31 August 2001: Kamajor militiamen, RUF rebel
combatants and members of the Sierra Leone Army took part in a peace march
in Bo Friday ahead of the start of disarmament in Bo and Bombali Districts
in September. "These were arch enemies before the restoration of the
democratically-elected government in this country," said BBC Bo
correspondent Richard Margao. "Seeing the SLA again
and
the RUF coming together in Bo Town, that is a milestone in the history of
the disarmament process." The celebration is to culminate in a
football match on Saturday. Meanwhile, Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga
Norman (pictured left), who is also National Coordinator of the
pro-government Civil Defence Forces, met with Kamajor commanders,
ex-combatants, and their families at the Bo Town Hall Friday. "(He
warned them) to disarm to UNAMSIL tomorrow or face criminal charges in
court," Margao said. "He also reminded them of the May 15
agreement between UNAMSIL, CDF and RUF, that anybody caught with arms and
ammunition or causing mayhem after disarmament will be regarded as an
enemy." Norman expressed regret that Sierra Leone's decade-long civil
war had disrupted their academic and professional lives, but said that
opportunities now existed for them to pursue the vocations of their
choice, Margao added.
The U.S. Attorney-General has given
notice of intent to extend for an additional year the designation of Sierra
Leone under the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) programme, which is due
to expire on November 2. Re-registration, which will extend employment
authorisation and allow those covered to remain in the United States
through November 2002, is limited to those who previously registered for
the programme. The 90-day re-registration period begins on August 31 and
runs through November 29.
The United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra Leone is
nearing its Security
Council
authorised strength of 17,500 with the expected arrival of a last
contingent of Pakistani troops en route from Islamabad, Radio France
International reported on Friday. Behrooz Sadry, the Acting Special
Representative of the Secretary-General (pictured left) was quoted as
saying that the situation in Sierra Leone was improving every day, and
that the movement of civilians within the country was becoming more and
more free.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) distributed
815 tons of food to 35,864 persons in Sierra Leone during the past week,
the agency said in its latest emergency report. The WFP distributed food
to 17,486 internally displaced persons at the town of Mile 91, while
simultaneously carrying out an assessment mission to identify additional
beneficiaries for next month. In the south, 10,699 persons received relief
food at Mandu, Bo Township and Port Loko Camp. The agency also assisted
200 Liberian refugees who were relocated from Daru to resettlement camps
in the south, along with 8,800 returnees in the Western Area. The WFP distributed
207 tons of food to 15,923 persons at the Lokomansama resettlement site in
Lungi. The agency is also operating food-for-agriculture projects in
Makpele, Barri West, and Soro Gbema Chiefdoms in Pujehun District, and has
started distributing 210 tons of food to 4,915 farm families in Tonkolili
District's Tane Chiefdom. The WFP completed food distributions to 13,219
families in Bombali, Port Loko and Tonkolili Districts during the
week.
29 August: Britain will cut its military training
force in Sierra Leone by nearly half by next month, a defence source in
London told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday. "The proportion of
the country under the control of the government of Sierra Leone has
expanded hugely," the source said. "That has allowed us to get to the
point where we can start to see the drawdown of our training team, which
has been running at about 600, including a short-term training scheme. We
see that finishing up next month and the numbers then dropping down to
initially to around 300 to 400." The source added that the British
presence could be halved again, to a long-term core of 100 to 150
trainers, after Sierra Leone's presidential and parliamentary elections,
now tentatively scheduled for the first half of next year.
The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) and
the Sierra Leone Web announced a joint effort Wednesday aimed at making
first-hand information
on
Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission available to persons
anywhere in the world. Initially, documents, photographs, and an
explanation of the Truth and Reconciliation process have been provided by
the United Nations and are hosted by the Sierra Leone Web at http://www.sierra-leone.org/trc.html.
Behrooz Sadry, the Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General,
stressed that popularising the Commission was a crucial element in Sierra
Leone's peace process. He added that it was UNAMSIL's role to assist the
Sierra Leone government and civil society in making Sierra Leoneans from
all walks of life aware of the Commission's provisions and its mode of
operation.
Sierra Leone's former ruling APC party has added its voice
to calls by a number
of civil society groups, opposition parties, and the rebel RUF for an
interim government of national unity. "The current government has
gone out of ideas, of actually having a solution to our problems,"
APC Deputy Leader John Yambasu told the BBC. "We want a level playing
field. We want a credible National Electoral Council. We want to have
statistical developments to show exactly what is happening in the country,
what has gone wrong, what is happening in the country." Yambasu said
his party was asking for a national consultative conference comprising the
existing political parties and civil society groups to meet "and give
a mandate to this new government." The deputy leader said the
conference should go ahead despite the fact that peace had not been fully
restored to the country. "We’ve had a lull in the fighting for six
months; there has been relative peace in Sierra Leone," he said.
"We have to test this peace, and the way of testing the peace is by
having an election. And if you have an election where, the election is not
going to be free, fair and credible, then we’ll be reversing the whole
effort of the international community, especially the British government,
that has come in." Yambasu said the interim administration should
govern the country for "anything between twelve to eighteen months,
maximum."
Acting UNAMSIL force commander Major-General Martin Agwai
(pictured left)
has
paid a confidence-building visit to the rebel-held diamond mining town of
Tongo ahead of next month's planned deployment of Zambian peacekeepers in
the area, UNAMSIL said on Wednesday. Agwai and the Zambian 2nd Battalion
commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Chikumba, were met by Colonel Sama Banya,
commander of the RUF's 5th Brigade, who assured them that the rebel group
was committed to peace and would allow U.N. peacekeepers to deploy at
Tongo and in the surrounding area.
28 August: Sierra Leone's RUF rebels say they want
a 1-1/2 year interim
transitional
government, and are threatening to stop cooperating with the peace process
if the government fails to accede to their demands. "If they refuse
an interim government the whole peace process will be at a
standstill," RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi told the Sierra Leone Web
on Tuesday. "Above all, we will even stop government officials
entering to our own territory. We are not going to fight any longer, but
that will be a form of protest so that the whole world will know that we
need to address the political aspect of this problem now in Sierra
Leone." The hardening of the RUF's position followed this weekend's
government announcement that elections would be held only after
disarmament was complete, and rejecting opposition calls for an interim
administration. President Kabbah is expected to ask parliament for a
second six-month delay of presidential and parliamentary elections due to
continuing insecurity in the country. Massaquoi, however, insisted that
six months would not be enough time to return the country to a state where
elections could be held. "We are asking for a transition of 1-1/2
years so that the refugees could return and resettle, internally displaced
persons could return and resettle, we have census conducted to know
exactly the total population of the country after the civil war, and at
the same time to know exactly who are eligible voters," he said.
"But that cannot be done within six months, and they don’t want to
leave the seat of office."
A former appeals court judge, 74-year old Justice M.O.
Taju-Deen, has been released from prison after serving just 58 days of a
12-month sentence for corruption and perverting justice, the Panapress
reported on Tuesday. Taju-Deen had been recalled from retirement to
preside over the corruption trial of former Agriculture Minister Dr. Harry
Will, accused of defrauding the government of $900,000 and causing the
World Bank to pay out $1,350,000 for supposedly supplying 1,000 metric
tons of seed rice from Ghana. Will was found guilty, but was filed only Le
500,000 — about $250. In a June interview with the Sierra Leone Web,
President Kabbah hailed Taju-Deen's conviction as an early success of the
government's anti-corruption commission. Justice Minister and
Attorney-General Solomon Berewa told the Panapress that the decision to
release the former justice was based on "medical reports on his
deteriorating health condition submitted by his wives and relatives."
Said Berewa: "We don't want him to die in prison."
Police in Sierra Leone have launched a major operation to
seize illegal "conflict diamonds," blamed for fueling Sierra
Leone's decade-long civil war, the Reuters news agency reported on
Tuesday. Police said the operation began on Monday with the seizure of 179
stones from the home of a Freetown woman. There was no estimate as to
their value. Last month the government and the rebels agreed to a
moratorium on mining in Sierra Leone's diamond-rich Kono District, but the
ban has been largely ignored. "There is no police presence in the
district and we have information that foreigners and nationals have been
traveling there to deal with illicit miners," a senior police source
was quoted as saying.
Radhika Coomarswamy, the United Nations
Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, called Tuesday for more
donor support for Sierra Leone's women, particularly for those who are
internally displaced. Coomarswamy told reporters at the end of her
week-long visit to Sierra Leone that the social condition of women had
deteriorated during the past decade of civil strife, and she accused the
donor community of "not responding appropriately," UNAMSIL said
in a statement. She also pointed to other problems confronting Sierra
Leonean women, such as the use of women as sex slaves, rape, drug abuse,
and traditional practices including female genital mutilation and
discriminatory laws on inheritance. During her visit to Sierra Leone,
Coomarswamy met with government and U.N. officials, diplomats, RUF
leaders, and several women's organisations. She also visited Kenema, Bo
and Makeni, where she heard testimony from female victims of physical and psychological
atrocities perpetrated during the war.
RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi has disputed allegations
that the rebel group is using forced labour by children and youths to dig
diamonds in Sierra Leone's eastern Kono District. The Washington
Post reported last week that the RUF, using forced labour, was
continuing to dig diamonds in Kono despite a moratorium on all mining
activities in the district. "That is not correct at all,"
Massaquoi told the Sierra Leone Web. "In fact, the whole mining site
is open to everybody: women, children, even people from Freetown are
coming down there. Even people who have been given certificates from
Freetown are all going down to Kono to buy diamonds. It’s not an issue
of digging or RUF forcing people to labour. Everybody — CDF, civilians,
RUF — everybody is digging."
27 August: Sierra Leone's delayed presidential and
parliamentary elections will
likely
take place during the first six months of next year, National Electoral
Commissioner Walter Nicol said on Monday. "So far the disarmament
process is going on very smoothly, and we understand it should end in
November. If it ends in November, then we probably will be able to to
start registration in late January," Nicol told the BBC. He said he
did not yet have a specific date, but added: "I’m sure it won’t
be necessary to keep on postponing indefinitely." The commissioner
said a "violence-free atmosphere" would have to be created prior
to elections. "(The voters) have told us over and over again that
they would not feel free to go out and register or vote if the combatants
are not disarmed," he said. "And we have promised in our
strategic plan that we will only hold elections in a violence-free
atmosphere." In addition, Nicol said, the National Electoral
Commission wanted access to all parts of the country "so that we will
be able to go out and educate the people before attempting to register
them."
Sierra Leone's RUF rebels have called for a national
consultative conference which would pave the way for an interim
transitional government. In a letter to
Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, the U.N. Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi said the rebel group
would oppose a further six-month extension in the life of the government,
and instead wanted to establish multi-party caretaker government to
complete disarmament and prepare for elections. "The RUF in previous
meetings had shown much commitment to the agreements reached. But we
cannot continue if our political concerns are not addressed,"
Massaquoi said.
Disarmament in Koinadugu District, which got off to a slow
start last week due to poor roads and a lack of transport, has begun to
pick up, the U.N. Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) reported
on Monday. The news service quoted a humanitarian source as saying the
U.N. had provided vehicles to transport combatants to disarmament
reception centers at Kabala and Fadugu. According to UNAMSIL, 177 RUF
fighters and 46 CDF combatants turned in their weapons in Koinadugu during
the first week of disarmament.
25 August: A team of election experts from the
Commonwealth Secretariat has sent
a team to Sierra Leone to help prepare for the upcoming presidential and
parliamentary elections, Chief Electoral Commissioner Walter Nicol was
quoted as saying. The team included legal and voter registration advisors,
the BBC reported. With the July 13 registration of the Peace and Liberation
Party, there are now 21 registered political parties in Sierra Leone, and
more are expected to register ahead of the elections. Nicol has insisted
that all combatants in the country must be disarmed before elections can
take place.
24 August: RUF 3rd Brigade commander "Colonel
Bai Bureh" (Abubakar
Jalloh,
pictured
left) told U.N. officials Thursday that the disarmament process in
Koinadugu District, which began on Monday, is being hindered by lack of
transportation and poor roads, UNAMSIL said on Friday. "Bai Bureh"
accompanied acting UNAMSIL force commander Major-General Martin Agwai and
Chief Military Observer Major-General Athar Ali to Alikalia, where he
instructed RUF combatants to turn over their weapons to U.N. peacekeepers.
Bai Bureh assured the rebel fighters that UNAMSIL would provide security
for everyone, the statement said.
A total of 12,902 combatants have laid down their arms in Sierra
Leone since the disarmament process resumed in May, the National Committee
for Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (NCDDR) said on Friday.
The figure is lower that that provided by UNAMSIL, which puts the total
number of combatants disarmed at over 16,000. Acting UNAMSIL spokesman
Patrick Coker said there was a reason for the discrepancy. While U.N.
figures are compiled at the reception centers when the combatants turn in
their arms, he told the Sierra Leone Web last week, the NCDDR records the numbers
only when the documents are processed. "Part of the processing
includes documentation for identity cards -- in other words, the figure
they have at any point in time depicts the ex-combatants that have been
documented in NCDDR, outside the disarmament reception centres," he
said. According to the NCDDR, 4,633 RUF fighters including 1,223 children,
8,162 CDF combatants including 684 children, 65 ex-SLA and 42 others,
eight of them children, have so far turned in their weapons out of an
estimated 28,000 combatants in the country. 5,636 weapons have been
collected since the beginning of disarmament, along with 39,530 rounds of
ammunition and 3,197 pieces of other equipment.
An international effort to stem the flow of "conflict
diamonds," blamed for fueling
wars in Sierra Leone, Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo, may be
stalling, U.S. Representative Tony Hall said on Thursday. According to the
Associated Press, Hall told the World Diamond Conference that his own bill
to require diamond importers to provide certificates of origin on rough
and polished diamonds might not win Congressional approval despite having
bipartisan support. Hall warned diamond industry representatives gathered
in Vancouver to do more to eliminate conflict diamonds or risk a backlash
in the United States, the world's largest consumer of the gemstones.
"I
believe that the Kimberly Process is in trouble, and that your industry
may be the only player that can salvage its promise," Hall said,
adding that deadlines set in the agreement had already been missed. The
next meeting in the Kimberly Process takes place in London in two weeks
time. "This really is a make-it or break-it meeting," a diamond
expert told the Sierra Leone Web. "Despite all the cheery talk, there
are a lot of problems that need sorting out, and several governments that
don't want that to happen."
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: [$]
1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2200 / 2300 [£] 2950 / 3150.
Continental: [$] 2220 / 2350 [£] 2900 / 3200. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2270 / 2285 [£] 3000 / 3050.
23 August: The Mano River Union's Joint Security Committee
concluded two days of talks in Freetown Thursday with a recommendation
that armed rebel groups operating with in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia
be apprehended and turned over to their country of origin. In a communiqué
released after the meeting, delegations from the three countries, led by
their respective foreign ministers, said they had resolved to enforce
compliance with the Mano River Union's 1996 Non-Aggression and Security
Co-Operation Treaty, to deploy joint border security along their common
borders, and to create "material and psychological conditions"
to encourage the repatriation of refugees to their countries of origin.
At least 13 African would-be immigrants,
including nine Sierra Leoneans, drowned off the coast of the Canary
Islands on Thursday while attempting to reach Spain, the German news
agency DPA reported. Eight other people survived. They told Spanish
authorities that the smugglers had forced them to jump off the boat into
the water during the night. Aid agencies estimate that some 700 persons
have lost their lives this year alone in attempting to enter Spain across
the Gibraltar Straits.
22 August: Delegations from Sierra Leone, Guinea
and Liberia met at Freetown's Mammy Yoko Hotel this week for two days of
talks on security issues affecting the Mano River Union
sub-region. The Joint Security Committee meeting is a follow-up to last
week's meeting of foreign ministers in the Liberian
capital, Monrovia.
"We should send a clear message that we have the capability to
resolve our differences and problems by peaceful means," said Safety
and Security Minister Charles Margai (pictured left) following Wednesday's
talks. "The government and people of Sierra Leone hope that we would
not only deliver flowery speeches but ensure that we match our words with
deeds." Margai described the meeting as a "fact-finding exercise
on where we have gone wrong and how to chart a way forward," the
Associated Press reported. The Guinean delegation was led by Foreign
Minister Mahawa Bangoura, while Foreign Minister Monie Captan headed a
high-ranking Liberian delegation which included Justice Minister Eddington
Varmah, Defence Minister Daniel Chea,
National Security Minister Philip Karma and Presidential National Security
Advisor Lewis Brown. "It is my wish that we can put distrust aside
and negotiate, deliberate and consult in a spirit of trust and confidence
among ourselves," Captan was quoted as saying. The United Nations
Security Council granted a waiver of the U.N.'s international travel ban
on senior Liberian officials to allow the ministers to attend the meeting.
Monday's police raid on a home in western Freetown was not
aimed
at RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi, who was staying at the residence while
in the capital this week to conduct a joint sensitisation programme with
the Sierra Leone government, Information Minister Dr. Cecil Blake said on
Wednesday. "There was a tip-off to the police that a residence that
has been suspected for quite awhile of being an abode for illicit dealings
in 'blood diamonds' was having some activities taking place there,"
Blake told the BBC. "This residence has been under surveillance. A
team of detectives obtained a search warrant and proceeded to that
residence and conducted a search." On Tuesday, Massaquoi alleged that
police had entered the house to search for arms, ammunition, foreign
currency and minerals. He accused the government of mounting the raid in
an effort to harass him. Blake denied the claim. "Warrant searches of
that nature are not directed at individuals. It was directed at the
premises," he said. "Mr. Massaquoi happened to have been there,
and he had a black handbag containing money and other items. He opened the
bag briefly, and the police observed what appeared to be hundreds of
thousands of U.S. dollars. When questioned further, Mr. Massaquoi
indicated that he had in his possession $13,400 U.S. dollars. He was then
asked to go to the CID headquarters. He went instead to the UNAMSIL
offices." Blake added that police had found "criminal
documents" at the residence. "The occupant of that home had four
passports in his name, including a Sierra Leone diplomatic passport,"
he said.
Members of the United Nations Security Council's Sierra
Leone Sanctions Committee have agreed that the Second Review of the new
diamond certification of origin regime was "thorough and
detailed," committee chairman Ambassador Anwarul Chowdhury of
Bangladesh has written in a letter to the Sierra Leone government.
Chowdhury commended the government for its "continued efforts to
curtail the traffic in conflict diamonds mined from Sierra Leonean
territory," but requested that the Sierra Leonean authorities
continue to submit 90-day review reports on a regular and timely basis. In
addition, Chowdhury said, the committee had expressed interest in
"the future arrangements planned by the government for monitoring the
resumption of mining in areas reclaimed from the RUF."
UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki expressed guarded
optimism
Wednesday
over the prospects for peace in Sierra Leone. But she said that the
process would take time. "In any civil conflict the most difficult
aspect is restoring a semblance of building confidence between the
parties," Novicki told reporters at the United Nations headquarters
in New York. "In Sierra Leone’s case, of course, it took a long
time to rebuild confidence, particularly after what took place last year
(the collapse of the peace process), and there were a lot of — people,
let’s say — who were interested in a quick solution to the conflict.
But it takes time. Diplomacy takes time. Restoring confidence takes time.
And putting a country back together after a decade of civil war takes
time." Novicki, who is on leave in the U.S. this month, warned that a
lack of funds could put at risk programmes designed to reintegrate former
combatants into society. "People need support,
training and a feeling that they have future prospects," she said.
21 August: A leading RUF commander has sought the
protection of United
Nations
peacekeepers after allegedly killing another rebel commander in Makeni,
UNAMSIL military spokesman Major Mohammed Yerima (pictured right) said on
Tuesday. "Brigadier-General Morris Kallon came for self-protection
with the United Nations mission, Yerima told the BBC. "It was alleged
that he killed one of his commanders, one 'Lieutenant-Colonel Christopher'.
It was alleged that they were involved in stealing some things, removing
some roofing sheets and so on and so forth." Yerima said it was still
too early to say whether the RUF would demand that Kallon be handed over.
"At the moment when such incident happened, you don’t just start
thinking of bringing him back or sending him away or taking drastic
measure on him, but the issue is how to resolve the issue amicably with
the leadership so that it should not disrupt the peace process going
on," he said. Yerima said UNAMSIL was conducting an investigation
into the incident, and he defended the U.N.'s decision not to hand the
investigation over to the police. "There is no police presence in
Makeni," he said.
Acting UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker confirmed Tuesday
that
some
RUF detainees have been moved from Freetown's Pademba Road Prison. He
provided no details. Coker's statement, to Radio France International,
followed allegations by the rebel spokesman over the weekend that 40 of
the group's senior officials had been transferred to Pujehun District and
Bonthe Island. "I am not aware of any agreement concerning movement
of detainees, but I can inform you that the RUF is concerned about this
movement," Coker said. "I believe after a meeting with the RUF,
UNAMSIL tasked the human rights section of UNAMSIL to look into it."
Police have raided the home in western Freetown where RUF
spokesman Gibril Massaquoi was staying while in the capital to participate
with the government in joint a sensitisation programme, Massaquoi told
the BBC. "They told me they were there to search for arms,
ammunitions, foreign currency and minerals," he said, adding:
"They searched throughout. Nothing was found." Massaquoi said
the police still insisted he accompany them to police headquarters.
"The only thing I told them that I was not going to get into their
landrover, I have my own private vehicle," he said. "I rode with
them...I decided it’s nonsense. They did not come to my yard with any
warrant of invitation or arrest, and they have not found anything of
substance to them so there is no need for me to go. If I am to go there I
could only go along with UNAMSIL or my lawyer." Massaquoi said he put
down the accompanying CID officer at Bathurst Street and then drove to
UNAMSIL headquarters. "With this type of development I will be moving
out with security," he said. The rebel spokesman said he believed the
government was behind the police raid, and he warned that it could have
the effect of slowing the peace process. "If I am here for
reconciliation, to establish some form of confidence-building, if I am
treated this way, exactly when I go back I report to my commander I
believe things will move at a slow pace," he said.
20 August: 45 CDF combatants handed over their
weapons to U.N. peacekeepers Monday in a symbolic ceremony at the northern
town of Makakura to begin the disarmament process in Koinadugu District,
UNAMSIL said in a statement. The CDF also turned over 39 former child
combatants to the Catholic child protection agency, CARITAS-Makeni. The
ex-combatants brought in a variety of light arms, including AK-47 rifles,
FNs, and a rocket launcher. All of the weapons were destroyed at the
reception centre. The former combatants were transported to a
demobilisation camp at Kabala.
The United States government has donated $4.8 million in
military equipment to a Senegalese battalion bound for peacekeeping duties
in Sierra Leone, the Associated Press reported on Monday. The equipment,
which includes military vehicles, machine guns, mortars, tents helmets and
other equipment, was donated under a U.S.-sponsored program known as
Operation Focus Relief. The 650 Senegalese soldiers also underwent a
ten-week military training course conducted by 70 U.S. Army Special Forces
troops.
The food security situation in Sierra Leone's eastern
Kailahun District remains "fragile," with almost no rice for
sale in the towns of Kailahun and Pendembu, the U.N. World Food
Programme (WFP) said on Monday. The conclusion came following a joint
assessment mission by the WFP and the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees for four chiefdoms in the rebel-held district: Upper Bambara,
Luawa, Mandu and Dia. The team reported, however, that security conditions
were not adequate to assist both area residents and Liberian refugees
under a general food distribution. The WFP is now discussing with other
agencies ways to assist malnourished people, either by setting up feeding
centres in Kailahun and Buedu, where the majority of the refugees are
concentrated, or by referring them to Daru. Meanwhile, the WFP distributed
905 tons of food to 46,021 persons during the second week in August. This
included 122 tons of food to 2,855 affected farmers in Malema, Jawi, Mandu,
Dia and Jaluahun Chiefdoms. If the security situation permits, the agency
is planning on expanding agricultural programmes in Kailahun District. The
WFP also distributed 15 tons of food to the new disarmament camps in
Moyamba District and at Kabala.
19 August: The RUF has written to UNAMSIL asking for access to
imprisoned
rebel
officials, including their leader Foday
Sankoh, and alleging that the Sierra
Leone government had moved more than 40 senior RUF members from Freetown's
Pademba
Road Prison to locations in Pujehun District and on Bonthe Island. "It is
meaningless, if our colleagues are being held in prison without being
charged for any crime they may have committed for the past one year and four months, and both the government
and the RUF continue to preach reconciliation," said the letter,
which was signed by RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi. The letter
expressed concern about the safety of the detained RUF members, who
Massaquoi alleged were being held "not under UNAMSIL supervision but
purely Kamajors. It also suggested that Sankoh might be in British
custody. "Our own
concern is the issue of our brothers being detained," Massaquoi told
Voice of America correspondent Kelvin Lewis.
"As you know we have been persistently asking that they release our
brothers in the interests of peace and reconciliation...We wrote a letter to
the SRSG (Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji, the U.N. Special Representative of the
Secretary-General) that including Foday Sankoh
we want to know and see where exactly our people are being detained,"
Massaquoi said. "We want to see him, we want to talk with him, we
want to talk with our brothers, and above all we are asking that they
release all of them in the interests of peace and peace and
reconciliation."
RUF rebels are using forced labour by children and young
men to continue mining diamonds in Kono District, despite an agreement
earlier this month to observe a moratorium on all mining activities, the Washington
Post reported on Sunday. In addition, RUF commanders acknowledged to
Post correspondent Doug Farah that, despite their commitment to disarm,
the rebel group has retained its military structure and enough weapons to
enforce its control over the alluvial diamond mining fields. "A
mixture of RUF militants, adult and child conscripts, and local miners
allowed in by the rebels has turned every possible diamond site into a
pile of mud and gravel where the miners, dressed in rags and covered with
mud, pan for stones. Children work beside adults, digging mud and gravel,
sifting it and wielding picks and shovels," Farah wrote after visiting
Koidu, the district's largest — but largely destroyed — city. The RUF
claims that the miners, working under RUF supervision, are allowed to keep
two thirds of the stones they mine, while the rest goes to the rebel group
as a tax.
18 August: The disarmament of combatants in Sierra
Leone's eastern Kono
District
has been completed, UNAMSIL military spokesman Major Mohammed Yerima
(pictured left) was quoted as saying on Saturday. According to the
Associated Press, Yerima said the last of the 3,623 RUF fighters and 2,011
CDF militiamen in the district turned in their weapons to United Nations
peacekeepers on Friday, bringing the total number of combatants who have
surrendered their weapons nationwide since the disarmament process resumed
in May to over 16,000. 166 RUF and 50 CDF combatants gave up their
weapons on the last day of the disarmament, the Voice of America
reported.
17 August: UNAMSIL began airlifting former
combatants to demobilisation camps Thursday in an effort to speed up the
disarmament process, acting UNAMSIL force commander Major-General Martin
Agwai was quoted as saying on Friday. According to Reuters, Agwai told
Radio UNAMSIL that the U.N. had begun transporting the combatants by
helicopter in the east of the country, where the poor condition of roads
in the rainy season has slowed the movement of combatants to the camps.
The disarmament process in Kono District is behind schedule, but Agwai
said he hoped it would soon be complete. "I am hopeful that by next
week (the U.N. force) UNAMSIL will...see Kono begin to return to its
normal life," he said. Patrick Coker, the acting UNAMSIL spokesman,
was quoted as saying that more than 6,200 combatants, including 700
children, had handed in their weapons in Kono, while others were
continuing to come forward. Nationwide, Coker told the Sierra Leone Web
late Friday, 15,121 combatants have laid down their guns since disarmament
resumed in May.
150 CDF combatants handed over their weapons Wednesday on the
first day of disarmament in Moyamba District, the National Committee for
Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (NCDDR) said on Friday. Some
1,500 CDF combatants are expected to disarm in the district by August 31.
Disarmament begins Monday in Sierra Leone's northern Koinadugu District,
where about 1,400 RUF and 1,280 CDF combatants are expected to disarm by
the end of the month. As of August 11, according to NCDDR figures, 11,561
combatants had disarmed nationwide, including 3,779 RUF, 7,533 CDF, 212
AFRC/ex-SLA and 37 others. The NCDDR said 11,211 ex-combatants are now
benefiting from re-integration projects, of which 4,034 are engaged in
vocational/small enterprise development training. 1,819 are engaged in
various types of formal education programmes, 1,513 are involved in
apprenticeships, and 362 are taking part in public works programmes.
Only three of Sierra Leone’s seven student athletes who
qualified in April for this month’s Summer Universiade Games in Bejing
have found sponsors, sports correspondent Andrew Masuba reported from
Freetown. The team, which included Tamba Koteque, Alie Conteh and Dan
Dawson-Showers from Fourah Bay College, Bernadette Amara and Alimamy C.
Bangura from the Milton Margai College of Education, and Samul Kallon and
Martin Bangura from Njala University College, were to have departed for
the Chinese capital on Thursday. But only the top three finishers, Amara,
Koteque and Conteh, have been able to come up with the necessary funds.
Amara and Koteque are both being sponsored by the Summer Universade Games’
organizing committee, while Conteh is backed by Sierra Leone's Ministry of
Youth, Education and Sports. The Sierra Leone Roads Authorities also
donated $1,000 to help the athletes. Amara will compete in the women’s
100 and 200-metres race, Koteque in the long jump and triple jump, and
Conteh men’s 100 and 200-metres. The games are held every two years, and
include students from colleges and off-campus institutions in all sports,
including soccer. Due to economic constraint, emphasis was put this year
on athletics events.
Valentine Strasser, Sierra Leone's former military ruler
who as NPRC chairman
was once the world's youngest head of state, is now homeless, according to
John Benjamin (pictured right), the former NPRC secretary-general and
current head of the opposition NUP party. "He hasn’t got a home to
live in. He is living in an unfinished house in his village, and he’s
being fed by his mom who presently hasn’t got a job," Benjamin told
the BBC. Earlier this week the government appealed to Freetown residents
not to harass Strasser, who can often be seen walking the streets of the
capital. "Basically he has to walk from one place to another. He hasn’t
got a vehicle," Benjamin said. "So when he’s walking the
streets and people realise there is the former head of state, they all
crowd and run after him." Benjamin acknowledged reports of bizarre
behaviour on the part of the former NPRC leader, but he attributed it to
stress. "I have been to see him. He’s quite well. I mean he is in
good health," he said. "But when you have a lot of stress on
your mind, you appear to be abnormal. He’s on a lot of stress. I mean,
imagine a former head of state has to worry about his next day’s meal. I
mean, how does he feel? That is the stress under which he is living."
It was the same stress, Benjamin insisted, that caused Strasser problems
in Britain. Strasser was expelled from Britain, and then Gambia, last
December. But Benjamin defended Strasser's record as NPRC chairman.
"During the time he was head of state, at least, he made his own
contribution," he said. "(People) should look at it from the
fact that he’s a human being, he deserves some attention now that he
needs help."
The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination has expressed concern over the plight of Sierra Leonean
refugees in Liberia, which it describes as a particularly vulnerable
group, the BBC reported on Friday. The committee also noted reports of
extra-judicial killings, allegations of rape and torture, and a lack of
accountability of perpetrators, including government security forces. The
committee also voiced alarm over the situation of refugees who fled the
Liberian civil war, saying little was being done to help repatriate and
reintegrate them.
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: [$]
1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2200 / 2300 [£] 2950 / 3200.
Continental: [$] 2220 / 2350 [£] 2900 / 3200. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2270 / 2285 [£] 3000 / 3020.
16 August: The foreign ministers of Sierra Leone,
Liberia and Guinea ended their meeting in Monrovia on Wednesday with a
recommendation that the presidents of the three Mano River Union states
meet as soon as possible. A meeting to determine the venue, date and
agenda of the summit will be held September 10 in the Guinean capital
Conakry. The ministers agreed to use the Mano River Union's non-aggression
pact as the framework for resolving conflicts in the strife-torn
sub-region, and recommended that a joint security meeting take place in
Freetown on August 22. In a communiqué released after the meeting, the
ministers called for cooperation and confidence-building among the three
states at all levels, "reaffirmed the political will of the
respective governments to make the Mano River Union an organisation
capable of promoting social and economic integration; condemned all
dissident activities in the sub-region, and agreed to take individual and
collective measures to curb the activities of armed groups operating in
the Mano River Union sub-region; and agreed to foster good
neighbourliness."
Following this week's meeting of Mano River Union foreign
ministers in
Monrovia, Sierra Leonean Minister of Foreign Affairs and International
Cooperation Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya acknowledged the difficulties Thursday
in efforts to bring together the three presidents of Sierra Leone, Guinea
and Liberia. In March, Guinean President Lansana Conte vowed he would
never negotiate with President Charles Taylor of Liberia, whom he accused
of backing an insurgency on Guinean soil. But Conte appeared to soften his
position this month after an appeal by a delegation of prominent women
from the Mano River Union countries. "Definitely there are
difficulties," Dumbuya told the BBC. "This whole consultative
meeting and subsequent meetings are geared towards removing these
difficulties so that our leaders can again get together and work for the
good of the entire people of the sub-region." Dumbuya said his
government was taking a cautious approach. "We have our doubts, we
have our mistrust, but we believe that that shouldn’t prevent us also
from taking whatever advantages there may appear to be to try to resolve
our problems," he said. The minister said moves to resolve the
differences between the three states were a response to the desires of the
people in the sub-region. "I think this is a responsible response by
the leaders of the region to adequately address the yearnings of their
people who want to be left alone, who want peace so that they can go about
their ordinary life," he said.
A convoy of Sierra Leone Army troops passed unhindered through the RUF's northern headquarters
of Makeni Wednesday — with the RUF's consent — to resupply government
troops deployed at Kabala, Army Media Relations Director Major John Milton
said on Thursday. Milton told the BBC that the event marked a "giant
step" in the peace process. "This is the first time in over
three and a half years that the security situation has improved to the
extent that government forces can now transit through areas that were
previously considered too dangerous," he said. Milton noted that the
army had previously been forced to resupply its troops in Kabala by air.
"You could imagine that we took a lot of supplies compared to when we
tried to use aircraft to resupply them," he said, adding: "We
hope that it will be a routine administrative move now so that our troops
will be getting their supplies via road instead of air. And we hope it
will continue in that direction."
Members of the United Nations Security Council have
welcomed this week's
meeting
of Mano River Union foreign ministers in Monrovia, according to a
statement read out by the current Security Council president, Ambassador
Alfonso Valdivieso of Colombia. "(Members) express the hope that the
initiative will facilitate and broaden prospects for enhanced cooperation
and sustainable peace throughout the sub-region, and encourage the ongoing
initiatives aimed at promoting a meeting of the heads of States of the
Mano River Union," the statement said.
15 August: CDF combatants turned in their weapons
to U.N. peacekeepers at the town of Gandohun in Moyamba District's Fokoyan
Chiefdom Wednesday,
in a symbolic exercise to kick off the start of disarmament in the
district. According to a
UNAMSIL statement, the event was witnessed by acting UNAMSIL force
commander Major-General Martin Agwai and other senior United Nations
staff, and Dr. Francis Kai-Kai (pictured right), the executive secretary
of the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration. The statement did not say now many combatants disarmed, but
weapons turned in were said to include AK-47s, FN rifles, and other light
arms. Disarmament is due to begin in the northern Koinadugu District, an RUF
stronghold, on August 20. A disarmament camp built to house
about 500 combatants at Kabala is now complete, the UNAMSIL statement said.
The Sierra Leone government has appealed to Freetown
residents
not
to harass former NPRC leader Valentine Strasser, the Reuters news agency
reported on Wednesday. Strasser's condition has reportedly deteriorated
since he was expelled from Britain, and then Gambia, last November.
"Captain Strasser...has been facing embarrassment by some members of
the public by throwing stones at him as well as booing him and it is a
great concern to the nation," the government said in a statement.
14 August: Foreign Minister Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya
met in Monrovia
Tuesday with his counterparts from the Mano River Union states of Guinea
and Liberia to lay the groundwork for a heads of state summit later this
year. Relations between the three nations has been tense in recent months,
characterised by accusations and counter-accusations of support for
insurgencies in one another's territory. But Dumbuya (picture right)
suggested that relationship between the three countries was improving.
"The very fact that I am here from Sierra Leone, my sister is here
from Guinea is an indication that if there had been any mistrust it has
been eroded right now," he told reporters. Following the ministerial
meeting, the three foreign ministers and their delegations met behind
closed doors with Liberian President Charles Taylor. "President
Taylor assured the delegations that he’s in one accord with the rest of
the leaders in a search for peace in the sub-region," said Vaani
Passawe, Taylor's press secretary. "He however expressed concern
about ongoing war in Lofa County, and hoped that these meetings will lead
to a final peace in MRU (Mano River Union)." The three foreign
ministers are due to meet again in Freetown on September 10. Arrangements
are also being concluded for a meeting of defence and security officials
from the three countries, the BBC reported. No date has yet been set for
the presidential summit.
Sierra Leone's Director of Information, Priestly Bell, has
called "untrue" a claim by RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi that
the government had freed far fewer rebel detainees than the 41 it said
were released last week, the U.N. Integrated Regional Information Network
(IRIN) reported. Massaquoi told the BBC that only 17 RUF members had been
freed. Bell, however, insisted that the government figure was accurate,
IRIN said.
13 August: RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi has
disputed the government's
claim
to have released 41 RUF detainees ahead of last Friday's tripartite
meeting in Kenema. "The situation in my view, and in the view of the
RUF, is that only 17 of our men were released and not 41," Massaquoi
told the BBC. He added that seven other names were duplicated. "There
are other people who matter in our transformation (to a political party),
who matter in the peace process," he said. "They are still
keeping them over there. They don’t want to release them. Over 121 names
who are senior officials of the RUF. We want these people released."
On Sunday, Sierra Leone's chief electoral commissioner suggested that the
disarmament process would not be completed in time to hold elections
before the end of the year. Massaquoi agreed that the vote should not be
rushed. "We want free and fair elections," he said. "We
cannot rush elections in this country because our people are still out as
refugees, there are some displaced. People need to resettle and we need to
know exactly who are eligible voters before we can start talking about
elections in Sierra Leone." The rebel spokesman repeated the RUF's
call for an interim government — a demand President Kabbah has rejected
as being unconstitutional. "That is what we believe in, that all
political parties including civil society should participate in a
transitional government that will take us to election," Massaquoi
said.
U.S. President George W. Bush issued a memorandum to the
Secretary of
State
Monday to allow the sales of arms and military equipment to Pakistan, to
be used to equip Pakistani peacekeepers in Sierra Leone. The waiver to the
U.S. ban on arms sales to the Pakistanis applies to the purchase of
helicopter and armored personnel carrier spare parts and ammunition
"for use in its deployment in Sierra Leone in support of U.N.
peacekeeping operations," the memorandum said.
The aid agency GTZ officially launched the first of its
skills training centres Friday at the town of Mange in Sierra Leone's
northern Port Loko District. The Mange Training Centre is the first in a
series of German-funded skills training centers to be opened across the
country. At Mange, the centre will benefit 125 ex-combatants and 125
persons from Bureh, Kasseh and Maconteh Chiefdoms. The programme offers
training in masonry, carpentry, farming, hair dressing, soap making and
blacksmithing. GTZ will support the trainees through three phases of the
programme, including in-centre training, on-the-job training, and the
set-up of micro-enterprises after graduation. The programme targets 3,600
beneficiaries over three years, including a minimum of 1,800
ex-combatants.
The foreign ministers of Sierra Leone and Guinea were due
to arrive in Monrovia late Monday for talks designed to pave the way for a
meeting of the three Mano River Union heads of state, Liberian Foreign
Minister Monie Captan told the BBC. "We expect to meet tomorrow and
hold discussions relating to our bilateral relations and the issue of the
Mano River Union, and hopefully setting some sort of a framework for a
summit," he said. On Friday, the Liberian government reversed its
decision to expel the ambassadors of Sierra Leone and Guinea for what it
said in March was acts incompatible with their diplomatic status. Captan
said the decision was influenced by appeals from regional leaders at last
April's ECOWAS summit in Abuja, as well as on "the improvement in the
situation within the Mano River Union, and...on the desire and the general
consensus within the Mano River Union that there is a need now to move
forward with the question of reconciliation and rapprochement." From
the beginning, the Liberian government has refused to say why it decided
to send the two ambassadors packing. "We are not on obligation to
explain specifically the reasons," he said. "I should say that
it was a reflection of the state of affairs of the relationships."
12 August: Elections which had been planned for
December may have to be
postponed
until next year, Chief Electoral Commissioner Walter Nicol said on Sunday.
According to the BBC, Nicol told a local radio station that too many
people were still carrying arms in the country, despite progress in the disarmament
programme. He added that a fact-finding mission to the rural areas had
shown that people would not feel free to cast their ballots if all
combatants had not been disarmed. "Presidential and parliamentary
elections...will not take place until total disarmament throughout the
country has been completed," Nicol was quoted as saying. "Though
there is progress in the disarmament, I don't believe that the scheduled
date of end November 2001 (to complete disarmament) will be
possible." The elections were originally due in February, but were
postponed by six months after the National Electoral Commission, which
Nicol heads, said security and financial problems would not allow the vote
to go ahead as scheduled. In its Strategic Plan
2001-2005, published in February, the commission proposed that voter
registration begin in mid-September, and that the elections be held before
the end of the year. But in a June interview with the Sierra Leone Web,
President Kabbah suggested that the electoral commission's timetable might
be too optimistic, and he said the elections would likely be held in
February. Thirteen parties contested in the 1996 presidential and
parliamentary elections. Currently, there are 21 registered political
parties in Sierra Leone, with more expected to register ahead of the
polls.
11 August: Liberia has lifted a ban it imposed on
the ambassadors of Sierra Leone and Guinea, expelled from Monrovia in
March for unspecified acts "incompatible with their diplomatic
status," the Reuters news agency reported. A statement released by
the Liberian government Friday evening said the lifting of the banks came
from the "desire to normalise relations between Liberia and the two
countries and to engage in dialogue for peaceful co-existence." The
statement added that ECOWAS had asked Liberia to lift the ban.
A new community FM radio station was officially launched
Friday at the town of Mile 91, east of Sierra Leone's capital Freetown.
The station, Radio Mankneh, is currently doing test broadcasting with its
100-watt transmitter on the frequency FM 91. A final determination of the
broadcast frequency will be made by the Independent Media Commission when
it reviews the station's license application later this month. Radio
Mankneh's transmitter was provided by World Vision and the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID), with production costs being
underwritten by Freetown's Talking Drum Studio. The NCRRR is contributing
Le 29 million to support the station's operational costs. Radio Mankneh is
considered to be a "displaced institution" from the rebel-held
town of Makeni. Eventually, the station plans to return to Makeni with a
larger transmitter, which will allow it to reach listeners throughout the
Northern Province. A small community radio station, to be renamed Radio
Gbafth, will remain at Mile 91. The station's current range is
approximately a 25-mile radius of Mile 91.
Following an appeal at the Paris international donors
conference in May for an additional $31 million to support Sierra
Leone's Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (DDR) programme, the
government has so far received pledges for nearly half that amount, the
National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (NCDDR)
said on Friday. According to the latest NCDDR bulletin, the European
Commission has pledged €10,000,000 ($8.9 million), while Germany
promised DM 10,000,000 ($4.6 million). Sweden will donate 6,000,000
kroners ($585,000). Meanwhile, according to NCDDR figures, 10,812 of an
estimated 28,000 combatants nationwide, including 1,536 children, had
handed over their weapons to United Nations peacekeepers as of August
6. The number included 3,369 RUF (including 933 children), 7,344 CDF
(595 of them children), 62 ex-SLA, and 37 which were classified as
"other" (8 of them children). Since the disarmament process
resumed on May 18, 4,976 weapons have been surrendered by combatants,
along with 299,188 rounds of ammunition, including bombs, and 3,178 pieces
of other equipment, the NCDDR said.
President Kabbah invoked the principle of self-reliance
Saturday in a speech
marking
the transformation of the Sierra Leone Roads Authority's Department of
Equipment and Supplies into a new semi-autonomous Mechanical Services
Unit. Kabbah said the new unit was expected to operate as a
"commercially viable plant pool" within the authority, and to
promote the development of local private road maintenance contractors. He
noted that development of the industry was at present hampered by a lack
of capital to buy equipment — especially heavy maintenance equipment.
"Indigenous private road maintenance contractors and force account
brigades will now be able to rent or lease such equipment from the
newly-established Mechanical Services Unit at competitive, but reasonable
commercial rates," Kabbah said, adding that this would allow the
private firms the financial flexibility to upgrade their equipment at a
convenient pace. The equipment was procured with the assistance of the
World Bank, and the European Union, but the president stressed that
international institutions and organisations should be seen not "as
permanent donors or benefactors, but as development partners in an
interdependent world, partners whose sole objective is to help boost our
capacity to be more self-reliant."
Recent progress in the peace process is due in part to the
change of leadership
within Sierra Leone's RUF rebel movement, according to Ambassador Oluyemi
Adeniji, the Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General in
Sierra Leone. "We decided that one of the problems was with
leadership of the RUF particularly with Foday Sankoh, who was obsessed
with becoming president of Sierra Leone at all costs," Adeniji told
the Voice of America. "Fortunately, we managed to persuade ECOWAS
that really Foday Sankoh was not a truthful interlocutor, and that the RUF
should look for a new leader if they want to be taken seriously in terms
of negotiation." He added that the RUF's new leadership "of very
young people" did not have "the ego and ambition of their former
leader" and were persuaded that in the long term they could not win a
military struggle. Adeniji said other factors contributing to the RUF's
decision to join the peace process included contact with UNAMSIL
"practically on a daily basis at every level," the build-up of
U.N. forces, the training of the Sierra Leone Army by Britain, and
international pressure on Liberian President Charles Taylor "who,
quite obviously, was their main supporter."
10 August: Disarmament of combatants in Moyamba District
will begin on August 15 and in Koinadugu District five days later, and
should be completed by
the
end of the month, under an agreement reached in Kenema Friday between
representatives of the Sierra Leone government and the RUF. The two delegations
to the tripartite talks, led respectively by Justice Minister and
Attorney-General
Solomon Berewa (pictured right) and RUF spokesman Gibril Massaquoi (left),
formally declared the end of disarmament in Kambia and Port Loko
Districts. The two sides noted that there were still pockets of combatants
in Kono, and called on the RUF and the CDF to ensure that all their
combatants in the district disarm by August 17. They also agreed that
disarmament in Bombali and Bo Districts would take place in September. The
two sides are due to meet next in Makeni on September 6.
RUF Political and Peace Council chairman Omrie Golley has
reacted
to Thursday's government announcement of the release of 41 RUF prisoners
by saying that the move was "in keeping with our continued and
persistent request" to have them freed. "Whilst we welcome the
news that they have been released, we are continuing to request the
government to release the remaining RUF at Pademba Road," Golley told
Radio France International. As representatives of the Sierra Leone
government, the RUF and UNAMSIL prepared to meet in the eastern town of
Kenema on Friday, Golley said that the issue of diamond mining would
likely be discussed. At the last tripartite meeting in Bo, the three sides
agreed to a moratorium on diamond mining in Kono District in order to
speed the disarmament process there. Reports from Kono, however, suggest
that mining has continued unabated. "I think it most important,
however, to say that disarmament in Kono is a first priority. Once people
have disarmed completely, it is much easier than to enforce moratoria of
this sort," Golley said, adding: "I think it’s also fair to
say that the mining going on in Kono is very much free for all, and that
it’s not just RUF but also all other combatants and Sierra Leoneans
leaving Freetown during the week to go up to mine in Kono." Golley
said one reason for the moratorium's failure was that word had to filter
down to all those "all those that were involved in these activities,
not only the armed combatants in the area." He stressed that
disarming combatants in the area would make it easier to enforce the
agreement. "Once you actually carry through with disarmament, then it
becomes much easier for the government to enforce moratoria of this
sort," he said.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
and the Sierra
Leone
government have issued a joint statement requesting returned refugees who
have been residing in Freetown's three UNHCR transit centres to vacate the
premises, the refugee agency said in a statement. The camps, at Jui
(pictured left), Waterloo and Lumpa, were originally set up as five-day
transit centres for Sierra Leonean returnees fleeing strife in Guinea.
Currently, they shelter more than 8,000 persons, most of them ethnic
Konos, who returned to Freetown by boat beginning last November. The UNHCR
deems the RUF-held Kono District to still be too dangerous for
resettlement, and instead wants to relocate the returnees to displaced
camps in the south. The camp residents, backed by the group Movement of
Concerned Kono Youth (MOCKY), have resisted being moved and insist they
are willing to be resettled only in Kono. MOCKY representatives who spoke
to the Sierra Leone Web in Freetown this past June expressed concerns
about the security and welfare of returnees at the new camps, but they
also voiced fears that the relocation exercise represented a
"conspiracy" to relocate the Konos permanently "and give
our land to other tribes." The UNHCR, however, has argued that the
transit centres around Freetown were not designed for long-term
settlement, and that "conditions are not optimal for a proper
assistance there." The agency noted that a new transit camp was due
to open next week at Taiama in Moyamba District to accommodate the
returnees as close as possible to their home area. "Transfers will be
done on a voluntary basis, but refugees who decline will eventually have
to find alternative accommodation," the agency warned.
The International Organisation for Migration (IOM)
announced Friday it would
suspend
an operation to return Sierra Leonean refugees from Conakry to Freetown by
boat to to a lack of funding combined with the fact that relatively few
refugees currently want to make the trip. The charter vessel MV Overbeck
made its last voyage to Freetown on Wednesday, carrying only 150 refugees.
In July, the ship made two rotations between Conakry and the Sierra
Leonean capital with 365 returnees. Nearly 25,000 Sierra Leoneans have
returned to Sierra Leone by boat since the IOM took over the operation
from the UNHCR in January, the agency said.
Sierra Leone ranks among the bottom ten countries in the
world in terms of the efficiency of its health care system, the World
Health Organization said on Friday. WHO researchers, using data from 1993
to 1997, ranked the nations according to their efficiency in turning
expenditure into health. Using these criteria, Oman came in first of 191
states, followed by Malta and Italy. Britain placed 24th and the United
States 72nd. Sierra Leone was ranked 183rd. But David Evans, the WHO
researcher who compiled the table, stressed that the rankings were not a
direct reflection of the quality of health. "This does not mean the
quality of care is better in Venezuela than in, say Canada, even though it
ranks higher," Reuters quoted Evans as saying. "This is an
efficiency index charting what you get out compared to what you put
in."
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 [£] 2800 / 2900. Commercial Bank: [$]
1850 / 2050. [£] 2590 / 2870. Frandia: [$] 2180 / 2250 [£] 2800 / 3000.
Continental: [$] 2200 / 2320 [£] 2900 / 3100. Dollar Boys (Black Market):
[$] 2250 / 2270 [£] 3000 / 3100.
9 August: Former Energy and Power Minister Alimamy
Pallo Bangura
was
among 41 RUF prisoners freed from detention on Thursday, news services
reported from Freetown. The 41 were among more than 100 RUF members and
sympathisers locked up over a year ago following the collapse of the peace
process in May 2000. The announcement of their release came one day in
advance of Friday's scheduled tripartite meeting in Kenema of the Joint
Committee on Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration, where the RUF
was expected to press for the release of its imprisoned members. Last
month, a rebel spokesman complained that of 15 detainees released by the
government in early July as a confidence-building measure, only eight had actually
been RUF members. Tensions rose as well over the government's
admission that eight RUF detainees, including People's War Council
chairman Solomon Y.B. Rogers, had died in custody. Among those freed,
according to a list published by the Freetown newspaper Concord Times,
were RUF Party leader Daniel Kallon, Aruna Jaward, Sylvanus K. Kamara,
Mohamed Kamara II, Mariama Kanneh, John Sesay, Allieu Konneh, Mohamed S.
Koroma and Santigie Koroma, Ibrahim Kamara II, Ibrahim Alpha, Thomas
Sandy, Pastor Solomon Paul Steven, Daniel Sesay, Titus Tarawally, Yaryah
Barrie, Osman Kamara, Mohamed Morah, Aruna Turay, Foday Kamara, Michael Y.
Bona, Samura Kamara, Gibrilla Kanu, Sorie Gbla, Hassan Koroma, Amidu
Kamara, Noah Turay, Yusufu Turay, Salieu Conteh, Momoh Kargbo, Morlai
Mansaray, James Tamba Bayoh, Mohamed Wurie Jalloh, Salieu Conteh, Abdul
Rahman Tarawally, Kai Johnny, Sulaiman Bangura, Philip Nelson, Saidu
Conteh and Steven Kamara.
Guinean President Lansana Conte is likely to participate
in a
Mano River Union summit for talks with President Kabbah and Liberian President
Charles Taylor on the ongoing conflict along their common borders, Sierra
Leonean Foreign Minister Ahmed Ramadan Dumbuya (pictured right) said on
Thursday. Guinea and Liberia have long accused each other of supporting
rebel incursions into the other's territory, and in March Conte vowed he
would never meet with Taylor. Dumbuya told the Voice of America that Conte
appeared to have been swayed by a delegation of prominent women from the
three Mano River Union countries. "As the women reported to us, they
said President Lansana Conte had said that women were more powerful than
men, that when men had failed to prevail upon him, now the women have
spoken to him and he was willing," Dumbuya said. "That is what
they reported to us. So we can only go by their report." Dumbuya, who
travelled to Conakry this week in an attempt to persuade the Guinean
president to attend the proposed summit, said no date had been set for the
meeting, but he said he anticipated a three-pronged approach: "First,
a fact-finding mission to establish contact with our colleague in Liberia,
and then a foreign minister’s conference preparatory to the
summit." Earlier in the week week, President Kabbah flew to the
Nigerian capital Abuja for talks with the leaders of Nigeria and Mali on
the current situation in the sub-region. Dumbuya said Kabbah had wanted to
brief his colleagues on the disarmament process in Sierra Leone, and also
to discuss what the foreign minister described as "new emerging
challenging issues." "As a result of the peace dividend,
we are now confronted by the fact that more and more refugees are
returning, more and more internally displaced people are going back to
their homes," he said. "Many and many more ex-combatants are now
on our hands, and we have to find a shelter for all of them, we have to
feed them because this is the rainy season."
The Joint Committee on Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration will hold its fourth meeting on Friday in Kenema, the
capital of Sierra Leone's Eastern Province, UNAMSIL said in a statement.
The so-called Tripartite Committee is comprised of representatives from
the Sierra Leone government, the RUF and the United Nations. Friday's
meeting, a follow-up to last month's meeting in Bo, will assess progress
made so far in the disarmament process, and examine ways to move the peace
process forward. UNAMSIL, in collaboration with the National Committee for
Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration, will present reports on the
ongoing disarmament in Kono and Bonthe Districts. The reports, and the committee
deliberations, will focus on the commitment of the RUF and the CDF to
disarming their combatants, other
developments in the Sierra Leone peace process, an update on the national
recovery programme, and the future of the DDR programme, the statement
said. Earlier Thursday, U.N. Special Representative Ambassador Oluyemi
Adeniji (pictured right), who will chair Friday's meeting, told Radio
UNAMSIL on Thursday that this meeting would "concentrate more on
political issues," the Reuters news agency reported. He gave no
further details. "With the progress achieved in the disarmament of
the diamond-rich Kono district, we need to go back to the drawing board
and assess the situation which would enable us to make more progress in
the peace process," Adeniji said.
United Nations peacekeepers began deploying Wednesday in
Koinadugu District, the U.N. Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)
reported on Thursday. "A Bangladeshi company was sent to Kabala, the
district's main town, and another company is due there today," a
UNAMSIL official was quoted as saying. Last month the Tripartite Committee
consisting of representatives from the Sierra Leone government, the RUF
and UNAMSIL agreed to begin disarming combatants in Koinadugu and Moyamba
Districts at the completion of the current disarmament exercises in Kono
and Bonthe.
With the arrival in Sierra Leone of the first Pakistani
battalion of peacekeepers,
which
was completed on July 25, UNAMSIL's troop strength has grown to 14,378, Hédi
Annabi, the U.N. Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations
told the Security Council on Thursday. The Council raised UNAMSIL's
authorised troop strength to 17,500 last March. Annabi briefed Security
Council members behind closed doors Thursday on the current situation in
Sierra Leone. He noted that more than 13,000 combatants had disarmed
through August 6, and that the RUF had freed more than 1,100 children
during the same period. However, Annabi noted that logistical constraints,
including problems in transporting combatants to disarmament centers, had
impeded disarmament efforts in Kono and Bonthe Districts. On the proposed
Special Court for Sierra Leone, Annabi noted an appeal from the
secretary-general to donors to disburse pledges to finance the court, and
to propose candidates for a prosecutor.
The Canadian-registered company DiamondWorks Ltd. will
resume diamond mining in Kono with at least a $40 million investment,
Mineral Resources Minister Mohamed Swarray Deen told the Reuters news
agency on Wednesday. The company is listed on the Toronto stock exchange,
but actually operates from South Africa. "DiamondWorks traveled to
Kono District with a helicopter. They did not land but they were able to
carry out an air assessment of their areas of operation," Deen said.
"They have confirmed to the government that immediately the
disarmament is completed and UNAMSIL give the okay to the government to
reestablish its authority, the company will also want to start restart
operations." The main part of the DiamondWorks concession in Koidu
involves Kimberlite pipes, which requires heavier equipment than does
alluvial mining. "The government is expecting something of about
300,000 carats of diamonds or well over $30 million annually from
Kimberlite," Deen said. DiamondWorks has a 60 percent stake in a
25-year lease on the Koidu concession.
8 August: A troupe of Freetown actors was denied
visas to attend this year's Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland because
some in the group had paid money to be included, raising suspicions that
they intended to remain in the U.K., British officials said on Tuesday.
"We can confirm that eleven were refused visas by the British embassy
in Freetown because they did not fulfill immigration criteria for a number
of different and individual reasons," a Home Office spokesman said.
The acting company had been invited to present the play "Kpundeh,"
dealing with the aftermath of the current Sierra Leone conflict ten to
fifteen years in the future. In a BBC interview on Monday, director and
playwright Inaju Reuban rejected a suggestion that his actors planned to
apply for asylum. But the British authorities were not convinced.
"They applied at the last moment. We fast-tracked them so they could
be seen quickly," a Foreign Office spokeswoman told the Reuters news
agency. "As a group, their credibility was undermined as some of them
admitted that they had paid a substantial amount of money to be included
under the guise of artists. It was clear that some were not performers at
all."
Between 150 and 200 civilians are returning every day to
the RUF-held town of Makeni, the commander of the U.N.'s Nigerian
peacekeeping contingent in the city told BBC West Africa correspondent
Mark Doyle. "They're encouraged by our presence and the return of
security to resume their normal lives," Lieutenant-Colonel James
Oladipo added. Doyle is currently travelling by road from Freetown to
Koidu in order to see how the peace process is taking hold in Sierra
Leone. Oladipo insisted that the rebels were committed to peace, and he
said the difference between now and a year ago, when the RUF resumed
hostilities and abducted over 500 U.N. personnel, was the presence of U.N.
peacekeepers in Makeni. "We keep on educating and talking to them to
explain that without peace there cannot be development and there cannot be
commercial activities," he said. "The RUF leader, General Issa
Sesay, has said any one of his men not committed to the peace process
would be handled as appropriate and I believe and trust in what the RUF
have said."
The United Nations Security Council is due to hold
closed-door hearings Thursday morning on the situation in Sierra Leone, a
spokesman said in New York.
7 August: President Kabbah met in the Nigerian
capital Abuja on Tuesday with
the leaders of Nigeria and Mali for more than two hours of discussions on
the crisis in the West African sub-region. According to the Xinhua news
agency, the three presidents welcomed the fact that in Sierra Leone
"the ceasefire has continued to hold, that the Disarmament,
Demobilisation and Reintegration programme remains on course, and the
deployment of UNAMSIL deep into RUF-held areas including the
diamond-mining areas." But the three expressed concern over fighting
in Liberia and the "continued instability in the Mano River
region," and backed a call by Kabbah for a meeting of the Mano River
Union. On Monday, Kabbah announced he was trying to arrange a summit of
the three-nation sub-regional body. According to the Reuters news agency,
Kabbah told a peace mission of women from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia
that he had sent his foreign minister to Conakry to finalise arrangements
for talks in Freetown. "We cannot wait much longer," he said.
Both Guinea and Liberia accuse one another of supporting insurgencies in
the other's territory. In March, Guinean President Lansana Conte vowed he
would never negotiate with his Liberian counterpart.
Sierra Leone's newly-restructured, British-trained army is
"an army that can fight
in
West African circumstances pretty well," the commander of British
forces has told the BBC. But Brigadier Nick Parker said that following the
May 15 agreement between the government and the RUF to disarm their
combatants, the situation in the country had become more complex.
"What we now need to do is to develop the armed forces so that they
become even more capable," Parker told BBC West Africa correspondent
Mark Doyle. "They don’t just need to be able to take a rebel
organization on in a straight fight. They now need to start thinking about
border security operations, support to the police operations — a wider
range of activities which are quite a challenge for them. So yes, they can
certainly deal with a West African bush war and they can deal with it
well. No, they are not yet a fully mature army and we’ve got more work
to do on that." Parker said what was needed was to rebuild the army's
confidence, which had been eroded during the past decade. "I think we’re
beginning to build it back," he said. "And I think if (the
British forces) can stay here in certain key places, we will continue to
build that confidence. If we were to go, the thing would continue, but at
the moment it feels a little bit like a job not yet quite completed."
Parker, who also acts as a military advisor to the Sierra Leone
government, insisted that he did not know the whereabouts of imprisoned
rebel leader Foday Sankoh, detained in May 2000 following the collapse of
the peace process, after the RUF abducted more than 500 U.N. peacekeepers
and resumed hostilities. But Parker denied that Sankoh was being held by
British forces. "I think (Sankoh's whereabouts are) a matter for the
prison service, for the police, a matter for the Minister of the Interior
— certainly not a matter for me," he said. "I’m worried
about the wider context of military security."
Members of a Sierra Leonean theatre company, the Oja
Performing Arts Guild, have been
forced to cancel their appearance at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland
after the British High Commission denied the actors visas, the BBC
reported on Tuesday. The play, entitled "Kpundeh," meaning
"problem" or "crisis" in Mende, deals with problems
envisaged in Sierra Leone ten to fifteen years in the future as a result
of the current conflict, director and
playwright Inaju Reuban said. He added that the High Commission's decision
to deny the visas, on the grounds that the actors might not return to
Sierra Leone, had left the troupe physically and emotionally devastated,
and he rejected suggestions that they might be planning to seek asylum in
Britain. "I have a responsible thing I’m doing in this
country," Reuban said. "I don’t see any reason why I’m going
to hang back in England. My actors, like I said, I know that if I had gone
to England and left them there, obviously the next time I go to the
British embassy for visa, I wouldn’t even be bold enough to go back
there. So I was going to come back with my actors and actresses."
Reuban acknowledged he didn't hold out much hope that the decision would be
reversed, but he said he would still like to go Edinburgh. "If it is
possible for this troupe to still do this show I’ll be very, very glad
to do it," he said.
The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, has begun
transferring newly-arrived Liberian refugees in Ivory Coast to a refugee
camp near Guiglo in the west of the country. The first convoy included 19
Sierra Leoneans who fled Guinea to Ivory Coast last year following the
first attacks in the Guinea border region, a UNHCR spokesman said in
Geneva.
6 August: UNAMSIL deputy force commander
Major-General Martin Agwai has played down recent tensions between the
U.N. force and the pro-government CDF militia — in particular,
allegations that the CDF had failed to supply food to Donso militiamen
fighting in Kono. "There are problems within every organisation, and
I think the CDF is not left out," Agwai told Radio France
International. "If you consider that part of the CDF came in from the
eastern part of this country (which) has been completely under the RUF
control — the major CDF is in the southern part. So I think they may
have some communication problem or other things. But definitely it is a
fact that some of the CDF in the eastern part, I personally met them on
more than five occasions. And they really had problem of food. I don’t
think we have a right to say totally that U.N. or UNAMSIL is annoyed with
anybody on that, no." Agwai also downplayed reports that diamond
mining is continuing in Kono despite a moratorium agreed by the two sides
last month at a meeting of the Tripartite Committee in Bo. "I don’t
think anybody announced that mining would stop," he said. "My
understanding of that was that to stop people mining and enable all those
who are carrying arms to go to disarm. I think that mining in Kono is a
very complex issue, and I think that even at the best of the time, nobody
has been able to totally stop illegal mining in Kono." Agwai said the
moratorium had, in fact, assisted UNAMSIL in getting most of the
combatants who were either providing security for diamond mining
operations or who were actually fighting to come forward and disarm.
"I think the priority now is to get everybody in Kono District to
disarm," he said. "Then I think it will become easier to enforce
any law you want to enforce, because it will be difficult to enforce laws
when people are carrying arms." Agwai indicated the U.N. was not
concerned about the possibility that some combatants in Kono might be
holding on to their arms and ammunition. "It was agreed right from
the beginning of the disarmament that there will be cordon-and-search
based on intelligence and based on information available, and people who
are found with arms and ammunition after the official disarmament are now
criminals," he said.
5 August: The deadline for disarmament in Kono has
been pushed back, as
more combatants have already been disarmed than the total number of
combatants estimated by the RUF and CDF to be in the district. But acting
UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker told the BBC that the U.N. was not
concerned that those handing over their weapons might not actually be
combatants. "We believe that as long as they are coming to the
process with their weapons, it is reducing the weapons we have floating
around that could be used to create any problem," Coker said.
"These fighters, as long as they bring in their weapons, are helping
the peace process." Coker said the combatants were surrendering light
arms — AK-47s, SN rifles and GPMGs (General Purpose Machine Guns) —
and he acknowledged that it was difficult to determine whether all the
weapons being handed over by ex-combatants were still serviceable. "Some
of them are new and some are relatively old," he said. "You will
agree with me that until you use it you really don’t know if it will be
effective." Coker stressed that the combatants were not being paid to
turn in their arms. "After we collect the weapons from them they get
demobilised and they get what we call Transitional Safety Allowance,"
he said, adding that the allowance it intended to allow the former
fighters to return home and to "start them marginally into the normal
society."
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba in Freetown, for the
Sierra Leone Web.] The most decisive match for the Premier League
championship took place Sunday before a crowd of some 10,000 spectators at
Freetown's National Stadium, as the East End Lions (Red Roaring Lions)
clashed with Ports Authority (the Water Front Boys). East End Lions with
14 points needed a 1-0 win so as to clinch the championship trophy. The
Water Front Boys also needed a win to secure a place among the three
qualifiers for the club
championship and West African Football Union
(WAFU)
competitions.
4 August: An advance party of 350 Pakistani
peacekeepers began deploying
Friday in Sierra Leone's eastern Kono District,
relieving a United Nations "permanent patrol presence" of
Bangladeshi troops headquartered at Magburaka (pictured left). According to a UNAMSIL
statement, the advance party is setting up in the town of Yengema, and
includes personnel for UNAMSIL's newly-established Sector 5 headquarters,
as well as for the headquarters of the new Pakistani battalion,
PAKBATT 1.
Disarmament continued to gather momentum in Sierra Leone's
eastern Kono District this week, with 1,088
combatants surrendering their weapons to U.N. peacekeepers on Friday and
319 more on Saturday, acting UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker told the
Sierra Leone Web. On Friday, 1,080 RUF fighters including 143 child combatants
handed in their arms, while eight CDF fighters, seven of them children,
did the same. On Saturday, 164 RUF disarmed, 91 of them children, along
with 155 CDF, of whom 17 were child soldiers. The total number of combatants
who have laid down their weapons since the disarmament process resumed in
May is 14,048.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has called on
Nigeria's military
commanders
to consider distributing condoms to her troops in an effort to curb the
spread of AIDS among members of the country's armed forces. According to
the Reuters news agency, Nigerian military commanders say hundreds of
soldiers returning from peacekeeping duties in Sierra Leone and Liberia
were found to be infected with the HIV virus which causes AIDS. "You
must not allow AIDS to ravage our armed forces," Obasanjo told
top-ranking military officers on Saturday during a one-day retreat in the
city of Ibadan. "During my time (in the military) it was an offence
to contract a sexually transmitted disease," he added. "Now it's
only an offence if you conceal it."
[Sports Feature by Andrew Masuba in Freetown, for the
Sierra Leone Web.] As the race for the Premier League championship enters
its last
stage, Real Republicans (the Real People), with eight points and still in
danger of relegation should they lose, clashed Saturday with the hot favorites Mighty
Blackpool (the Tis-Tas Boys), who have 16 points. A win would
automatically
make them champions.
3 August: Representatives from Sierra Leone's
warring sides gathered
this week in the Swiss town of Caux sur Montreaux for a conference on
peace-building, sponsored by an arm of the Swiss Foundation for Moral Rearmament,
Agenda for Reconciliation. Former AFRC junta leader Johnny Paul Koroma
(pictured right), who is now chairman of the government's Commission for
the
Consolidation
of Peace, travelled to Switzerland for the week-long conference, Elizabeth
Lavalie, the Deputy Speaker of
Parliament. Omrie Golley (left), the chairman of the RUF's Political and
Peace Council, was also present. The Sierra Leoneans are among some 400
persons from 60 countries examining various peace-building and
conflict-resolution issues. Koroma and Golley, who are subject to separate
international United Nations travel bans, were granted waivers by the U.N.
Security Council to attend. The conference, which started on Sunday, runs
through August 5.
Sierra Leone's Permanent Representative to the United
Nations called on the
Security
Council Thursday to take action to implement decisions taken at last
month's U.N. conference on small arms proliferation. "The issue of
follow-up has only just begun," Ambassador Ibrahim Kamara told Sierra
Council members, adding that the Council should emphasise the need for
member states to pursue "radical programmes...aimed at building a
greater consensus on the prevention, combat and virtual eradication of the
illicit trade in small arms." Kamara suggested that peacekeeping
forces could work in cooperation with various U.N. agencies to address the
issues of collection, storage, control and destruction of light weapons.
"It is simply not good enough to issue presidential statements and
resolutions that have very little meaningful effect on their intended
recipients," Kamara warned. He said Sierra Leone would like to see
"much more potent action emanating from those statements and
resolutions, which would have an appropriately direct bearing and
reverberating effect on those intended recipients." The ambassador
called for member states to advocate stricter norms in international law
to put an end to what he called "the culture of impunity,"
warning that otherwise the lucrative trade in small arms would continue
unabated. Kamara also called on the Security Council to adopt measures
which would insure that member states involved in the manufacture and
marketing of small arms be forced to comply with international law.
RUF leaders, who this week blocked the planned deployment
of some 700 policemen to the rebel-held northern towns of Makeni and
Magburaka, say they need more time to sensitise residents of the two
towns, acting UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker said on Friday. "They
said they needed to sensitise their people, and they requested for some
more time to do this," he told Radio France International. Coker
noted that the deployment was part of the process of extending government
authority throughout the country, and he pointed out that RUF combatants
in the area had not yet been disarmed. "We do not foresee any major
problems in such deployment.," he said. "But because it is a
peace process, all parties must show consent for such deployment to take
place." Coker pointed to reported plans by Makeni residents to
welcome the returning policemen with a human chain as a sign that peace
was returning to Sierra Leone. "I can also assure you that UNAMSIL
peacekeepers on the ground have done a lot of work to sensitise the public
and make them realise that peace is really returning to the country,"
he said.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling] Standard
Chartered Bank: [$] 1850 / 2100 [£] 2800 / 3000. Commercial Bank: [$]
1800 / 2000. [£] 2750 / 3000. Frandia: [$] 2220 / 2300 [£] 2900 / 3000.
NIMO: [$] 2200 / 2350 [£] 2900 / 3100. Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$]
2250 / 2260 [£] 3050 / 3100.
2 August: Junior doctors employed by the government
began an indefinite
strike
Wednesday
to press their demands for better pay and working conditions. The work stoppage
followed an eleven-day strike notice, with the doctors complaining they hadn't
been paid in nearly a year, while hospital conditions were deteriorating. In a BBC interview on Thursday Sahr
Kortequee, the Secretary-General of the Sierra Leone Association of Medical
Doctors, denied that the doctors were sacrificing the health of patients
just to increase their salaries. "Though we are asking for an
improvement in our conditions of service, these ones probably form only a
small part of what we want," he said. "If you have a hospital
that has no emergency facilities, there are no emergency drugs available —
If a person in the street falls down with a diabetic attack or any
emergency, even is hit by a bicycle...the hospitals, there is not a single
aspirin or Panadol provided free of charge. Everything in the hospitals is
for sale." Kortequee acknowledged that some patients might die because
of the strike action, but said that if the government met doctors' demands
that others might be saved in the future. "If we decide to stay away
from work, it’s possible that the mortality would increase," he
said "But if the people support us, and if government listens to us
and decides to make a positive change — and then all that we are
asking for, emergency drugs, improve the sanitary conditions of the
hospital. If all these ones are done, then we’re sure we’ll be able to
reduce mortality significantly. So in the long run I think that the
patients themselves would have to benefit."
625 RUF and 449 CDF combatants disarmed Tuesday in Sierra
Leone's eastern
Kono
District, acting UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker (pictured left) told the
Sierra Leone Web on Thursday. This latest surge in disarmament means 1,377
RUF and 1,359 CDF combatants have given up their arms in Kono. In Bonthe
District, a stronghold of pro-government forces, 279 CDF combatants have
been disarmed on Bonthe Island and peninsula, and 789 in the town of
Mattru. The total number of combatants who have laid down their weapons
since disarmament resumed in May is 10,735: 3,667 RUF, 6,899 CDF and 169
ex-SLA/AFRC.
Ambassador Oluyemi Adeniji (pictured right), the Special
Representative of the
U.N. Secretary-General, travelled to Sierra Leone's Northern Province
Thursday to launch the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) Community
Sensitation Programme in Makeni. According to a UNAMSIL statement the
programme, conducted jointly by UNAMSIL's Human Rights Section and the
Northern Region Working Group — a coalition of local human rights
organisations — seeks to explain at the community level the role
of the TRC in Sierra Leone's peace process. The chief of the the Human
Rights Section, Rodolfo Mattarollo, stressed that the TRC would promote
healing for victims of human rights abuses, advance the reconciliation
process, and break the cycle of impunity. "The TRC would gather a
historical record and provide a balanced account of the Sierra Leonean conflict,"
he said. "It would allow perpetrators to apologize to victims and
victims to forgive perpetrators. It would also encourage victims to give
information in confidence and perpetrators to take responsibility for
crimes committed. This is what we are working towards." RUF spokesman
Gibril Massaquoi, who recently
has
voiced reservations over the establishment of a Special Court for Sierra
Leone, said the rebel group would support the TRC because it was one of
the most important provisions of the 1999 Lomé Peace Accord, the UNAMSIL
statement said. Also present for Thursday's launching ceremony were the Bishop
of Makeni, George Biguzzi (pictured left), Sierra Leone Council of
Churches Secretary-General Alimamy Koroma, and human rights organisations
such as the Sierra Leone Forum of Conscience and the National Forum for
Human Rights.
Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman has described as
unfounded
allegations
made on Tuesday by UNAMSIL that he had failed to cooperate with the disarmament
process in Kono, the Freetown newspaper Concord Times reported. UNAMSIL,
in response to a BBC interview last week in which Norman had accused U.N.
peacekeepers of deliberately stalling the disarmament process, also
suggested that the Kono Donso militia had refused to take instructions
from Norman, who is also the National Coordinator of the Civil Defence
Forces. Instead, the UNAMSIL statement said, the militiamen told U.N.
peacekeepers they would only take orders from their local and chiefs.
Norman denied this. "All CDF are under my command," he said,
adding that the U.N. would achieve nothing by going through local chiefs
instead of working with the CDF High Command. But Norman stressed that
this latest war of words would not affect the disarmament process.
"No amount of jealousy will stop the move to make Sierra Leone free
of arms," the newspaper quoted him as saying.
Applications for the United States diversity
immigrant visa programme for 2003 must be received during October 2001,
the U.S. Department of State announced on Thursday, adding that
applications received before and after October, or which are improperly
filled out or mailed would be disqualified. The U.S. diversity lottery
offers permanent residency visas to natives of countries which send under
50,000 immigrants to the United States. Winners, who are selected by
random computer-generated drawing, must then show that they meet
stipulated educational standards and other requirements. Winners will be
notified by mail between April and June 2002, and will have until 30
September 2003 to process their applications.
1 August: Hundreds of RUF combatants disarmed
Tuesday at sites in Kono Districts, and hundreds more were expected to
hand over their weapons to United Nations peacekeepers on Wednesday and
Thursday, according to a
statement
by the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration (NCDDR). The rush came after RUF interim leader General Issa
Sesay (pictured left) gave orders on Monday that all rebel combatants
should disarm by July 31. This resulted in more RUF fighters turning up at
disarmament centres than could be processed in a single day, the statement
said. NCDDR and UNAMSIL officials are now working to adjust the
disarmament and demobilisation process in Kono to handle the surge in
disarmament. The NCDDR said it would establish an end date for the
disarmament of both RUF and CDF combatants in consultation with the
Tripartite Committee, comprised of representatives of the Sierra Leone
government, the RUF, and UNAMSIL.
RUF rebels blocked the planned deployment of Sierra Leone
police in the northern towns of Makeni and Magburaka on Wednesday, the
Associated Press reported. The deployment was agreed a week ago in a
meeting attended by RUF and U.N. officials and Police Inspector-General
Keith Biddle. The news agency quoted Police Inspector Dominic Kargbo as
saying the rebels had raised the issue of the death in prison last month
of Solomon Rogers, the head of the RUF's People's War Council, in
preventing the deployment. United Nations and British officials left for
the area Wednesday in an effort to resolve the impasse, the AP said.
Colonel Gabriel Mani, the Sierra Leone Army's Director of
Training, was freed
on
bail Wednesday after appearing in Magistrates Court in Freetown. Mani was
arrested along with 38 others in June, after a cordon-and-search operation
turned up a cache of arms and ammunition in his compound. The magistrate
warned Mani to stay away from military installations, while Justice
Minister and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa pleaded with the colonel not
to return to the bush, a source in Freetown told the Sierra Leone Web.
Sierra Leone is one of 17 sub-Saharan African countries
facing exceptional food emergencies this year, the U.N. Food and
Agriculture Organisation said in a new report published on Wednesday. The
report, "Food Supply Situation and Crop Prospects in Sub-Saharan Africa,"
cited civil strife and population displacement as having disrupted the
production and marketing of crops during the past year. As a result of low
food production in 2000 and transport problems, the report said, the food
situation in the country remains tight. "Planting of the rice crop
started in mid-April with the onset of rains, and growing conditions are
favourable so far," the FAO report said. "Rice production should
increase this year, reflecting increased planted area by returning farmers
and improved conditions for distribution of inputs. However, the country
remains heavily dependent on food aid." Neighbouring Guinea and
Liberia also made the FAO's list, along with Angola, Burkina Faso,
Burundi, Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Eritrea; Kenya,
Niger, Rwanda, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.