31 July
1997: A Russian ship carrying 6,800 tons of rice evaded ECOMOG sanctions and
docked in Freetown Thursday. The Ivanov, which was escorted to Queen Elizabeth
Wharf by a navy gunboat, was greeted by cheering crowds of people at the waterfront.
"This is the first cargo boat to dock in Sierra Leone since the coup," a harbour
official said. AFRC spokesman Allieu Kamara said the AFRC has instructed the harbour
authorities to get the rice to market rapidly. "The shipment of rice will last the
country for about two or three months. We are also expecting a shipment of fuel,
especially petrol and kerosene, to arrive in Freetown by ship over the weekend,"
Kamara said. ECOWAS foreign ministers have called for in intensification of sanctions
against Sierra Leone, and there have been reports that an ECOMOG blockade of the harbour
was already in effect. AFRC officials denied that there is any embargo against Sierra
Leone and said that the current standoff is a creation of "saboteurs of the
revolution."The United Nations Security Council reiterated its call Thursday for
an immediate restoration of constitutional rule in Sierra Leone under President Ahmad
Tejan Kabbah. After informal consultations, Council President Peter Osvald of Sweden said
council members expressed their deep concern over the breakdown of talks between AFRC
envoys and the ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone in Abidjan. Commonwealth
Secretary-General Chief Emeka Anyaoku denounced the AFRC's plan to delay a return to
civilian rule for four years. "Any delay in the immediate transfer of power from the
junta and back to civilian rule--let alone a postponement until 2001--would represent a
major setback not only for Sierra Leone and the West Africa region but for the continent
of Africa as a whole," Anyaoku said in a statement. He called for the "immediate
and unconditional reinstatement" of the Kabbah government. "It is now for the
region to take every necessary step to see legitimacy, constitutionality and democracy
reinstated in Sierra Leone," Anyaoku said. "In that task I trust that they (the
countries of the region) will continue to have the full support of the international
community."
AFRC spokesman Allieu Kamara said Thursday that AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma's
speech had been misinterpreted and that "he did not say" the AFRC will hold on
to power until 2001. "It was just an intention he intends to pursue, he was not
announcing a program," Kamara said. "He was talking to the people of Sierra
Leone to explain to them the problems of our country and at the same time to enlighten
them a little bit. If he is given the opportunity, these were the areas he was going to
concentrate on." Kamara said the AFRC had been continuing to "work for the
people" of Sierra Leone while AFRC envoys were negotiating in Abidjan. "At the
same time, our members left this country to go back to Abidjan with a modality wherein
they can sit with the committee and work effectively to come out with an agreement so that
the people of this country and they, the ECOWAS, would actually appreciate a work well
done," he said. Kamara denied that the sanctions are seriously affecting Sierra
Leone. "The embargo is not actually biting as at this point," he said.
"ECOMOG should understand that now we have the People's Army. These people have been
in the bush for over six years. They are now with us. The world should understand that. If
we refuse to accept these people, if we refuse to understand their presence, at the end of
the day they will go back to the bush and where will we be?"
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma acknowledged that his speech of July 30 which
brought about the collapse of the peace talks had been a mistake in judgment and "has
not gone down well to a number of our enlightened citizens." In a fax to AFRC Foreign
Minister Dr. Alimamy Pallo Bangura, the AFRC's Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs who
headed the delegation to Abidjan, Koroma said the speech was delivered "in direct
response to what appeared to me at the time to be the continued intransigence of the
ECOWAS Foreign Ministers based on their mandate." Koroma conceded that the speech had
undercut the work of the AFRC envoys. "I am willing further to admit this much - that
I erred in making such a broadcast at the time the negotiations were in progress in
Abidjan and the impression might have been created that our delegation was not acting in
good faith throughout," he wrote. "I ask of you to read this my statement to the
ECOWAS Foreign Ministers in Abidjan and trust that what I have now said will in good
measure provide a level of comfort that will enable them to see their way clear towards
the ultimate resumption of the talks in Abidjan in an atmosphere of the utmost good faith
on all sides."
Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi, who led the ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra
Leone, described events which led to the collapse of Abidjan peace talks, and said that
the AFRC had not negotiated in good faith. "On 17 and 18 July we made some progress.
We agreed on the implementation of the mandate assigned to us, namely, restoring
constitutional order, ensuring President Kabbahs' return as well as seeing to the problems
of peace, security, and refugees. Unfortunately, the situation deteriorated considerably
in the last few days. In fact, the Sierra Leonean delegation refused to acknowledge the 17
and 18 July agreement, and at the same time we learned that the junta has decided to stay
in power until 2001 and to suspend the constitution. We consider than an affront."
Ikimi expressed disappointment at the failure of the negotiations. "On these matters,
it is clear that [the AFRC] are really not serious and they do not seem to have understood
the seriousness of the situation in which they have found themselves. This is an affront
to ECOWAS, an affront to Africa, and an affront to the international community."
Ikimi said the timing of the AFRC announcement extending the timetable for a return to
democracy until 2001 was "Out of a lack of experience, and one gets the impression
that they do not care. Many of them have been estranged from the rest of the world for
many years. I am talking about the rebels of the Revolutionary United Front. The welfare
of their country and their people are not a subject of concern to them. I also conclude
that the delegation sent by the junta in Abidjan has no authority, no mandate, and does
not want to make any decision." Ikimi said that ECOWAS will proceed to strengthen the
sanctions. "We will do nothing that will hurt the ordinary citizens of Sierra Leone,
but products like petroleum products, like food, and arms and ammunition would be, in
fact, restricted completely," he said. The effect of an embargo on food and fuel on
the civilian population is unfortunate, Ikimi said, but those who seized power in Sierra
Leone have to be taught a lesson. "Right now, we cannot pinpoint who really are the
leaders there. There is one Major Koroma who claims to be the leader, but apparently he is
held captive by the RUF fighters who have returned from their jungle sojourn over the past
five years. We believe that these people do not care about civilized behaviour, and so
they would not bother if they did not have electricity, pipeborn water, or any decent
surroundings. The day before yesterday, the Army and this RUF hoodlums had descended on
innocent civilians, looting and destroying property there. We see a serious situation
evolving in Sierra Leone."
30 July: The ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone abruptly broke
off negotiations with AFRC envoys Wednesday after the military regime announced a
timetable of more than four years to return the country to democracy. Nigerian Foreign
Minister Tom Ikimi announced the collapse of the talks in Abidjan after an address by AFRC
leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma on SLBS (state radio). "The Committee expressed
dismay at the announcement by the illegal regime in Freetown, while the meeting was still
in session, of its decision to suspend the constitution of Sierra Leone and remain in
office illegally until the year 2001," Ikimi said, reading from a prepared statement.
"The committee found the new position of the Sierra Leonean delegation on the issue
of the reinstatement of President Kabbah totally unacceptable." Ikimi said the AFRC's
envoys had had no real mandate to negotiate. He said he and his fellow foreign ministers
from Guinea, Ghana, and Ivory Coast making up the Committee will recommend that the
economic embargo against Sierra Leone be tightened.
In a 20 minute broadcast to the nation over SLBS radio and television Wednesday, Koroma
announced a timetable of more than four years for returning the country to constitutional
rule. "The Constitution of the Second Republic has been suspended and remains
suspended." he said. All political parties, hereby, remain banned." He said the
country will elect "Village Management Committees" by March 1998; and Town,
Municipal, and City Council Election by December 1998. District Council Elections will be
held by August 1999, and Provincial Assemblies will be elected by May 2000. The ban on
political parties will be lifted at least two months before the Provincial Assembly
elections, Koroma said. State Council elections and Presidential elections will be held
simultaneously by November 2001. Koroma said the AFRC stands ready "to hand over to
such a properly tried constitutional order," but emphasized that the AFRC would not
"be stampeded into hurrying matters beyond their appointed course."
Koroma said that "with the successful completion of the Liberian election,"
ECOMOG forces should be withdrawn from Sierra Leone soil. He also called on Nigeria to
remove its troops sent under the Status of Forces Agreement. Accusing international
organisations of an "orchestrated campaign" against Sierra Leone, Koroma said
the country will "pursue a policy of enlightened self-interest in the international
area and seriously review Sierra Leone's membership of some regional and international
bodies." In a wide-ranging speech, Koroma touched on proposed AFRC political,
economic, agricultural, and judicial policy, and outlined plans "to establish the
People's Revolutionary Court in each district and traditional center in the country to
augment work of the regular courts." Koroma called on Barclays Bank, the Standard
Chartered Bank, and the Union Trust Bank to reopen by Monday, 4 August 1997, saying that
if the banks failed to comply, "the AFRC will regard their action as deliberate
sabotage, and will withdraw their operating licenses and force them to liquidate."
The AFRC is prepared to defend the territorial integrity of Sierra Leone from any
aggression, "real or threatened, internal or external," Koroma said. "Let
no one doubt our resolve to do this, even until the last drop of our blood."
29 July: AFRC envoys in Abidjan interrupted their talks with ECOWAS
foreign ministers Tuesday to consult with military rulers in Freetown. The envoys wanted
to seek guidance on an ECOWAS demand for the immediate reinstatement of ousted President
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The AFRC, which met in parallel session in Freetown, has not
authorised its envoys to take any decision on the issue. The second day of the talks began
eight hours behind schedule. Earlier, after agreeing in principle to restore democracy,
the AFRC rejected demands for Kabbah's reinstatement as president, called for Nigerian
ECOMOG troops to vacate key positions they hold in Freetown, and demanded that RUF leader
Foday Sankoh be allowed to join the talks. The delegation also demanded that ECOWAS
recognise the military regime, asserting that ECOWAS has implicitly recognised the AFRC
government by holding talks with its representatives. ECOWAS has interpreted the
communiqué signed after the first round of talks as an agreement to restore the Kabbah
government. The AFRC interprets is as simply agreeing to restore democracy, and wants a
transitional period to constitutional rule. A diplomat at the talks said that persuading
the AFRC to give up power would not be easy. "We are talking about an entrenched
regime being asked to stand down. It has never happened in Africa and it won't be easy in
the case of Sierra Leone," the diplomat said. "There doesn't appear to be any
country in ECOWAS prepared to join Nigeria in using force in Sierra Leone, and it doesn't
look like Nigerians will want to go it alone after their experience (shelling Freetown) on
June 2."
The second round of talks between AFRC envoys and the ECOWAS Committee of Four on
Sierra Leone stalled early Tuesday, with the Sierra Leone delegation demanding that
imprisoned RUF leader Foday Sankoh be present at the meeting. "Sankoh is an integral
part of the Sierra Leone crisis and no deal can be done without him," a Sierra
Leonean delegate said during a pause for consultations. Guinea's Foreign Minister Lamine
Kamara told a resumed session that the meeting is adjourning until Wednesday,
acknowledging that "a lot is left to be done." The negotiations were expected to
be difficult after the AFRC replaced all but three members of the 17 member delegation on
Sunday night, reportedly at the insistence of RUF leaders. The delegation, led by AFRC
Foreign Minister Pallo Bangura, is made up mostly of army officers. Nigerian foreign
minister Tom Ikimi, who opened Tuesday's talks, said that they were expected to deal only
with the restoration of democratic rule. "We do not expect that the meeting will be
taking too much of our time," Ikimi said. "We intend to build on progress made
at the last meeting."
The AFRC Secretariat Tuesday ordered the release of the remaining six detainees held in
Pademba Road Prison in connection with a alleged coup attempt last month. A statement
broadcast on SLBS (state radio) said those released "include veteran politicians and
members of the Council of Consolidation of Peace, Dr. Sama Banya and Bockarie Kobba."
Nine military officers who were also detained were released more than two weeks ago.
"It should be recalled that they were arrested and detained at the Central Prison
over a month ago for their alleged involvement in the coup plot to overthrow the
government of Major Johnny Paul Koroma," the statement said. The first indication
that the six would be released came last week when Koroma visited them at Pademba Road
Prison for 45 minutes, and later said on SLBS that he was ready to release all who had no
case against them. According to the AFRC Secretariat, the detainees were released on
Koroma's orders. The six return to homes that have been looted. Dr. Sama Banya, in a BBC
interview, said that he is not bitter. "This is public life. I mean if you can't
stand the heat don't stay in the kitchen. So I'm in this and when the chairman asked me
whether I believed in the SLPP government and what they were doing I said yes, I do. I'm a
member and I believe so I'm out and still what I am," Banya said. Police sources said
the released politicians will remain under 24-hour house arrest.
AFRC Secretary-General Colonel Abdul K. Sesay accused Nigeria ceasefire violations
Tuesday, and said that a letter of protest has been sent to Ivory Coast President Henri
Konan Bedie, to be forwarded to Nigerian leader General Sani Abacha. Sesay said Nigerian
troops manning a checkpoint at Jui "refused passage to a contingent of our armed
forces travelling from the interior to the capital" on Saturday. "A tense
situation ensued which almost led to open confrontation," Sesay said. "This is
an act considered as a ceasefire violation." Sesay also said that Nigerian troops are
"being airlifted to the international airport in excessively large numbers,
reinforcing the already present garrison." Nigerian-led ECOMOG forces have begun
enforcing an air, sea, and land blockade against Sierra Leone, and have clashed several
times with Sierra Leonean troops since the May 25 coup. "We are calling on the
international community to restrain Nigeria from its bloodthirsty intentions and we have
been showing a lot of patience and respect for human lives," Sesay said.
"Nigeria has enough problems to solve in its own country," he added.
An ECOMOG statement released in Monrovia on Tuesday said 16 Sierra Leonean policemen
have surrendered to ECOMOG forces at Bo Waterside, a Liberian town on the Sierra Leone
border. "We surrendered to ECOMOG in compliance with recent directives by ousted
President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah, who ordered patriotic police and military personnel to
surrender to ECOMOG peacekeepers in a recent radio broadcast," the statement quoted
the policemen as saying. The policemen also surrendered four sub-machine guns and five
AK-47 rifles, the ECOMOG statement said. ECOMOG plans to hand the Sierra Leoneans over the
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
A report by the World Food Programme (WFP) on Tuesday reported that the situation in
Kenema is very tense and that food supplies are "extremely low." The report said
that 25,000 displaced persons have arrived in the city since the May 25 coup. The
organisation also noted that 3,500 Sierra Leonean refugees who fled the fighting in the
near Zimmi have registered in the Bo Waterside (Liberia) area. Refugees have continued to
cross into Guinea as well, although the border is officially closed. The WFP is continuing
limited food distributions in Freetown, Bo, Kambia, Makeni, and Kambia. The report said
the continued systematic looting of WFP food stores in Freetown by armed men and civilians
has resulted in the loss of 600 metric tons of rice. In a strongly-worded statement issued
in Abidjan Tuesday, WFP West African Regional Manager Paul Ares said, "While we
remain committed to providing humanitarian assistance to the people of Sierra Leone, we
can hardly continue our operations under present security conditions." Ares urged the
military "to stop hampering the agency's humanitarian work." He chronicled
recent armed looting of WFP's stores in Freetown: On July 12, armed men in military
uniform commandeered a truck transporting 12 tons of vegetable oil. The oil was unloaded
somewhere in Freetown and never recovered. "On another occasion, June 20, armed
elements temporarily took control of WFP's stores in Sierra Leone's National Shipping
Company compound in Freetown and looted some of the stores, which forced us to close the
stores there," Ares said. "The WFP still has access to that store and is trying
to transfer the remaining food elsewhere." Since July, the report said, the WFP has
been moving food supplies to more secure locations up-country. To date, 725 metric tons of
food supplies have been transported by truck, mainly to Kambia and Kenema.
A Kamajor press release issued Tuesday in Monrovia, Liberia said Kamajors "and
other civil defence forces" captured the towns of Jendemah, Gofor, Gissiwo, and Da
Salamu in Pujehun District on July 28, forcing the army and RUF fighters "to withdraw
from all the areas between Zimmi Makpele and Sulima." The statement said the Kamajors
had destroyed three vehicles and captured one, a UNHCR vehicle, which is now being used by
the Kamajors. All the vehicles were said to contain large quantities of weapons and
ammunition. "Some of the weapons now being used by the combined civil defence forces
were also captured from retreating AFRC forces, some of whim have defected to the civil
defence forces," the statement said. The press release also said that the Kamajors
had recaptured the Mano River Bridge on July 11, "inflicting heavy casualties on
rebels and renegade soldiers" of the AFRC.
28 July: Two more journalists critical of the military coup have gone
into hiding after a crackdown by police and soldiers against their newspaper, the
New
Tablet. Managing Editor Gibril Foday Musa and journalist Emmanuel Senessie went into
hiding Monday after three newspaper sellers were arrested and the latest edition of the
paper was confiscated. The New Tablet has called upon the military leaders to step
down, calling the AFRC regime illegal. The newspaper also dismissed a weekend announcement
on SLBS (state radio) that the newspaper is not registered as "an attempt by a group
of bullies to intimidate us into fear and silence."
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma moved into State House Monday, and access roads
have been cordoned off. Since the coup, Koroma had operated from Defence Headquarters.
A clandestine pro-democracy radio station has confirmed that Nigerian-led ECOMOG troops
are enforcing an air, sea, and land embargo against Sierra Leone. The radio said that
Nigerian ECOMOG task force commander Colonel Maxwell Khobe is in charge of the
operation. Khobe "is advising all ship owners, shipping agents, airlines, and travel agents
that any violation of the sanctions and embargo by them will be at their own risk,"
the radio said. "As soon as the (AFRC) government complies with the demands of Sierra
Leoneans and the international community to return power to the democratically elected
government, ECOWAS will be prevailed on to lift the sanction and embargo." AFRC
officials said they had no prior notice of the blockade and are "actively studying
the development." Oil for the main power station has run low, and there have been
drastic power cuts in Freetown. Residents say that some parts of Freetown, especially the
east end, have been without power for days. Drivers are finding it difficult to find fuel,
and there have been long lines of marooned vehicles at petrol stations since Saturday.
Traffic between Freetown and towns in the interior is down to a trickle. There have been
reports of trucks stranded in Bo loaded with perishable food bound for Freetown.
"Because of the lack of fuel, the Ministry of Energy and Power has been forced to
embark on providing electricity mainly for priority locations," a ministry source
said. The source listed priorities as state radio and television, key military
installations, state hospitals, and main government offices.
27 July: The Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) has made a
last-minute change in the composition of the negotiating committee which is due to leave
for Abidjan on Monday. The 12 delegates who will meet with ECOWAS foreign ministers will
be members of the AFRC Supreme Council; non-AFRC members have been dropped. The decision,
which was made shortly before 8:00 p.m. Sunday, reportedly came about after disagreement
by RUF leaders within the AFRC on the committee's negotiating position. The delegation was
to return to Abidjan with modalities for a return to constitutional rule. The RUF, which
had been represented on the committee by Acting Minister of Lands and the Environment S.B.
Rogers, will reportedly add an RUF military leader to the delegation.
26 July: The president of the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists
has gone into hiding after soldiers raided the office of his newspaper on Saturday and
detained four journalists. Colleagues said Frank Kposowa went into hiding after soldiers
twice visited his office looking for him. Kposowa's independent Unity Now newspaper
has been critical of the military government, and in its latest edition called for the
immediate departure of the AFRC and criticized Chief Justice Samuel Beccles Davies for
swearing in AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma as head of state. Two of the four
detained were journalists working for Sierra Leone News Agency who were at the newspaper
office when it was raided. The other two were members of the Unity Now staff.
UNPP leader Dr. John Karefa-Smart, who Thursday announced his withdrawal from the AFRC
negotiating committee, said Sunday that he has reconsidered his decision after AFRC leader
Major Johnny Paul Koroma implored him not to "desert" Sierra Leone. "If you
don't come now and things don't go well, the people will never understand that you left
the job half done," he quoted Koroma as saying. Dr. Karefa-Smart said he will travel
to Abidjan Monday for the second round of talks, which are expected to be convened on
Tuesday. He said the negotiations must determine "what role should the people have in
all of this. They cannot be just observers to a president being overthrown and being
brought back." Dr. Karefa-Smart said Sierra Leone should convene a second
Bintumani-type conference. "The people of Sierra Leone will be brought into the
picture, we can sit down as a people to look at what happened and where we will go in the
future," he said. Dr. Karefa-Smart rejected any suggestion that he might participate
in a military-dominated civilian government. "I will not take part and I will not
accept any position" in a military-led government, he said. "I am the last
person to want to live under military rule."
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma has sent a message of congratulations to Charles
Taylor on his victory in the Liberian presidential election.
The Leone Stars, who were to have played Guinea July 26 in an African Nations Cup first
round match in Bamako, withdrew from the game. The team also forfeited a match against
Tunisia earlier in the week. The matches were to have been played in neutral Bamako, Mali
because of concerns by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) about the security
situation in Freetown.
25 July: The AFRC has denied Nigerian claims that the Sierra Leone
Army and RUF rebels have violated the ceasefire agreement. "There has been no
clashes. We are abiding by the ceasefire agreement," said Deputy Director of Defence
Information Major John Milton. "Maybe the Nigerians have some motives up their
sleeves. It is their own imagination," he added.
U.S. Ambassador to Sierra Leone John Hirsch said Friday that the international
community will not accept the continued presence of the AFRC government in Sierra Leone,
and does not recognize it in any way. His statement, which were made in Guinea, was
carried over a clandestine pro-democracy radio station. Hirsch said that the nearly seven
week strike has shown the determination to see the democratically-elected government
restored. The central issue now, he said, is whether the military government and the
former RUF combatants genuinely have the interests of the Sierra Leone people at heart. If
they do, he said, they would step down and spare the people further pain and suffering.
Nigerian military leader General Sani Abacha Friday defended Nigeria's intervention in
Sierra Leone. He said ECOMOG is not there to interfere in Sierra Leone's internal affairs
because ECOMOG is a peace force, not a warring one. "We are in Sierra Leone because
we have a mandate which is in the national security interest of the Sierra Leonean people
and the entire sub-region," he said. "ECOMOG is in Sierra Leone to secure and
defend the democratic interests and values of that country," he added. Abacha
emphasized that the intervention in Sierra Leone falls under the auspices of ECOWAS.
Nigeria believes in collectivity as the right approach to security and development, he
said, and if Nigeria's presence in Sierra Leone is conspicuous, it is because of its
leading role and commitment to ECOWAS, and ECOMOG in particular. Abacha also addressed
critics who point to the paradox of military rulers in Nigeria trying to restore civilian
government in Sierra Leone. "There are some cynics who would wonder why a military
regime in Nigeria should denounce a military putsch in Sierra Leone," Abacha said.
"Let me remind such cynics that this military regime came to power at a critical
moment of Nigeria's history to avert disintegration." Abacha said he wants to
convince the international community that Nigeria is committed to the return to civilian
rule. "I want to convince the international community that this government is
committed to the political transition programme much more than we are to the regional
peace-keeping process," he said. "If they see seriousness in our peacekeeping
efforts we are even more resolute about the transition programme. We have only some 14
months from today to prove our cynics wrong, when the country returns to civil rule by
October 1, 1998."
24 July: Nigeria said Thursday that military leaders have violated the
ceasefire which was agreed to last week in Abidjan. "The coupists and their rebel
allies have continued to conduct probing attacks on ECOMOG troop locations in Kossoh, Jui,
Hastings Airfield, Lungi airport and its environs, presumably in search of the FM radio
station believed to be harboured by ECOMOG," Nigerian Defence Department Spokesman
Colonel Ugbo said in a statement issued in Lagos. He said that ECOMOG did not hesitate to
launch counter attacks. Ugbo said that some civilians, military, and paramilitary
personnel loyal to ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah had surrendered to ECOMOG in the
past two days. "The villages of such people have been attacked and burnt," he
said, adding that the latest of these attacks had occurred Thursday morning at Bo and
Kenema. "The ECOMOG troops have been provoked beyond limits and will not hesitate to
be on counter-offensive for self-defence," the Nigerian statement said.
UNPP leader Dr. John Karefa-Smart announced Thursday that he is withdrawing from the
AFRC committee negotiating with the ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone, saying that
his work has been successful and that his continued presence on the committee would be
misunderstood. "My primary concern throughout has been to let my people and the
international community become aware of the dangers inherent in allowing any state or
combination of states to interfere in the internal affairs of another state," Dr.
Karefa-Smart said in a written statement released in Freetown. "I am now satisfied
that my loud and clear message has been received and heeded and that I and all Sierra
Leoneans can now go to sleep at night with the assurance that they will not be awakened by
a military attack on our country. I believe my mission has been accomplished." Dr.
Karefa-Smart, who had participated in the talks as a "concerned citizen," said
he has already informed AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma that he will not attend next
week's second round of talks in Abidjan. "I sincerely believe that my presence might
send the wrong signals to certain quarters, which I must avoid at all cost," he said.
23 July: The second round of talks between an AFRC delegation and
ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone has been pushed back four days, to July 29.
Diplomatic sources in Conakry, Guinea said the reason was to give the coup leaders more
time to meet ECOWAS demands. On Tuesday, the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Guinea, Ghana
and Ivory Coast had talks with ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah in Conakry. According
to one diplomat, "The demand by the junta in Sierra Leone about the return of
constitutional rule in that country without Kabbah is a non-starter."
22 July: AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma has ordered Sierra
Leone's military forces to cease all hostilities in the interest of peace, SLBS (state
radio) reported late Monday. He called on soldiers and RUF fighters to comport themselves
in an exemplary manner in order to "gain the respect and confidence of the civilian
population." Koroma told soldiers that "the honeymoon is now over," and
that the parading through Freetown with guns, the commandeering of vehicles, and vehicles
parading aimlessly through the city should stop. Addressing the "People's Army,"
Koroma said the AFRC is using all diplomatic efforts to bring about the release of RUF
leader Corporal Foday Sankoh, so that he can "join in the government and its
socioeconomic development process."
A group of 80 former parliamentarians, ousted when parliament was dissolved following
the May 25 coup, have called for a meeting between President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah and AFRC
Chairman Major Johnny Paul Koroma. The parliamentarians are calling on former president
Joseph Momoh to take part in the round table conference.
21 July: The clandestine Radio of Sierra Leone said Monday it
"welcomes the military government's acceptance of the decision by the four-man ECOWAS
committee on Sierra Leone," which calls for the restoration of "constitutional
order" in Sierra Leone. "This is a good omen for Sierra Leone and a move in the
right direction to peace and prosperity. The people are now enjoying a good
democracy," the radio said.
The second round of talks between AFRC envoys and the ECOWAS Committee of Four on
Sierra Leone, which was due to convene in Abidjan on Friday, will reportedly be postponed
until next week. The delay was requested by the foreign ministers on account of Saturday's
presidential and parliamentary elections in Liberia.
The Nigerian newspaper ThisDay reported Monday that ECOWAS and the AFRC may be
close to reaching an understanding on the remaining issues, and that a four-point
agreement is expected. The newspaper New Nigerian reported that the AFRC has
snubbed the Nigeria's National Democratic Coalition's offer of solidarity in a plot to
destabilise Nigeria.
The MI-8 helicopter that flew President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah to safety in Guinea
following the May 25 coup has crashed in Liberia, along with its three-member Ukrainian
crew. The helicopter, which was chartered by the European Union to cover Liberia's
elections, had been operating flights between the cities of Kakata and Voinjama, ferrying
electrical generators to polling stations. A four day search has failed to find any trace
of the helicopter, an international observer mission spokesman said Sunday.
The International Soccer Federation (FIFA) has ruled that three World Cup qualifying
matches which were postponed for reasons beyond the control of the participating teams
should still be played. None of the three games, Gabon vs. Sierra Leone, Syria vs.
Kyrgystan, and Yemen vs. Uzbekistan, will affect the outcome of the qualifying process,
but FIFA said its decision is "a matter of principle."
20 July: Military leaders denied a report in the Tablet Sunday
that 485 soldiers and RUF fighters have surrendered to ECOMOG bases in Freetown. According
to the newspaper, the soldiers gave themselves up after clashes at Jui last weekend
between "People's Army" soldiers and Nigerian ECOMOG troops. The AFRC statement,
which was broadcast over SLBS (state radio), said "the entire armed forces and the
Revolutionary United Front continue to demonstrate their loyalty to the (military)
government." It described the Tablet report as "a blatant act of
propaganda and the work of unpatriotic persons parading as journalists to create panic and
fear in the minds of the people." The AFRC statement noted that the Tablet
"is unregistered and operating contrary to the rules and regulation governing
newspaper registration." Meanwhile, a clandestine radio station asserted that
"some patriotic rebel fighters and Sierra Leone soldiers are being prevented from
surrendering to ECOMOG bases by hard-core junta and RUF members." On July 8, ousted
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah broadcast a statement over the same clandestine radio
ordering soldiers to give themselves up to ECOMOG forces to avoid being branded as
mutineers. "Soldiers who wanted to defect are threatened with death and told they
will be killed by ECOMOG troops if they give themselves up to the ECOMOG," the radio
said. On Sunday, bodies of those killed in clashes between the "People's Army"
and ECOMOG forces still lay in the streets of Jui.
ECOMOG forces lifted a road blockade of Freetown Sunday, allowing trucks carrying food
from the provinces to enter the city for the first time since July 12. Sources said that
Nigerian ECOMOG troops continue to enforce a sea and air blockade of the country in an
effort to restore the civilian government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. Local ECOMOG
Commander Brigadier Maxwell Khobe announced the lifting of the road blockade Sunday over
a clandestine radio station. He went on to warn civilians to stay away from Sierra Leonean
military installations which, he said, are potential targets if the AFRC refuses to
reinstate Kabbah. "I ordered the ECOMOG troops holding the Orugu Bridge to withdraw
from the bridge and allow vehicles and people to resume using the highway,"
Khobe said. "If the talks between ECOWAS and the military government fail...and ECOMOG is
given the mandate by ECOWAS to forcefully remove the coup makers from power, ECOMOG will
invade Freetown and bomb the city to remove them," he added. "There will be no
escape for the coup makers."
19 July: Freetown was reported calm Saturday, and the truce agreed to
by AFRC envoys and ECOWAS foreign ministers appears to be holding. "The ceasefire is
holding on all the fronts," Sierra Leone military spokesman John Milton said. SLBS
(state radio) said Saturday that the AFRC is cracking down on people masquerading as
soldiers or policemen. The radio also reported that AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma
addressed the army on Friday, and quoted him as telling soldiers, "You are to report
to your respective units and stop parading the streets aimlessly. Any soldier caught in
the street without a valid pass will be severely dealt with." SLBS also reported that
the AFRC has called for "constructive dialogue" with the secretariat of the
Commonwealth, which suspended Sierra Leone's membership on July 11. Koroma told the
Commonwealth that the AFRC wants to restore democracy in Sierra Leone as soon as possible,
and invited the secretariat to send a delegation to Freetown to discuss how this could be
done. The radio said a timetable for a return to democracy could have been laid down by
now "had it not been for the threat of armed violence in Sierra Leone caused by
Nigeria."
18 July: AFRC envoys meeting with West African foreign ministers in
Abidjan agreed Friday to implement an immediate ceasefire and to restore constitutional
government to Sierra Leone. A joint communiqué with the ECOWAS Committee of Four on
Sierra Leone called for an immediate end to hostilities, and for coup leader Major Johnny
Paul Koroma to take steps toward restoring constitutional rule. The two sides agreed
"to resolve all issues related to the Sierra Leone crisis peacefully," to
establish an immediate ceasefire throughout the country, and to work toward "the
early restoration of constitutional order" in Sierra Leone. The Sierra Leone
delegation will be given time "to return home and hold further consultations with the
regime in Freetown in order to facilitate a consideration of the detailed modalities for
the return of constitutional order to their country." A number of issues were noted
in the communiqué but not resolved. ECOWAS maintained its call for the reinstatement of
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, while the Sierra Leone delegation "expressed
concern" about the continued detention in Nigeria of RUF leader Corporal Foday
Sankoh, and "wished to see him reunited with his people in Sierra Leone." The
statement expressed the Sierra Leone delegation's "deep regrets at the loss of lives
which occurred on the 25 May, 1997 and subsequently." The two sides resolved to hold
a second round of talks in Abidjan on Friday, July 25. Delegation leader Alimany Pallo
Bangura said that by pledging to restore constitutional order, the AFRC was opening the
possibility that Kabbah could return to power, but was not guaranteeing that this would
happen. The issue is expected to be addressed in the second round of talks. AFRC spokesman
Allieu Kamara denied that a return to constitutional order implies Kabbah's reinstatement.
Kamara said the truce agreement means the borders and airport which have been closed by
Nigerian troops would reopen. "No more blockades. The airport will be open. No more
hostilities," he said.
A group of British charities warned Friday that the situation in Sierra Leone is
rapidly deteriorating. The group, which includes Actionaid, Oxfam, and Save the Children
Fund, said thousands of refugees have fled the country since the coup, while those left
face soaring prices, food shortages, and reduced harvests. "The recent coup and
subsequent instability has increased the suffering of the poorest people in Sierra
Leone," the group said. Charity staff working in the country reported many classic
warning signs of a serious humanitarian emergency. The charities said over 30,000 refugees
have fled to neighbouring states and about 50,000 combatants are ranging across the
country. Rice, palm oil, and cassava prices have risen by 100 percent. "We are deeply
concerned that a serious emergency is rapidly developing," said one aid worker in
Sierra Leone. "What is needed now is immediate humanitarian assistance and an end to
the political stand-off and violence. Sierra Leone needs help and not political
posturing."
The AFRC broadcast an appeal Friday over SLBS (state radio) urging the country's two
main commercial banks to reopen after hundreds of depositors stormed the central bank
demanding money from their accounts. The AFRC Secretariat asked Barclays and Standard
Chartered Banks to reopen "because it involves the lives of people." The two
banks, which control about 80 percent of the market, have said they will remain closed
until the security situation in the country improves. State-owned Sierra Leone Commercial
Bank reopened on July 2 after receiving AFRC guarantees of security and liquidity. The
AFRC also warned traders to cut the price of rice or face drastic action. A bag of rice
which cost Le 22,000 before the May 25 coup now sells for between Le 30,000 and Le 50,000
in Freetown. The AFRC is calling for a price of from Le 22,000 to Le 25,000, depending on
the quality. The AFRC statement said that a shipment of rice is due in Freetown shortly.
17 July: Envoys sent by the AFRC met in Abidjan Thursday with the
foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Guinea, making up the ECOWAS
Committee of Four on Sierra Leone. Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi said he was hopeful
of progress and looked forward to a speedy resolution of the crisis. "We feel we have
made substantial progress and that the atmosphere exists for a substantial
breakthrough," he said. He described the atmosphere of the talks as "very
friendly, cordial and brotherly." Some Sierra Leonean delegates were less optimistic
before the talks. Corporal Tamba Gborie, who led the May 25 coup, said that it would be
impossible to strike any deal without the participation of RUF leader Corporal Foday
Sankoh. "You can't make any peace in Sierra Leone without Foday Sankoh," Gborie
said. Sankoh, who is listed as a member of Sierra Leone's delegation, remains under house
arrest in Nigeria. The start of the talks was delayed by the late arrival from Liberia of
Ikimi and Ghana's deputy foreign minister Victor Gbeho. Delegates said the ministers are
eager to return to Liberia for Saturday's elections. Ivorian officials said the talks will
resume on Friday. The participants have agreed not to give press conferences until the
conclusion of the talks.
An anti-Nigerian rally held Thursday at the national stadium in Freetown was attended
by thousands of people. Speaker after speaker denounced the presence of Nigerian troops in
Sierra Leone and called for their immediate withdrawal. People displayed banners with such
messages as "Down With Abacha," "Abacha is trying to get a colony in West
Africa," "Nigerian troops stop killing our women and children," and
"Who gave Nigeria the right to hold on to our airport?"
The Red Cross said Thursday it is trying to get access to civilians trapped southeast
of Freetown after weekend fighting between Nigerian ECOMOG troops and soldiers loyal to
the AFRC. International Committee of the Red Cross delegate Rene-Luc Thevoz said the Red
Cross had urged the two sides to allow it to take in food and medicine, and to treat any
wounded following the fighting in nearby Jui. "We are not sure how many people are
trapped in Kossoh Town but we know there are several hundred of them and possibly even
several thousands," he said. "We are also strongly considering an evacuation of
the civilians." Meanwhile, ECOMOG officials in Freetown said a truce has been signed
to end the bloody clashes which have left over 150 civilians dead. Thevoz said the health
situation in Sierra Leone has worsened alarmingly since the May 25 coup, and that the
onset of the rainy season is making the situation worse. He said there has been a sharp
rise in the number of cases of malaria, dysentery, and respiratory infections. "The
people cannot afford any more to buy medicine because there is only little cash flow in
the country. And on the other side, the stock of medicine available in the country is
getting scarce. So we have started to operate different clinics and health centers in
Freetown," he said. Thevoz said that clashes between rival forces is making relief
work more dangerous and difficult for Red Cross work throughout the country. He said
another consequence of the violence is that people are going hungry. "The food
situation is getting more and more difficult because there are no supplies coming from the
outside. And of course there were, already before, many people who were assisted. So all
these people are now deprived of assistance and the food stock is diminishing day by
day," Thevoz said.
16 July: The AFRC Wednesday announced members of the Sierra Leone
delegation which will meet with the ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone in Abidjan on
Thursday, July 17. The delegation will be led by Mr. Alimamy Pallo Bangura, Secretary of
State for Foreign Affairs. Also included on the list is Corporal Foday S. Sankoh, AFRC
Vice Chairman. Other delegates are Mr. A. Manley-Spaine, Attorney-General; Brig. D.K.
Anderson, Chief of Military Staff; Capt. Paul Thomas, Under-Secretary of State for the
Ministry of Mineral Resources; Mr. S.B. Rogers, Acting Secretary of State for Ministry of
Lands and the Environment; Corporal Tamba Gborie, Member of the AFRC Supreme Council; Mr.
Dauda S. Kamara, Ambassador; Mr. S.A.T. Bayoh, Secretary to the Chairman, AFRC; Mr. W.S.
Bangura, Deputy Director-General, Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Mr. Alieu Kamara, Public
Relations Officer; Dr. John Karefa-Smart, Concerned Citizen; Mrs. Ina Lamin,
Secretary/Stenographer, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The delegation left Freetown
Wednesday by helicopter for Conakry, Guinea, where a plane sent by Ivory Coast flew them
to Abidjan.
15 July: AFRC leader Johnny Paul Koroma and ECOMOG field commanders
from Nigeria, Ghana, and Guinea agreed to a truce Monday night after several days of
bloody clashes at Lungi and Jui. "Both sides agreed to order all fighting to
stop," a military official said Tuesday. Hundreds of "People's Army"
fighters were reported killed at Lungi, as well as an unknown number of civilians. Homes
were destroyed at Jui and four neighboring areas, where an undetermined number of people
were killed and wounded. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said about 30
civilians wounded in the clashes have been taken to two hospitals, while another 10 were
injured in traffic accidents while trying to flee the scene of the fighting. The ICRC said
it had planned to visit the scene of the fighting but had been prevented by the AFRC.
"The AFRC would not let us in and we're still waiting for a go-ahead from them so
that we will be able to transfer the casualties to the Freetown hospitals," and ICRC
spokesman said Tuesday. An AFRC official confirmed that no civilian vehicles are being
allowed on the highway. "We have to ensure that they would be safe and lives and
property are protected," he said. Freetown has been cut off from the rest of the
country as a result of the occupation of the highway by ECOMOG troops at Jui.
Nigerian government sources told a newspaper Tuesday that Nigeria will do whatever it
takes to restore the civilian government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. "It is
obvious that Nigeria will be abdicating its sense of mission and responsibility as a
sub-regional power, if it holds its arms and watches helplessly and unconcerned its
geo-political environment being threatened by destructive interests," presidency
sources told the Nigerian Tribune. Nigeria is in Sierra Leone fulfilling its
commitment under a bilateral security pact with Sierra Leone, and as part of the
sub-region's efforts to restore the elected government, they added. "From Momoh to
Tejan Kabbah, those variously in power in Sierra Leone have solicited Nigerian security
assistance, culminating in a security defence pact between both countries," the
sources said. They said that Nigeria had also intervened in Sierra Leone at the request of
some unnamed foreign countries to protect their citizens trapped in the country.
Intervention in Sierra Leone and Liberia is consistent with the principle of Nigeria's
foreign policy and in accord with the protection and safeguarding of its geo-political
environment, which is a component of Nigeria's national interest, the sources added.
The AFRC cabinet announced by coup leaders on July 8 was sworn in Monday. Head of State
and AFRC Chairman - Major Johnny Paul Koroma; Deputy Head of State and Deputy AFRC
Chairman - Corporal Foday S. Sankoh; Secretary of Mineral Resources and Chief Secretary -
Captain S.A.J. Musa; Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs - Dr. Alimamy Paolo Bangura;
Attorney General and Secretary of Judicial Affairs - Robin O.I. Mason; Secretary of
Finance - Joe Amara Bangali; Secretary of State for Transport and Communications - Osho
Williams; Secretary of State for Development and Economic Planning - Victor Brandon;
Acting Secretary of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries - A.A. Vandy (People's Army);
Secretary of State for Works and Labour - Capt. (Rtd.) A.B.S. Jumu Jalloh; Secretary of
Social Welfare, Children and Gender Affairs - Major Kola Samba; Secretary of State for
Youths, Sports and Social Mobilization - S.B. Rogers (People's Army); Secretary of State
for Health and Sanitation - Colonel K.I.S. Kamara; Secretary of Education - Mrs. Rogers
Wright; Secretary, Chairman's Office - Squadron Leader V.L. King.
The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) said Tuesday its members have been
subject to unprecedented harassment and intimidation since the May 25 coup. The
Association called upon the AFRC to release three journalists detained during the
military's search for a clandestine radio station, or to turn them over to the civilian
police. "We are very concerned that in the seven weeks since the AFRC took power our
members have been exposed to a degree of harassment and threats from military authorities
which far exceed anything ever seen in this country," the SLAJ said in a statement.
"If the military authorities consider these three persons to be guilty of the offence
it is their duty to hand the matter over to the police for the appropriate action to be
taken," it added. The Association named the three as Saloman Conteh, Fatmata Kamara,
and Jeff Bowlay Williams, arrested July 8 at the offices of The Democrat newspaper.
Four other persons detained at the time were released after four days.
14 July: Freetown was reported to be relatively calm Monday following
a weekend of fighting between Nigerian ECOMOG troops and Sierra Leone "People's
Army" soldiers at Jui which left at least 30 civilians dead and 50 seriously wounded.
Red Cross officials are still searching for more bodies believed to have been buried as a
result of the bombardment. A doctor at Connaught Hospital said the corpses of 15 civilians
were at the mortuary, while a doctor at the military hospital said another 15 bodies had
been brought in. "The bodies were completely mangled and hardly recognizable,"
the surgeon said. ECOMOG forces reportedly fired about 30 missiles at police headquarters
killing 6 police officers. Sierra Leone television Sunday night showed the bodies of a
family of four who were killed by a bomb dropped from a Nigerian air force jet. Jui was
bombarded with heavy weapons and mortar fire for 20 hours on Saturday and Sunday, and
reports say the town has been completely devastated. Many residents have abandoned their
homes and fled to Freetown. About 10 Nigerians were killed in the clash, while the Sierra
Leone Army says it lost 5 soldiers with 12 wounded. There was no independent confirmation
of the claims. The two sides are reportedly dug in with trenches facing each other, and
the situation remains volatile. The two sides also clashed at Lungi International Airport
on Wednesday, with unofficial reports of the death toll ranging from 200 to nearly 300,
most of them RUF fighters. Residents at Lungi said that Nigerian soldiers with tanks took
control of the whole town over the weekend, driving back "People's Army"
soldiers. ECOMOG commander General Victor Malu has rejected AFRC claims that the Nigerians
started the fighting. "We had no reason to attack them," he said. Sierra Leone
military sources confirmed Monday that talks are underway between AFRC leader Major Johnny
Paul Koroma and Nigerian, Ghanaian, and Guinean ECOMOG commanders over the terms of a
ceasefire.
Military leaders are preparing to send a delegation to Abidjan later this week to meet
with the ECOWAS Committee of Four on Sierra Leone. An agenda has been agreed upon, and if
logistical problems can be overcome the meeting should take place on Thursday, July 17.
Military leaders arrested and briefly detained a BBC reporter at Pademba Road Prison
Monday. BBC Freetown correspondent Victor Sylver was arrested by four soldiers on the
orders of PLO 1 Staff Sergeant Abu Sankoh, a member of the AFRC Supreme Council, who
complained that Sylver was "sending out all sorts of bad reports" about the
AFRC. After being taken to the prison and assigned to one of the prison blocks, he was led
out again and taken to Sankoh's home. Sankoh complained "among other things that I
had not been carrying reports in favour of the AFRC, that I do not refer to the head of
state, Major Johnny Paul Koroma, in my reports as His Excellency, and a host of other
allegations. I of course explained certain things to him, stressing that should any one of
them feel aggrieved about my reports, I am always available for comments and
corrections." Sylver said he had not been ill-treated. "The soldiers and the PLO
were polite and never threatened me. It was only very much later that I discovered that
certain individuals had had sleepless nights wanting to see me behind bars."
Sierra Leone's last two African Nations Cup qualifying matches have been moved to
neutral Mali, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) announced on Monday. CAF said
fighting following the coup had made it impossible to hold the games in Freetown. "We
have rescheduled the matches after a thorough analysis of the situation," a CAF press
release said. Sierra Leone will play Tunisia in Bamako on July 23 and Guinea on July 27.
The Leone Stars trail both countries in the Group 4 standings, and will need to win both
games to have any chance of qualifying for the Nations Cup finals to be held in Burkina
Faso next February.
13 July: Nigerian ECOMOG troops clashed with soldiers of the
"People's Army" near Hastings Airport at Jui Saturday, about 15 miles southeast
of Freetown. Witnesses said that at least 8 civilians were killed in the crossfire. The
fighting continued on Sunday and the bombardment could be heard in Freetown, where most
residents were reported to be staying off the streets. "The Nigerians started
attacking our men on the ground," AFRC spokesman Allieu Kamara said. "The only
thing that can bring this fight under control is for the international world to tell
Nigeria to get out of our territory." Military sources said that soldiers and
civilians have been hospitalised in Waterloo. Unconfirmed reports from Freetown say that
many Sierra Leonean soldiers have been killed. Nigeria reportedly imposed an air, sea, and
land blockade on Sierra Leone Saturday night, in line with an ECOWAS decision to impose
economic sanctions should negotiations with the AFRC prove unsuccessful.
12 July: The AFRC will "increase its screening operation" of
people wishing to return to Sierra Leone "so that only genuine people would be
allowed to enter," a military spokesman said Saturday. "We are not depriving
those who have genuine business in Sierra Leone. We only want to ensure that
anti-government elements would not slip in to cause chaos," he said. The spokesman
said Friday's statement by the United Nations Security Council shows "there is still
room for discussions and we are still open for dialogue as our main aim is to sustain the
peace we have already achieved." Officials of international relief agencies said that
about 2,000 persons, many of them Sierra Leoneans who fled the country after Nigeria's
June 2 naval bombardment of Freetown, are massing on the Guinea border trying to return.
On Friday, four state-owned Road Transport Corporation buses brought in about 250 Sierra
Leoneans free of charge who had been stranded in Guinea.
11 July: Sierra Leone's membership in the Commonwealth was suspended
Friday as a consequence of the May 25 military coup. The announcement was made by
Commonwealth Secretary-General Chief Emeka Anyaoku following a two-day meeting of the
Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) in London. In his statement, Anyaoku demanded
the immediate and unconditional restoration of the democratic government of President
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The suspension will expel Sierra Leone from any Commonwealth meeting
and deprive the country of technical aid from the organisation. "Pending the
restoration of the legitimate government, the participation of Sierra Leone in the
councils of the Commonwealth will be suspended," said Zimbabwe Foreign Minister Stan
Mudenge, chairman of CMAG. The Commonwealth decision was endorsed by United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan. "The Commonwealth, like all law-respecting
institutions, has been determined to restore democracy," Annan said. "I hope the
coup-makers in Sierra Leone will really begin to understand that the international
community is not accepting what they have done and that perhaps they should begin to
rethink...and step down."
The United Nations Security Council Friday called for the "immediate and
unconditional restoration of constitutional order" in Sierra Leone. In a statement
read by Council President Peter Osvald, the Security Council called the "attempt to
overthrow the democratically elected government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah
unacceptable" and expressed deep concern about the continuing crisis in Sierra Leone
and its negative humanitarian consequences for the civilian population, particularly for
refugees and internally displaced persons. The Council also referred to the atrocities
committed against Sierra Leone's citizens, foreign nationals, and ECOMOG personnel. The
Council reiterated its view that the overthrow of the Kabbah government was unacceptable,
and said it was "concerned about the grave crisis in Sierra Leone which endangers the
peace, security and stability of the whole region and, in particular, about its possible
negative impact on the ongoing peace process in neighbouring Liberia." The Security
Council expressed its "full support for the objectives" of ECOWAS in restoring
the civilian government, but stopped short of endorsing military intervention. The Council
called on the coup leaders to cooperate with ECOWAS, and said it will follow the progress
of measures aimed at a peaceful resolution of the crisis. The Security Council stands
ready to consider appropriate measures if constitutional order is not restored in Sierra
Leone without delay, the statement said. Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi expressed his
satisfaction after the meeting, saying that "all the elements that we would want are
contained" in the Security Council statement. "We depart New York fully
satisfied that the international community and the Security Council are in full support of
the actions that we are taking as a sub-region on Sierra Leone, which has been supported
fully by Africa at the summit of the O.A.U.," he said.
10 July: Foreign ministers representing the ECOWAS Committee of Four
on Sierra Leone arrived in New York Thursday to brief the United Nations on the Sierra
Leone crisis. The foreign ministers, from Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, and Guinea, are
seeking U.N. Security Council support for ECOWAS' three-pronged initiative to restore
Sierra Leone's civilian government: dialogue, sanctions, and the possible use of force.
The ministers will meet with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, members of the Security
Council, and the ECOWAS and African groups at the United Nations.
Nigerian ECOMOG forces were still in control of Lungi International Airport Thursday,
and the clandestine radio station which was the target of an attack by a unit of soldiers
and RUF fighters Wednesday continued to broadcast. AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma
late Wednesday accused the station of "broadcasting vicious and malicious propaganda
aimed at intimidating soldiers and civilians against the government and spreading general
panic...He (ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah) cannot succeed to incite my loyal
troops," Koroma said in a broadcast over SLBS (state radio).
Reports reaching Freetown Thursday said 10 Kamajors were killed when a combined force
of soldiers and RUF rebels attacked in a Kamajor-controlled area between Zimmi and the
Mano River Bridge. One soldier was reported to have been killed in the fighting. The force
was commanded by Colonel Sam "Mosquito" Bockarie, second in command of the RUF.
"The Kamajors retreated and some of them fled across the border into Liberia,"
Bockarie said, adding that two Kamajors had been captured. The Kamajors reportedly left
behind a large cache of weapons and ammunition. Residents said that former Deputy Defence
Minister and Kamajor leader Sam Hinga Norman had visited the area earlier in the week. The
area is now said to be under the control of government troops.
9 July: A combined unit of soldiers and RUF fighters clashed Wednesday
with Nigerian ECOMOG troops at Lungi International Airport, a day after an address by
ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah was broadcast over a clandestine radio station.
"The junta launched the fierce attack on the allegation that ECOMOG installed an FM
station in Lungi. The junta's attack was therefore aimed at destroying the station,"
an ECOMOG statement said. The statement, released in Monrovia, Liberia, said the attack
was repulsed and warned that any further attack would be dealt with ruthlessly.
"ECOMOG feels strongly that any further attack on its position will draw maximum
retaliation. ECOMOG would deploy maximum firepower to contain it. In such circumstance,
the rebel leadership should be held responsible for any casualties on innocent
civilians," the statement said. The assault, which began at about 11:30 a.m., caused
thousands of civilians in nearby villages to flee to Port Loko. Military officials in
Freetown said there was light damage to the airport, and that about 10 Nigerian soldiers
may have been killed or wounded. They described their own casualties as minimal. There was
no independent confirmation of the claims. According to one military official, a column of
soldiers and RUF troops was on its way to the airport when an argument broke out between
them and Nigerian soldiers. "The Nigerians were hostile and started trading insults
and then things got out of hand," he said. "There was a near hand-to-hand
fighting at one stage before the two sides separated and took up heavy bombardment."
Two Sierra Leone navy gunboats patrolling the coast also took part in the battle. The
sound of the firing caused panic in the center of Freetown, already tense since Kabbah's
speech on Tuesday. Civilians fled for safety and shops and markets were closed. Acting
Nigerian defense spokesman Goldwin Ugbo denied on Tuesday AFRC claims that the clandestine
radio station is being operated by Nigeria. Ugbo said Nigeria was not even aware of the
station, let alone funding it.
Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi left for New York Wednesday to brief the United
Nations on the situation in Sierra Leone. As head of the ECOWAS Committee of Four on
Sierra Leone, Ikimi will seek support for the ECOWAS initiative to restore the civilian
government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. The U.N. briefing was ordered by ECOWAS
Chairman and Nigerian leader General Sani Abacha, who met with the Committee of Four on
Saturday.
A meeting of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) will be held in London
this week to assess the situation in Sierra Leone, as well as the ongoing crisis in
democracy in Nigeria and Gambia. CMAG, which includes representatives from Canada, Ghana,
Jamaica, Malaysia, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and Zimbabwe, is
mandated to work toward the promotion and protection of democracy, human rights and the
rule of law in the Commonwealth.
8 July: Ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah addressed the nation over
a clandestine radio station Monday, calling for the AFRC to give up power. "Hand over
now and spare yourself and the people of Sierra Leone further pains and suffering,"
Kabbah told coup leaders. "If you persist however and cause any further force to be
used...then let me assure you no Western countries will grant you asylum. No African
countries will harbour you." Addressing ordinary soldiers, Kabbah said, "As your
commander I hereby order you to report to the nearest ECOMOG base without arms in your
possession and declare your loyalty. By doing so you will avoid being treated as a
mutineer." He told citizens not to work with the regime, and said that supporters of
the military government would be "damned as collaborators." Kabbah accused the
coup leaders and their RUF allies of "looting, killings and rape, destroying
overnight what many people had worked for all their lives." The broadcast caused
panic in Freetown, fueling fears that military intervention by ECOMOG forces is imminent.
The city's lorry parks were reported Tuesday to be crowded with people attempting to flee
the capital. Military authorities called the broadcast illegal and an infringement of the
territorial integrity of Sierra Leone. "The public is hereby warned that statements
which may be broadcast on this radio station should not be considered as official but must
be seen and regarded as propaganda designed to disrupt the peaceful citizens of this
country," an AFRC statement said. AFRC Secretary-General Colonel Abdul Sesay called
the station a "pirate setup" and accused the Nigerian government of
"providing logistics for the setting up of the station," which he said was based
at Lungi International Airport. He claimed that the announcer spoke with a Nigerian
accent. The clandestine station, which calls itself "Sierra Leone Broadcasting
Service," "SLBS 98.1" and "The True Voice of Sierra Leone,"
transmits at a frequency of 98.1 on the FM waveband--very close to the SLBS frequency of
99.9.
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma announced the formation of a cabinet Tuesday,
naming himself as head of state and RUF leader Foday Sankoh as his deputy. A statement on
SLBS (state radio) said that Koroma had announced a large cabinet drawn from a
cross-section of the country, with Captain Solomon "SAJ" Musa as Chief
Secretary. Details of the other appointments were not available. SLBS said Koroma had
asked for representatives from various professional bodies to be part of his government.
Soldiers backed by RUF rebels of the "People's Army" captured the strategic
Mano River Bridge on the Liberian border Monday after a battle with hundreds of
Kamajors, senior army spokesman Major John Milton said Tuesday. Sources in Kenema said at
least 18 Kamajors were killed and that several soldiers were wounded. There were
unconfirmed reports of deaths among the soldiers. Milton accused Nigeria of arming the
Kamajors from Liberia. "The Kamajors are being supplied arms and ammunition by
Nigeria," he said. The taking of the bridge followed the capture of the towns of
Gofor and Zimmi over the weekend, about 27 miles away. The Mano River Bridge is
owned jointly by Sierra Leone and Liberia.
ECOWAS will seek economic sanctions against Sierra Leone, Ghanaian Deputy Foreign
Minister Victor Gbeho said Tuesday. Gbeho, who was part of the ECOWAS four nation
committee formed to negotiate with the AFRC, said the coup leaders had set conditions for
their departure. These included the incorporation of all RUF fighters into the regular
armed forces and the return of all war refugees to their villages. "If these
conditions could be met, the regime will be ready to step down within four to six
months," Gbeho said in Accra. He said the committee will ask the United Nations
Security Council to impose sanctions on the AFRC to force them out.
6 July: Captain Solomon Anthony James "SAJ" Musa has arrived
in Freetown, and has made a statement on SLBS (state radio). Musa, who was linked to coup
allegations in 1993 and has since been living abroad, was originally called on by an AFRC
spokesman on May 25 to join the coup leaders. He has reportedly been named acting Vice
Chairman of the AFRC in place of RUF leader Foday Sankoh, who remains in detention in
Nigeria. In Freetown, conditions are continuing to deteriorate. Supplies of food and fuel
are reported to be running low. At Connaught Hospital, only 2 of 24 doctors remain on
duty, and most of the wards have been locked. The courts are not operating, and most
judges and lawyers have fled the country.
The Kamajor militia reopened the Makeni-Kono road to civilians on Friday, but Kamajors
are checking vehicles to prevent passage of soldiers and RUF fighters of the
"People's Army." Passengers arriving from Kono District reported seeing 25
skeletons displayed at Makali of Kamajor fighters who were killed by soldiers shortly
after the coup. The soldiers who reached Kono are said to have seized and worked diamond
mines there in the district.
Three Sierra Leone human rights organizations have reported an increase in armed
robberies, summary executions, and other human rights abuses since the AFRC came to power.
Sulaiman Banja Tejan-Sie, Chairman of the Civil Liberties Congress (CLC), reported more
than 30 armed robberies in Freetown alone. "Most of these cases are accompanied by
gruesome murders of the victims and there have also been more than a dozen summary
executions carried out by the AFRC loyalists, sometimes in broad daylight," Tejan-Sie
said. He also cited the detention of at least 15 persons on June 15, mostly SLPP
politicians and military officers, on charges of plotting to overthrow the AFRC. Both the
CLC and Amnesty International have expressed concern about possible mistreatment of the
detainees. "We are going to make a formal protest to the AFRC junta about these
abuses and then ask them to let us see the detainees at the maximum prisons,"
Tejan-Sie said. The National League for Human Rights and Democracy (NLHRD) has also
accused the military of human rights abuses. A statement released by the NLHRD Secretariat
read, "The League is very concerned about the flagrant violation of human rights,
especially the rights of life, security and property, of the ordinary Sierra
Leonean." NLHRD Secretary General Joseph Rahall termed the situation
"frightening" and said it will "be difficult bringing the culprits to
justice." Mohamed Koroma, the Secretary General of Prison Watch, said that the
increase in human rights abuses and armed robberies resulted from the release of over 500
prisoners from Pademba Road Prison during the coup. "I think that was a sad mistake.
How could they have done that? These hardened convicts are now on the prowl with guns and
military uniforms killing innocent people," Koroma said. The AFRC is showing signs of
preparing to clamp down on the press. The editors of the independent newspapers
The
Democrat and the Standard Times, were recently summoned to military
headquarters over alleged negative reporting. The editor of the Standard Times has
reported receiving anonymous death threats for "not being in line with the
revolution."
Reaction: U.S. Ambassador to Sierra Leone John Hirsch: "This effort that is now
underway by ECOWAS provides an opportunity for those in power for the moment in Freetown
to very carefully consider their responsibilities to their own people. The international
community will not accept their continued presence in Freetown and does not recognize them
in any way. The population, as is evident from the continued refusal to work for almost
six weeks, has spoken very eloquently about its determination to see the
democratically-elected government restored. I think it behooves those in power,
momentarily, to really think very hard as to what they are seeking to attain. And if they
genuinely have the interests of the people of Sierra Leone at heart, if they really have
that at heart, they should now, together with the ECOWAS committee, find a way while there
is still time to step down without more destruction and allow the restoration of the
democratically-elected government of President Kabbah. Thereafter a lot of those concerns
that they raised can be addressed in a democratic context."
5 July: ECOWAS is seeking United Nations support for its stance on the
Sierra Leone crisis. On Saturday, ECOWAS chairman and Nigerian president General Sani
Abacha directed the four nation contact committee on the Sierra Leone crisis to brief the
U.N. Security Council. The announcement was made by Nigerian Foreign Minister Tom Ikimi
shortly after the committee met with General Abacha to brief him on the agreement reached
by the ECOWAS foreign ministers meeting in Conakry, Guinea. Ikimi said Abacha fully
endorsed the committee's agreement, which approved talks with the AFRC, but threatened
sanctions or military intervention should the negotiations fail. Ikimi claimed the
situation in Sierra Leone is degenerating into anarchy. He dismissed fears that some
ECOWAS member nations are giving the AFRC tacit support, explaining that nations which
received the military government's delegations had all emphasized that the government of
ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah must be restored.
4 July: Sierra Leone's military rulers alleged Friday that last year's
presidential election was tainted. In a statement read over SLBS (state radio), the AFRC
ruling military council said said outgoing NPRC military leader Julius Maada Bio had
"rigged" the vote to elect ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. "Thus
Sierra Leone was saddled with the Tejan Kabbah government against the true wishes of the
people," the AFRC statement said. "In order to guarantee true and lasting peace
and stability, Sierra Leone needs fresh and truly democratic elections supervised, not
merely observed, by neutral experts provided by the international community." The
military leaders called for a sovereign national conference to form a civilian government
and prepare for new elections. "The Armed Forces Revolutionary Council will accept
any decision arrived at by the conference with regard to the interim civil governance of
the country, leading to the installation of a government that is freely and fairly
elected," the AFRC statement said.
Nigeria said Friday that six countries have closed their embassies in Freetown in what
Nigerian Foreign Ministry sources said may be a prelude to the storming of Freetown by
ECOMOG forces. The closure of the embassies of Ghana, Guinea, Senegal, Benin, Togo, and
Ivory Coast began Wednesday and the withdrawal of their diplomats was expected to be
completed on Friday. The diplomatic missions were closed following the recommendation of
an ECOWAS foreign ministers conference held in Conakry, Guinea at the end of June. The
foreign ministers decided to use negotiations and economic sanctions to force the military
government from power, while reserving the military option if these measures should fail.
3 July: Ousted Foreign Minister Shirley Gbujama said Thursday that she
now believes only military action can reverse the coup against Sierra Leone's civilian
government. "I think it has got to the stage where force must be used," Gbujama
said in Abuja, Nigeria. "It is regrettable, the stage at which we are is not a time
for dialogue. People have tried all kinds of dialogue and have spent five weeks trying and
it didn't have any effect," she said. Gbujama was accompanied on her trip to Nigeria
by Patricia Kabbah, the wife of ousted president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. "We were here in
Nigeria to express gratitude to the head of state for the fact that Nigeria has stuck its
neck out for us so far," said Gbujama. She said Nigerian leader General Sani Abacha
had promised what assistance he could as ECOWAS chairman.
2 July: Sierra Leone's state-owned Commercial Bank reopened Wednesday
after the military government said it would guarantee its security. "The government
has, after repeated meetings with them, convinced us that they will protect us and our
operations fully," a senior bank official said. He said the government had also
"assured us of other technical issues, such as the matter of liquidity, in case we
run across such a problem." The bank will give priority to corporate customers who
need large amounts of money to pay staff, many of whom have not received their wages for
two months. Other banks in Freetown remain closed, and trade union officials said they had
been told that the banks will remain closed for the time being. "The parent companies
of Barclays and Standard Chartered have written to the Sierra Leone Labour Congress that
their banks will remain shut for the time being, despite calls by the present military
government to reopen them, until the security situation improves considerably," a
union leader said. "Our case is different from the foreign-owned banks," said
the Sierra Leone Commercial Bank official. "We are mainly owned and run by the
government and, whatever happens, we are bound to comply with government orders."
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma has told Nigeria that Sierra Leone, not foreign
forces, must provide security for the ECOWAS negotiating team. In a statement broadcast
over SLBS late Tuesday, Koroma said that the use of Nigerian or ECOMOG troops would
infringe on Sierra Leone's sovereignty. "The delegates arriving in Sierra Leone for
fact-finding are purely under the auspices of the government of Sierra Leone and no
assistance is needed from any foreign forces," the statement said. "Let the
integrity of our country be respected." Sources close to the AFRC said ECOMOG is
insisting on providing security for the visiting envoys, and diplomats say that there is
no guarantee that the committee will go to Freetown unless the security issue can be
resolved.
The Sierra Leone Teachers Union issued a statement Wednesday, saying that the coup
"will not only destabilize the fragile educational system but will cripple all
development prospects as Sierra Leone is considered as a least developed country
worldwide." The statement, which was presented to AFRC spokesman Colonel Abdul K.
Sesay, regretted that the overthrow of the civilian government "has disrupted the
country's education calendar and caused the flight of hundreds of teachers and school
children to neighboring countries." Immigration officials in Freetown estimate that
at least 3,000 teachers and 4,000 school children have left the country since the coup.
The statement followed an address to the Teachers Union by Colonel Sesay on June 29, in
which he apologised to the teachers for "any inconveniences they may have gone
through" as a result of the coup. He reminded the teachers of their importance in
nation building, and said the AFRC looked forward to the Union's cooperation in the
interest of the children.
U.N. Ambassador James Jonah said Wednesday that Sierra Leone's military government is
controlled by the Liberians, who are preventing the AFRC from being flexible in meeting
international demands for them to relinquish power. "The evidence is very clear that
those in charge today in Sierra Leone are not those ill-considered military people who
have made a coup," Jonah said at a press conference in New York. "The control
has passed on to the RUF, which is today controlled by Liberians. They are digging in
their heels." As evidence for his claim, Jonah said that the Liberian accents of RUF
leaders "just gives them up completely," and that people who were involved in
the Liberian civil war knew them. "It is painful to me to mention, because we don't
want to implicate all the Liberians...but the people who are resisting the return of the
legal government are these leadership people...the military people who made the coup are
no longer in control," he said. Jonah referred to the RUF's number two man, Sam
Bockarie, who is commonly called 'Mosquito'. "Though he has Sierra Leonean connection
and he may be Sierra Leonean, most of his life he has spent in Liberia," he said.
Jonah said the civilian government in exile does not want war with Liberia, but to return
to civilian rule. He said the coup leaders "seem to be missing the point" in
believing that negotiations can take place, whereas ECOWAS leaders are attempting to clear
the way for a return to civilian rule. "The government of President Kabbah seeks no
wider war. Nor does it intend to wage a war of revenge against the RUF or the army,"
Jonah said. "The main objective of the legal government is to make it abundantly
clear than an act of treason should not be allowed to succeed."
The World Food Programme (WFP) completed distribution of 228 metric tons of relief food
Wednesday to more than 26,000 displaced persons in Makeni. The food was given to 4,400
families from Freetown and outlying villages in Northern Province who have taken refuge in
Makeni. The WFP said in a press release that this was the largest consignment of food to
be distributed in Sierra Leone since the May 25 coup.
AFRC leader Major Johnny Paul Koroma told the executive council of the Bondo Society
Tuesday that he supports female circumcision and other traditional practices, SLBS
reported Wednesday. "Now that peace has been achieved you can practice without
hindrance," Koroma said.
1 July: ECOMOG Commander Major-General Victor Malu said Tuesday that
his troops are ready to drive the AFRC from power should negotiations fail. "We have
the capability of flushing out those people if and when we are directed to do so,"
Malu said in Lagos. On Friday, ECOWAS foreign ministers designated a four nation
negotiating committee consisting of the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Guinea, Ghana, and
Ivory Coast to try to persuade the military to relinquish power. The committee is to
report to ECOWAS Chairman General Sani Abacha on the outcome at the end of two weeks. The
foreign ministers reserved the option of military force should negotiations fail. "If
after two weeks of consultation they report to the chairman that these people are still
adamant in reversing the situation as it is supposed to be then all those measures can be
applied at the same time," Malu said.
Nord Resources Corporation, a 50% owner of Sierra Leone Rutile, has received a three
month extension of its debt forbearance agreement. As a condition of the extension, the
company has agreed to pay the banks $3,000,000 plus 50% of one principal payment to each
bank. Under terms of the extension, which ends September 30, 1997, the banks have agreed
to refrain from taking any action to collect loans unless there is a material change in
circumstances. Because of the recent unrest in Sierra Leone, the company said, there could
be a delay in the previous target date of early 1998 for the reopening of the mine. The
company said that the Sierra Leone Rutile site has been unaffected by the unrest, and
minesite personnel continue to perform limited refurbishment and maintenance.
Reaction: Russian Foreign Ministry: "The Revolutionary United Front, which has
staged a military coup in the country, is still keeping power despite the outer pressure
and resistance of civilians and volunteers units." Moscow hailed ECOWAS efforts
to "find ways of restoring constitutional order."