian doctor was attacked and beaten up with iron bars in a private
hospital. Police say there have been other incidents as well, and that the robbers often
maim or kill their victims.
10 May: Soldiers have found 9 bodies at Kalangba, near Makeni, and
they fear that many more people died there Friday when rebels attacked the town and razed
87 houses. "The rebels fought us off for more than five hours yesterday, soldiers are
picking up the corpses of civilians killed and the search continues," one army
officer said. The rebels reportedly also attacked the nearby town of Gbendembu, burning
houses and abducting residents. "Since the peace accord last November this is the
first time the rebels have launched an attack on a town or tried to capture it. They had
only carried out small scale attacks before," army spokesman Col. Abdul Sesay said in
Freetown. The International Committee of the Red Cross in Freetown reported that scores of
people had been mutilated in the attacks on Kalangba and other villages. "Ten people,
some of them with their arms chopped off, have reached Makeni government hospital,"
said one aid worker. "Many more are trying to make their way to other hospitals in
the area. Some have had their arms and some their feet cut off." A Red Cross team
that tried to reach the area reported seeing large numbers of rebels in fresh uniforms
with new automatic rifles. Two of the houses that were destroyed belonged to government
ministers: Finance Minister Thaimu Bangura's home was razed in Madina in Bombali District,
and Labour and Sports Minister Dr. Sheku Saccoh's house was burned down at Kalangba. The
home of a traditional chief was also destroyed. According to some unconfirmed reports, the
rebels left a message threatening to continue the attacks until Foday Sankoh is given back
his freedom of movement. Heavily armed government troops and paramilitary militias began a
three day offensive in the north of the country Saturday, aimed at flushing out the rebels
who continue to operate in the region. A statement from state house said the that
"the movement of troops in these areas should be regarded as a protective
measure," and called upon residents "to assist the troops by giving them moral
and other support." Rebel attacks have intensified in recent days. On Tuesday a U.N.
vehicle was attacked, and on Wednesday two passengers in a World Food Programme vehicle
were injured in an attack on the Makeni-Lunsar highway. Two private vehicles were attacked
on Thursday and a number of persons injured as they fled into the bush. Six people were
also reported to have been killed at the village of Mayankay.
Forged cheques totalling $150,000 were discovered at the government treasury Friday by
a joint commission of inquiry set up by the Finance Ministry and the Central Bank to
investigate corruption by civil servants. "The fraudsters (at the treasury) have been
good at forging the signatures of senior members of staff who are signatories to the
department's account at the central bank," a commission member said. Police are
investigating the fraud, which involves 22 forged cheques discovered so far for the period
from December to March. One, issued in January for the Comptroller of Customs, was for
$11,000. About 33 government accountants and sub-accountants have been detained in
connection with the alleged forgeries.
Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi will consult with President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and
other key West African leaders to decide whether Liberia's general election set for May 30
should be postponed. A statement said that Ikimi was meeting with Liberian leaders on
after talks with President Lansana Conte of Guinea on Wednesday. "(Abacha) is
expected to make a statement on the holding of the general elections after the series of
consultations with member states of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
committee of Nine on Liberia," the statement said. The committee, and some
candidates, had argued that the May 30 election date should be postponed because they are
not ready for it. Charles Taylor, who started the Liberian civil war and is a presidential
candidate, wants the elections to go ahead as scheduled.
9 May: The Ethiopian Agency for the Administration of Rental Houses
(AARH), which has threatened to evict 15 African countries from their embassies in Addis
Ababa for arrears in rent, now says that Sierra Leone, Sudan, Burundi, and Uganda have
started to settle their arrears on a monthly basis. Tanzania is the only country which
took immediate action to remedy the situation, while Gabon and Zaire have continued to
remain silent on the issue. AARH spokesman Mekwanent Ayechea, who heads the agency's
section which deals with foreign tenants, regretted the lack of a response from the
embassies concerned after the arrears had been published and a call for payments had been
made. He said it was unfortunate that "rich countries" like Sierra Leone and
Gabon would expect a poor country like Ethiopia to provide services without payment.
8 May: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has allocated a $14
million loan to Sierra Leone, a government statement said on Thursday. The statement said
the IMF had commended Sierra Leone's efforts to keep a structural adjustment programme on
track despite difficult circumstances, and had cited efforts at macroeconomic
stabilisation and structural reforms. "The IMF's approval will facilitate Sierra
Leone's access to resources from the country's bilateral and multilateral donors and
creditors," the statement said. The country's success in bringing inflation down from
26% in December 1996 to 6.4% in December was given as an example of Sierra Leone's success
in meeting economic targets. The first of two half-yearly loan installments is available
for immediate use.
7 May: Gunmen shot and wounded a senior U.N. aid official Tuesday and
killed his Sierra Leonean driver in an ambush near Makeni. Two U.N. vehicles were attacked
near the village of Madina, 15 miles from Makeni, when about six unidentified attackers,
some shirtless, some in combat fatigues or wearing bandanas, sprayed them with machine gun
fire. This was the first time that a U.N. vehicle had been specifically targeted. The road
had been safe since before the peace agreement had been signed in November between the
government and the RUF. "If, as it appears, this was a deliberate ambush on clearly
marked U.N. and NGO vehicles, it could have serious implications for the delivery of
humanitarian assistance in Sierra Leone," a U.N. spokesperson said. The wounded aid
official was Robert Painter, the American head of the U.N. Department of Humanitarian
Affairs in Sierra Leone, who was shot in the foot. Passengers in a second car used by the
aid agency Concern Worldwide were unhurt. They were identified as Kathy Jones, British
deputy head of the U.N. peace operation in Sierra Leone, and a World Bank official.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees announced a temporary halt to the repatriation
of Sierra Leonean refugees from Liberia Tuesday because of the fighting in eastern Sierra
Leone. A UNHCR spokesperson said the group has pulled out of Kenema District. "We do
not wish to endanger the life of anyone working for us. The situation in Kenema is still
unsafe and the UNHCR has no option but to suspend our operations until we are sure of a
return of calm," he said. The 520 refugees who arrived last week will remain in
Freetown until Kenema is safer.
The commission of inquiry into the cause of tension between soldiers and Kamajors will
be chaired by Bishop Michael Keili, and will include a paramount chief, a lawyer, an army
colonel, a retired police officer, and two Kamajors. The commission has until May 30 to
deliver its findings. Clashes between the two groups have left 200 people dead since
January.
One report puts the number of persons killed in Kenema in clashes between soldiers and
Kamajors at 50. The bodies of 13 civilians, 10 Kamajors, and 2 soldiers were recovered in
the town, but humanitarian officials believe the actual number may be twice that high
since many casualties may not have been reported. At least seven Kamajors, five soldiers,
and 21 civilians were wounded. Other sources had variously put the death toll as high as
70 or 80. Most patients and staff also fled the government hospital and were taken by Red
Cross workers to a medical post on the outskirts of town. The Red Cross began taking them
back on Wednesday. U.N. aid workers had not yet returned by Wednesday, but schools and
shops in Kenema had begun to reopen.
6 May: At least 80 persons were killed in Kenema after a weekend of
clashes between soldiers and Kamajors, a hospital source said Tuesday. "Hospital
staff and the International Red Cross in Kenema have discovered the bodies of 30
civilians, 30 soldiers and 20 Kamajors and we are looking for more," the source said.
Aid agencies said the situation was tense in Kenema Monday, but the fighting had stopped.
"We have treated 25 wounded people so far, some of them in very bad shape from
gunshot wounds and in need of emergency surgery," an official of the International
Committee of the Red Cross said Tuesday. The withdrawal of aid agency staffs has left
70,000 people recently resettled in nearby villages without food or medical supplies.
New clashes also reportedly broke out at Camp Charlie near Matotoka Tuesday, where 14
persons were killed Sunday when soldiers fought against Kapras (a traditional hunters
militia). "At least six Kamajors and two government soldiers have been killed in
bitter fighting," a military source said.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Monday approved the third annual loan of $14
million under the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF) to back Sierra Leone's
1997 economic program. Under the 1997 program, real GDP growth is targeted for about 10
percent and the rate of inflation is to be contained at 8 percent. The IMF approved an
augmented second annual loan for Sierra Leone under the ESAF, raising the total three year
ESAF loan to about $139 million from the original of about $121 million. Currently, Sierra
Leone owes the IMF about $163 million.
5 May: New clashes between soldiers and Kamajors broke out in Kenema
Saturday, leaving at least 20 persons dead in three days of fighting and causing some
relief groups to pull out of the city. The UNHCR and the British medical group Merlin have
already withdrawn their staffs, while a spokesman for the World Food Programme (WFP) said
the situation Monday remained "extremely tense" and that the WFP staff might
leave later in the day. The International Committee of the Red Cross has stayed behind to
treat the wounded. The fighting reportedly started at 11:00 a.m. Saturday after Kamajors
drove by an army base at Kpetema, near Kenema, singing derogatory songs. Soldiers
reportedly fired on the truck, killing 3 Kamajors and starting a gun battle which lasted
until evening and resumed Sunday morning. Thousands of civilians fled the city to take
refuge in the forests as Kamajors fought soldiers in the streets of Kenema with rocket
propelled grenades, heavy machine guns, and assault rifles. Several buildings were set
ablaze in streets empty except for the fighters. "Many people, especially civilians,
have been killed in the battle and their bodies are lying about in the streets of the
town," a military source said in Freetown. Chief of Defence Staff Brigadier Hassan
Conteh and Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman flew to Kenema Sunday to negotiate a
truce, but more gun battles were reported early Monday. SLBS (state radio) reported Sunday
that President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah has set up a six man commission of inquiry to look into
the cause of the clashes between the soldiers and the Kamajors.
Clashes between soldiers and traditional hunters also broke out Sunday at Camp Charlie,
near Matotoka, the army's main base in the north. Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant-Colonel
Max Kanga said in Freetown that hundreds of Kapras (a separate militia of traditional
hunters) attacked the main military base at Camp Charlie on Sunday evening. "There
was a serious shoot-out which lasted for six hours," he said. At least 14 people are
reported to have died.
At least 60 more RUF fighters surrendered to government forces in northern Sierra Leone
over the weekend. "They have given us valuable information about life in the Kangari
Hills Camp (on the Makeni-Kono highway)," a government spokesman said. Surrendered
rebels described severe food shortages, and spoke of a conflict between Liberian and
Sierra Leonean fighters in the camp. "Senior Sierra Leonean rebel commandos now want
all fighters to be allowed to surrender but their Liberian counterparts are opposed to
this," one rebel said. Surrendered rebels said five female commandos who tried to
escape from the camp were "butchered" to death.
17 "first ladies" of Africa, including Liberian Interim President Ruth Perry
and Patricia Kabbah, wife of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, opened "the first summit
of African first ladies on peace" Monday in Abuja, Nigeria. The summit was organized
by Maryam Abacha, wife of Nigerian military ruler General Sani Abacha, and is backed by
the Nigerian government. Maryam Abacha said that the conference would work out practical
ways of mending fences among warring African nations. "Our intention is not to
duplicate the commendable efforts of African leaders in brokering peace," she said.
General Abacha said the summit should focus on "conflict prevention and improving the
deplorable economic conditions of our people, because economic deprivation is one of the
causes of conflicts in our continent." Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi said,
"The major objective of the summit is to find ways women can be involved in conflict
resolution in Africa." Other first ladies attending the meeting are those of Namibia,
Angola, Niger, Senegal, Gabon, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Gambia, Guinea, Chad, Zambia,
Guinea Bissau, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Burkina Faso, and Tanzania.
3 May: Two boats carrying 295 Sierra Leonean refugees from Liberia
docked in Freetown Saturday. A gunboat of the Sierra Leone navy arrived with 42 refugees,
while another 253 docked on a naval landing craft. A further 233 were expected on Sunday
after the fishing trawler carrying them developed engine trouble. Doctors who treated the
returnees, mostly women and children, said some had malaria and worm infestations, while
others suffered from seasickness or high blood pressure. The refugees returned in the
second phase of the UNHCR's resettlement program, which is expected to last for two years
and repatriate 500,000 Sierra Leoneans from neighboring countries. According to UNHCR
figures there are 340,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea, with 120,000 in Liberia and
tens of thousands more in Ivory Coast, Mali and Guinea Bissau. The current phase will last
until July, and the UNHCR expects to repatriate 3,000 Sierra Leoneans from Liberia.
2 May: The World Food Programme (WFP) reported that it completed the
distribution of three-months resettlement rations to 220,000 internally displaced persons
in April, and is now concentrating assistance to rehabilitation and development-oriented
programmes. Some 50,000 families are currently involved in food-for-work and
food-for-agriculture activities throughout the country. Food-for-agriculture activities
include the rehabilitation of thousands of acres of coffee, cocoa, oil palm, citrus fruit,
banana, and pineapple plantations to jump start the local economy. Food-for-work
activities include the construction of housing and shelter in areas of resettlement and
the rehabilitation of roads leading to villages. The WFP continues to provide emergency
rations to populations displaced because of isolated security incidents.
1 May: Police questioned ten top treasury officials for seven hours
Wednesday in their investigation into corruption by civil servants. A spokesman said
Thursday that the probe involved forged cheques totaling $150 million. Those interrogated
included treasury controllers, computer systems analysts, accountants, and sub
accountants. The deputy head of the treasury was also questioned and released on bail.
Police said their investigations were leading to the Central Bank, where forged cheques
were allegedly cashed. "We are treating the development as a conspiracy. The cheques
involved were salaries for different ministries using code accounts from the Central
Bank," an official said. Police made a surprise raid on the treasury Tuesday and
demanded the addresses of a number of officials suspected of fraud. Most of those wanted
were not at work, but some were arrested at home. Others fled to the provinces. There are
unconfirmed reports that 21 officials are being sought in connection with the
investigation.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Thursday sent a first batch
of 600 Sierra Leonean refugees from Samuka Town displaced camp back to Freetown aboard
three ships. UNHCR senior protection officer Yacoub el-Hillo said 600 more refugees will
be repatriated on May 8, and another 600 will follow a week later. The voyage will take
about 22 hours. El-Hillo said that 200 extremely vulnerable refugees will be airlifted to
Freetown on May 15, while 1,153 at Bo Waterside, on the Sierra Leone border, will return
home by foot or by road. The Chairman of the Sierra Leone Welfare Committee, George Zoker,
said the refugees had decided to return because of the deplorable conditions at Samuka
Town camp. "Our ration is inadequate and most often delayed, while our children have
no educational facilities," he said. The UNHCR said that each refugee will be
provided with an assistance package upon arriving in Sierra Leone, comprising two months
food rations from the World Food Programme, a plastic sheet, two mats, a jerrycan, a lamp,
a kitchen set, and two blankets.