31 July 2001: The Sierra Leone government will ask
parliament for a second
six-month
extension of its term in office, presidential spokesman Septimus Kaikai
told the BBC on Tuesday. The announcement was not unexpected: Last month
President Kabbah told the Sierra Leone Web that presidential and
parliamentary elections would likely be held next February. The Sierra
Leone constitution provides for an postponement of up to six months at a
time, with the consent of parliament, if the country is involved in a war
in which its physical territory is threatened. Last February the
government asked for and received a six-month delay in the elections after
the National Electoral Commission reported that the security climate in
the country would make elections impossible. "We have speculated that
the disarmament of former fighters will be completed in September and the
electoral process be put in place," Kaikai told BBC correspondent
Lansana Fofana. Some opposition leaders and civil society groups have
called for the formation of an interim government of national unity to
lead the country to the elections as the price of a second extension. But
in the June interview, Kabbah made it clear he would oppose such a move.
"There is no provision for an interim government in our
constitution," he said.
The RUF will assist United Nations peacekeepers in
tracking down Demba
Marah,
the renegade rebel commander blamed for the massacre last week at Henekuma
of at least nine persons, some of them children RUF spokesman Gibril
Massaquoi said on Tuesday. But Massaquoi (pictured right) suggested in a
BBC interview that the attack on the town might have been in retaliation
for a CDF raid last month on Marrah's home town of Yiraia. "After
that attack he left Koidu to go and bury his people that were
killed," he said. "Among the 28 people that were killed, his
wife, his mother, two of his children, other relatives were all
killed." Massaquoi said RUF interim leader General Issa Sesay had
dispatched a team to the area to search for Marah, and would bring him to
Koidu to investigate the charges. "We are all operating under the
rule of the law," he said. But the rebel spokesman was vague about
what would happen next. "Demba Marah knows very well if you do
summary execution it’s against the rules and regulations of the
RUF," he said. "You wait and see what the RUF will do, what type
of steps the RUF will take against him if he’s found guilty."
Massaquoi was critical of the CDF militia, which he blamed for
"attacking RUF positions, killing dozens of people, amputating
them," and of UNAMSIL, which he accused of failing to act on RUF
complaints. "This particular attack at Yiraia was only brought to the
knowledge of the entire nation and the world by Human Rights Watch,"
he said. "We made persistent complaints that they did not accept, and
this is the type of result now."
Lieutenant-General Daniel Opande, the commander of the
UNAMSIL force,
called
last week's massacre of villagers at the town of Henekuma one of the worst
he had seen. "When we landed in Henekuma and what I saw there shocked
me…it went through my blood," Opande told reporters. "I have
seen quite a bit of nasty things in war throughout my military career
either in action or in peacekeeping. But what I saw in Henekuma really
made me feel very bad." But Opande said he believed that the rebel
commander responsible, identified as Demba Marah, had acted without the
knowledge of RUF leaders. "Prior to doing what he did, he had caused
some problems within his own organisation in Kono and he was arrested in
Kono and put in or held in some sort of a jail for seven days, and then he
escaped from there," he said. The general told journalists he doubted
whether the incident represented a split within the rebel movement.
"I don’t believe that there is a breakaway faction from the RUF,
but there are combatants out there," he said. "It is not only
becoming evident to us now, there are combatants and commanders of
combatants out there in the bush, regardless of which factions they belong
to, who sometimes don’t take instructions from their organisation. And I
think Demba Marah is one of those who has been a bad boy, and that he has
done what he has done without any instructions at all from his higher
leadership or support of any major factions that you can term as
breakaway."
The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone
(UNAMSIL) has lashed out
against
allegations made last week by Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman
(pictured left), who accused the U.N. of deliberately dragging its feet in
disarming combatants in Sierra Leone's eastern Kono District. Norman is
also the National Coordinator of the pro-government Civil Defence Forces
Militia. In a statement read out on Tuesday, a UNAMSIL spokesperson noted that U.N. peacekeepers had
initially attributed the
difficulties in disarming CDF militiamen in Kono to a wide gap in communications between
the combatants on the ground and
the central CDF leadership in Freetown. "During that initial difficult period
in the Kono disarmament operation, the CDF Kono combatants always insisted
on receiving instructions from their own local leaders and chiefs. They
had accused the CDF National Coordinator, Chief Hinga Norman, of having
long ceased to supply them with their requirements," the spokesperson
said. "If, therefore, Chief Norman
did not know what was happening on the ground in
Kono, it is not
surprising. He has been to the district only once in May 2001 under
considerable pressure from the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General (Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, pictured right), who took him along in a UNAMSIL helicopter. To
UNAMSIL’s amazement, his visit did not help, as the CDF combatants made
it clear they would not, and in fact did not, take instructions to disarm
from him. It is important to bring out these facts in view of the continuous
unjustified attacks on the UNAMSIL approach to disarmament in Kono. The
results being achieved have fully justified that approach. UNAMSIL will
continue to pursue its task with strict impartiality as is expected of
it."
997 CDF combatants have disarmed to date in Bonthe
District, a stronghold of the pro-government militia, a UNAMSIL
spokesperson said on Tuesday. 789 combatants turned over their arms to
U.N. peacekeepers at Mattru, and 208 on Bonthe Island and peninsula. In
Kono District, the pace of disarmament has picked up, with 910 CDF and 752
RUF combatants having given up their weapons through Monday. The U.N.
attributed the improved rate of disarmament and the cessation of ceasefire
violations to the involvement of Kono chiefs and elders.
Canada announced Tuesday it would contribute $2.25 million
(US $1,450,000)
over
three years for the creation of a Special Court for Sierra Leone.
"Accountability for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes
is an important part of Canada's human security agenda," Foreign
Affairs Minister John Manley (pictured left) said in a statement. "By
creating a venue for holding individuals accountable, the Special Court
will help to
break the cycle of conflict and lay the foundation for the promotion and
protection of human rights in Sierra Leone." Maria Minna, Canada's
Minister for International Cooperation (right), stressed that the court
would strengthen Sierra Leone's legal system, which she called essential
to the establishment of peace and security in the region. "The
establishment of the Special Court will also send a powerful message, both
in the country and internationally, that impunity will not be
tolerated," she said. The Canadian contribution includes $1.5 million
over three years from the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
and $750,000 over two years from the Department of Foreign Affairs and
International Trade. Part of these funds will be used to send Canadian
experts to the court to contribute to the rebuilding of the rule of law in
Sierra Leone.
The European Union has appointed Hans Dahlgren, currently
State Secretary for Foreign Affairs at the Swedish Ministry for Foreign
Affairs, as the European body's Special Envoy to the Mano River Union
states of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, the Swedish Foreign Affairs
Ministry announced on Monday. During his six-month assignment, Dahlgren
will be responsible for framing a coordinated EU policy on the three
countries, which will include measures aimed at alleviating the serious
humanitarian and political situation in the area. In addition to
maintaining close contact with the leaders of the three countries,
Dahlgren will be promote cooperation and the exchange of information with
the United Nations and ECOWAS, the EU statement said. Earlier this year,
Dahlgren headed an EU delegation which toured the region.
30 July: Some 200 former members of the
Revolutionary United Front and the
pro-government
Civil Defence Forces militia began military training on Monday at the
Benguema Training Centre outside Freetown, as the first step towards
integrating them into the country's restructured army, the Voice of
America reported. Sierra Leone Army Media Operations Director Major John Milton was
quoted as saying that the majority of this first group of trainees
consisted of former rebel fighters.
Illicit diamond mining is continuing in Sierra Leone's
eastern Kono District, despite an agreement reached earlier this month
between government and RUF representatives to halt all mining activities
in the district in a bid to hasten the disarmament of combatants, Radio
France International reported on Monday. Mineral Resources Minister
Mohamed Swarray Deen was quoted as saying that it was the responsibility
of United Nations peacekeepers to monitor and enforce the ban. This was
disputed by UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki, who insisted that the
U.N.'s mandate was to keep the peace — not to protect the diamond mining
areas.
29 July: Nigeria's Super Eagles recorded a
convincing 3-0 win over Ghana
Sunday,
capping a comeback for the Nigerian side from what appeared earlier this
year to be near-certain elimination, and securing a spot in next year's
World Cup finals. Had Nigeria lost or only drawn, Liberia's 1-0 victory
over Sierra Leone earlier this month would have been enough to keep the
Lone Stars at the top of Group B, and would have meant a first-ever World
Cup appearance for the Liberians. Nigeria, with Cameroon, South Africa,
Tunisia and Senegal, will now represent Africa at the 2002 World Cup
finals in Japan and Korea. Meanwhile, Sierra Leone lost to Sudan 3-0 at
Obdurman Sunday in a meaningless World Cup qualifying game. The Leone
Stars, with just one win and one draw in eight tries, end the series mired in last
place in Group B with four points, behind Nigeria with 16, Liberia with
15, Sudan with 12, and Ghana with 11. Other results: Madagascar 1, Congo
0; Angola 1, Togo 1; Ivory Coast 1, Democratic Republic of Congo
2;
55 Guinean civilians freed by Sierra Leone's RUF rebels
have returned home with accounts of maltreatment, rapes and death at the
hands of their captors, BBC Conakry correspondent Alhassan Sylla reported
on Sunday. The freed captives, including 20 children, had been abducted
during rebel raids into southern Guinea earlier this year, and some had
been in rebel hands for as long as six months. "Many of the women
were brave enough to tell reporters that they had been raped, while the
men said that they had been forced to undertake extremely hard
chores," Sylla said. Among those freed was a sub-prefect of
Gueckedou, who told reporters that at least 11 of the captives had died
while in RUF captivity, and that a number of children had also died of
hunger and malnutrition.
28 July: A renegade band of RUF rebels under the
command of Demba Marah has been blamed for last week's attack on the
village of Henekuma in the Koinadugu District, UNAMSIL said on Saturday.
Villagers told UNAMSIL force commander Lieutenant-General Daniel Opande
and deputy force commander Major-General Martin Agwai, who with other
senior United Nations officials visited the town on Friday, that 22 people
had been killed in the July 19 attack. Only nine bodies of adults and
children were visible, however. Approximately 25 homes were destroyed in
the attack. Opande urged the families and CDF combatants not to seek to
avenge the attack, and pledged that UNAMSIL would have the culprits hunted
down and punished. Acting on information provided by village residents,
Opande flew to the town of Yiraia in an attempt to locate Marah. Upon
arrival, he discovered the village in the hands of CDF militiamen who
captured it from the rebels on Thursday. Opande returned to Freetown with
a CDF combatant who had been captured, tortured, and subsequently freed by
the RUF.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Aiah Abu Koroma and UNAMSIL
deputy force commander Major-General Martin Agwai visited the CDF-held
village of Masundu and the RUF-held town of Njaiama Nimikoro on Friday, to
continue disarming combatants in Kono District as had been agreed in
meetings between the two sides. According to UNAMSIL, 82 RUF and 128 CDF
combatants were disarmed at the two locations.
27 July: RUF officials in Kono District complained
Wednesday that one of their local commanders, Colonel Momoh Rogers, and
his bodyguards had been abducted by the CDF, and that as a result they
were slowing down the pace of their disarmament until Rogers was released,
a UNAMSIL spokesperson said on Friday. UNAMSIL's force commander and
deputy force commander left Freetown Friday morning for Kono in an effort
to lessen tensions between the two sides and to resolve
issues
hindering disarmament in the district. Meanwhile, disarmament in the
diamond-rich district is continuing. On July 19, 67 RUF combatants led by
RUF interim leader General Issa Sesay (pictured left) disarmed at Koeyor
on the eastern outskirts of Koidu, while 16 CDF disarmed in the town of
Masundu Kongoteh. On Monday, 39 RUF rebels and one CDF combatant disarmed.
On Tuesday, 129 CDF combatants, including Sector Commander Gbogbon, handed
over their weapons at Njagbwema Fiama and at Masundu Kongoteh. 23 RUF
combatants were disarmed on the same day. On Wednesday, 109 CDF combatants
disarmed at Njaiama Sewafe in what was to have been a simultaneous
disarmament exercise, while another 60 CDF disarmed at the
Njagbwema-Meiyor axis. 36 RUF combatants also handed over their guns. On
Thursday, 27 RUF disarmed, while four CDF surrendered their weapons at
Kayima and one at Worodu, both in Sandor Chiefdom. Since July 2, a total
of 304 RUF and 454 CDF combatants have disarmed in Kono District, while in
Bonthe, a stronghold of the pro-government militia, 813 CDF have
disarmed — 190 on Bonthe Island and the peninsula, and 623 in
Mattru.
The CDF has complained to United Nations peacekeepers that
RUF rebels
attacked
the village of Henekuma in Koinadugu District on July 19, killing twelve
persons, a UNAMSIL spokesman said on Friday. A U.N. air reconnaissance on
Thursday confirmed that the village was deserted and that many of the
structures had been burnt. UNAMSIL force commander Lieutenant-General
Daniel Opande (pictured left) will visit the area Friday, along with
representatives of the CDF and RUF and members of UNAMSIL's Human Rights
Section, to investigate the report.
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba in Freetown, for the
Sierra Leone Web] The race for the championship in Freetown's Premier
League is intensifying with the end of its season fast approaching. Old
Edwardians, with 15 points, battled it out at the National Stadium
Friday with Wellington People,
who trail with 12. Old Edwardians, the "May Park Boys," started play with a
good possession, deploying a 4-4-2 formation. Wellington People
too used a similar system of play. Both sides showed good ball
possession, with shots on goal.
Offsides occurred one after the
other from both teams.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling] Standard
Chartered Bank: [$] 1800 / 2100 [£] 2300 / 2900. Commercial Bank: [$]
1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2180 / 2250 [£] 2900 / 3100.
Continental: [$] 2200 / 2320 [£] 2900 / 3100. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2250 / 2270 [£] 2900 / 3000.
26 July: The foundation of a Special Court mandated
to try those bearing the greatest responsibility for war crimes committed
during the Sierra Leone conflict could be in place within three months,
according to Ralph Zacklin, the United Nations Assistant Secretary-General
for Legal Affairs. Earlier this week, the U.N. Security Council approved
new recommendations by Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and said it would
dispatch a team to Freetown to begin setting up the court. "We don’t
have an exact date, but the next steps would involve the conclusion of an
agreement with the government of Sierra Leone, and following the
conclusion of the agreement we will have a planning mission that will go
to Sierra Leone and discuss with the authorities there all the issues
relating to the practical implementation of this proposal," Zacklin
told Radio France International. "We would hope to have the advance
elements of the court itself — the nucleus of the prosecutor, registrar
and so forth — in place in Freetown sometime within the next two or
three months."
On Wednesday, RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi expressed
concern that the United Nations' proposed Special Court for Sierra Leone
might engage in a
"witch
hunt" against rebel leaders, and he complained that the U.N. had so
far failed to explain to the RUF how the court would operate. But on
Thursday, RUF Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie Golley (pictured
left) insisted that the rebel group in fact welcomed the establishment of
the court. "The RUF has always maintained that it is really not
afraid of the Special Court in the sense that it believes that the Special
Court would be impartial, would be fair, and would justly try all those
that have been accused of atrocities during the period in question,"
Golley told Radio France International. "The RUF believes by this a
lot of the misconceptions and the perceptions about them would be removed
in terms of the negative perceptions that have been going around the
world." Golley noted, however, RUF concerns that testimony given
before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission — due to operate
alongside the Special Court — might be used as evidence in the court,
and he said the rebel group was seeking clarification on the question.
Golley insisted that the RUF would not seek to shield suspects from the
tribunal. "The RUF would not stand in the way of any suspects in
terms of their actually appearing before the court," he said.
"We’ll do everything possible to cooperate with the court, and do
everything that it can to ensure that justice is not only done, but is
seen to be done."
The process of setting up a war crimes tribunal for Sierra
Leone should begin
immediately, Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Minister Dr.
Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya said on Thursday, dismissing a suggestion that the
establishment of the Special Court now might jeopardise the disarmament
process. "On the contrary, I think it will accelerate the peace
process," he told Radio France International. "You should
realise that a lot of atrocities (were) caused, and the rest of society
also is interested in having justice meted to those who are principally
responsible. And I believe if you talk to many of the combatants all
around they will tell you that they were put to this — You know,
somebody else was responsible. Many of them were abducted and forced into
fighting and committing atrocities." Dumbuya stressed that the
court's jurisdiction covered only those deemed as most at fault for crimes
committed during the country's civil war. "The war crimes tribunal is
aimed at the leadership — the people who were in responsible positions
for the atrocities that were caused," he said. "It’s not aimed
for the entire combatants, wherever they might be, RUF, CDF or what have
you, because there is the Truth and Reconciliation Commission for the rest
of the combatants." Dumbuya added that if the court were
"misconstrued as a witch hunt" against a wide range of
combatants, "it could have very negative repercussions." Dumbuya
rejected a suggestion that the court should be set up only after
disarmament in the country was complete. "When you say after
disarmament, when?" he asked. "We have a target date of November
this year to finish disarmament. Some people will still say it’s too
early. So really, it is a question of the people understanding that the
majority of the people will be reconciled with one another. But those who
plotted, who led, who coordinated this whole plot against the rest of the
country should be brought to book, and I think we’re unanimous on
that."
79 child ex-combatants with the RUF were returned to their
families in Kailahun on Tuesday, after having spent six weeks in an interim
care centre at Daru, UNAMSIL said in a statement. The 79 were among 234
children turned over by the RUF on June 4 and 9. Although child
combatants, many had been living with their parents or relatives in
Kailahun. At Daru, the children received psycho-social counseling, and
participated in educational and sports activities with other separated
children. They also received medical screening and treatment for problems
including severe malaria, hernia, shrapnel wounds, and the effects of
sexual violence.
A United Nations mission is in Liberia this week to
undertake a preliminary assessment of the potential humanitarian, social
and economic impact on the Liberian population of additional sanctions, a
U.N. spokesman said in New York on Thursday. Earlier this year, the U.N.
Security Council imposed a range of sanctions on Liberia, including a
broadened arms embargo, a ban on diamond sales, and an international
travel ban on senior government officials, in an effort to pressure the
Liberian government to abandon its support for Sierra Leone's RUF rebels.
A U.N. panel of experts is currently assessing the possibility of
additional sanctions. The three-member mission includes members of the
U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the
Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Meanwhile, Liberian Foreign
Minister Monie Captan complained Thursday about the Liberian Sanctions
Committee's decision not to grant a waiver to the travel ban to allow him
to attend the World Cup qualifying match in Freetown between Liberia and
Sierra Leone. Captan insisted that the football match was not the primary
reason for the proposed visit. "Rather it provided an opportunity for
confidence-building and dialogue," he said.
Sweden announced Thursday it would donate SEK 6 million
(about $566,000) to the World Bank Multi-Donor Trust Fund to help support
the Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (DDR) programme in
Sierra Leone. The Swedish government previously pledged SEK 3.5 million
($330,000) toward the establishment of a Special Court to prosecute those
most responsible for war crimes committed during the Sierra Leone
conflict.
25 July: One day after the United Nations Security
Council announced it was
prepared
to move to establish a Special Court to try those responsible for war
crimes committed during the conflict in Sierra Leone, Justice Minister and
Attorney-General Solomon Berewa insisted that the timing of the U.N.'s
announcement should not affect efforts to bring the war to an end.
"The jurisdiction given to the court covers very, very few: those
with the greatest responsibility for the crimes and atrocities that were
committed in Sierra Leone," Berewa told the BBC. "And the court
has defined these as a very small group of people — not yet named, of
course. But the vast majority of those who have been involved in the war
have been armed and we are hoping they will go through another process,
that is, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. There’s nothing wrong
about the timing at all." Berewa said the the RUF was, in fact,
supporting the establishment of the court. "The RUF and the other
combatants are all very anxious that the court be set up, because they
want to use the court as a means of vindicating themselves where they
may," he said. "They have expressed a desire that the court be
set up as quickly as possible." In a separate interview on Wednesday,
Berewa told the Reuters news agency that the Special Court would not
target only rebel leaders. Those deemed most responsible for war crimes
committed in Sierra Leone could include members of the former AFRC
military junta, "civilians in top positions during the ten-year
war," and even members of the pro-government CDF militia, he said.
"Many people think that the approval of the special tribunal by the
Security Council is specifically aiming at the RUF alone," Berewa
told Reuters correspondent Christo Johnson. "This is not so. There
are going to be investigators who will carry out investigations on people
to determine who will face trial. It could be Mr. Berewa himself as
attorney general, or any other citizen."
RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi said Wednesday the rebel
group was
concerned
that the proposed Special Court being set up to try those deemed to bear
the greatest responsibility for war crimes in Sierra Leone would lead to a
"witch hunt" against RUF leaders. "The RUF heard the
Attorney-General, Mr. Solomon Berewa, saying this morning that the RUF is
very eager to have the court set up, which is a complete
fabrication," Massaquoi said in a BBC interview. "The RUF
combatants remain in support of the TRC (Truth and Reconciliation
Commission) which they signed in Lomé (the Lomé Peace Accord) in July
1999." Massaquoi alleged that the United Nations had already compiled a
list of persons who would be charged before the court. "In the last
meeting in Bo (July 17), the RUF learned that the U.N. have already
recorded 14 names on which basis of selection we do not know," he
said. "These criteria need to be explained, even though I have not
heard any combatants saying no to it as long as it is generally
done." Massaquoi complained that the United Nations had not yet
explained to the RUF how the court would work. "Until United Nations
sits down with the RUF to clearly explain how this type of court will be
set up, then the RUF will be in position to speak as to what their
position is," he said.
The Sierra Leone government will increase its efforts to
provide for the welfare of
those
serving in its armed forces, President Kabbah pledged
on Tuesday. "Every effort will be made to provide proper housing
facilities and working environment will be provided for all ranks,"
he told newly-trained members of the Sierra Leone Army's 2nd Battalion the
Light Infantry at a passing-out ceremony at Benguema. The president also
promised that, in addition to "training and retraining,"
soldiers would be given the capacity to help meet their obligations to
their families. Looking to the upcoming presidential and parliamentary
elections, Kabbah called on the military to provide "a secure and
safe environment" for Sierra Leoneans to exercise their democratic
rights. He warned, however, that members of the military are barred from
engaging in partisan politics. "Their neutrality and impartiality in
this matter should be above board," he said. "Their loyalty
should be to the state and institutions of the state."
24 July: Some 600-700 members of the Sierra Leone
Police will begin to deploy in the rebel-held towns of Makeni and Magburaka
starting August 1, under an agreement reached on Monday, a UNAMSIL
spokesperson said in Freetown. The agreement was reached at a meeting in
Makeni between RUF officials and a delegation headed by U.N. Deputy
Special Representative for Governance and Stabilisation Alan Doss and
Police Inspector-General Keith Biddle. The deployment, scheduled to begin
simultaneously in the two towns, is expected to take about a week. The
police force would include members of the SSD, but their weapons would be
locked up and used only for self-defence, the spokesperson said.
Mechanisms are being set up to ensure a smooth deployment and functioning
of the force, including the establishment of a community Safety and
Security Committee. The meeting also addressed related issues such as the
imposition of a curfew if necessary, and the referral of suspects to the
Magistrates Court in Port Loko. The two sides also discussed the recruitment
of candidates into the Sierra Leone Police force.
The United Nations Security Council has welcomed new
proposals by Secretary-General Kofi Annan to establish a Special Court in
Sierra Leone, and will dispatch a delegation to Sierra Leone to begin setting
up the court, mandated to try those deemed most responsible for crimes
against humanitarian law committed since November 1996, Council President
Wang Yingfan of China said in a letter on Tuesday. Council members will
press donor nations to expedite transfer of contributions to a trust fund
what has been set up to fund the court, he said.
A total of 369 combatants have disarmed in Kono District
since July 2, including 218 RUF and 151 CDF militiamen, a UNAMSIL
spokesperson said on Tuesday. In Bonthe District, 679 CDF combatants have
disarmed, 149 on Bonthe Island and peninsula, and 529 at Mattru. The Joint
Monitoring Committee which was established at last week's meeting of the
Tripartite Committee on DDR in Bo has agreed to send mobile disarmament
teams to areas of recent alleged attacks, the spokesperson said. The teams
will be under the direction of Deputy UNAMSIL force commander
Major-General Martin Agwai and RUF and CDF leaders.
Atrocities against civilians in Sierra
Leone's Kono and Koinadugu Districts have risen to the highest level in
several months, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday. Victims and witnesses
described attacks by nominally pro-government Donso militiamen in June and
July against the RUF-controlled towns of Worodu, Yiraia, Sukudu and
Mansofinia. At least 24 civilians, including nine women and nine children,
were killed in the four attacks documented by the human rights group. Some
19 more civilians, including 11 children, were injured. On June 17,
members of the militia killed at least 21 civilians in the town of Yiraia.
In apparent retaliatory attacks in June and early July on the towns of
Porpon, Hermakono, Bumbanja, Dombadu and Samadu, RUF rebels killed at
least three children, wounded several other civilians, and abducted 16
persons including five children. Witnesses said many villages had been
burned and looted by combatants on both sides, and that hundreds of
residents had been displaced by the attacks, which took place from
mid-June to the second week in July. Human Rights Watch quoted witnesses
as saying many of the CDF militiamen involved in the attacks were, until
last April, based in refugee camps in Guinea or along the border area.
22 July: Solomon Y. B. Rogers, the chairman of the
RUF's People's War
Council,
died in custody on Friday, according to reports by the Associated Press
and Reuters which quoted a senior official at Freetown's Pademba Road
Prison. "Just a few days ago he complained of hypertension and
malaria and he was admitted to hospital, where he died after a short
illness," the official was quoted as saying. Rogers was 69. A former
civil servant and reportedly one of the original members of the RUF,
Rogers served in 1997as Secretary of State for Lands and the Environment
during the short-lived AFRC military junta. In 1999 he was part of the RUF
delegation which negotiated the Lomé Peace Accord with the Sierra Leone
government. Rogers was jailed in May 2000 after the rebels resumed
hostilities and abducted more than 500 United Nations peacekeepers. RUF
leaders have repeatedly expressed concern in recent months over reports of
deaths among RUF detainees, and in early July the government acknowledged
that seven RUF members had died in prison.
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba in Freetown, for the
Sierra Leone Web.] Tension mounted with arguments and discussion as soccer
fans rushed towards the National Stadium in Freetown Sunday for the battle
of the giants: Mighty Blackpool vs. East End Lions. Fans were excited as
both teams paraded quality players. Blackpool started play with very cool
teamwork, deploying the 4-4-2 formation. Similarly East End Lions used the
same formation. In the first five minutes, No. 10 for Mighty Blackpool,
Serey Turay, dribbled past two defenders with a shot that hit the
goalkeeper. Blackpool in good spirit exhibited good football with
brilliant passes, nice dribbling and good ball control. The East End
Lions, too, executed similar skills but with less composure. In the 18th
minute, Lions Defender Mustapha Bangura brought down sensational Blackpool
striker Serey Turay (alias Belay Belay) and referee Sanosie Rashid awarded
a direct free kick. The shot, taken by No 2 Junior Foday, swerved around
the wall to put Blackpool in the lead. Mighty
Blackpool 1, East End Lions
0.
21 July: Sierra Leone has welcomed the outcome of a
United Nations conference aimed at curbing the global proliferation of
illicit weapons, especially in zones of conflict. At the end of Friday's
session, which lasted into the small hours of Saturday morning, delegates
to the conference called on governments to regulate the sale of light arms
and make it easier to track the movement of such weapons. The delegates
also called for the disarming of combatants at the end of a conflict, the
destruction of small arms stockpiles, and public awareness campaigns on
the danger of the illicit arms trade. "Efforts to deal
with
this problem did not begin with this conference, nor will they end with
the conclusion of our two-week meeting," said Ambassador Sylvester
Rowe (pictured left), Sierra Leone's Deputy Permanent Representative for
Political Affairs. "As a result of our deliberations here, old
attitudes to and perceptions about the illicit trade in small arms and
light weapons will never be the same again. We are forging ahead. There is
no turning back." Rowe pointed to a new commitment by those
governments present at the conference to intensify their efforts in
dealing with various aspects of the arms proliferation problem, including
the marking, transfer, brokering, stockpiling, possession, and financial
and technical assistance to deal effectively with this scourge. In a
veiled reference to the United States, which opposed provisions that would
have limited the rights of individuals to own guns and prevented
governments from selling weapons to rebel groups, Rowe stressed that
"even those who found it difficult to go along with the overwhelming
majority of us on two key issues have got the message." Even though
African countries are the most seriously affected by the illegal arms
trade, Rowe told the conference, Africans are not the only victims.
"We must remember that the battlefields where these weapons are used
these days are not only found in the rebel-infested bushes of Sierra
Leone, Angola and other so-called conflict areas, but also in urban
centres of non-conflict areas," he said. "To be more specific,
even in schools -- places where our children are nurtured, where our
future is moulded, since we all recognise that children are indeed the
future of every nation."
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba in Freetown, for the
Sierra Leone Web.] Despite some showers of rain, soccer fans rushed
towards Freetown's National Stadium Saturday to witness the football match
between F.C. Kallon and Wellington People in the ongoing Sierra Leone
Amateur Football Association Premier League. The premier league comprises
ten teams, of which the last two will be relegated to division one. Play
started at 4:30 p.m., with Wellington
People on the ball.
20 July: Disarmament resumed in Kono Thursday as 67
RUF and 16 CDF
combatants
handed over their weapons to U.N. peacekeepers at locations on the
outskirts of Koidu, UNAMSIL said on Friday. The disarmament exercise began
during a visit to the area by UNAMSIL deputy force commander Major-General
Martin Agwai, RUF interim leader General Issa Sesay (pictured left), RUF
Political and Peace Council Chairman Omrie Golley, and a delegation of
Kono paramount chiefs and Donso commanders led by P.C. Abu Mbawa Kongoba
II of Mafindor Chiefdom. Following discussions the previous day between
RUF, CDF and U.N. officials, it was agreed that disarmament would begin in
areas where there had been tension between the two sides since Monday.
Agwai was due to return to Kono on Friday with representatives from the
RUF and the CDF in order to continue the disarmament exercise.
Shelling and attacks helicopter gunship attacks by Guinean
forces has caused Sierra Leonean residents and Liberian refugees to flee
border areas, the Reuters news agency reported on Friday, quoting aid
workers. The aid workers said large numbers of civilians were forced to
flee the towns of Koindu and Kailahun on Thursday after raids on nearby
villages. 15 persons were killed in one village, according to an
unconfirmed report.
A spokesman for the pro-government Civil Defence Forces (CDF)
denied Friday reports that the militia was responsible for new attacks
this week on RUF positions in Kono. Charles Moiwo told the BBC that when
CDF militiamen showed up to
disarm,
"they have to pass through an area where the RUF are, and the RUF
continue mounting checkpoints all over the country...They still mount
their checkpoints in Koidu," he said. Investigation by the Sierra
Leone Web last month, however, found only two RUF checkpoints remaining on
the highway west of Koidu — at Mambodu (pictured left) and at Bumpe
Junction. Moiwo rejected allegations that Wednesday's clash between the
two warring groups had been provoked by the CDF. "They did not come
into Koidu town shooting," he said. "They went there to
investigate. The (UNAMSIL force commander) did not know who shot. Our men
were coming to Koidu town to disarm. They were attacked and (the RUF)
arrested two of their boys and detained them in prison in Kono."
Moiwo pointed out that the two sides had agreed to set up a joint
committee in Kono to monitor the disarmament process. And he acknowledged
that he was not in a position to comment on the actions of CDF troops on
the ground. "I’m not in Kono to tell you whether they are behaving
well or they are not behaving well," he said. "When we get
report from the committee then I will answer that question."
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling] Standard
Chartered Bank: [$] 1800 / 2100 [£] 2300 / 2900. Commercial Bank: [$]
1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2120 / 2250 [£] 2800 / 3000.
Continental: [$] 2200 / 2320 [£] 2900 / 3100. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2250 / 2300 [£] 3000 / 3100.
19 July: Disarmament is still on track despite new
clashes between RUF and
CDF combatants in Kono District, UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki
(pictured right) said on Thursday. "We went yesterday to Koidu to see
whether the word of the agreement that had been reached the previous
evening had gotten to the combatants, and also to investigate what we were
hearing from our troops on the ground, which was that there was some
tension in the Koidu area. And in fact we found that there was,"
Novicki told the BBC. "Some armed elements of the CDF tried to come
into Koidu town with their weapons and some shooting ensued between the
RUF and the CDF." She said there were apparently no casualties in the
incident, but noted that the RUF had complained to U.N. peacekeepers about
another alleged attack by the Donso militia on rebel positions at a
village on the outskirts of Koidu. Novicki attributed the incidents to a
lack of communications. "(The Donsos) don’t have a clear command
structure in Kono District," she said. "It takes a long time for
word on these agreements to be filtered down to the combatants on the
ground, and they’re scattered over a wide area and appear not to be
informed of developments that have taken place." She said that U.N.
officials had travelled to the area with traditional Kono leaders to
"make them understand that an agreement has been reached and that
they must commence to disarm." Novicki played down the impact of the
of this week's clashes on the disarmament process, saying UNAMSIL was
confident the matter would be resolved. "We met yesterday in Koidu
with General Sesay, the head of the RUF, and also with some of the CDF
commanders on the ground," she said. "Our approach is to, when
we come up against a problem, we resolve it and then we move
forward."
67 RUF combatants and 17 CDF militiamen
have turned over their
weapons
to U.N. peacekeepers since disarmament resumed in Sierra Leone's eastern
Kono District on Wednesday, RUF Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie
Golley told the Sierra Leone Web late Thursday after returning from Koidu.
"The idea was that we had mobile disarmament to reduce tension in
recent days," he said. "So the disarmament was actually split
up." Golley said he accompanied UNAMSIL Deputy Force Commander
Major-General Martin Agwai to witness the disarmament in areas of Kono
controlled by the Donso militia, while RUF interim leader General Issa
Sesay remained in rebel-held territory to assist with the disarmament of
RUF fighters. "Obviously we were slightly disappointed at the paucity
of the CDF’s figures, but we are committed to carrying through with the
process and seeing disarmament through," Golley said.
Following completion of the disarmament of RUF and CDF
combatants in Kono and Bonthe, Sierra Leone government and RUF negotiators
agreed Tuesday to continue the disarmament exercise in Koinadugu and
Moyamba Districts, UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki told the Sierra
Leone Web on Thursday. This disarmament process will then proceed to
Bombali and Bo Districts, followed by Tonkolili - Pujehun and Kailahun -
Kenema — in each case pairing districts under the respective control of
rebel and pro-government forces.
Foreign Ministers from eight of the world's wealthiest
nations meeting in Rome this week have welcomed recent momentum towards
peace in Sierra Leone. "We welcome progress toward implementation of
the Abuja Agreement in Sierra Leone," the G8 ministers said in a communiqué.
"We call on the international community to support the consolidation
of the peace process and the reconstruction program in that country. We
call on all parties to cooperate fully with the United Nations and to
observe the relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions. The G8
group of countries includes Italy, the United States, Russia, Germany,
France, Britain, Canada and Japan.
18 July: One day after government and RUF
representatives agreed to resume
disarming
their combatants in Kono District, the rebels are again accusing CDF
militiamen of again attacking their positions, and are threatening to
delay the disarmament process as a result. "We are ready to go by
that agreement, but we cannot be disarming and the same time fighting,
repelling attacks from the government," RUF spokesman Gibril
Massaquoi told the Voice of America. "The government is playing
games, so if they are expecting us to start off disarmament today, it will
also continue to be delayed, because those two things cannot go together
at all."
17 July: Government and RUF representatives meeting
in Bo Tuesday resolved to resume disarming in Sierra Leone's eastern
Kono District on Wednesday, with a view towards completing the process in
the area by July 31, UNAMSIL said in a statement. In order to allow a
smooth completion of the disarmament process, the two sides also agreed to
a moratorium on all mining activities in the diamond-rich district
effective from Wednesday. Under the agreement,
both the RUF and the CDF will dismantle all checkpoints in Kono by the
same date. The two sides also agreed that no combatants would be allowed
to carry weapons in Kono, except on their way to the disarmament reception
centres under the supervision of their commanders. A joint committee is to
be established, consisting of representatives of the CDF, the RUF and
UNAMSIL, to monitor the implementation of the agreement.
More than 3,000 returned Sierra Leonean refugees have
arrived in Daru since the beginning of July, a spokesman for the United
Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said in Geneva on Tuesday. Most of the new
arrivals came from the "Parrot's Beak" region of Guinea,
although several hundred had crossed over from Liberia. Those from Guinea
cited the closure of refugee camps and the termination of assistance as their
reasons for leaving, the spokesman said. They did not report harassment
along the way, indicating that passage through rebel-held areas is now
much easier. Some of the returnees were in bad shape, and a number of the
children were severely malnourished. Among the new arrivals were Liberian
refugees fleeing renewed fighting in Lofa County, and Guinean civilians
recently freed by RUF rebels after having been abducted earlier this year
during raids into Guinea. The UNHCR will help repatriate them to Guinea,
the spokesman said.
Nigeria's Bureau of Public Enterprises announced Tuesday
its intention to sell its 40 percent stake in the Sierra Leone-based West
African Refinery Company Limited -- part of assets which were seized from
the estate of the country's late military dictator, General Sani Abacha.
16 July: Sierra Leone's RUF rebels have released 107
more children --
62 of them girls and the other 45 their dependent children -- in a brief
ceremony held on Monday at Makeni's Wusum Stadium, a UNAMSIL spokesperson said. The
children were handed over to U.N. peacekeepers by the Colonel Agnes
Manning, the RUF's Commander of Women and Children. The RUF pledged that
additional girls would be turned over in coming weeks at Magburaka,
Pendembu, Tongo, Kono and Kamakwie. The released children were taken to an
interim care centre in Port Loko operated by CARITAS-Makeni. They will
later be transported to child protection agencies in their regions of
origin for eventual reunification with their families. Monday's release
brings the total number of children handed over by the RUF to UNAMSIL
since May 25 to 1,170.
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has scaled
down his request for
funding for a Special Court for Sierra Leone, citing a shortfall in
voluntary contributions to fund the court for its first three years of
operation, a U.N. spokesman said on Monday. The court, which would
incorporate elements of Sierra Leonean and international law, would be
mandated to try persons deemed most responsible for war crimes, crimes
against humanity and other violations of international humanitarian law
committed during the Sierra Leone conflict since November 1996 -- the date of the
Abidjan Peace Accord. In a letter to the president of the Security
Council, Annan put the revised figures for the court's funding at $57
million, including about $16.8 million for the first year. In his original
request last October, Annan asked for $84.4 million to fund the court for
24 months, including $30.2 million for its first year of operation. As of
July 6, the U.N. had received pledges of about $15 million for the first
year, and of just $20.4 million for the subsequent two years, Annan said.
The secretary-general said he planned to circulate a letter to countries
which had made pledges, asking them to deposit the money for the court's
first-year costs in a trust fund within 30 days. "Member States have
a responsibility to ensure that sufficient resources are available to
secure the completion of proceedings against those indicted," the
letter said.
The Canadian government announced Monday that it had put
into effect
regulations
designed to implement United Nations sanctions against Liberia, effective
from July 12. In a statement, Foreign Affairs Minister John Manley
(pictured left) called Liberia's support for the RUF a serious obstacle to
the resolution of the conflict in Sierra Leone. "The Government of
Liberia has not complied with the Security Council's demands and the
imposition of these sanctions is reflective of Canada's commitment to the
United Nations," Manley said. "Canada has also raised the issues
of civil and political rights, Liberian government support for the RUF,
and the traffic in arms and diamonds, with Liberian officials on several
occasions, without a satisfactory response."
15 July: 93 members of the pro-government CDF
militia have applied to join the restructured Sierra Leone Army, Radio
France International reported on Sunday. Both CDF and rebel RUF combatants
are eligible to be recruited into the military under the terms of the 1999
Lomé Peace Accord.
The Sierra Leone government will remove taxes from
anti-malarial drugs, in line with its participation in the international
Roll-Back Back Malaria Programme, Voice of America correspondent Kelvin
Lewis reported on Sunday. It is estimated that one African dies every 25
seconds from malaria, Lewis said, adding that the disease is estimated to
cost Africa some $12 billion a year. Health Minister Dr. Ibrahim Tejan-Jalloh
pointed to the increased risk of disease for those who failed to protect
themselves from mosquitoes, which carry the malaria parasite. "An
unprotected person would receive about 650 to 1,500 effective mosquito
bites per year," Tejan-Jalloh said. "Government has decided to
remove taxes on nets, insecticide, anti-malarial drugs, and other
recommended (items) needed for malaria control."
14 July: The RUF Military High Command has decided to resume its
participation
in the disarmament process, Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie
Golley told the Sierra Leone Web on
Saturday, shortly after rebel leaders ended their
meeting in
Makeni. Earlier this week, RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi said the rebel
group had stopped disarming its combatants in protest over a number of
grievances, including recent attacks on its positions by CDF militiamen
and the government's failure to release RUF leaders imprisoned in Freetown
since last year. Golley said the RUF would instead voice its concerns at
next Tuesday's tripartite meeting in Bo between the government, the RUF
and UNAMSIL. "Disarmament continues, and we have elected not to hold
up the process by suspending disarmament," said Golley, who chaired
the meeting. "I pointed out to (RUF leaders) the need to carry
through with agreements that we have entered into in good faith. And
whilst the grievances that have been expressed I know are very deep-felt
grievances, we have agreed that the best way of dealing with these
grievances would be through this forthcoming meeting being chaired by
UNAMSIL. We want the world to know obviously that these problems exist,
and we are asking the sub-region and international community to be more
involved in this delicate phase of the peace process."
Liberia defeated Sierra Leone by a score of 1 - 0 Saturday in their
second-round World Cup qualifying match, played in Freetown. The victory
put the Liberians in first place in Group B, but a win by Nigeria over
Ghana on July 28 would send the Super Eagles to next year's World Cup
finals in Japan and Korea. Other results: Group A: Zambia 2, Cameroon 2.
Togo 2, Libya 0. Ghana 1, Sudan 0. Group C: Senegal 1, Morocco 0. Egypt 8,
Namibia 2. Group D: Democratic Republic of Congo 0, Tunisia 3. Congo
1, Ivory Coast 1. Group E: South Africa 2, Malawi 0. Zimbabwe 1, Burkina
Faso 0.
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba, for the Sierra Leone Web] It was all day sunny Saturday at the National Stadium in Freetown,
which was filled to maximum population capacity as the Leone Stars of
Sierra Leone locked horns with Liberia's Lone Stars. It was all the way
jubilation as the Leone Stars entered the stadium in the middle of a
motorcade. Similarly, Liberian fans jubilated as the Lone Stars team
entered, and a big shout went out from all corners as one-time world's
best George Weah emerged from the rear. There was great jubilation also
for President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah as he approached the field for the
introduction of players and match officials. Captains of both teams
exchanged their countries’ flags as a sign of friendship. Play started
at exactly 16:35 hours, with the Leone Stars on the ball. The Liberians
seemed confident right from the start of play with brilliant passes,
building up their attack right from the defence connecting to midfield and
attack. It was more of passes and support. The Leone Stars’ defence
seemed solid, and the Liberians could make no way through. The Leone Stars’
attack, on the other hand, showed more signs of individual play than of
teamwork. Injury forced Liberia's first change in the 25th minute, with
No.10 out and No.13 Alex Brown in. Play was still dominated by the
Liberians, with good midfield coordination between Tegbew and Brown. The
40th minute saw Sierra Leone's first change, with No.19 Obreh out and
No.18 Aluspa Brewah in. The first half came to an end with level scores of
nil-nil. The second half saw more tension, as the Sierra Leoneans now
seemed businesslike with Aluspa Brewah putting some strength and power in
the Stars' attack. Alfajoh Bah, with a breakthrough from midfield, made a
nice lob which Aluspa failed to convert into a goal. There was great
applause as George Weah, player and technical director of the Lone Stars,
started warming up. The Leone Stars, who were now composed, making
brilliant passes and showing good running, again frittered away a scoring
chance by Kewulay Conteh. The 59th minute saw No.11 Massa Joe out and
No.14 George Weah in for the Liberians. There were tense moments, as
Weah's presence seem to reinvigorate the Liberian side. Ten minutes later,
in the` 69th minute, it was Liberia taking the lead with George Weah's
beautiful header from a corner kick which hit the bottom of the crossbar
and landed in the net. In the 75th minute the Leone Stars made another
change, with No.4 Hassan Milla out and No. 11 Jamil in. In the 80th
minute, George Weah, in one of his deadly moves, took on three defenders
but was stopped by a hard tackle from Pasafah. The Leone Stars’ hope for
an equaliser was finally shattered when Aluspa Brewah again failed to
convert a lob from Alfajoh Bah. It was all the way jubilation for the
Liberians as the Gambian referee signaled his last whistle: Lone Stars 1,
Leone Stars 0.
Liberia has lashed out at a decision by the United Nations
Security Council's Liberian Sanctions Committee to turn down a request for
a waiver of the travel ban on Liberian officials, effectively barring
Foreign Minister Monie Captan and Finance
Minister Nathaniel Barnes from attending Saturday's World Cup qualifying
match in Freetown. "The foreign
ministry is taken aback by the committee's refusal to give consideration
to the Liberian government's request," the Liberian government said in a
statement. "The Council's rejection of the government's request runs
contrary to the spirit of (the U.N.) resolution...and the
search for
sustainable peace." In Freetown, Foreign Minister Dr. Ahmed Ramadan
Dumbuya (pictured right) suggested that the U.N. decision had resulted in
a missed opportunity to reduce tensions between the two countries.
"For some time I think the Liberian officials as well as ordinary
people have been interested in improving relations," he told the BBC.
"And I believe that they would not have only watched the match, but
they would have taken I think the opportunity to talk to any officials
about improving relations." Dumbuya said there would be heightened
security for Saturday's match, but he played down a suggestion that the
game could be seen as an extension of the current political tension
between the two countries. "The minister of sport has just had a
broadcast to the nation asking people to see the match in the context of
friendly relations and fair play, and that we should do everything
possible to avoid any incidents," he said. The foreign minister also
stressed the close historical links between the people of Sierra Leone and
Liberia. "By and large the people want to be friendly with one
another," he said. "They deplore the actions of their officials.
By and large as you know, families live on either side of this boundary
and they continue to have relations with one another."
Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie Golley will lead the RUF
delegation to Tuesday's tripartite talks in Bo with the Sierra Leone
government and UNAMSIL, he told the Sierra Leone Web on Saturday. The
rebel delegation will include Andrew Kanu and Patrick Beinda, who are
members of the Council, and Colonel Augustine Gbao, the RUF's Chief of
Security. "There will be no preconditions at these talks, but we
would be using the actual talks as the proper medium to voice our concerns
— those that have been expressed by Gibril," Golley said, adding:
"Gibril Massaquoi was most concerned about the deaths (of RUF
detainees) in custody. The government has international humanitarian
obligations towards political detainees."
13 July: Liberia has ignored a United
Nations-imposed ban on international travel by senior members of its
government with the arrival in Freetown of Sports Minister Max Dennis
ahead of Saturday's World Cup qualifying football match between Sierra
Leone's Leone Stars and the Lone Stars of Liberia, the Associated Press
reported. Earlier in the day, the United Nations Security Council's
Liberian Sanctions Committee rejected a last-minute request for an
exemption to the ban to allow Foreign Minister Monie Captan and Finance
Minister Nathaniel Barnes to attend the game -- a crucial one for the Lone
Stars if Liberia is to keep any hope of advancing to next year's World Cup
competition in Japan and Korea. "We are now sending the Liberians a
polite 'sorry-you-are-not-welcome' letter, emphasising that we are going
to observe the U.N. travel ban," a Sierra Leonean diplomat told the
Sierra Leone Web. In Freetown, the head of Sierra Leone's soccer association
said he had been informed by the foreign ministry that the Liberian
officials would not be coming. Presidential
spokesman Septimus Kaikai agreed: "I
doubt it seriously that we will have visitors other than the football
officials," he told the AP. But Dennis,
who had already registered at a hotel in Freetown, told the news agency he
was looking forward to the arrival of his two cabinet colleagues.
A third meeting between the Sierra Leone government, the
RUF and UNAMSIL on the disarmament process will take place Tuesday in Bo,
a UNAMSIL spokesperson said on Friday. Between July 2 and 12, only 33 RUF
combatants and 89 members of the pro-government Civil Defence Forces (CDF)
have disarmed in Kono
District, while 145 CDF militiamen have turned in their arms in Bonthe. On
Thursday, RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi said the RUF had suspended its
participation in the disarmament process over the U.N. Liberian Sanctions
Committee's inclusion of
Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie Golley on a list of those
banned from international travel, continued
attacks against rebel positions by the CDF, and the detention of
RUF officials in Freetown. Golley told the Associated Press on Friday
that the rebels remained committed to peace. "But these are problems
from the RUF point of view -- issues that need to be addressed," he
said.
Sierra Leone's high commission in London owes £66,246 in
unpaid non-domestic rates, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told parliament on
Friday. According to a Press Association report, diplomatic missions own
nearly £1.5 million. At the top of the list is Nigeria, which owes
£339,925, followed by Iran with an outstanding balance of
£105,827.
Two UNAMSIL human rights officers visited Makeni for a
second time Wednesday to continue their investigation into RUF reports of
attacks on its positions by CDF militiamen in the villages of Masofinia,
Yaraiya and Woardu in Koinadugu and Kono Districts, a UNAMSIL spokesperson
said on Friday. The officers conducted individual interviews with victims
and witnesses of the alleged incidents and also met with the senior
medical officer. 13 wounded persons from Yaraiya -- two men, three women,
and eight children -- were admitted to the African Islamic Hospital in
Makeni.
135 CDF ex-combatants who had been staying at the DDR camp
in Daru since May 29 were discharged on July 6, a UNAMSIL spokesperson
said on Friday. 87 of the ex-combatants left for Koidu by road on their
own, while 48 others were airlifted by UNAMSIL to Koidu, chanting
"ex-combatants, we are ready for peace, we are no longer going to
hold guns," the spokesperson said.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling]
Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 1800 / 2100 [£] 2300 / 2900. Commercial
Bank: [$] 1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2100 / 2250 [£]
2800 / 3000. Continental: [$] 2150 / 2300 [£] 2800 / 3000. Dollar Boys
(Black Market): [$] 2200 / 2220 [£] 2850 / 3000.
12 July: The RUF has stopped disarming to protest a
United Nations travel ban
imposed
on the chairman of its Political and Peace Council, Omrie Golley RUF
spokesman Gibril Massaquoi (pictured left) told the Reuters news agency on
Thursday. In April, the United Nations Security Council's Liberian
Sanctions Committee included Golley's name in a list of 15 RUF members who
should be expelled from Liberia. Subsequently, the committee added his
name to a list of Liberian officials and non-Liberians subject to an
international travel ban. Golley previously told the Sierra Leone Web that he
agreed to accept the RUF position at the urging of the U.N. and others,
and has insisted that his name should be removed. "Disarmament has
been delayed on our part," Massaquoi told Reuters, adding that the
suspension was also to protest attacks on rebel positions by the
pro-government CDF militia and the government's failure to release RUF
members detained since May 2000. Massaquoi also said that the government
had exaggerated the number of RUF detainees released from prison last
weekend. "They only released eight of our people. The others were
civilians classed as collaborators," he said.
Liberian Foreign Minister Monie Captan has formally
requested that the United Nations Security Council temporarily lift a ban
on international travel by senior Liberian officials to allow him to
travel to Freetown for Saturday's World Cup qualifying match between
Sierra Leone and Liberia, according to the Reuters
news agency. Liberian Ambassador Lami Kawah said the request had been made
to the Liberian Sanctions Committee on on Wednesday. Kawah said Captan had
met recently with Sierra Leonean Foreign Minister Dr. Ahmed Ramadan
Dumbuya (pictured right) in Monrovia, and "thought it would be a good
gesture in terms of cementing the relationship if he went to Freetown with
the football team." Said Kawah: "The whole idea is just to
create a positive environment between the two countries." Meanwhile,
Sierra Leone's soccer association said it had received a fax from the
Liberian government notifying it that an 80-member Liberian delegation
would begin arriving in Freetown on Friday. According to the Associated
Press, among those listed were the ministers of foreign affairs, sport,
and finance. Noting the U.N. ban, the head of the soccer association,
Sheka Bangura, referred the matter to Dr. Alpha T. Wurie, the Minister of
Education, Youth and Sports. Saturday's match is a must-win game for the
Lone Stars to keep alive their hopes of qualifying for next year's World
Cup finals.
As diplomats from around the world gathered in New York
this week to debate the problem of small arms proliferation, Sierra
Leone's Ambassador to Guinea, Sheku Ba Saccoh, pointed to the role of
light weapons in the fighting in Sierra Leone and Guinea. "From the
inception of the war in 1991 it was these same small guns the rebels used
to drive people from their homes from the Liberian border up to the city
in Freetown," he told BBC correspondent Lansana Fofana. "And it
was the same small arms they used at this border." Saccoh recalled
that when rebels launched attacks into Guinea last year, some 300,000 to
400,000 Sierra Leonean and Guinean refugees were put at risk. "We
felt the pinch of that in Conakry here," he said. "About
2,000-3,000 refugees gathered around my embassy. In fact we received some
with gunshot wounds. And I tell you, in the premises of the embassy here,
ladies were delivering children here, children started to die here. But
for some international organisations we would have had catastrophe in this
embassy." The ambassador called on the international community to
view the problem of small arms proliferation in the same way they view
drug smuggling. "The big powers are concerned with drugs more than
they are concerned with arms," he said. "Let’s say for example
that if a big power gets to know that Sierra Leone is growing cocaine and
importing into their own country, they can fight that country tooth and
nail -- provide all means to fight that country. We expect this same thing
to be applied for small arms, because we know people who are producing it.
We know the channels through which they are sending them to kill innocent,
innocent village dwellers with these arms...We should not have a double
standard about this. If drug is dangerous, small arm is much more
dangerous."
11 July: Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman
told a United Nations
conference
on the proliferation of small arms Wednesday that the conference was not
about the legitimate trade in weapons, but about people. "It is about
the fundamental right of people, in particular children, not to be
gunned down in cold blood by weapons that have been illicitly acquired,
transferred and used in the various battlefields," Norman said in
his statement.
"We must remember that
the battlefields where these weapons are used are not only found in the
rebel-infested bushes of so-called conflict areas, but also in the urban
metropolis of many of the state represented here today." Norman,
who is also National Coordinator of Sierra Leone's pro-government Civil
Defence Forces militia, expressed concern at the "illicit
manufacture, transfer and circulation of small arms and light weapons
and their excessive accumulation and spread" in many parts of the
world, and the humanitarian and socio-economic consequences these weapons
have on stability and development. " It is the view of my delegation that the
international character of the illicit trade in these weapons, should at
the same time, prompt us to develop appropriate international
arrangements, including legally binding instruments, to deal with the
problem," he said.
10 July: The United Nations will not support any
amnesty for imprisoned RUF
leader
Foday Sankoh or for other rebel leaders guilty of war crimes against
civilians, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan told reporters in Zambia on
Tuesday. "We are not party to any plan to release Foday Sankoh and
others who have committed atrocities against the people," the Reuters
news agency quoted him as saying. African leaders meeting in the Zambian
capital Lusaka discussed the war in Sierra Leone on Tuesday, along with
other conflicts in Africa. Annan recalled that the United Nations had
opposed the blanket amnesty which was embodied in the 1999 Lomé Peace
Accord, adding that the U.N's position had been that "amnesty could
not be extended to those who have committed crimes against the
people."
Leaders of the RUF and the CDF militia
recommitted themselves to
disarming Monday during a meeting in Koidu which was chaired by the
UNAMSIL force commander, Lieutenant-General Daniel Opande (pictured
right). The disarmament process in Sierra Leone's diamond-rich Kono District
stalled briefly last week after members of the pro-government militia
refused to surrender their arms. According to a UNAMSIL statement, the CDF
was represented at the meeting by the Chairman of the Council of Chiefs,
P.C. Samuel Foyoh of Soa Chiefdom, along with Donso militia leader Chief
Sansie Kwigba and several CDF officials from Mafindor, Toli and Soa
Chiefdoms. Attending for the RUF were Chief of Security
Colonel
Augustine Gbao and Colonel Bugma. Kwigba said he had met earlier in the
day with CDF commanders and combatants at Njagbwema to deliver the message
that the war was over and that they should now disarm quickly. He said the
combatants assured him they were ready to disarm, but feared being
attacked as had happened in the past. According to UNAMSIL, Colonel Gbao
(pictured left) urged combatants from both the RUF and CDF to hand in
their weapons. "There were no victors in the ten years of war. We
only succeeded in killing one another and destroying our country," he
said. In Freetown, Opande said the deadlock resulted from the fact
that neither side wanted to relinquish its claim to the district's
diamonds. "Everybody wants to get his hands in the diamond
pits," the Associated Press quoted him as saying. Opande said the
situation was also complicated by mutual distrust between the warring
sides. "Each one thinks this is planning this or that. So whenever
there are skirmishes, the fear and suspicion" are increased, he said.
The general noted that both sides claimed they were committed to the peace
process. "I want to see what they told me put into practice," he
said.
9 July: The International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) in Freetown,
together
with the Sierra Leone Web, launched a new initiative Monday seeking to
reunite hundreds of unaccompanied Sierra Leonean children with their
families. The aim of the ICRC programme is to assist families separated by
war in Sierra Leone and neighbouring Guinea and Liberia. A list of the
families, together with their last known address as provided by the
children and contact information
for the ICRC offices in Sierra Leone, will be published
on the Sierra Leone Web and periodically updated. The information is
accessible directly from a link on the website's front page.
During the past year which spanned the collapse of Sierra Leone's peace
process and the abduction of United Nations
peacekeepers in
May 2000 to current efforts
by both rebel and government forces to disarm their combatants, Gibril Massaquoi -- a
one-time teacher
at St. Paul's Secondary School in Pujehun who rose to the rank of colonel in
the rebel Revolutionary United Front -- has emerged as the movement's leading
spokesman. At his residence in the northern rebel stronghold of Makeni late last
month, Massaquoi spoke for the first time of his early student activism which
eventually brought him into the RUF, his views on the conflict, and his plans
for the future. "We started our organization in school
days," he said. "We met with people, some of
them are not alive today. Although by that time a name like RUF never came up to
be an armed struggle organization. We started it as an uprising against the
dictatorial regime back then, which was the APC...We were rising up against
them because of poor government. There were no good health facilities, no good
schooling, workers were not paid in this country. Our people could not afford
the escalating school fees, and there are a host of other issues.
Now, this
thing was going on unto 1991, when Foday Sankoh launched our
revolution."
Disarmament resumed in Kono District over the weekend,
with 34 members of the pro-government CDF militia turning in their
weapons, Radio France International reported on Monday, quoting UNAMSIL
spokesperson Margaret Novicki.
President Kabbah arrived in Zambia Sunday night ahead of
this week's OAU
Heads
of State and Government Summit in the Zambian capital Lusaka, according to
the official Sierra Leone News Agency. The meeting is expected to see the transformation
of the OAU into a new continental body, the African Union. Following the
summit, Kabbah will fly to Lesotho on Wednesday for a three-day official
visit aimed at strengthening ties between the two countries, SLENA
reported.
8 July: United Nations High Commissioner Ruud
Lubbers called on African
nations
Saturday to take tough action against those who worsen the plight of the
continent's estimated 6.2 million refugees and displaced persons,
including bringing them before international tribunals, the Reuters news
agency reported. "The tribunals should involve the international and
local community, which would then enforce sanctions on parties found
guilty," Lubbers said during a visit to a refugee camp in Zambia. He
also called for a determined effort to end conflicts in Sierra Leone, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Somalia and Angola. "Africa
cannot afford to have the number of refugees increasing every day,"
he said. "That is why they (African leaders) should be tougher on
signatories who break peace plans to make it clear that it is unacceptable
to damage innocent people's lives."
A total of 34 RUF rebels detained since May 2000 under
Sierra Leone's emergency regulations have been released, Voice of America
correspondent Kelvin Lewis reported on Sunday. "No big names were
released," he said, adding: "Presently, some 97 rebels are still
detained, including the rebel leader Foday Sankoh."
The chairman of the RUF's Political and Peace Council,
Omrie Golley, has
complained
about attacks on RUF positions by the pro-government CDF militia in Kono
and Koinadugu Districts. "My understanding is that these attacks are
continuing," Golley said in a Voice of America interview broadcast on
Sunday. "And if they are, that is of great concern to our movement,
and it is an obstacle to the peace process." Golley complained that
the government had so far failed to provide offices for the RUF as
promised in a May 15 agreement between the two sides, to allow the rebels
to transform their movement into a political party. And Golley said that
the RUF would like the government to release their imprisoned leader,
Foday Sankoh. "There are those within the RUF that feel very strongly
that Foday Sankoh should be amongst those that should be released,"
he said. "However, we have never made it a condition, and I have
insisted that it not be made a condition, that one particular individual
-- Foday Sankoh -- be released. We’ve never made it a condition in talks
with the government, and it is still not a condition for our continued
commitment to the peace process. We have shown our people that we’re
committed, but however it is very, very important that this issue is dealt
with."
7 July: The Sierra Leone government has released 15
imprisoned members of Sierra Leone's rebel Revolutionary United Front,
detained since the collapse of the peace process in May 2000, the Reuters
news agency reported on Saturday, quoting state radio. No RUF leaders were
among those freed.
A spokesperson for the United Nations refugee agency,
UNHCR, has dismissed criticism by the advocacy group Human Rights Watch,
which this week alleged that the agency was not doing enough to protect
Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees from harassment from government
authorities and civilian vigilantes in Guinea. Based on a fact-finding
mission to Guinea in April, Human Rights Watch reported that refugees were
often subjected to arbitrary strip searches, beatings, sexual
assault and extortion. "We’re very disappointed with the report
from Human Rights Watch, because we find that the criticism may have been
valid early this year when southwestern Guinea was the scene of repeated
rebel attack and UNHCR and other humanitarian groups could not reach
refugees trapped in the areas of southwest Guinea," UNHCR
spokesperson Millicent Mutuli told the Voice of America. "We also
feel disappointed that there is no acknowledgement by Human Rights Watch
of the situation of constant insecurity that both refugees and UNHCR as
well as other groups have to work in in that region." Human Rights
Watch was also critical of the agency for failing to provide adequate
security for the refugees. "(The UNHCR) has not put in the required
number of protection officers that would make them able to protect the
refugees, and many of the protection officers leave very quickly and have
very little knowledge of the situation of the sub-region," said Binaifer
Nowrojee, who co-authored the report. But Mutuli said the cash-strapped
agency simply could not afford the necessary staff. "We would like to
provide more protection officers, we would like to have a lot of
staff," she said. "However the reality right now is that we are
cutting 760 posts throughout the organization because of lack of
funds." Mutuli added that donations have fallen far short of the
agency's proposed budget of about $917 million. She said that the budget
shortfall would mean the closing of eight UNHCR offices in West Africa,
fewer schools for refugee children, and a lack of plastic sheeting to
build temporary shelters.
Sierra Leone's Ambassador to the United States said
Saturday that the
international
community has already pledged $40 million of the $56 million need to
operate a proposed Special Court in Sierra Leone for its first three years
-- including a $15 million pledge from the United States. The court, which
was proposed last year by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, would be
mandated to try those deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for
serious violations of international humanitarian law in Sierra Leone since
November 1996. "The government of Sierra Leone is very pleased with
the way the international community is supporting the Special Court for
Sierra Leone," Ambassador John Leigh told the Voice of America.
"A lot of money has been contributed, and the United States has been
a leader in that contribution. So we’re very pleased with the way the
United States is standing behind Sierra Leone and the United
Nations." Leigh pointed to several factors contributing to the length
of time it has taken the United Nations to act on setting up the court.
"It’s a lot of money," he said. "The situation in Sierra
Leone is very difficult. There has been a change of administration in the
United States, and new policies have to be put in place." Leigh
pointed out that the Special Court would try only those most responsible
for crimes against humanity committed during the course of the Sierra
Leone conflict. "This court is not for every criminal in Sierra
Leone," he said. "It’s only for the people with the greatest
responsibility. The president has said those who committed very, very
serious crimes against humanity should face the proposed Special
Court." Leigh said the composition of the court would be determined
by the United Nations Security Council. "They are the ones who will
be in charge of appointing all the top officials of the court, but our
government will have some input there," he said. "But I’m sure
we’re going to get the best judges, the best prosecutors, who will see
that justice is done in my country."
6 July: Seven members of Sierra Leone's rebel
Revolutionary United Front
imprisoned since after the breakdown in the peace process a year ago have
died while in detention, Justice Minister and Attorney-General Solomon
Berewa (pictured right) told the Reuters news agency on Friday. He said
RUF leaders had been informed as to the causes of death, but did not
elaborate. Berewa confirmed that the government was planning to free some
of the more than 100 RUF members currently held at Pademba Road Prison,
and said he had made recommendations to President Kabbah on which
prisoners should be released.
RUF rebels and pro-government CDF militiamen were still
refusing to disarm
Friday in Sierra Leone's eastern Kono District, the
Associated Press reported
on Friday. "Both sides are playing the wait-and-see game, to see how
many will come to the disarmament centres," said
Margaret Novicki (pictured left), the spokesperson for UNAMSIL. But both the United Nations and the Sierra Leone
government took pains to play down the significance of the halt in the
disarmament process. "The government is working to alleviate all
signs of obstacles to the disarmament process," Information Minister
Dr. Cecil Blake (pictured right) was quoted as saying.
A second demobilisation centre will be opened at the town
of Mattru in Bonthe District on Monday to accommodate pro-government CDF
combatants wishing to disarm there, a UNAMSIL spokesperson said Friday.
There is already a demobilisation centre on Bonthe Island. The decision to
open the second centre came as the result of a meeting at the UNAMSIL
headquarters on Wednesday, which was chaired by Behrooz Sadry, the Deputy Special
Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General. The CDF's National
Coordinator,
Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman, and other CDF officials also
attended, along with UNAMSIL's force commander and deputy force commander
and Dr. Francis Kai-Kai (pictured left), the head of the National
Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (NCDDR). As of
Thursday, 51 CDF combatants had disarmed at Bonthe, including 18 children,
while 30 RUF and eight CDF combatants had disarmed at Koidu, in the
country's eastern Kono District, the spokesperson said.
Chiefdoms in southern and eastern Sierra Leone will soon
receive tens of thousands of dollars from the proceeds of the sale of
diamonds in their region, Mineral Resources Minister Mohamed Swarray Deen
told the U.N. Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) on Thursday. "It
is government policy to return an amount which is deducted from export
fees paid by diamond exporters," he said, adding that 25 percent of
the current 3 percent levy would go to the chiefdoms for projects to improve
the local infrastructure. "The projects have to be beneficial to
every member of the community -- schools, health clinics and community
centres," Deen said. The money is distributed on the basis of mining
licenses in the area, in order to discourage illegal practices and
encourage the legalisation of all alluvial mining. In the next ten days or
so, the minister said, 32 chiefdoms in Bo, Pujehun and Kenema Districts
will receive some $95,000 as revenue for the first six months of the year.
The scheme, which the government intends to continue every six months,
will be extended to other diamond-producing areas once they are brought
under control. Deen told IRIN that this represented the first time the
government had returned diamond money to community development schemes
since 1956.
The United Nations Security Council reaffirmed Wednesday
the importance of U.N. sanctions in bring peace to Sierra Leone and to the
sub-region. In a statement read out by Council President Wang Yingfan of
China following a briefing by Ambassador Chowdhury of Bangladesh, the
chairman of the Sierra Leone Sanctions Committee, on the implementation of
sanctions imposed last year by Resolution 1306, members emphasised the
diamond certification scheme as an essential step in curbing the flow of
illicit diamonds out of Sierra Leone. They welcomed reports that the
certification scheme was having a positive effect, as measured by an
increase in the quantity of diamonds going through government hands.
Council members welcomed the establishment of a certification scheme in
Guinea, and efforts by ECOWAS to develop a regional certification
programme. Members noted that the peace process in Sierra Leone was about
to enter a critical phase as United Nations peacekeepers and the
government begin to move into diamond-producing areas. They stressed that
a successful strategy for managing the diamond fields would be crucial to
the sustainability of the peace process and for Sierra Leone's future
development.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling]
Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 1800 / 2100 [£] 2300 / 2900. Commercial
Bank: [$] 1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2150 / 2200 [£]
2800 / 3000. Continental: [$] 2170 / 2300 [£] 2800 / 3000. Dollar Boys
(Black Market): [$] 2220 / 2270 [£] 3000 / 3050.
5 July: Disarmament of combatants in Sierra Leone's
eastern Kono District
has
been
temporarily halted after pro-government CDF militiamen refused to disarm
without direct orders from the group's National Coordinator, Deputy
Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman (pictured left), the Reuters news agency
reported on Thursday, quoting a senior United Nations official. "We
are sure the misunderstanding between the RUF and CDF will end and
disarmament will resume in Kono very shortly," the U.N. official was
quoted as saying.
A five-member United Nations panel of experts was in
Liberia Thursday to verify whether that country was respecting U.N.
demands to cease support for Sierra Leone's RUF rebels, the Reuters news
agency reported. "We are here to know how the Liberian authorities
are implementing the U.N. Resolution 1343," said Martin Ayafor of
Cameroon, who heads the panel. Ayafor also headed an earlier panel of
experts on Sierra Leone, which last December accused the Liberian
government of providing support for the RUF at all levels. In March, the
United Nations Security Council responded by imposing sanctions on
Liberia, including a broadened arms embargo, a travel ban on senior
Liberian officials, and a global ban on the sale of Liberian diamonds.
Ayafor told the news agency the panel was not yet in a position to say
whether Liberia was respecting the U.N. demands.
Refugees in Guinea are being subjected to serious human
rights abuses at the
hands
of the Guinean authorities and civilian vigilantes, Human Rights Watch
concluded in a new report
which was released on Thursday. In the report, entitled "Refugees
Still at Risk: Continuing Refugee Protection Concerns in Guinea," the
human rights group alleges that Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees are
regularly harassed near their camps in Guinea or on the road as they
attempt to move through the country to safer areas. At checkpoints, the
refugees are often subjected to arbitrary strip searches, beatings, sexual
assault and extortion, the report said. Human Rights Watch also documented
cases of refugees being tortured to death while detained at Forecariah
Prison, southeast of Conakry. Recently, more than 40,000 refugees were
moved away from the volatile border area to safer camps in Guinea's
interior. Despite this improvement, the refugees' long-term safety is
still under threat, Human Rights Watch said. The group noted that refugees
have little information about the situation in the new camps, on the
roads they have to transit in Guinea, or on the situation in their home
countries, and that they have great difficulty in obtaining assistance
from the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR). The human rights group complained that the number of UNHCR
protection officers in Guinea is insufficient and subject to high
turnover. Many refugees have been arrested for arbitrary reasons such as
their age or size and held for periods of up to several weeks in
Forecariah, Gueckedou and Kissidougou, often without charge, the report
said. Human Rights Watch added that refugees were vulnerable to these
abuses because no valid refugee identification cards have been distributed
by the Guinean government. "Refugees in Guinea are presented with
choices that all pose risks to their long-term personal safety," the
human rights group said. "They can remain in the border area which is
under attack; move to new camps within Guinea, where they may be more
vulnerable to hostility from the local population; or return to Sierra
Leone or Liberia, which both remain unstable."
Representatives of 34 diamond producing and importing
nations meeting in Moscow approved on Thursday the framework for a system
aimed at curbing the trade in "conflict diamonds" blamed for
fueling wars in Sierra Leone, Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo,
the Associated Press reported. Under the regime, governments of both
diamond-producing nations and diamond-trading nations would issue
internationally-recognized certificates which would accompany the diamonds
beginning at the time they are mined. The new system would also require a
monitoring mechanism, which the countries plan to discuss at their next
meeting to be held in London next September.
Conflicts in Sierra Leone and the neighbouring countries
of Guinea and Liberia will be on the agenda next week when African leaders
meet for a three-day OAU Summit in the Zambian capital Lusaka. According
to the Xinhua news agency, 42 countries have so far confirmed they will
participate in the summit, which is expected to see the OAU transformed
into the African Union, a political entity modeled on the European Union.
The United Nations Security Council was due to meet behind
closed doors Thursday to conduct a periodic review of the U.N. sanctions
regime against Sierra Leone, a U.N. spokesman said in New York.
A United Nations report to be published next week shows
Sierra Leone as the world's worst place to live as measured by indicators
such as life expectancy, education and gross domestic product, the Reuters
news agency reported on Thursday, quoting the Norwegian daily newspaper
Verdens Gang. Norway scored highest among the 162 countries rated,
followed by Australia, Canada and Sweden. The United States took sixth
place, while Britain was ranked fourteenth.
4 July: An announcement is expected to come within
ten days on the release
of
at least some imprisoned members of Sierra Leone's rebel Revolutionary
United Front, President Kabbah said on Thursday. In an interview at the
presidential lodge, Kabbah said RUF detainees were currently being
screened, and that those found to have committed "very, very serious
crimes against humanity" would face the proposed Special Court,
mandated by the United Nations last year to try those deemed most
responsible for serious violations of humanitarian law committed in Sierra
Leone since November 1996, the date of the ill-fated Abidjan Peace Accord.
"Now there are others as well against whom we may not have any
evidence of a very serious crime, and just that they probably went with
the crowd and belong to the RUF," Kabbah said. "And then we’re
thinking that people like those we shall, perhaps in the interest of peace
because, let’s face it, I think the RUF leadership, they have
demonstrated their willingness to cooperate with the peace process, and so
we thought that in order to keep that momentum that there will be some
gesture of releasing those that may not have committed grave
crimes."
3 July: The simultaneous disarmament of rebel RUF
and pro-government CDF combatants finally got underway in Kono and Bonthe
Districts on Monday, UNAMSIL said in a statement Tuesday. The disarmament, which
was originally to have been completed by the end of June, was postponed
because of a delay in the preparation of disarmament camps. At Yengema, in
Kono District, 30 RUF and eight CDF combatants turned over their guns in a
ceremony presided over by UNAMSIL Deputy Special Representative of the
Secretary-General for Operations and Management, Behrooz Sadry. The event
was witnessed by Brigadier Morris Kallon of the RUF, John Kabbah of the
CDF, Acting UNAMSIL force commander Brigadier Tony Faith, and other senior
U.N. officials. The weapons destroyed included AK-47s, FN rifles, small
arms and ammunition, the UNAMSIL statement said. Meanwhile at Bonthe
Island, a stronghold of the CDF, nine militiamen handed over their arms to
United Nations peacekeepers at a U.N. reception centre. Meanwhile, a
committee comprising representatives from the government, the RUF and
UNAMSIL is expected to meet within the next week to decide on which two
districts should be the next to disarm, a UNAMSIL spokesperson said,
adding: "I think they will probably map out district by district for
the rest of the process. But it is up to that committee to decide."
Since the simultaneous disarmament of Sierra Leone's rival
warring factions began on May 18, over 6,000 combatants have handed over
their weapons to United Nations peacekeepers, a UNAMSIL spokesperson said
on Tuesday. The number included 2,081 combatants from the RUF, 4,280 from
the pro-government CDF militia, and 134 from the AFRC/ex-SLA.
Sierra Leone is one of 33 countries worldwide facing
exception food emergencies this year, the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Tuesday. The FAO report pointed in
particular to Sudan, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sierra
Leone as among 17 African countries facing poor crop prospects. In
Sierra Leone and neighbouring Guinea and Liberia, the FAO cited civil
strife as hindering agricultural activities.