31 August 2002: U.S. President George W. Bush has
authorised the State
Department
to spend up to $6.6 million from the U.S. Emergency Refugee and Migration
Assistance Fund to assist the estimated 200,000 people displaced by recent
fighting in Liberia, the Associated Press reported. The money would also
be used to help refugees returning to Sierra Leone. Meanwhile, the United
Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said Friday that the movement of
refugees from Liberia to Sierra Leone had continued to slow in recent
weeks as a result of reduced hostilities in Liberia. New areas in Kenema
and Kono districts have been declared safe by the government, which has
encouraged refugees and displaced persons to return home.
Sierra Leone's former rebels have renewed their appeal to
the United Nations to lift a travel ban on former AFRC junta members and
allow them to travel outside the country to build their political party,
the Agence France-Presse reported. "We want the ban to be lifted so
that we can travel out of the country to solicit funds to pursue our aims
and objectives politically," said Eldred Collins, the RUF Party
spokesman and a candidate to succeed former party secretary-general Pallo
Bangura, who resigned last month. "The ban has made the party to have
limited funds to fight the recent elections, so we are now trying to
strengthen the party's finances for carry out our programmes," he
said.
30 August: A Peace Corps security assessment team
which visited Sierra Leone this month has recommended the return of the
Peace Corps programme for the first time since the last volunteers were
pulled out eight years ago in the face of the country's worsening civil
war. If the recommendation is accepted by Peace Corps and modalities for
their return negotiated with the Sierra Leone government, a small group of
perhaps 20 volunteers – about one tenth the size of the pre-war
programme – could be on the ground by the beginning of next year, said
Michael O'Neill, who led the two-member mission. O'Neill spent four years
as a Peace Corps Volunteer some three decades ago in the Bo District town
of Mbundobu, and then remained in Sierra Leone for six more years working
with the non-governmental organisation GTZ. He left in 1988 but returned
to the country in 1991 to work for the Red Cross. In 1992, while on a trip
to Koidu, he was kidnapped by the notorious RUF commander Sam Bockarie and
held for six weeks at the rebel stronghold of Pendembu. Now, he is charged
with determining whether Sierra Leone, just emerging from a decade of
conflict, is safe enough for the volunteers to return. During his ten day
mission, O'Neill travelled to Freetown, Bo, Kenema, Magburaka and Makeni,
and met with President Kabbah and government ministers, army and police
officials, representatives of non-governmental organisations, university
educators, and members of UNAMSIL. He said the overall response was
enthusiastic. "The general finding is that based on our discussions
and observations, the need for resettlement, reconstruction and
development assistance in Sierra Leone is enormous," he said.
"Even with all the NGOs and people, they’re still a drop in the
bucket. Things are worn out." The first volunteers to arrive would be
members of the newly-formed Crisis Corps, made up of former Peace Corps
Volunteers now advanced in their careers who have specific skills
requested by the Sierra Leone government or non-governmental organisations. "You’re talking professional people – engineers,
lawyers, social workers, educators with masters degrees, things like
that," O'Neill told the Sierra Leone Web. "It’s a high level.
They’re essentially skilled consultants who are volunteering their
time." Crisis Corps volunteers would serve from three to twelve
months, and O'Neill said that initially they would work within commutable
distances of large towns. Although he said security was no longer a
concern except for the area near the Liberian border, volunteers would
likely not be placed in the far east or the far north. "In the short
term we probably wouldn’t go much further north than Makeni with Crisis
Corps, and that is still pending," he said. O'Neill explained that
the relatively small group of volunteers was what Peace Corp's
organisational infrastructure could bear at present, and that
re-establishing the programme to its previous level would take some time.
"It takes a while before you can get that level of infrastructure
established," he said. "I would suggest to you that in today’s
Peace Corps, and especially given the poor infrastructure and the
difficulty in communications in Sierra Leone, an expansion outside a
certain radius from the main towns – Bo, Kenema, Makeni and Freetown –
is going to take time until Peace Corps can build up its own internal
structure." In the meantime, he said, members of the Crisis Corps
could draw on their previous experience as Peace Corps Volunteers and
could be on the ground quickly. "Crisis Corps volunteers have the
benefit of previous experience as volunteers, so they know what it’s
like to have to adjust to a new culture, to live with hardship, and to put
in
the two years," he said. "They have a proven record in that
regard. As returned volunteers, they also have the professional
development they’ve gained since they returned to the United
States." The return of Peace Corps has received the strong support of
U.S. Ambassador Peter Russell Chaveas (pictured left), who before
embarking on his foreign service career served as a Peace Corps Volunteer
in Chad. "The ambassador accompanied us overland to Makeni with the
express intent of demonstrating the level of security and being able to
have first-hand credibility to say ‘look I was there, I saw it’ and
make his advice to the State (Department)," O'Neill said. Among those
the team met with in Freetown was Mohamed B. Daramy, Sierra Leone's
Minister of Development and Economic Planning. Daramy told the Sierra
Leone Web that in principle his government would be delighted to see Peace
Corps return, but that the details still had to be worked out. He
described his response to the Peace Corps mission: "We are very much
interested in your coming, but let us know what will be the action on our
own part then what will be on your own part," he said. "We have
to know really what will be our own commitment, then we know your own
responsibility, what you want to do. So if you send that document to me I
will review that, I take it to (President Kabbah) for his input."
Daramy said there were a number of sectors where he would like to see the
volunteers work. "Education, health – everywhere where they can be
useful," he said. "I tell you, we need people in every area. All
the areas, to be truthful with you. It depends how much expertise they
have in each of these areas: construction, agriculture, health, education,
all these areas."
Despite signing international protocols which commit it to
appointing women to 30 percent of leadership positions in the government
and civil service, the Sierra Leone government has made little headway in
meeting those goals, the Freetown civil society group Campaign for Good
Governance said this week. According to the group, only seven of the 126
Directors of Boards in the 21 parastatals are women, or just 6 percent of
the total.
Exchange rates for the leone against the U.S. dollar and
pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying / Selling]
Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2050 / 2250. [£] 3000 / 3250 Commercial
Bank: [$] 2100 / 2300. [£] 3050 / 3250. Frandia: [$] 2100 / 2250 [£]
2700 / 2950. Continental: [$] 2200 / 2300 [£] 3050 / 3350. Dollar Boys
(Black Market): [$] 2180 / 2200 [£] 3150 / 3250.
29 August: Members of the United Nations Security
Council commended Sierra Leone Thursday on its efforts to crack down on
illicit diamond mining, but acknowledged that the government still faces
problems in controlling illegal diamond production and smuggling, Council
President John Negroponte of the United States said in a statement.
Thursday's statement came at the conclusion of a briefing of the 15-member
Council by the chairman of the Sierra Leone Sanctions Committee,
Ambassador Adolfo Aguilar Zinser of Mexico, on the fourth review of the
Sierra Leone Diamond Certification Process. According to Negroponte,
Council members urged the Sierra Leone government to strengthen its
internal monitoring capacity to prevent the country's gemstones from being
used to fund conflicts in the region, and appealed to the international
community and donor nations to support these efforts. The Council also
welcomed plans by West African countries to develop a region-wide
certification system. On Wednesday, the Sierra Leone Sanctions Committee
reminded U.N. member states of the prohibition on the import of Sierra
Leonean rough diamonds into their territory, except for those stones
certified by the Sierra Leone government as coming from legitimate
sources.
28 August: Four days of heavy rains have caused
serious flooding in Bo, BBC correspondent Richard Margao reported on
Wednesday. At least four houses and a newly-constructed guest house
collapsed in the flood and more than 500 residents were made homeless,
while makeshift huts built by returning refugees and hundreds of market
stalls were also said to have been destroyed. "The most affected were
women and children who were seen trapped in houses engulfed by the
flooding," Margao said. "Some of the women had their personal
effects on their heads and they stood in the harsh waters pathetically
crying for rescue. Rescue was not possible for 24 hours until two local
canoes were brought in from the nearby villages to carry the children and
women to the commercial sections of New London and New York." He
added that about 50 vehicles had been halted on the highway after the
water flooded a bridge on the highway linking Bo to the capital Freetown.
27 August: The United Nations refugee agency,
UNHCR, will begin an airlift Wednesday to repatriate Sierra Leonean
refugees from Lagos, Nigeria, a spokesman for the agency said on Tuesday.
A first group of 70 persons, including six babies, is due to travel
Tuesday in a convoy of five trucks from Oru Camp, about two hours north of
Lagos. On Wednesday they will take a commercial flight to Freetown, where
all of the first group come from. Subsequent flights through September 25
will transport refugees from other parts of the country, including Bo,
Kenema, Makeni and Koidu. There are some 2,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in
Nigeria, but so far only 270 have expressed a willingness to return
home.
25 August: A goal by Bai Omar Samba in the 58th
minute was enough for Gambia to defeat the Leone Stars 1-0 Sunday in a friendly match
played in the Gambian capital Banjul, the Associated Press reported.
24 August: Immigration officials in Britain are
trying to track down 21 Sierra Leonean athletes who failed to return home
at the end of the Commonwealth Games earlier this month, the PA News
reported. "The British High Commission were disappointed to learn
that 21 team members have not returned to Sierra Leone. The U.K.
Immigration authorities have been notified and will be investigating
individual cases," a Home Office spokesperson said, adding: "In
arranging these events there is always a risk that participants will use
the event to secure entry into the U.K. for another purpose." Only nine
members of the 30-strong team – two athletes and seven officials –
returned to Freetown at the conclusion of the games despite warnings by
Youth and Sports Minister Dr. Dennis Bright that failure to do so could
have serious repercussions for Sierra Leone's future participation in international
competitions.
A Freetown-based civil society group has lodged a
communication against Libya with the African Commission on Human Rights on
behalf of five Sierra Leoneans who, it is alleged, were illegally detained
and tortured by Libyan authorities in November 2000 in violation of the
African Charter. The Campaign for Good Governance (CGG), which filed the
complaint on behalf of Osman Conteh, Mohamed Bashiru Jalloh, Idrissa
Kamara, Ibrahim Sankoh, and Bangali Kargbo, said the Libyan government
should apologise and pay compensation for the violence unleashed against
them and other West African refugees after the Libyan government broadcast
a statement demanding that Libyans who had hired "black aliens"
immediately terminate their services and send them back to refugee camps.
"As a direct result of this proclamation, soldiers, police officers
and other security personnel and civilians attacked, assaulted, insulted
and abused refugees, including the Sierra Leoneans, who were within and
without refugee camps," the letter said, adding that the refugees
were subjected to physical violence and torture, illegal and arbitrary
detention, and other forms of maltreatment. Some, it said, were
subsequently denied access to medical care. The Sierra Leoneans and other
West Africans were then rounded up and expelled from Libya without
recourse to local courts, and in violation of the African Charter's
prohibition against mass expulsions of non-nationals based on their
national, racial, ethnic or religious affiliations. "Sierra Leonean
refugees were forced to decide whether they were to continue suffering
from harassment, torture and die in Libya or return to Sierra Leone or
Liberia at a time when there was civil war in both West African countries,
where they would face equally harsh fate," the letter said. The
Libyan government failed to respond to a previous letter, according to the
CGG. The accusations come as some Western governments were voicing
opposition to the African Union's decision in July to nominate Libya to
head the U.N. Human Rights Commission when the rotating leadership of the
body goes to Africa in 2003.
23 August: An independent inquiry conducted by
seven Sierra Leonean civil society and human rights groups into last
month's anti-Nigerian rioting in central Freetown has blamed U.N.
peacekeepers for the deaths of two persons from bullet wounds, and the
injuring of three others. The July 18 riots erupted after a popular Sierra
Leonean black market currency trader, Momodu Jam Bah, was found to have
been murdered, allegedly by Nigerian criminals. U.N. troops intervened
after several hundred youths began looting Nigerian-owned
businesses in
the city centre. The Human Rights Committee's report
accuses the Nigerian troops who arrived on the scene of using
disproportionate force in putting down the disturbances. The report's
conclusions contradict in part an earlier in-house investigation by
UNAMSIL, which found insufficient evidence to determine who had fired the
fatal shots and largely exonerated the peacekeepers. U.N. troops had "employed a combination of
persuasion, crowd dispersal tactics and firing of warning shots into the
air" to disperse the rioters, UNAMSIL said, adding that the available
evidence indicted that "at no time was firing
directed at the crowd." The Human Rights Committee disagreed, citing
what it said were eyewitness accounts and medical evidence which suggested
that the victims had been hit by direct gunfire. The report quoted police
and witnesses as saying that neither the rioters nor law enforcement
officials on the scene were armed, and that the only people carrying
weapons were U.N. troops. The committee called the use of live ammunition
to suppress a stone-throwing crowd "a disproportionate use of
force," suggesting that the situation could have been more
appropriately handled by using rubber bullets or tear gas. Meanwhile, the
Deputy Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General, Behrooz Sadry,
told the Associated Press that the UNAMSIL investigation was ongoing.
"Some people are of the view that UNAMSIL is guilty. We are still
continuing our own investigation," he said, adding: "It has not
been an easy matter. As soon as we complete the investigation, we shall
issue another report." Sadry acknowledged that the peacekeepers who
responded to the disturbance were carrying weapons. "We did
shoot in the air. We had justification to deploy in the area to quell the
riot and to shoot in the air. We do not have the right to kill
people," he said.
Three Sierra Leonean football players
who were tapped for the Leone Stars' September 8 African Nations Cup
qualifying match against Equatorial Guinea have been arrested by
immigration officials in Cyprus and turned over to police, the BBC
reported on Friday. Mohamed "Opong" Kamara (formerly with Mighty
Blackpool, Warren Kanu (Mighty Blackpool) and
Abdulai "Kalouga" Conteh (Old Edwardians) were on their way home
to Sierra Leone after having attended team trials with a Russian club last
month. "They
failed to impress, and were headed home when they received a called from a
Cypriot national named Appolous who claimed he could find them a
club," the BBC
said. "Unfortunately
on their arrival in Cyprus Appolous did not meet them, and instead they
were met by immigration officers who then handed them over to police."
The Sierra Leone Football Association and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
are now said to be working to secure the players' release. Meanwhile,
Sierra Leonean international Mohamed Kallon (pictured right) is listed as
doubtful for next month's match after suffering what was described as a
thigh strain. The Inter Milan striker is expected to recover in time for
the Leone Stars' second qualifier, against Gabon on October 13, the BBC
reported.
22 August: The continued presence of United Nations
peacekeepers in Sierra
Leone
is linked to progress in achieving a number of benchmarks aimed at
reinforcing the recently restored peace in the country, Ambassador Oluyemi
Adeniji told diplomats in Freetown on Wednesday. According to a UNAMSIL
statement, Adeniji, who is the Special Representative of the United
Nations Secretary-General in Sierra Leone, noted UNAMSIL's view that the
U.N.'s exit strategy should not be tied to the recently-concluded
presidential and parliamentary elections. Instead, he said, the U.N.
should look at the ability of the Sierra Leone Police and the armed forces
to maintain security, the successful reintegration of ex-combatants,
security in the Mano River Union sub-region, and progress in restoring
civil authority throughout the country. Adeniji expressed hope that the
U.N. Security Council would take these factors into consideration when
making a decision on UNAMSIL's future.
21 August: President Kabbah has expressed his
support for an ECOWAS
proposal
designed to end the conflict in Liberia between government forces and the rebel group
Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD), the Associated
Press reported, quoting state radio. "Any
initiative to bring peace to Liberia and (neighboring) countries is highly
appreciated," Kabbah said after meeting with ECOWAS
Executive-Secretary Mohammed Chambas on Tuesday to discuss the initiative.
The proposal calls for a ceasefire and the disarmament of all militias and
some government security forces, followed by elections. An international
contact group comprised of representatives of the United Nations, the
African Union and some African countries, would oversee implementation of
the agreement. Chambas, who arrived in Sierra Leone from Liberia, said
Liberian President Charles Taylor had welcomed the proposal. Chambas was
due to travel on to Guinea on Tuesday.
The Sierra Leone
government has offered the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission
(TRC)
office space in the old agriculture building on Tower Hill, and will
provide emergency financial assistance toward the commission's preparatory
phase, TRC Executive Secretary Yasmin Jusu-Sheriff
told the Sierra Leone Web on Tuesday. "They’re in the process of
clearing (the building) out and preparing a report of dilapidation,"
she said. "They’ve offered about half of the old agriculture
building to us." She added that the TRC hoped to complete its move
from its present offices on Pademba Road by the time the commission
launches its operational phase in October. Jusu-Sheriff said the financial
contribution was expected to be in
the area of 200 million leones, or about $100,000. "They want to give us some kind of emergency
contribution just towards the preparatory phase while they work on what
would be the more substantial contribution of the operational phase,"
she said. "That’s to help us with certain operational issues in the
preparatory phase, particularly with our public education campaign."
20 August:
The proceedings of Sierra Leone's Special Court will held in public,
and
could even be broadcast over the radio, Chief Prosecutor David Crane said
on Tuesday. "(Sierra Leoneans) will in fact be able to come in and
watch the proceedings," Crane told the World programme – a
collaboration of the BBC and National Public Radio. "The proceedings
hopefully with the consent of the president of the court will be broadcast
over radio, which is the primary means of communication here," he
said. "As the prosecutor I would encourage these kind of things.
Courts have to be transparent." The Special Court is comprised of
both Sierra Leonean and international judges and staff, and is charged
with prosecuting a handful of persons deemed to bear the greatest
responsibility for war crimes committed during the latter half of Sierra
Leone's decade-long civil war. Crane declined to speculate on who might be
indicted. "At this point, all I can tell you is that we have a solid
prosecution plan and we are moving forward following the evidence wherever
it may lead," he said. "We are looking at all aspects of this
tragedy, evaluating all potential defendants." Crane said the court
and a parallel institution, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC),
would be working together. "I expect and intend to fully participate
with dialogue and information sharing with the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission," he said. He downplayed concerns that a person who
testified before the TRC could have his testimony used as evidence against
him in the court – something TRC commissioners have insisted will
not be allowed to happen – and he stressed the TRC's important
role in bringing closure to Sierra Leoneans who have suffered through
years of civil strife. "From
time to time those individuals may be one and the same and should that
happen the Special Court has primacy and in fact can seek and ask the
witness to testify before the Special Court," he said. "But
those instances will be in fact few and far between. Most of the parties
will be going before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission if they so
desire. It's an important healing device for this country, to tell the
story, to get the victims and others to come forward and tell what
happened so that an historical record can be had."
In his latest report on the promotion of
durable peace and
sustainable
development in Africa, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed concern
that the deteriorating security situation in Liberia was spreading to
neighbouring Guinea, and was causing concern for the fragile peace in
Sierra Leone, his spokesman said on Tuesday. Annan also said that aid to
Africa was declining despite efforts by African governments toward better
economic growth and poverty reduction programmes. He added that nowhere
was the need for greater financial resources more urgent than in Africa,
where countries were faced with the challenge of poverty and the threat of
HIV/AIDS.
19 August: Sierra Leonean sports officials feared
that some of their county's athletes at this month's Commonwealth Games were preparing to abscond, but were powerless to prevent it, Youth and
Sports Minister Dr. Dennis Bright said on Monday. Bright, who accompanied
the team to Manchester, told the Sierra
Leone Web that he twice visited the athletic village to warn the athletes about the repercussions
their remaining behind would have on Sierra Leone's
future representation in international competitions. In the end, however, he failed to persuade them. "Most of them were stone cold," he
said. "They were just
looking at me sheepishly. If you study
their body language you will feel that they were uneasy – it was like I was
hitting the nail on the head. The more I spoke about it the more
discomfort you could feel in them. I thought that if some of them had the idea it
would be really just one or two of them. This is what I thought at the
time. I never knew that the huge bulk of them had already made plans to do
that, and I have a feeling that even from here." Only
nine members of Sierra Leone's 30-member team, most of them officials, returned to
Freetown. 21 of the country's 23 athletes went into hiding in England. Bright
said his ministry would go back to the drawing board, and that he
intended to concentrate from now on on restructuring and rebuilding Sierra Leone's sports institutions –
the associations and clubs – which have fallen into decline from a decade of civil war. But
appearances by Sierra
Leonean athletes in international competition might be at an end – at
least for now. "I would not be in a hurry to send them to the
Olympic games, I’m telling you," he said. "In the immediate future, I think this is
what it would mean. I don’t think they’re ready – mentally,
psychologically, even in terms of the training physically. I don’t think
they’re ready to represent us." Bright said the money used to send
the team abroad could be better spent in improving training facilities at
home and in developing the country's athletes to the point where they
would be legitimate medal contenders.
"This idea of a symbolic appearance was good for
now, and look at what happened," he said. "It was good for now because we’ve been
in war and things like that, and we’re just trying to behave now like a
normal country. And attending the (Commonwealth Games), or at least making a
representation there, was at least strategic in that respect, to know that
at least not only could we have elections but we are also present in the
world. But the way it turned out, the performance they put out, I think
that’s enough now." The minister said that if anything positive
came out of the team's participation in the Commonwealth Games, it was the
contacts Sierra Leonean officials made which could pave the way for future
assistance for Sierra Leone's sports programmes, including training for
national coaches. And he
pointed to the enormous amount of goodwill shown for Sierra Leone's
athletes. "We did enjoy that kind of recognition," he said.
"We at
least were present there, and people cheered Sierra Leone. It’s like
coming back to life again internationally in sports." But Bright
acknowledged that there were few other positive results achieved by what
was perhaps Sierra Leone's largest athletic team ever to appear in
international competition. "In terms of the real thing, nothing could have
been better than if we at least had one or two medals, which we didn’t
have," he said.
A nine-member Mano River Union
delegation of officials from Sierra Leone and Guinea has arrived in
Monrovia to assess Liberia's security situation in light of recent
cross-border raids into Sierra Leone, Radio France International reported
on Monday. The delegation is headed by Alex Koroma, who told journalists
that the officials would meet with President Charles Taylor, civil society
groups, and the religious community. The delegation met with the
Inter-Religious Council of Liberia on Sunday.
Senior
Sierra Leone government and United Nations officials were in Makeni
Saturday for the formal handover of offices and residence for the Senior
District Officer – the highest government official in Bombali District.
During the latter
stages
of Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war, Makeni served as the headquarters
for the rebel Revolutionary United Front. The handover, said U.N. Deputy
Special Representative Behrooz Sadry (pictured left), was "a
definitive landmark" in the restoration of civil authority, which
began with the deployment of the Sierra Leone Police and the return of the
paramount chiefs. Sadry pointed to an urgent need for the return of the
judiciary, and pledged that UNAMSIL would "commence work to
rehabilitate, refurbish and provide furniture for the Magistrate's Court
buildings in Makeni, Magburaka and Kabala." Local Government
Minister Sidique Brima said the government would begin holding local
government elections this month in order to further consolidate the
restoration of civil authority. "We want a departure from the trend of putting government appointees in position at local government administration, and we shall ensure transparency and all democratic principles in the conduct of local government and paramount chiefs elections,” he said.
Liberia
presents "almost a textbook case" of major warning signs that
the country is deteriorating on the political, military, economic and
social fronts, threatening to plunge it back into a civil war which could
have devastating consequences for its civilian population and threaten the
hard-won peace in neighbouring Sierra Leone, the International Crisis Group
(ICG) warned on
Monday. In its new briefing paper Liberia
Unravelling, the ICG noted that "rivalry and tribalist
tendencies" dating back to 1980, to the Samuel Doe regime, had never
been resolved. These were now being highlighted, the group said, by
"a retrograde civil war," a crumbling economy, an isolated and
threatened leadership seeking to cling to power, and the re-emergence of
Liberian militia groups. The ICG report also noted that the international
community, which imposed sanctions on the Taylor regime last year for its
support for Sierra Leone's RUF rebels and for its involvement in the
illegal arms-for-diamonds trade, was left with few palatable options.
"Years of sanctions might only push Liberia further into a decayed
state where militias able to loot their own salary effectively control
large swaths of the country," the ICG said. "Alternately, the
notion of simply ignoring Taylor's many previous transgressions and
embracing a policy of full engagement – in essence forgiving and
forgetting – is unsavoury." The group suggested that an exit by
President Taylor after the next election, currently scheduled for October
2003, might remove one stumbling block to resolving Liberia's deep-rooted
problems. The report pointed, however, to three impediments to Taylor
relinquishing power: His concern that he could be prosecuted by Sierra
Leone's Special Court, concerns for his physical safety, and pressure to
remain in power from members of his ruling party concerned about their
futures. The ICG suggested that the international community guarantee
Taylor immunity from the Special Court and give him basic assurances for
his safety in exchange for his agreement to go into exile and to remove
himself permanently from Liberian politics and military affairs.
18 August: Student leaders met in Freetown over the
weekend to commemorate
the fifth anniversary of student demonstrations against the AFRC military
regime which were ruthlessly put down by junta soldiers and their RUF allies.
At least two people, a medical nurse and an Environmental Sciences
student
from Njala University College, were killed in the resulting violence,
while a number of female students were
abducted and raped by AFRC supporters. A journalist who covered the events of
that day, Voice of America stringer Kelvin Lewis (pictured left), recalled
that the students had decided to go ahead with their anti-junta protest
despite warnings broadcast over state radio that the demonstrations would
be illegal. "The demonstration was in defiance of that order,"
Lewis told the Sierra Leone Web. "The government – Johnny
Paul's junta – had said that it was illegal and they were
urging the students not to go along. In fact, one feature of that was the junta then
said they were observing a ceasefire and they were not going to fire, but
then they opened up a container of agricultural tools and took out
machetes which they were using instead of guns." On 18 August 1997,
university students
first attempted to rally at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital
on Fourah Bay Road, but the demonstration was countered by force from the
soldiers. "As soon as they started congregating, then the
military boys learned of it and they swiftly went to that area and started
firing," Lewis said. "From PCMH, (the students) then went to the National School
of Nursing, and they were at National School of Nursing when the soldiers
came again to that particular spot, and then they massacred those boys."
Lewis, his cousin, and BBC correspondent Winston Ojukutu-Macaulay were
arrested by Koroma's Chief of Security, Colonel "Rambo" Marah,
and taken to Military Headquarters at Cockerill where they were stripped
of their possessions and locked in a shipping container. "When I was arrested, we lost touch with what was
actually happening during the day, although we were also getting news of
what was happening," Lewis said. "The students were being arrested and brought in along
with us. Everybody was telling their own experiences. And when I came out,
in fact, it was very
difficult to find out who were dead because they were detaining people in
different centers. I was detained at the military headquarters. Some of
the students were detained in the Pademba Road Prison. And of course there
were other groups of students, girls, who were being rotated in the houses
of some of these so-called ‘honourables’ in the AFRC. Some of these
girls were gang-raped. It took a period before you could know who was dead
and who was still alive, because for over a week a lot of people were not
seen." Lewis said it was difficult to know who actually gave the order to
unleash violence against the students, but he said it was clear that it was an
organized effort. "The AFRC was such a chaotic government that you
didn’t know who gave the orders," he said. "You know that there was the intention
to quell the demonstration, because anywhere the students went to, as soon
as they heard the students
were going to congregate in any particular place they then rushed to the place."
One man who has a different recollection of that day's events is the
former junta leader, now a parliamentarian, Johnny Paul Koroma (right). In
an interview with the Sierra Leone Web Sunday, Koroma denied that he
had given orders for the demonstration to be suppressed. "I told them that if they want to demonstrate let
them demonstrate, and the soldiers should not tamper with them,"
Koroma said, adding that he had only warned the students that their
protest should not be violent. "The soldiers were not ordered to go to the
streets at all," he said. "The only thing we suspected that some of these students,
that is what happened, some of the students they were using, some of them
were Kamajors. They were armed. That was the problem – they were armed. In
fact, they were the first that opened fire, as what I was told."
Koroma insisted it was not true, at least to his knowledge, that soldiers
had taken students away and raped them. But he acknowledged that others
could have done so. "You
know at that time how the city was congested," he said. "You
have RUF, you have everybody. Nobody gave us the chance to put things in
order for them to disarm."
16 August: Most of the Sierra Leonean athletes who
competed in the just-concluded Commonwealth have gone into hiding in the
U.K. and have refused to return home, the BBC reported on Friday. Only
nine of the 30-member team has returned to Freetown. Earlier in the
month, there were unconfirmed reports that the Sierra Leoneans had left
the compound which housed the athletes. Minister of Youth and Sport Dr.
Dennis Bright, who accompanied the team to Manchester, was quoted as
saying the athletes had put their country in an embarrassing position.
Permanent Secretary Edward Surrur said the team's decision to stay
illegally in Britain was "a national disgrace for Sierra Leone."
The
overland repatriation of Sierra Leonean refugees from Guinea resumed this
week, when a convoy of seven trucks picked up 120 people from the Mambya
transit camp north of Conakry, where they had been awaiting transportation
to Freetown by boat, the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said on
Friday. The convoy reached Port Loko on Monday and continued on Tuesday to
other locations in the country. The repatriation the estimated 42,000
remaining Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea had been suspended to allow
the UNHCR to concentrate on helping refugees and returnees who have fled
to Sierra Leone in recent weeks to escape renewed fighting in Liberia. Now
for the first time the agency is using Guinean trucks for the transfer.
This first operation was regarded as a test run, and will resume in full
once the roads are repaired. Meanwhile, repatriation of Sierra Leoneans in
Liberia is continuing by sea. Some 1,800 returnees have arrived in
Freetown since the exercise began on July 22. The UNHCR is considering
chartering a second boat or even mounting an airlift to accelerate the
pace of returns from about 300 to 900 a week.
Most of those
abducted in recent raids along the Liberian border have been released, the
U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday, quoting police sources.
Because of the recent cross-border raids on four villages in Kailahun
District, aid agencies have taken precautions for their safety and have
been advised to consult with UNAMSIL before distributing food near the
border areas, the agency said in a statement.
The
Moroccan authorities deported 48 sub-Saharan Africans this week who were
attempting to reach Europe illegally, the Reuters news agency reported.
The would-be migrants were said to come from Sierra Leone, Kenya, Benin,
Ghana and Senegal. They were arrested in a house in the Moroccan coastal
city of Agadir after arriving from Algeria using forged passports.
Moroccan officials said the migrants planned to travel to the city of
Laayoune in the Western Sahara, and then make for the Spanish Canary
Islands.
The
departure this week of RUF Party Secretary-General Pallo
Bangura
will not mean the end of the RUFP, party spokesman Eldred Collins insisted
on Friday. In an interview with the BBC, Collins suggested that the former
rebel movement would be better off now that Bangura has left. "It’s
a resurrection for our party," he said. "The resignation of Dr.
Pallo Bangura has no effect on the RUFP as far as we are concerned,
because we have expected a whole lot from Dr. Pallo and he never produced
the goods that were expected him. So even today I had a talk with the
chairman of the Western Area today, and he told me that most of the
members, the supporters, are very happy because they said they could not
have a secretary-general they don’t know and he can’t even go into the
office to speak to them. And even they said that he was one of the
contributing factors for the performance in the election because he did
not play his part well." Collins said the RUFP was holding meetings,
and would soon announce a new secretary-general. In an interview with the
Sierra Leone Web on Tuesday, Bangura speculated that Collins himself might
replace him at the head of the party, and Collins told the BBC he might be
interested in the post. "If I feel within myself that I’m capable
of shouldering the responsibility of manning the party, well why
not?," he said. "Because I think that we are now a political
party and we have political objectives to meet up with." Collins
rejected a suggestion that with the RUFP's poor performance in the May
elections it might be time to disband the party. "There is a story
about the farmer: the RUFP is a farmer who sends his seeds," he
said. "Some of those seeds fall down in rocky areas, some of them in
thorny areas, and some of them in good areas. So we believe that those
that fell in the good areas are still with the RUF, and we will muster our
resources together to push the party forward."
14 August: The trial of parliamentarian and former
Transport and Communications Minister Momoh Pujeh will proceed despite the
resignation of his lead lawyer, a Freetown magistrate's court ruled on
Wednesday. Pujeh faces charges of acquiring wealth through unlawful means
and, along with his wife Mary, of illegal trafficking in diamonds.
According to the BBC, Pujeh's lead defence lawyer, Luseni Massaquoi, told
the judge he could no longer represent the former minister, and left the
court. His reported replacement, Nicholas Browne-Mark, is said to be out of the country for health
reasons. The judge ruled that since Pujeh's junior lawyers were present,
that the trial should proceed. "What actually happened though, the
prosecution was prepared," said BBC correspondent Tom McKinley.
"It seemed to know that this was going to happen, and it had brought
its witnesses in. So the first witness, a diamond dealer, was brought in
and questioned, and he said how Mr. Pujeh had allegedly come to his office
last year and sold him diamonds to the value of Le 73,200,000 – that’s
the equivalent of about $35,000. Then when the prosecution had finished
doing its questioning, the defence obviously couldn’t cross-examine
because they didn’t have their lead lawyer there. So the magistrate at
this stage did defer the trial until late next week."
A Liberian ex-combatant who reportedly
fought on both sides during Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war is facing
deportation from Sierra Leone on security grounds, BBC correspondent
Lansana Fofana reported. General David Bropley, a former battlefield
commander with the Liberian ULIMO militia, was detained over the weekend
and is being held at Pademba Road Prison. An aide to President Kabbah told
the BBC that the government is concerned both about Liberian former
combatants and about current fighters who have been crossing the border
from Liberia in recent weeks. Fofana said friends of Bropley say he is
worried that he will be sent to Liberia, but the aide said Bropley would
be given a choice of which country he will be deported to. The expulsion
could come as early as Wednesday, the aide was quoted as saying.
13 August: RUF Party Secretary-General Alimamy
Pallo Bangura has resigned
his
position as the party's secretary-general, saying the time has come for
him to move on. "I’ve been considering this even just after the
elections. I sat down and I looked at the whole thing and where I’ve
come from, where I am, and all sorts of things that probably the best thing
would be for me to begin to stitch my life together again and move
on," he told the Sierra Leone Web. "And
I obviously wouldn’t be able to do that if I continued within the RUFP.
I’ve made a lot of sacrifices and I’ll let others continue now, and I
want to pick up the pieces of my life." Bangura previously held
diplomatic and ministerial posts
under the NPRC and the AFRC regimes before joining Sierra Leone's rebel
movement after the fall of the junta in 1998.
In 1999 and early 2000 he held the post of Minister of Energy and Power in
President Kabbah's short-lived unity government which followed the signing of the Lomé
Peace Accord. This year, Bangura was the RUF's last-minute choice as its presidential
candidate for the May elections after the National Electoral Commission ruled that
the jailed former rebel
leader Foday Sankoh was ineligible to contest as a candidate because he
had not registered as a voter. Bangura finished
sixth in a field of nine candidates, garnering just 1.73 percent of the
national vote. Speaking from Freetown Tuesday by telephone, Bangura said
the creation of the Special Court had nothing to do with his decision to
step down. Rather, he said, he needs to find a job. "Honestly I’m looking for various
opportunities," he said. "At the moment I don’t know which one. I’m jobless and all those
constraints. But I hope something will come up now, because really I need
to do something again." With no income, he is surviving "only by
the grace of God and handouts from good people." Bangura said he
didn't know who would replace him as secretary-general of the RUF Party,
and that he had not given the party notice of his intention to depart.
"To be frank there is very little communication since shortly after
the elections when we met and went to see President Kabbah," he said.
"After that they’ve all been going about their business —
no contact with me. All of that was an indication to me that really I
should get out and move on."
17 Sierra Leoneans abducted from three villages in
Kailahun District last month are being held by members of the Armed Forces
of Liberia, Radio France International reported on Tuesday. Three Sierra
Leonean officials recently travelled to the Liberian town of Faya to
negotiate with the local Liberian army commander, Sam Powell, for their
release. According to the report, 27 villagers were abducted on July 17
and used as porters to carry looted goods across the border. Ten
subsequently escaped their captors. The group remaining captive includes
very young children, with the oldest just 18 years of age.
12 August: The wife of jailed RUF leader Foday
Sankoh says she fears for her
husband's life amid reports last week that he had
been admitted to a prison hospital with malaria. "He is in a very bad condition and he has
been in hospital twice in the past month. The doctor from the prison is
advising the government about his health and they fear that he may die
before the Special Court," Fatou Mbaye Sankoh told the Reuters news
agency in Abidjan. Mrs. Sankoh, a Senegalese-born U.S. citizen,
accompanied RUF Party chairman Mike Lamin to Dakar last April in an
unsuccessful bid to have ECOWAS intervene and pressure the Sierra Leone
government to allow Foday Sankoh to contest the May presidential election.
The National Electoral Commission ruled that Sankoh was ineligible to
stand as a candidate because he had not registered as a voter. Since his reappearance
last March following nearly two years of detention at a secret location on
the outskirts of Freetown, Sankoh has appeared frail in his several court
appearances, and Fatou Sankoh charged that he was being mistreated.
"Now he is like an animal just living out of the bush. I cannot
imagine how they can treat a person like this," she said. "I have no access to my husband. I am trying to do
my best, to be in touch with human rights organisations to organise it, I
am not able to write letters to him...I have had no contact at all."
Foday Sankoh currently faces a 70-count indictment on murder and related
charges before Sierra Leone's High Court. It is widely expected, however,
that his case will be transferred to the Special Court — a joint Sierra
Leonean and United Nations war-crimes
tribunal which by statute takes precedence over the Sierra Leonean court system.
Fatou Sankoh suggested that the court would find her husband innocent of responsibility
for atrocities committed by his rebel movement. "If Foday is guilty of anything let's just
go to the Special Court, the whole world is watching," she
said. "Foday
is very human. He is concerned about corruption and that is what brought
the war. He likes women and children... I am not seeing that monster that
people want us to believe. I could not see myself marrying a
monster."
The Freetown civil society group Campaign for Good
Governance has called for the setting up of a fund to help the victims of
Sierra Leone's decade-long civil war, noting that the establishment of
such a fund was one of the provisions of the 1999 Lomé Peace Accord. That
provision, embodied in Article XXIX, states simply that the Sierra Leone
government, with the support of the international community, "shall
design and implement a programme for the rehabilitation of war
victims" and that a special fund should be set up for the purpose.
While ex-combatants have received cash benefits and even vocational
training after laying down their arms, war victims often complain that
they feel marginalised. The Campaign for Good Governance noted that many
had been stigmatized by their experiences, and pointed out that the
prospects for many of Sierra Leone's war affected citizens remain poor .
"A great number of them are unable
to afford the proper medical care that they desperately need and others
cannot return to school due to unwanted pregnancies," the group said
in a statement. "For these sexually abused women and girls the future
is bleak. The predicament of amputees is not only centered on the fact
that they are physically handicapped, but also on the fact that, they are
unable to support their families and dependants. For the younger ones it
greatly reduces their prospects of progressing and succeeding in this
highly competitive world."
10 August: Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission has scaled
back
its budget from nearly $10 million to about $6 million, the TRC's chairman
said on Saturday. But Bishop Joseph Humper (pictured right) told the BBC
that so far the commission had received only about $1.5 million in pledges
and cash from international donors, which he said was insufficient for the
TRC to carry out its mandate. "It is true that the TRC doesn’t have
sufficient funds to start its activities," he said. "This is
against the background that when the act was established, some mechanisms
were to be put in place for the TRC to take off, but events unfolded
instead in this country which prevented the TRC from taking off."
Humper said international donors had been waiting to see whether the
commission would ever be established before deciding whether to contribute
funds. Now that the TRC was a reality, he said, commissioners had been
meeting with donors in
Freetown "to tell them our plans and our desire and wishes and asking
them to ask their constituencies, nationally and internationally, to seek
their help in releasing necessary funds required for us to carry out
programme activities." Earlier this week, TRC commissioner John
Kamara (left) told reporters that President Kabbah had promised to raise
the issue of funding when he travels to New York next month to address the
United Nations General Assembly. Kamara said Kabbah had assured
commissioners that the TRC was one of his government's priorities, and he
pledged government financial support for the commission's work.
Some Sierra Leonean refugees and displaced Liberians who
were forced to flee into the forest when rebel fighters attacked their
refugee camp in the Liberian town of Sinje have begun returning to the
area, the Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported. Representatives of a
humanitarian mission which visited the area last week said Saturday that
about 200 Liberians who had sought refuge in Sierra Leonean border towns
had returned home. Some Sierra Leonean refugees have also returned to
areas around the town, the sources said.
9 August: An internal inquiry into the handling by
United Nations peacekeepers of anti-Nigerian rioting in central Freetown
last month suggests that the U.N. acted properly to put down the violence,
according to a UNAMSIL statement issued on Friday. Meanwhile, an official
investigation headed by CID director Tamba Gbekie is ongoing, and the
results are not due out until next week. The July 18 riot was sparked by
the murder of a popular Sierra Leonean "Dollar Boy," allegedly
by Nigerian black market money changers. Two persons, neither of whom was
apparently involved in the violence, died from gunshot wounds, and several
civil society groups in Freetown accused the Nigerian peacekeepers who
responded to the disturbance of using disproportionate force. According to
a UNAMSIL press release, U.N. peacekeepers "employed a combination of
persuasion, crowd dispersal tactics and firing of warning shots into the
air" to break up the riot, and noted that the situation was brought
under control by the combined efforts of U.N. peacekeepers and the police.
"The facts available to UNAMSIL indicate that at no time was firing
directed at the crowd," the statement said. "At this time, there
is no conclusive evidence as to how individuals were killed or injured on
that day." Civil society groups and diplomats had also questioned
whether UNAMSIL's mandate allowed it to intervene without being asked by
the Sierra Leonean authorities. A police spokesman played down the matter
in the week which followed the disturbances, insisting that UNAMSIL didn't
require police permission to intervene. And the U.N. said Friday that the
deployment was carried out "in accordance with standard operating
procedures," citing its expanded mandate which allows the U.N.
"to afford protection to civilians under imminent threat of physical
violence, taking into account the responsibilities of the Government of
Sierra Leone." UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki said the U.N.
investigators had interviewed witnesses and that there was no evidence
that peacekeepers had fired into the crowd. She pointed out that the
bodies of the two victims had been found in different parts of the city.
"If UNAMSIL fired into a crowd you can be sure that more than one
individual would have been hit and injured, generally speaking," she
said. Medical examiners have said that the two victims died of gunshot
wounds, but failed to find bullets in the bodies. Police say they were not
carrying guns, but were armed only with teargas. Novicki said no witness
had reported seeing peacekeepers shoot at rioters, and she added that it
was highly unlikely that shots fired into the air could have resulted in
the deaths. She noted, however, that many of the rioters were ex-combatants. "Anybody could have had guns," she said.
A last group of 269 former refugees have been resettled in
Kono and Kailahun Districts after more than a year of waiting until their
home areas were declared safe, the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR,
said on Friday. The returnees were part of a group of some 10,000 Sierra
Leoneans who returned from Guinea between March 2001 and February 2002.
They were temporarily settled in Pujehun District's Barri Chiefdom because
their homes were then under RUF control. 10,000 returnees who lived with
host communities in Lokomassama Chiefdom were returned to their homes in
the north last year. Now, virtually all returnees have been moved from
temporary resettlement and transit camps, the UNHCR said. Since September
2000, some 80,000 returnees have been resettled in their homes out of
about 100,000 who are known to have come home from Guinea and Liberia.
Repatriation from Liberia by sea is continuing, with 1,222 having returned
to Sierra Leone since the evacuation exercise began on July 20.
Police in Freetown are seeking two Nigerian nationals in
connection with the killing of a Sierra Leonean black market money
changer, Momodu Jan Bah, whose murder last month set off anti-Nigerian
riots in the centre of the city, CID director Tamba Gbekie told the Sierra
Leone Web. Gbekie, who is leading the investigation, said photographs had
been circulated and a warrant issued for the arrest of Oneyneychuku Nwosu,
alias Pascal, who like Bah was a black market foreign exchange dealer.
Nwosu is said to be a native of eastern Nigeria who entered Sierra Leone
by way of Liberia one or two years ago. The identity of a second man,
believed to be Nwosu's accomplice, is still unknown. Gbekie dismissed
speculation that Bah's murder was tied to a rivalry between Sierra Leonean
and Nigerian "dollar boys," or to competition between Nigerian
and ethnic Fullah street traders. "It was purely theft," he
said. "He abducted the man. He explained to him that he had in his
possession some dollars which he wants the leone equivalent for. They went
to a hotel at 152 Circular Road, Freetown. There they tied him up."
8 August: Liberian fighters who abducted 28 Sierra
Leoneans last month from the border town of Kokobu were members of the
rebel group Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD),
according to a man who escaped his captors. Tamba Bockarie, who spoke to
BBC correspondent Tom McKinley via an interpreter, said he and his fellow
captives were first taken to a Liberian border village and then to the
town of Masanbulahun where 25 of the villagers, including four of his
children, are still being held. He said six of the remaining captives were
women, eleven were girls, and the rest teenage boys. He said the LURD
fighters accused him of being a "rebel" who was fighting for the
forces of Liberian President Charles Taylor, and that he was mistreated as
a result. Bockarie was one of three abductees who got away from their
captors, and he said his escape was made possible because he was familiar
with the area. "He heard some of them talking that they are going to
take him to Kolahun, their headquarters, with the intention that they have
caught a rebel," the interpreter said. "So when he heard that,
they were sitting together in the night and he pretended to go to the
toilet, and he went round the house into the bush and went through the
bushes and came back to Sierra Leone."
Former Transport and Communications Minister Momoh Pujeh
and his wife Mary were charged in court Thursday with diamond smuggling in
what will be seen as a major test of Sierra Leone's Anti-Corruption
Commission (ACC). The couple were arrested last November after the ACC
alleged they had been involved in illicit diamond mining in Kenema
District, and had smuggled the gemstones out of the country in violation
of Sierra Leonean law and international sanctions. They were later
released while police conducted further investigations. Prosecutor Robin
Masson told the court that the two had been found in possession of 638.81
carats of diamonds, worth an estimated $35.000. Pujeh and his wife pleaded
not guilty, and the case was adjourned until August 14. Despite the
allegations against him, Pujeh won election to parliament in the May
elections on the ruling SLPP party's list in Kailahun District.
The European Commission (EC) adopted a proposal Thursday
aimed at reducing the trade in so-called illicit "conflict
diamonds," which are blamed for fueling wars in Sierra Leone, Angola
and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Under the plan, which would still
have to be approved by European Union member states, European countries
would adopt a unified set of controls modeled on mechanisms already in
place in diamond-importing countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands and
the United Kingdom. The new regulations would also require the setting up
of an advanced certification system to ensure that diamonds entering
Europe come only from legitimate sources. Under this scheme, producer
countries would be required to control diamonds from the mines to the
point of export. Parcels of diamonds would then be sealed in a
tamper-proof container, and a certificate issued for each shipment.
Re-exporting countries would have to provide similar certification. The
system, according to an EC statement, would exceed the minimum
recommendations of the so-called Kimberly Process, set up in May 2000 by
diamond importing and exporting countries, diamond industry groups and
civil society, to bring the illicit diamond trade under control
Under the EC plan, imports of diamonds not accompanied by a certificate
issued by a Kimberly Process participant would be prohibited, as would
exports to non-participants. If adopted, the new system
would take effect
in 2003. Meanwhile, an expert on conflict diamonds has called the EC
proposal a step in the right direction, "but alone it's not
enough." Ian Smillie (pictured left) of Partnership Africa Canada,
who served as the diamond expert on the U.N. Panel of Experts which in
2000 investigated the link between illicit diamonds and arms proliferation
in Sierra Leone, acknowledged that the proposed regulations were in some
respects even tougher that those called for by the Kimberly Process.
Smillie questioned, however, whether all of the EC countries would have
the will to enforce them, and he noted that the Kimberly Process had so
far refused to deal with demands by non-governmental organisations for the
regular independent monitoring of all national control mechanisms.
"Each government simply undertakes to apply the rules, and review
missions become a possibility only if there are indications of significant
non-compliance," he told the Sierra Leone Web. "Even then the
terms of reference of the review as well as the makeup of a review mission
would have to be discussed by a full plenary session of the Kimberley
Process, which only expects to meet once a year." Smillie said that
in the United States, the General Accounting Office had already found the
current system too weak to keep conflict diamonds out of the system.
7 August: Jailed RUF leader Foday Sankoh is
seriously ill, suffering from
malaria and a severe cough, and his condition has worsened despite being
treated at the prison hospital, the Reuters news agency reported on
Wednesday. He is, however, expected to recover. Sankoh is currently
awaiting trial before Sierra Leone's High Court on charges relating to the
May 2000 shooting of demonstrators outside his residence in Freetown. His
case is widely expected to be transferred to the Special Court, a war
crimes tribunal being set up to prosecute those deemed to bear the
greatest responsibility for atrocities committed during the latter half of
the country's decade-long civil war. "Sankoh at present is
hospitalised at the prison clinic where his condition continues to
deteriorate," a senior official at Pademba Road Prison told Reuters.
"He has been responding to medical treatment at a very slow pace, but
it is expected that his condition will have improved for the next High
Court sitting." Sankoh is not due back in court until September 18.
An aid worker was quoted as describing the former rebel leader's condition
as "very serious," saying he had lost a lot of weight but that
he was receiving relatively good medical care.
Special Court Chief Prosecutor David Crane arrived in
Freetown Tuesday to
begin
investigations into war crimes in Sierra Leone, the Associated Press
reported, quoting UNAMSIL spokesperson Margaret Novicki. The Special Court
is a joint tribunal consisting of Sierra Leonean and international judges,
and is charged with prosecuting a handful of persons deemed to bear the
greatest responsibility for serious crimes against international
humanitarian law since 30 November 1996, the date of the ill-fated Abidjan
Peace Agreement.
6 August: High Court Judge Samuel A. Ademosu has been named
to concentrate on anti-corruption cases in an effort to deal with a
backlog of nearly fifty corruption cases investigated by the
Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and turned over to the attorney-general's
office for prosecution, ACC Commissioner Val Collier told the Sierra Leone
Web on Tuesday. Collier said Mousu was finishing his current schedule as
circuit judge in Kenema, and that he could take up the new post before the
end of the month. Sierra Leone has come under increasing pressure from
donor nations in recent months to tackle the problem of official
corruption or face a reduction in development aid. Following the May
elections, President Kabbah announced that the fight against corruption
would be one of the hallmarks of his new administration. In its nearly two
years of operation the Anti-Corruption Commission has scored few
successes. Collier insisted that the small number of successful
prosecutions was not a matter of bad faith, but rather a lack of
resources. "But that is being cleared up with technical assistance
coming in in the form of additional help which we requested," he
said. "We are expecting to have one or two expatriate judges coming
in. They’re going to strengthen the law department, the prosecution arm
of government, which too has a dearth of law officers to do
prosecution." The new judges are not due until the end of the year.
In the meantime, Collier said, the ACC was working to build coalitions
with a growing number of civil society and professional groups, and even
with schools. "In this business you need partnership," he said.
"We cannot do it on a stand-alone basis; it has no value standing
alone like the knight in shining armour trying to get rid of all the bad
boys." Collier said a six-month experiment with anti-corruption clubs
at four local primary schools had proven so successful that there were now
plans to expand the programme into secondary schools, and to incorporate
anti-corruption ideals into the school curriculum. And he stressed that
the prosecution of corrupt officials was only the most visible part of his
commission's work. "Because of the sensational aspects of
enforcement, people feel and the general tendency is that enforcement
comes first," he said. "Honestly, enforcement is the least
and the last card in the pack for us. Education and prevention take
precedence as far as we are concerned. That is why sensitisation
programmes are nationwide."
The United States Department of Agriculture will donate
2,080 metric tons of rice, vegetable oil and dehydrated soup mix to feed
some 140,000 Sierra Leonean returnees and Liberian and Guinean refugees in
Kailahun District, the agency said on Tuesday. The food will be
distributed to the International Medical Corps under the Food for Progress
programme. The IMC, a private voluntary organisation, works to increase
the delivery of health services through construction of new or
rehabilitated clinics, and to stimulate the economy by rebuilding and
repairing roads.
5 August: 26 former ECOMOG soldiers who say they
were dismissed from the Nigerian army last year for marrying Sierra
Leonean women have appealed to Nigeria’s Defence Minister to intervene
on their behalf, the Lagos newspaper Vanguard reported. In a letter to
Defence Minister Theophilus Damjuma which was written by their lawyer, the
soldiers said that in July 2001 their commanding officer,
Lieutenant-Colonel S.O. Adeoye, ordered the soldiers to remove their
Sierra Leonean wives from the barracks. The soldiers complied, only to
again be summoned two months later by Adeoye and summarily dismissed from
the army. Now the soldiers, some of whom had served in Nigeria's military
for as long as twenty years, want to be reinstated. "It is
conspicuously glaring that the soldiers have suffered serious physical and
psychological trauma borne out of a crime that is non-existent in our
criminal jurisprudence," the letter said.
3 August: In the wake of last week's anti-Nigerian
riots in Freetown, Nigerian
President
Olusegun Obasanjo has called on the Sierra Leone government to ensure the
safety of Nigerians living in that country, the Lagos newspaper ThisDay
reported. Obasanjo made the comments during a farewell visit by outgoing
High Commissioner Joe Blell, who is returning to Freetown to take up the
post of Deputy Defence Minister. "The incident is unfortunate, but
what matters most is how we, the leaders in both countries, take it,"
Obasanjo said. "We request that whenever Nigerians require security,
assistance and protection of their lives and property, it is given."
2 August: Additional Sierra Leonean troops have now been
deployed along the
Liberian border to forestall further armed incursions
into Sierra Leone, Chief of Defence Staff Major-General Tom Carew told
journalists on Thursday after returning from a tour of five villages in
the border region. In two raids
last month, Liberian gunmen crossed into Sierra Leone and abducted some
46 residents of Kokobu village in Kailahun District. So far, only three of
the villagers have returned home. Carew said the raids had been carried
out by soldiers from the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL). "These
particular AFL soldiers must have been those people who have been trapped
and who were under no central command," he said. "They don’t
have food, they’re short of logistic supplies, so they were just there.
So at times when they enter our territory, say in a group of seven, it’s
only about two people that will be carrying weapons. They fire in the air
and the people will run away and they come, gather all their food, then
they abduct people to take this loot across." The Voice of America
quoted Carew as crediting Liberian Defence Minister Daniel Chea with
helping to negotiate the release of the remaining Sierra Leonean abductees.
But according to the official Sierra Leonean News Agency, he said Chea had
reneged on an agreement to send Liberian officials to participate in a
joint fact-finding mission along the border to assess how security in the
area could be reinforced. "I telephoned him and he assured me of his
presence but he boycotted," Carew was quoted as saying. The Chief of
Defence Staff said Sierra Leonean troops had now been moved to forward
positions and had been given appropriate rules of engagement. "We
have deployed in such a way that the main two crossing points, our men
have been deployed just opposite those crossing-points, making sure that
wherever they come from we will see," he said. But Carew acknowledged
that the border region could not be sealed off entirely because of its
length and its porous nature. Meanwhile, Carew said his troops had so far
disarmed about 70 Liberian soldiers who had crossed the border, the BBC
reported. The soldiers are now awaiting encampment in
Sierra Leone's northern Port Loko District.
Sierra Leonean weightlifter Omar Sheriff
lifted 225.0 kilos overall, but it was only enough to place 13th of 17 in
the up to 85 kg. category at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester. Sheriff
lifted 100.0 kilos in the snatch and 125.0 kilos in the clean and jerk.
His teammate, Ambrose Johnson, finished in 14th place with a total score
of 215.0 — 90.0 in the snatch and 125.0 in the clean and jerk. The
competition was won by David Matam of Cameroon, who achieved a composite
score of 340.0 kilos.
Sierra Leone is one of 13 West African countries which
will benefit from a new $3.2 million satellite communications system
designed to link ECOWAS member states around the clock to the
organisation's headquarters in Abuja, the Voice of America reported on
Friday. The system, which is being donated by the U.S. government, is
designed to reinforce ties between countries, especially in times of
crisis or humanitarian disaster. Two ECOWAS countries will be excluded
from the system: Liberia, because it is under United Nations sanctions,
and Burkina Faso, because of what a U.S. officials said was its links to
Liberia. The 13 countries will each receive five satellite-linked computer
work stations, to be used by their ministries of defence, foreign affairs,
or their chief of defence staff. The system has already been installed in
Abuja, and installation is expected to follow in the other West African
capitals in the near future. The U.S. intends to follow up with training
and maintenance after the system is put in place, the radio said.
Meanwhile, the U.S. said it is also prepared to hand over to ECOWAS some
$5 million worth of military equipment and spare parts currently stored at
a depot in Freetown. The non-lethal equipment consists mainly of trucks,
radios, generators and water purification materials, and would help allow
a rapid response by ECOWAS for regional peacekeeping tasks or to provide
support for humanitarian crisis operations.
The number of Liberian refugees entering Sierra Leone via
the three official entry points of Jendema, Gbaa and Dar es Salaam has
continued to decrease over the past two weeks, the U.N. World Food
Programme (WFP) said on Friday. The number of new arrivals during the
period varied from 10 to 50 per day. Meanwhile, the U.N.'s Consolidated
Appeal for Sierra Leone has reportedly been half funded, the agency said,
adding that the WFP had received 67 percent of its $61.5 million request
for Sierra Leone.
An investigation into the response by U.N. peacekeepers
and Sierra Leonean security forces of last month's anti-Nigerian riot in
central Freetown is expected to be completed next week, UNAMSIL
spokesperson Margaret Novicki said on Friday. At least two persons were
killed during the disturbance, allegedly by Nigerian peacekeepers who were
called to the scene. Some groups in Freetown have accused UNAMSIL of using
disproportionate force to put down the riot.
1 August: The United States government has dropped
its travel warning on Sierra Leone, but the U.S. Embassy in Freetown is
still advising caution to those travelling to the country. "Security
remains a concern. Crime, to include
armed robberies, has increased in
recent months. Large crowds and political rallies can quickly become
violent and should be avoided," the embassy said in a statement. The
U.S. State Department travel
advisory pointed out that while the security situation in the country
has improved significantly over the past year, travel, especially outside
the capital, can still be problematic. The advisory also noted that the
incidence of serious crime had risen since the lifting of the curfew in
January, while petty theft, especially of wallets and passports, is
common.