28 August: A traffic jam of former fighters
seeking to cross the Liberian border into Sierra Leone with their loot was
building Thursday, while Sierra Leonean soldiers manned machine gun nests
to prevent combatants from crossing the Mano River Bridge,
the Associated Press reported. "We have
come under pressure...to allow them passage across the bridge into Sierra
Leone with their personal effects –
war booty," Lieutenant-Colonel Salifu Lawrence Conteh told a visiting
military inspection team. Conteh said he had no count how many combatants
were waiting to cross, but that the number was "large." Many of
the rebels have offered to disarm to Sierra Leone's forces to be allowed
to cross, he said, adding that about 80 percent of the fighters were born
in Sierra Leone, and that many of them were seeking to return with wives
and children they had acquired over the 14 years of conflict in Liberia.
The movement to the border began following former Liberian President
Charles Taylor's resignation and flight into exile on August 11, Conteh
said. On the Liberian side, LURD rebel commander General Mohamed
Tarawallie said the fighters wanted the bridge reopened to restore trade
and to reunite families and communities divided by the war. "There is
no cause for concern, and there is perfect peace for Sierra Leone,"
he said.
U.S. Ambassador Peter Chaveas handed
over the newly refurbished Koidu Government Hospital to President Kabbah
Tuesday at a ceremony in Sierra Leone's eastern Kono District, following a
U.S.-funded restoration effort which cost more than half a million
dollars. The project to refurbish the war-damaged hospital was overseen by
the French non-governmental organisation Premier Urgence, with 80 percent
of the labour provided by local people, including former combatants and
returned refugees. Improvements included the rehabilitation of the
surgical theatre and maternity ward, the construction of an under-5 ward,
the rehabilitation of outpatient facilities, the reconstruction of the
dispensary and administrative offices and a general face-lift to the
building. According to a U.S. Embassy statement, the new hospital is now
complete and is ready to provide health care services for the people of
Kono District. Chaveas said a similar restoration of the Kailahun Hospital
was underway and will be complete in two months.
President
Kabbah on Tuesday formally launched the "Kono Diamond Peace
Alliance," a coalition aimed at cleaning up the diamond mining sector
in Sierra Leone and returning it to profitability. In a statement, the
U.S. Embassy called the Alliance "an important step towards improving
control and management of Sierra Leone's diamond industry," which has
been plagued for years by smuggling, money laundering, corruption and
unfair labour practices. In 2002, only $41 million of, by one estimate,
$300 million worth of diamonds mined in
Sierra Leone were exported legally. U.S. Ambassador Peter Chaveas
(pictured right) noted that little of the benefits of the country's
diamond wealth goes to the
ordinary
Sierra Leonean. "My government is firmly of the view that there can
be no lasting peace in Sierra Leone, indeed no lasting peace in this
region, until fundamental change assures that more of the wealth of Kono
stays in Kono and more of the wealth of Sierra Leone stays in Sierra
Leone," he said. "There is no other way to assure that the youth
of this country are offered a future that does not involve violence. And
there is no other way to insure that Sierra Leone diamonds do not continue
to merit the label of 'blood diamonds,' because we must not lose sight of
the fact that the same diamonds that once financed the terrorism
perpetrated by the RUF may now or in the future support the activities of
terrorist organizations elsewhere in the world." The Kono Diamond
Peace Alliance comprises the Government of Sierra
Leone, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID),
Britain's Department for International Development (DfID), industry
experts, community representatives and others.
The Chinese government has donated 300
pieces of furniture to furnish the Special Court's new facility in New
England, the court said in a statement. In a ceremony on Thursday, Chinese
Ambassador Fan Guinjin said the donation was made in response to an appeal
by the United Nations Security Council, and was targeted toward the
specific needs of the court. Meanwhile, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
announced Thursday the appointment of Gambian Judge Hassan Bubacarr Jallow
as Chief Prosecutor of the Rwanda war crimes tribunal in Arusha. Jallow
had previously been named as an appeals judge for the Special Court for
Sierra Leone. According to the Associated Press, Security Council
President Fayssal Mekdad said the Security Council may meet on Friday to
endorse the appointment of Jallow to a four-year term as head of the
Rwanda tribunal.
26 August: 186 persons aboard the ship MV Overbeck,
among them 154 Sierra Leonean refugees, remain adrift after the vessel's
engine broke down on
Sunday.
The Overbeck was chartered by the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) to
repatriate thousands of Sierra Leonean refugees from the war-torn Liberian
capital, Monrovia. The Sierra Leoneans boarded the ship on Friday and have
now spent more than 80 hours at sea. A UNHCR spokesman said the U.S.
Navy's USS Carter Hall and a World Food Programme ship rushed to the
Overbeck's assistance. An attempt to repair the ship's engines failed, and
the option of towing the Overbeck to port is now being considered. The
refugees aboard the stranded vessel were reported to be well, and the ship
has sufficient food and water. The UNHCR has received assurances that any
medical needs of the passengers will be attended to by the USS Carter
Hall's medical staff. Meanwhile, the UNHCR has returned 350 Sierra
Leoneans who sought refuge at the UNHCR compound in Monrovia back to their
camps.
25 August: Police in Makeni said Monday they were
searching for the body of
the
late RUF leader Foday Sankoh after someone removed his corpse from its
grave under cover of night. "Sankoh's body is missing from the grave –
the grave has been checked and...the body is no longer to be seen," a
police official told Reuters. Sankoh died on July 29 in the custody of the
U.N.-backed Special Court, which indicted the former rebel leader for war
crimes last March. He was buried on August 3 in his home town of Masang,
near Magburaka. According to the Associated Press, police who visited the
grave site found the body gone and the grave covered so as to hide any
sign that the body had been there.
The United Nations
Secretary-General's Special Representative for
Liberia,
Jacques Klein (pictured right), met in Freetown Monday with President
Kabbah and Vice President Berewa in what a U.N. spokesman described as the
first in a series of meetings with regional leaders to discuss the
situation in Liberia. Klein also met with U.S. Ambassador Peter Chaveas,
Special Court Chief Prosecutor David Crane, and senior UNAMSIL staff. According
to a UNAMSIL statement, Klein expressed concern over the continuing
serious humanitarian situation in Liberia, but noted that U.N. agencies
were now rushing relief supplies to the war-torn country. He added that it
was up to the international community to make Liberia work. A failed
Liberia, he stressed, "will spell disaster for Sierra Leone and the
sub-region." The new U.N. Special Representative announced he would
be going to New York in ten days time to present a report to the Security
Council. He expressed hope that a U.N. mandate for a peacekeeping force in
Liberia would be forthcoming between mid-September and the beginning of
October. Klein said he was working well with Liberian President Moses
Blah, and expressed hope that the transitional government which succeeds
him in October will live up to expectations. "I expect it to be a
government of technocrats," he said. Klein also decried reports of
continuing fighting in some parts of Liberia, despite the signing by the
warring factions of a peace agreement. "There is fighting in isolated
parts," he said. "There is no command and control among the
fighters. This will go on until sufficient U.N. troops are on the ground.
When they know we have more guns than they do, they will stop."
A
U.S. naval ship went the the aid of the UNHCR-chartered vessel
MV
Overbeck Sunday as the ship drifted in stormy seas off the coast of
Liberia, a UNHCR spokesperson said. The Overbeck was carrying nearly 200
Sierra Leonean refugees from Monrovia to Freetown. The USS Carter Hall
arrived in the early hours of the morning and docked beside the Overbeck
for the rest of the night. A WFP ship also sailed from Monrovia to help
the stricken vessel. The spokesperson said the passengers and crew were
not in danger.
Aid workers who visited two of the refugee camps on the
outskirts of Monrovia for the first time since fighting engulfed the
Liberian capital were shocked by what they found, UNHCR spokesperson
Millicent Mutuli told the Voice of America. "The situation remains
very, very desperate," she said. "People do not have adequate
supplies of food or water. There is need for health care. The situation is
as dire as we have been fearing for some time. The camps had been home to
many of the estimated 13,500 Sierra Leonean refugees still in Liberia.
Many of them fled to the bush, or into the city centre. On Tuesday, aid
agencies travelled to Bo Waterside, on Liberia's border with Sierra Leone,
to explore the possibility of opening corridors for humanitarian aid. The
mission noted that bad roads between Bo Waterside and Zimmi and a lack of
security guarantees may impede plans to transport Sierra Leonean refugees
by land. A U.N.-chartered ship, the MV Overbeck, resumed repatriation
voyages a week ago, but its capacity is limited to 300 passengers per
trip. Aid agencies also visited the town of Tubmanburg, about 40 miles
north of Monrovia, where an estimated 20,000 persons had been displaced by
recent fighting. There, they found people surviving mostly on cassava
leaves and palm cabbage and in desperate need of food, health care and
sanitation. Some 38,000 refugees from Ivory Coast are in eastern Liberia,
in areas still inaccessible to aid workers. Mutuli said aid workers were
making daily visits to the camps around Monrovia to help give the refugees
the confidence to return. "Yesterday some of our staff who visited
the camps also talked to groups of refugees on the possibility of setting
up of neighborhood watches, at least for the night, so that there is more
vigilance," she said. "We're not where we should be, but these
are the first steps."
Finnish police said Monday they had found most of the 13
young
soccer
players who stayed behind after their team was eliminated from the U-17
World Cup, but that the players were likely to seek asylum, the Reuters
news agency reported. The Sierra Stars team was to have left for home on
Thursday, but 13 players and a team official failed to show up for the
flight. Police in the southern city of Lahti, where the team played its
matches, said they had not been able to interview the players and could
not confirm whether any had sought asylum. "Over half of them have
been found, all outside of Lahti," a police spokesman said. "We
haven't talked to them yet, but we will do that by the end of the week to
see what their intentions were. It is possible they applied for
asylum."
24 August: Thousands of people lined the streets of
Freetown Sunday as the body of former President Joseph Saidu Momoh was
borne in a colonial-era gun carriage to the Kissy Road Cemetery, the
Reuters news agency reported. Earlier, President Kabbah joined friends and
relatives to pay final respects as the late president's body late in state
in the parliament building.
The Milton Margai School for
the Blind, founded in Freetown just under fifty
years
ago, suffered during the decade of Sierra Leone's brutal civil war. It was
evacuated during the military coup in 1997, and the building was bombed
during the rebel invasion of the capital in 1999. In fact, some of the
students were blinded by rebels during the conflict. This month, the
school's choir is touring the U.K. to show the world a
new image of Sierra Leone: an image of hope. "We want to say thank
you (to Britain) for helping us put an end to the war," said
Headmaster Sam Campbell, who is accompanying the 34-member group. In their
first performance, at Leicester Square in the heart of the British
capital, the youths entertained Londoners with songs in Krio such as
"You Eat Me Money" and "Fine Boy Fine Girl." Since
then, the choir has performed at
churches
and military bases. This Friday they will end their tour with a concert in
front of 2,400 people at the Methodist Hall in London's Parliament Square.
Thirteen Mayors of London are expected to attend. In Sierra Leone, the
students face a struggle in a society which often does not value the
disabled. But with their motto, "We cannot see, but we will
conquer," the students are clearly expecting a better future – for
themselves, and for their country Sierra Leone.
23 August: Former Police Inspector-General Walter
O. Nicol, who as Chief
Electoral
Commissioner helped guide his country through the May 2002 presidential
and parliamentary elections, died early Saturday at a London hospital
where he was being treated for throat cancer. He was 59. Nicol
received his bachelor's degree from Fourah Bay College in 1967. He joined
the police force after graduation, eventually becoming Principal
Immigration Officer, a post he held for many years. He eventually became
Inspector-General of Police until his retirement in 1995. He studied
policing extensively, earning a Masters degree in Police Studies from
Oxford University. After his retirement he worked as a consultant on
several projects. He was named Chief Electoral Commissioner and head of
the National Electoral Commission in 2001. Nicol is survived by his wife
Valerie and four children.
Footballer Maxwell Fornah,
nicknamed "Amputee Kallon," was in school when
he
heard the sound of gunfire from his village. He tried to run home to be
with his family during the imminent RUF attack, but a rebel shot him in
the back of the leg. After weeks of severe pain without medical attention,
Red Cross workers intervened to save his life, but they were forced to
amputate his by now gangrenous leg. Fornah now lives at the amputee camp
in the Freetown suburb of Murraytown. This month, Fornah and his fellow
Sierra Leonean amputee soccer players are visiting Britain to measure
themselves against the best of the English amputee teams. In their first
match on Wednesday the Sierra Leoneans lost 2-1 to Southend on a disputed
goal. And although they rallied from their disappointing loss to come back
with a strong effort against Everton on Thursday, they lost 4-0 against
what proved to be a very strong Everton side. Two of the Everton players
were professional football players before they lost their legs. "They
had never played a competitive game before they came here, so theirs is a
steep learning curve," press officer Kathryn
McNicoll told the Sierra Leone Web. "They are (said to be) learning
fast. However, they also have a lot to learn and so, although I know that
losing is not in their vocabulary, I hope they can come away with a
positive outlook on the tour. They were so positive when I met them the
day they arrived, even though they were exhausted after the long
flight." The team will take part in a mini-tournament in Manchester
on the 24th, and play in a demonstration match at Luton on the 30th. The
tour ends with a friendly against the English national team at Fulham on
August 31. Apart from the experience, the Sierra Leoneans are looking for
a long-term working relationship with Britain's Single Leg Amputee Sports
Club (SLASC), and with the charity Action for Children in Conflict (AFC),
which sponsored the team's "Play for Hope" tour.
Britain's
new High Commissioner to Sierra Leone, Dr. John
Edward
Mitchiner, presented his credentials to President Kabbah Friday in a
ceremony at the presidential lodge. In his statement, Mitchiner said the
United Kingdom remained committed to a strong and active involvement in
Sierra Leone, and would work to ensure a peaceful democratic future for
Sierra Leone. "It will remain vital, for the continuing evolution of
Sierra Leone, to press forward with post-conflict priorities
such as reforming the security sector; bringing the diamond fields under
the full control of the Government of Sierra Leone; tackling the scourge
of corruption and developing your industry and economy," he said.
Mitchiner, 52, began
his diplomatic career in 1980. His most recent postings were as Deputy
High Commissioner in Kolkata (Calcutta) India (2000-2003) and as
Ambassador to Armenia (1997-1999). He has also served as Desk Officer of
the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Central African Department. He received a PhD from London University's School of Oriental and African
Studies in 1977. From 1977-1978 he was a research fellow at Visva Bharati
University in Santiniketan and from 1978-1979 the Bipradas Palchoudhuri
Fellow Calcutta University. He replaces former High Commissioner Alan
Jones, who has moved on to another diplomatic assignment.
22 August: Liberian President Moses Blah expressed
regret Friday for his
country's role in Sierra Leone's civil war, and assured Sierra Leoneans in
a live television broadcast that "the past will not be
repeated." Blah, accompanied by
ECOWAS officials, is on a regional
tour to meet with the leaders of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and
Nigeria. The former vice president took over Liberia's government last
week following the departure of Charles Taylor, who stands accused of
backing Sierra Leone's RUF rebels during the country's civil war.
According to the Associated Press, Blah was welcomed to Freetown by
military bands and an honour guard. President Kabbah welcomed him in a
ceremony at Lungi International Airport. "We have come to extend our
hand of friendship to the people of Sierra Leone," Blah said.
"What has happened in the past will not be repeated.
Even if it calls upon us to apologise to the people of Sierra Leone, we
will. We are brothers. We are one." Blah invited the Sierra Leonean
leader to visit Monrovia, and Kabbah accepted. "I look forward to
walking in the streets of Monrovia with you," he said. "This is
the beginning of civilized existence between our two peoples. If there is
peace in Liberia, then there will be peace in Sierra Leone." Kabbah
said his government had no problem with the people of Liberia, but only
with Taylor. "We have a problem with one man," he said. "We
shall treat him as an individual."
At least three of the missing Sierra
Stars players players have turned up in Helsinki and may already have
applied for asylum in Finland, the Reuters news agency reported on Friday.
"Three people have been found in Helsinki and the police know about
them. They have possibly applied for asylum," police
spokesman Aimo
Ojanen said. Ojanen said three other persons spotted in the capital
overnight were also probably team members. "It is probable that the
missing youngsters will be found in the Helsinki region in a few
days," Ojanen said in a statement. He said the players did not have
their passports on them, as they were held by team officials who flew back
to Sierra Leone on Thursday. They had only a small amount of cash. Finnish
officials declined to comment on asylum cases, saying all such issues were
handled in secrecy. "In a normal case we talk to the applicants and
the process could easily take months," a police official told
Reuters. FIFA, in a statement, said that twelve players and two officials
failed to show up for their flight home. Reuters reported that thirteen
officials and one player from the 28-member squad remained behind. The
Sierra Leonean delegation to the FIFA Under-17 World Championships
consisted of twenty players and eight officials.
21 August: Fourteen members of Sierra Leone's
national Under-17 team failed
to
show up Thursday at the Helsinki airport for
their scheduled flight home, soccer's world governing body FIFA said in a
statement.
Police in the Finnish city of Lahti, where the team played its matches,
say they are investigating the disappearance of the team members. The
Sierra Stars qualified for the FIFA World Championships in Finland with a
second-place finish at the CAF U-17 Championship in Swaziland, but managed
only a single draw in their three World Championship matches. Twenty
players were listed on the team's roster.
Funeral
services for former President Joseph Saidu Momoh will take place
Sunday
at the Samaria West African Methodist Church in Freetown, according to a
statement by the president's office. Momoh passed away on August 2nd in
the Guinean capital Conakry where he lived in exile. The former
president's body will lie in state in the State Hall of the Parliament
building prior to the service. He will be buried at Kissy Road Cemetery.
President Kabbah opened a condolence book for the late president Thursday
at State House. The book will remain open until until Saturday, the
statement said.
Representatives of Liberia's warring
factions meeting in Accra have
selected Gyude Bryant, to chair the transitional government charged with
leading the war-torn country out of 14 years of civil conflict until
elections in 2005. The 54-year old businessman was one of three candidates
for the post put forward by Liberia's political parties and civil society
groups on Monday. Bryant finished third in Monday's balloting, but the BBC
members of the government and rebel groups saw him as more neutral than
his two opponents, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Rudolph Sherman. He was also
said to be the least well-known the of the three candidates in Liberia.
Bryant is a Monrovia-based businessman who deals in port handling
equipment, and the leader of the minor political party, the Liberia Action
Party. He is also a leading official in Liberia's Episcopal Church. Long
time political opposition leader Wesley Johnson of the United People's
Party was chosen as the vice chairman. The transitional government will
take power on October 14, at the end of the current government's term in
office. The Chief Mediator at the ECOWAS-sponsored peace talks in Accra,
former Nigerian leader Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, and other ECOWAS
officials are now preparing to fly to Monrovia to meet with President
Moses Blah. They then intend to accompany Blah on a regional tour, to
Conakry, Freetown, Abidjan and Abuja, to try and seal the peace process,
news services reported.
REACTION to the selection of Gyude
Bryant as the chairman of Liberia's transitional government.
GYUDE BRYANT: "Too many tempers are inflamed and we need to cool them
down.
We need to cool Liberia down. It takes time. We can't do this in two years
but we must begin it...I bring a balanced quality of a neutralist. I don't
see myself as being a contentious person. I don't see myself as posing a
threat. I've taken this job because I think our country needed a cooling
off period...I have always been the one who mobilized and brought together
the opposition for a purpose of healing our country and bringing us
together, appealing one candidate and reducing the number of parties...I
have the full and absolute confidence that Wesley and I enjoy the
confidence of the warring factions. We will do our best to mobilize the
needed resource to have them disarm - and not just disarm. You have to put
these people in programmes to change them, to make them better men and
women." (On whether Liberia should have a war crimes tribunal)
"No, I think it will do more damage than good. We need to grant a
general amnesty and move our country forward."
INFORMATION MINISTER REGINALD GOODRIDGE: "(Bryant is)
level-headed...He will be the perfect type of glue that will bring
together this country."
ECOWAS CHIEF MEDIATOR GEN. ABDULSALAMI ABUBAKAR: "Your job is not
going to be an easy one...The first step of unifying the people starts
from today. Do not let your people down."
U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL: "We are pleased at the
progress
made in Liberia so far. We see this morning that a head of a transitional
government has been named and are pleased the United States was able to
play a role with ECOWAS. I'd like to congratulate the Secretary General
for his efforts as well as the ECOWAS leadership for their efforts in
getting Mr. Taylor out of Monrovia and peacekeepers in; and hope in as
well."
UNITED PARTY OF LIBERIA LEADER ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF: "We are hopeful
that this will mean the end of the conflict and that all Liberians can now
meet the awesome challenge of peace, reconciliation and development...I think
we'll
have to wait and see (what kind of leader Bryant will make). He's the
chairman of one of the political parties, so that does put him in a
leadership role. How he will measure up to the awesome task that our
country faces remains to be seen, but we will wish him well and give him
whatever support is required...I think all things considered Liberians are
tired of war and would like to see the country move into the place where
people can return to normal lives, and I hope that the transitional
government will put in place those measures and will address those needs
and concerns of the thousands of young combatants to ensure that there's
no need for them to recourse to arms once again."
20 August: A 3-2 loss to South Korea's Taeguk
Warriors Wednesday has ended the Sierra Stars' slip hope of reaching the
quarterfinals at the U-17 World Championships in Finland. Han Dong Won
fired a curling shot off his right foot to score for South Korea in the
28th minute, but Obi Metzger evened the score eight minutes later when he
kicked in a deflected shot from Kalie Jalloh. The Sierra Leoneans went
ahead briefly in the second half when Metzger scored at the 51 minute
mark. After that, however, it was all South Korea. Yang Dong Hyen
equalised in the 74th minute and Lee Yong Rae scored the Warriors in the
78th to secure the win. Sierra Leone drew a tough match against Spain,
then lost a hard-fought battle with the U.S.
Exiled Liberian leader Charles Taylor still poses a threat
to peace in
his
country and will be arrested and sent to Sierra Leone if he ever tries to
return home, the U.S. Secretary-General's Special Representative for
Liberia said on Wednesday. "Charles Taylor with a cell phone is still
almost a government in exile, potentially quite dangerous," Jacques
Paul Klein told the Reuters news service. Taylor faces war crimes charges
before the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone, and Klein said that
if Taylor should try to make good on his pledge to return to Liberia he
would quickly be turned over to the court. "He would be arrested. I
would love to do that," Klein said. A United Nations peacekeeping
force is slated to replace the West African peacekeeping force ECOMIL in
October, and Klein said the U.N. would then be authorised to take Taylor
into custody. "The moment you have a United Nations mission, once you
have a mandate, not only are you authorized to arrest a war criminal but
you are mandated to execute the warrant of the court," he said. Klein
rejected talk of any deal for Taylor which would see the charges against
him dropped. "Never. Otherwise you set a precedent; you can be
a dictator and if you kill enough people and you wait long enough you'll
get away with it," he said. "You cannot afford to have that
happen in the 21st century."
19 August: Liberian political parties and civil
society groups meeting in Accra have narrowed the list of candidates to
head the country's transitional government from 17 to 3. In balloting late
Tuesday, veteran opposition politician Ellen Johnson Sirleaf received the
most votes, followed by Rudolph Sherman of the former ruling True Whig
Party. Monrovia-based businessman Gyude Bryant of the Liberia Action Party
finished in third place after a three-way runoff election. Under the peace
agreement signed last week, Liberia's warring parties
– the current government and the LURD and MODEL rebel groups
– must choose by consensus one of the three to chair the interim government.
This is expected to take place on Wednesday. The new administration will
take over on October 14, at the expiration of the current government's
term in office, and will lead the country until elections in January 2005.
The warring factions were barred from the seeking the
posts of chairman and vice chairman, but each group will have 15
representatives in the transitional government. In addition, the current
government will receive the Defence and Internal Affairs portfolio; LURD
will get the Finance and Justice ministry, and MODEL will receive the post
of Foreign Affairs.
Sierra Leone's Ministry of Health and Sanitation has reported one confirmed
case and 45 suspected cases of yellow fever in Tonkolili District, the World
Health Organisation (WHO) said on Tuesday. A joint investigative mission from
the ministry, WHO and UNICEF took place from August 7-10 and samples collected
on site are currently undergoing laboratory testing. According to the WHO
statement, surveillance has been strengthened in the affected areas and plans
are in place for an immunisation campaign to begin this week. The ministry has
a stock of yellow fever vaccine available to cover the affected population.
Additional samples are being collected for testing in surrounding
districts.
Several aid workers were briefly held
hostage during a protest by more than 9,000 Liberian refugees at a camp in
Sierra Leone over delayed food supplies, the BBC reported on Tuesday. No
one was injured, and officials later negotiated the hostages' release.
A
senior United Nations official who helped to keep the humanitarian crisis
in
Sierra
Leone in front of the international community during the country's civil
war was killed Tuesday in a terrorist attack on the U.N. headquarters in
Iraq. At least 17 persons died and many more were injured or remain buried
in the rubble after a suicide bomber drove a truck bomb into the U.N.'s
headquarters at Baghdad's Canal Hotel. The U.N. confirmed that Sergio Vieira de
Mello, the U.N.'s Special Representative for Iraq, was among those killed.
A Brazilian diplomat and a veteran of peacekeeping operations from the
Balkans to East Timor to Africa, Vieira de Mello formerly served as the
U.N.'s Under Secretary-General
for Humanitarian Affairs. Following a visit to Sierra Leone during the
country's civil war in June 1998, he described rebel atrocities against
civilians as among the worst he had ever experienced. "I
have close to 29 years of experience with these conflicts I had not seen something like
this before," he said. "There is a pattern of cruelty against civilians without discrimination,
including children. The pattern is one of amputations, of lacerations, of maiming of
civilians
– men, women of any age including children. Hands are cut, ears and noses are
amputated." United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who cut short
his European holiday Monday to return to New York, issued an angry
statement condemning the bombing.
"Nothing can excuse this act of unprovoked and murderous violence
against men and women who went to Iraq for one purpose only: to help the
Iraqi people recover their independence and sovereignty, and to rebuild
their country as fast as possible, under leaders of their own
choosing," Annan said, adding: "I hope to see those who have perpetrated
this outrage brought to justice."
18 August: Liberia's warring factions signed a
peace agreement Monday, raising hopes for an end to 14 years of civil
conflict. The pact, signed in Accra by representatives of the Liberian
government and the LURD and MODEL rebel groups, paves the way for a
two-year transitional government in which none of
the three factions will
hold the top posts. The transitional government will take over from
President Moses Blah in October, and democratic elections will be held no
later than 2005. The head of the new administration, who will not come
from any of the warring factions, is expected to be chosen later this
week.
REACTION to the signing of the Liberian peace
agreement:
ECOWAS CHIEF MEDIATOR GEN. ABDULSALAMI ABUBAKAR: "I want to
believe
that with the signing of this agreement today, Liberia will never be
plunged into another spiral of violence in the quest for political power,
or under the false pretense of liberating the people. Liberians do not
need liberators anymore. Liberians need developers and nation-builders.
SPOKESMAN FOR U.N. SECRETARY-GENERAL KOFI ANNAN: "The
Secretary-General
welcomes the signing today in Accra of a comprehensive peace agreement for
Liberia...He calls on all concerned to seize this opportunity to work
together to restore peace and stability in the country. He further calls
upon the international community to support the parties in that endeavour."
LURD REBEL LEADER SEKOU CONNEH: "I am a liberator. I have finished my
job. I am returning to my country as a citizen."
MODEL REBEL LEADER THOMAS NIMELY: "Today is a great day for the
people of Liberia and for the peace process, for the people within the
sub-region of Africa. It's a very great day." (On the fighting)
"It was a call for help. You have seen people always say 'I'm going
to kill myself'. They don't really need to do that. They are calling for
help. We have called the American people and the international community
for help." (On whether there will be true peace) "I don't know
about the other people, but MODEL
– there will be true peace. There has been true peace. We have begun
a peace process before it was signed, and we will hold on to it."
LIBERIAN DEFENCE MINISTER DANIEL CHEA: "The government, together
with
the rest of Liberia, will say we are all very, very happy. We believe the
signing of the agreement, the political agreement in Accra, is a real
victory for the Liberian people, who have been the biggest victims of all
of these armed aggressions over the years...We believe that ECOWAS
together with other members of the international community, unlike the
past, they are very serous about this. And one of the things that they
have done, and we want to encourage them not just for Liberia but for
Africa, is to ensure that they create a disincentive for this kind of
aggression in Liberia and elsewhere. But you must understand in clear
terms that you cannot wage war on your own people for political gains and
then at the end of the day you are awarded portfolios and the
presidency."
GHANAIAN PRESIDENT JOHN KUFUOR: "Liberians must now allow the love of
country to override the love of power. You should return to Liberia and
treat your country like a cherished but sick baby that should be cared for
with love."
U.S. WHITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN: "The United States welcomes the signing
of the peace agreement today in Accra, Ghana by Liberia's Government,
rebel groups, political parties, and leaders of Liberia's civil
society...The United States expects all parties to abide by the terms of
the agreement and to live up to their commitments to stop all hostilities,
to fully support the formation of the new government, and to ensure full
humanitarian access. This historic agreement provides the people of
Liberia and its new leadership an unprecedented opportunity to begin the
process of healing and reconciliation toward a peaceful, stable, and
prosperous Liberia."
A Sierra Leonean ship chartered by the
aid agency World Vision to transport
badly-needed relief supplies to war-torn Monrovia has sunk in a storm, a
spokesman for the agency has told news services. The Madam Monique reportedly broke apart off the coast of Sierra Leone some time Saturday
night after battling a storm for ten hours. The 19 crew members managed to
swim ten kilometres to shore before being rescued by a helicopter.
According to a World Vision press release, the
ship was carrying $186,000 of relief goods including 15,000 blankets, 4.8
tons of laundry soap, 1,200 plastic buckets, 4,000 water cans and 1,200
sleeping mats, four generators, 24 drums of diesel and eight drums of
gasoline. World Vision was planning to distribute the items to 21,000
Monrovia residents. News reports and several spokespersons for World
Vision initially named the boat as the Madam Patricia, a vessel which had
been chartered last year to ply the waters between Bonthe and Freetown. A
World Vision statement subsequently named it as the 140-ton Madam Monique.
Sierra Leone's Anti-Corruption
Commission struggled last year, with no cases brought to trial, little
significant movement on cases pending in 2001, and fewer additions during
2002, according to the Commission's 2002 report
which was presented to President Kabbah last week. While recording a few
modest successes, Anti-Corruption Commissioner Val Collier (pictured
right) said that because the Anti-Corruption Act (2000) provided no
penalties for failing to cooperate with the Commission, many government
ministries and departments simply ignored the Commission or refused to
comply with its requests and recommendations. Collier also expressed frustration
over what he said was "the rather lukewarm attitude of the judiciary,
which after two years has yet to take a single matter of adjudication to a
final
conclusion," and "a level of disinterestedness" by
Parliament. While investigators are already over-burdened, Collier said a
decision by the Attorney-General to take anti-corruption cases directly to
the High Court meant the Commission had to retake 119 witness statements
under oath had caused a significant delay especially as 46 of the
witnesses were from outside of Freetown. Collier also pointed to the
problem of inadequate legal staff which, he said, meant that cases turned
over by the Commission had not been prosecuted. President Kabbah,
according to the Office of the Presidency website, registered strong
disappointment over the apparent slow progress and lack of tangible
results in both the investigation and the prosecution of
corruption-related cases. Kabbah said he had often been embarrassed while
abroad by questions about the huge backlog of corruption cases awaiting
action, including matters pertaining to two former ministers and a former
High Court judge. The president called the backlog of cases turned over by
the Commission to the Attorney-General's office hard to justify, and he
called for the prompt replacement of magistrates who might be responsible
for stalling corruption trials. "Donors are watching…and our people
are very critical," he said. "We have to show that we are
serious and committed."
17
August: The Sierra Stars lost to the United States 2-1 Sunday at their
U-17 World Championship match in Lahti, Finland. Alimamy Sesay drew first
blood,
with a goal in the 32nd minute, but the score was evened at the 45 minute
mark on a penalty shot off the foot of U.S. midfielder Guillermo
"Memo" Gonzalez. Ghanaian-born football sensation Freddy Adu
scored in the 89th minute to seal the U.S. win. Spain, which scored a 96th
minute goal to tie Sierra Leone on Thursday, defeated South Korea 3-2 to
take over second place in Group D. In Group C, Brazil decimated Portugal
5-0 Sunday, while Cameroon and Yemen battled to a 1-1 draw.
President
Kabbah told a group of Liberian and Sierra Leonean youths Friday
that
former Liberian President Charles Taylor would not escape trial on war
crimes charges in Sierra Leone. "Even if (the Special Court) does not
get him, or he doesn't appear in court, the charges will remain,"
Kabbah said. "The refusal to appear in court and answer to the
charges against him means Charles Taylor has got some thing to hide."
According to the Office of the President, Kabbah said Taylor had
orchestrated Sierra Leone's civil war while benefiting from the country's
diamonds and other resources, and that his government would take legal
action to seek compensation from Taylor's frozen accounts. "We will
be going after that money," the president said. At the request of the
Special Court, the Swiss authorities said last month they had frozen the
bank bank accounts of two unnamed Taylor associates containing about $1.5
million in assets. The Swiss National Bank also reported that Liberia had about $3.3 billion in assets in the country
– about six times Liberia's Gross Domestic Product and around 40
times the impoverished country's national budget. The Swiss authorities
said, however, that they had found no accounts specifically linked to the former Liberian
leader. Kabbah said the Ghanaian government had failed to act on an arrest
warrant to apprehend Taylor at the opening of peace talks in Accra because
"it would have appeared as if President Kufuor purposely lured
Taylor to be entrapped in Accra." This, he suggested, would have been
damaging to the Ghanaian president's image.
15
August: The ship which began an emergency evacuation of Sierra Leonean
refugees
from Monrovia in July will return to the Liberian capital with enough food
and medicine for 7,000 people, a spokesperson for the U.N. refugee agency
said on Friday. In its first four voyages, the UNHCR-chartered vessel MV
Overbeck transported 1,250 Sierra Leoneans to safety before being forced
to suspend operations due to fighting which broke out around the city on
July 18. Francesca Fontanini of the UNHCR said on its return voyage on
Wednesday the Overbeck would carry 300 more refugees. Many of the 15,000
or so Sierra Leoneans were forced to flee after refugee camps were
overtaken by the fighting, and many took refuge in the city centre where
food and medicine has been in short supply. "Their health is still a
crucial issue, but now we are sending medicines and food for some 7,000
people," Fontanini said. "So let's see if the situation is going
to improve gradually."
14
August: The Sierra Stars came up just short of a win Thursday in
their U-17 FIFA World Championship opening match against Spain, when the
Spaniards scored an equalizer six minutes into an unusually long stoppage
time. The heavily favoured Spanish side took a quick 2-0 lead early in the
match on goals by David in the 8th minute and Sisi in the 15th. Spain was
forced to play a man down, however, when Arzo of Villareal was shown a
yellow card in the 28th minute, three minutes after he had a look at the
yellow. Sierra Leone captain Samuel Barclay took advantage of his team's
numerical superiority to record a rare hat trick: Barclay scored in the
34th and the 36th minutes, and then put the Sierra Stars ahead in the 73rd
with a powerful shot through the legs of Spanish keeper Adan. Spain added
punch to their offense with the substitution of two forwards, Xisco for
David in the 66th minute and Cases for Jurado in the 76th, and Xisco put
the ball into the net in the 96th minute to secure a 3-3 tie. Sierra
Leone's lone substitution came in the 72nd minute, when forward Emerson
Samba went in for Sheriff Suma. The Sierra Stars will take on the United
States on Sunday. Starting for Sierra Leone were Patrick
Bamtamoi in goal; Defenders Daniel Taylor, Umaru Bangura, Hassan Sesay,
Mohamed Kamara, Mohamed Fornah; Midfielders Alimamy Sesay, Samuel Barclay,
and Kalie Jalloh, and forwards Obi Metzger and Sheriff Suma. In reserve
are Ibrahim Bangura, Unisa Bangura (goaltenders); Mohamed Koroma and Abu
Bakarr Sankoh (defenders); Sampha Kamara and Lansana Bayoh (midfielders);
and Emerson Samba, John Keister and Ibrahim Khalil Tahini (forwards). In Thursday's
other Group D match, the United States defeated South
Korea by a score of 6-1. In Group C, Portugal defeated Yemen 4-3 while
Cameroon and Brazil played to a 1-1 draw.
Sierra Leone's
military has announced plans to retire 1,000 soldiers who have reached the
mandatory retirement age of 55 in order to make the army leaner and more
efficient, the United Nations information service IRIN reported on
Thursday. The downsizing is part of a three-year programme to restructure
the army and to reduce its size from 13,800 troops to 10,500 by the end of
January 2004. "We are targeting 1,000 soldiers each year for this and
next year," said Brigadier Alfred Nelson-Williams, the Operations and
Planning Officer of the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF). He
said those affected would be given one year's notice of their
demobilisation. Those retired will be given a retirement bonus in addition
to their pension. This will consist of the standard retirement gratuity, a
year's salary and allowances, and a lump sum resettlement grant of $850.
An army spokesman said the reduction should not affect the security
forces' effectiveness. "After the war, we want a sizeable army which
can be maintained financially and which will be well equipped," he
said.
13
August: The Sierra Stars are set to take on Spain Thursday in the
opening
match
of their FIFA Under-17 World
Championship campaign. The Sierra Leonean footballers qualified for first
world championship appearance last June, when they very nearly carried off
the CAF U-17 championship cup in Swaziland. They were edged out in
overtime when the Lion Cubs of Cameroon scored the match's lone goal. By
reaching the finals, however, the Sierra Stars automatically qualified for
this week's trip to Finland. Before they can look for a rematch with Cameroon,
the Sierra Leoneans first have to contend with the United States, Spain
and South Korea, their opponents in Group D. Two teams from each group
advance to the semi-finals. On paper, the Spaniards are favoured for
Thursday's match, and Coach Musa Kallon said his team is taking them
seriously. "Spain are always a very tough opponent," he told
FIFA.com. "But we will try to find the right strategies to deal with…and
play our football." Spain's coach said his players were taking
nothing for granted. "We know very little about Sierra Leone, but I
am sure we can expect a very tough match
– a physical match," he said. "Every match at the world
championship is a difficult match…especially the first one and we will
have to be ready." On the opening day of competition, hosts Finland
defeated China 2-1 in Group A, while Mexico and Colombia could do no
better than a 0-0 draw. In Group B, Nigeria and Costa Rica tied 1-1 and perennial
powerhouse Argentina beat Australia 2-0. Groupings: Group A, at Helsinki: Finland, China,
Mexico and Colombia. Group B, at Turku: Argentina, Australia, Costa Rica
and Nigeria. Group C, at Tampere: Yemen, Portugal, Cameroon and Brazil.
Group D in Lahti: Sierra Leone, United States, Spain and South Korea.
Sierra
Leone's National Recovery Committee met Tuesday in the town of Moyamba to
review recovery progress and challenges in Moyamba District,
UNAMSIL
said in a statement. The meeting, the eighth to be held at district level,
was chaired by Vice President Solomon Berewa (pictured left), and was
attended by representatives of the U.N. country team, UNAMSIL, the
European Union, the World Bank, Britain's Department for International
Development (DfID), local officials, and representatives of government
ministries and parastatals. The chairman of Moyamba's District Recovery
Committee, Daniel Kopoi, said the recovery process in Moyamba District was
"generally advancing, but slowly" and recommended that the focus
should be on agriculture sector development, rehabilitation of roads,
power and water supply, communications, and the provision of shelter.
Berewa responded that the government recognised the need for shelter
throughout the country but that "it is impossible for the
Government to satisfy all those needs." He encouraged people to
"work hard in order to gain capacity to build houses." The
U.N.'s Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General, Alan Doss
(right), stressed the key role of agriculture and mineral resources to
achieve economic growth in the district and to sustain the progress
already made. Doss announced that the Magistrate Court building in Moyamba
would be completed shortly, and that the UNDP had agreed to fund a
residence for the resident magistrate, enabling Moyamba to have a sitting
magistrate by the end of this year. Doss said that a radio communication
set would soon be installed in the district, linking Moyamba to Freetown
for the first time in many years.
Naturalised Sierra Leonean citizens should report with
their naturalisation papers to the Immigration Department in Freetown or,
if living abroad, to Sierra Leone's diplomatic mission in their country by
August 16 or face the possibility of being left off a list of naturalised
citizens, the Ministry of Internal Affairs said in a statement. The
ministry said the Immigration Department was compiling a comprehensive
list of naturalised citizens in line with its current restructuring
programme. "This is to enable Government to maintain an accurate
record of all naturalised citizens in the country," the statement
said, adding: "The cooperation of all naturalised citizens is
solicited in order to avoid the embarrassment that may ensue in the event
of not being included in the official list of naturalised citizens in
Sierra Leone." [Note: This affects only immigrants to Sierra Leone
who acquired Sierra Leonean citizenship.]
11 August: President Charles Taylor of Liberia
turned over the reins of
government Monday to his vice president, Moses Blah, and left his country
for exile in Nigeria. The former Liberian leader was accompanied to Roberts International Airport
by several African presidents who were in Monrovia to witness the transfer
of power. Taylor
(pictured right) accepted an offer of asylum from Nigeria last month which
in effect would shield him from war crimes charges by a U.N.-backed court
in Sierra Leone, but he had remained vague on when he would actually leave
Liberia. According to the Associated Press, some 300 Liberian and foreign
dignitaries witnessed the handover ceremony in Monrovia, including the
presidents of Ghana, South Africa, Mozambique and Togo, and Nigerian
Foreign Minister Oluyemi Adeniji. Taylor had announced he would resign at exactly 11:59 a.m., but arrived for the ceremony hours late,
reportedly delayed by the arrival of the foreign leaders. When he finally
showed up, he was dressed in a white safari suit, and heavily guarded by
Nigerian
and South African peacekeeping troops. "Today's ceremony marks the
end of an era in Liberia," said Ghanaian President John Kufuor, who
is also the current chairman of ECOWAS. "It is our expectation that
today the war in Liberia has ended." Kufuor added that Blah (left)
would only remain in charge until October 2, when he would hand over to a
transitional government. Within two hours of the handover, three American
warships approached the Liberian coast. Under intense pressure to step
down, Taylor left peacefully, but he did not leave quietly. In a farewell
address to the nation on Sunday, he described himself as a
"sacrificial lamb," and complained that he was being forced out
by the United States. He accused the U.S. of backing Liberia's rebel
forces in order to take over control of the country's mineral resources,
and suggested that the U.S., in refusing to intervene until he left,
"is using food and other things as a weapon against the Liberian
people." "I am stepping down from this office on my
own volition," Taylor said. "No one can take credit for asking
me to step down. I did not want to leave this country. I can say I am
being forced into exile by the world's superpower."
REACTION
to the resignation of Liberian President Charles Taylor:
FORMER PRESIDENT CHARLES TAYLOR: "I am stepping down from this
office of my
own
volition. No one can take credit for asking me to step down. I did not
want to leave this country. I can say I have been forced by the world's
superpower...If I were the problem, which I know you know I'm not, I would
step aside...I would become the sacrificial lamb, I would become the
whipping boy that you should live...What is most important is that you
live, and that ... there is peace. These are very, very tough times, but I
hope that as the international community is here, that our friend the
United States who have been the architect of this
'anybody-but-Taylor-policy' ...that they will bring all of the good for
you. I wish you all of the good...If (the Americans) say they will do
nothing as long as I am here, this further threatens your survival as a
people. I can no longer see you suffer, you have suffered enough. I love
you from the bottom of my heart. I will always remember you wherever I am.
And I say, God willing, I will be back. God bless you, and save the
state." (At the handover ceremony) "History will be kind to me. I
have fulfilled my duties."
SPOKESMAN FOR U.N. SECRETARY-GENERAL KOFI ANNAN: "The
Secretary-General
welcomes the decision of President Charles Taylor to resign office, and
expects that he will immediately leave Liberia, as he had promised to do.
The Secretary-General hopes that this development may at last mark the
beginning of the end of the long nightmare of the Liberian people; and,
with that in mind, he strongly urges all parties in Liberia to observe the
ceasefire, and to allow humanitarian assistance to reach the population in
all parts of the country."
GHANAIAN PRESIDENT JOHN KUFUOR: "Today's ceremony marks the end of an
era in Liberia. It is our expectation that today the war in Liberia has
ended."
SOUTH AFRICAN PRESIDENT THABO MBEKI: "It is indeed shameful that as
Africans we have killed ourselves for such a long time. It is indeed time
that this war should come to an end."
NIGERIAN PRESIDENT OLUSEGUN OBASANJO: "Here was a man who
decided
to make a sacrifice, believing that sacrifice would bring his country
peace. We will endeavor to be good hosts while they are here. And I hope
the world will give them time to settle down."
PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE, SPECIAL COURT FOR SIERRA LEONE:
"The departure of Charles Taylor from power and from Liberia
constitutes a significant but incomplete step forward for West Africa in
establishing a just and stable peace. We call on the international
community to ensure that Taylor stands before the Special Court for Sierra
Leone to face the serious charges against him. There can be no true peace
while he remains at large...Accountability addresses not just immediate
threats to the peace but also the root causes of instability in the
region, such as impunity for the most egregious violators of international
criminal law. We call on the whole of the international community to take
steps necessary to ensure that all those charged with violations of
international humanitarian law are transferred into the custody of the
Special Court, where they will be given the right to a presumption of
innocence and a hearing before impartial international judges. Only then
will the United Nations fulfill its promise that those most responsible
for atrocities in Sierra Leone are tried. There can be no deals for
indicted war criminals such as Charles Taylor. We hope that African
leaders, particularly from Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa, will continue
to show their leadership in ensuring that Mr. Taylor faces justice.
LURD LEADER SEKOU CONNEH: "The war is over. I'm happy and I know
everybody is happy."
U.S. PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH: "The United States will work with the
Liberian people and the international community to achieve a lasting peace
after a decade of suffering."
LIBERIAN PRESIDENT MOSES BLAH: "He is gone. He would not interfere
with the day-to-day activities of the Liberian government. I am a truly
independent president." (On whether he thought Taylor guilty of war
crimes in Sierra Leone) "I don't think so."
RORY MUNGOVEN, HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH: "Taylor is an indicted war
criminal accused of the most heinous of abuses. Amnesty for Taylor would
flout international law and would be an affront to his innumerable
victims. Nigeria must not reject the Security Council's request by
harboring an indicted war criminal."
CANADIAN FOREIGN AFFAIRS MINISTER BILL GRAHAM: "Taylor's exit from
the country will help to spare Liberian civilians from further suffering
and should move the peace process forward...Canada strongly supports the
work of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in its efforts to bring to
justice those who bear the greatest responsibility for war crimes, crimes
against humanity and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law. We call on all states to cooperate with the Court.
Canada opposes the granting of amnesties for crimes of this magnitude,
which would give rise to impunity."
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL: "After President Olusegun Obasanjo offered
'asylum' to Charles Taylor last month, we made it clear that this violated
international law. Nigeria, instead of seeking to end the culture of
impunity, is fostering it and in so doing perpetuating what has been a
major contributing factor to years of conflict in West Africa. Nigeria is
also undermining the important contribution being made by the Special
Court towards justice, reconciliation and sustained peace in Sierra Leone.
Each state which is a party to the Geneva Conventions - as is Nigeria - is
under an obligation to bring to justice in its own courts those who have
committed or ordered grave breaches of the Conventions, to extradite them
to another country willing and able to do so or transfer them to an
international criminal court. No one, regardless of their status
– including a head of state
– has immunity for the most serious crimes under
international law. There can be no impunity for such crimes. We would
expect the United Nations to reiterate this message to the Nigerian
government."
U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL: "We are very pleased at the
developments
we saw in Monrovia today: the peaceful and constitutional transfer of
power from Charles Taylor to now President Blah and the departure of Mr.
Taylor for Nigeria. We hope that all of the parties to this conflict will
now recognize that it is time for the conflict to end. We will be working
hard to fix the ceasefire in place, working with the peacekeeping forces
that have already arrived. I congratulate the Nigerian forces for the work
they have been doing. In the few days that they have been there, they have
accomplished a lot."
UNITED NATIONS SRSG FOR LIBERIA JACQUES KLEIN: "Good riddance!"
10 August: Detainees of Sierra Leone's Special
Court have been moved from a temporary lockup on Bonthe Island to the
court's new high-security detention facility in Freetown, the court's spokesman
confirmed on Sunday. David Hecht told the Sierra Leone Web that the move
would bring the prisoners closer to their lawyers, give them access to
their friends and families, and provide them with better health and
recreational facilities. "The main thing is that they'll be able to
work on building a defence to the charges by the prosecutor," he
added. The eight prisoners were transferred at around midday Sunday.
Twelve persons have so far been indicted by the court for war crimes,
crimes against humanity, and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law. Three are known dead or may have died since the
indictments were handed down. A fourth, President Charles Taylor of
Liberia, has challenged the court's jurisdiction to prosecute him.
8 August: Nigerian peacekeepers
in Liberia intercepted a plane early Thursday carrying ten tons of
ammunition destined for forces loyal to Liberian President Charles Taylor,
according to IRIN, a United Nations information service. The plane arrived
before dawn at Roberts International Airport outside of Monrovia. Taylor
and his Military Chief of Staff, General Benjamin Yeaten, went to the
airport personally to try and secure the release of the cargo, which
consisted of ammunition for AK-47 rifles and rocket propelled grenades,
but the Nigerians refused to hand it over. IRIN quoted a military source
as saying the ammunition had been purchased abroad by Taylor's son Chucky,
in contravention of a U.N. arms embargo. It was originally to have been
delivered by ship to the port of Buchanan, but due to the capture of
Buchanan last week by MODEL rebels, the ammunition was offloaded at an
undisclosed foreign port and flown to Liberia instead. Also Thursday,
Taylor told the television news service CNN that he planned to go into
exile in Nigeria, but that he would continue to fight war crimes charges
lodged against him by the Special Court for Sierra Leone. "President
Obasanjo and other African leaders of the African Union and ECOWAS have
all seen the political nature of this case," Taylor said. "They’ve looked
at it and have seen that as African brothers they ought to help the
situation in Liberia where I have volunteered to step down. They can see
no reason why I should be harassed, and have gone ahead to ask me to come
to Nigeria. I will go to Nigeria, God willing, but while I’m there I
expect that this issue will be dealt with. However, I have not waited for
that. I’ve just said that we’ve filed papers, both in the court in Sierra
Leone and in the International Court of Justice challenging the
jurisdiction and legitimacy of this court." Meanwhile LURD rebels
besieging the capital have added new conditions for opening Monrovia's
port to aid agencies which are seeking to bring desperately needed food
and humanitarian supplies into the capital. Sekou Fofana, a LURD
representative in Monrovia, told Reuters that Taylor's forces would have
to withdraw from the rest of the city. Fofana also threatened that LURD
would resume fighting if Taylor hands power over to Vice President Moses
Blah as planned, and if the Liberian leader did not depart the country
immediately after stepping down. "If Moses Blah takes over, we will fight
back. We will definitely fight Moses Blah," he said, adding that if Taylor
did not leave on Monday, "things will be tough again" for the Liberian
people.
7 August: President Kabbah met
with his cabinet in Bo Thursday, as part of an effort to bring government
closer to the people. Previous cabinet sessions were held in Kenema in May
and in Makeni in June. The BBC correspondent in Bo, Richard Margao, said
planned disruptions were avoided when the president met Wednesday evening
with teachers upset over non-payment of their salaries and with Kamajor
officials demanding the unconditional release of their leader, former
Internal Affairs Minister Sam Hinga Norman, who has been indicted for war
crimes. The Kamajors, Margao said, also complained they had not received
medals for service they say they were promised by the government.
Some of the teachers, particularly the new teachers, complained they had
not been paid for the past eleven months. "In the case of the teachers,
(Kabbah) said that he understands that the blame squarely lies with the
owners of primary and secondary schools," Margao said. "He said there was
no liaison between them and the Ministry of Education. He told them that
when he goes back to Freetown he will have to normalize for sure that
their salary will be paid, now that he has identified the problem and
where the problem lies." In the case of the ex-Kamajor militiamen, "He
said government had spent three billion leones on the Kamajor movement in
this country. But [that did not mean] that the government backed Kamajors
for whatever atrocities they could have committed in this country." The
president also heard complaints over the high price of rice, the country's
staple food. "The president said he had spoken to the Lebanese community
in this country, and the Lebanese are saying that this country and the
Lebanese are saying since this country created liberalisation they go
according to the price of the dollar," Margao said. "When the dollar comes
down then definitely the price of rice will come down. When it goes up,
then the price of rice will go up."
Liberian President Charles Taylor notified Congress Thursday that he
will
step down on Monday and hand over power to his vice president, Moses Blah.
In a letter to Congress, Taylor said his government had been the victim of
an "international conspiracy" which included support by neighbouring
countries for rebel factions and U.N.-imposed sanctions. "This orchestration
has prevented me from carrying out my constitutional responsibilities of
defending the country and providing essential social services for the
people,'' he said. "Therefore I as
president of this noble republic can no longer preside over the suffering
and humiliation of the Liberian public." Members of the House and the
Senate, meeting behind closed doors, endorsed Taylor's decision as is
required by Liberia's constitution, the Associated Press reported.
Meanwhile, Nigerian soldiers from the new West African peacekeeping force
for Liberia, ECOMIL patrolled for the first time through central Monrovia
Thursday, where they were greeted by tens of thousands of cheering
residents.
6 August: Liberian President
Charles Taylor is expected to announce his intention to resign Thursday,
and is expected to take asylum in Nigeria, ECOWAS Executive-Secretary
Mohamed Ibn Chambas told reporters on Wednesday. "There will be a joint
session of the (Liberian) Senate and the House of Representatives
tomorrow," Chambas said. The ceremony is for Mr. Taylor to inform them of
his intention to resign. Then, on Monday the handing over proper will
happen and this will be administered by the Chief Justice of Liberia. I
will expect Mr. Taylor to take the offer to come to Nigeria." The Reuters
news agency reported that President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa would be
on hand Monday to witness the handover of power to Vice President Moses
Blah. Earlier Wednesday, Nigerian Foreign Minister Oluyemi Adeniji denied
that Taylor had rejected an offer of asylum in Nigeria. Adeniji met with
the Liberian leader on Monday. According to AFP, the French news agency,
Adeniji insisted that the Nigerian government would not negotiate with
Taylor over his demand for the lifting of a war crimes indictment he faces
in Sierra Leone. "No, no, no, that is not for us," he was quoted as
saying. In Washington, a presidential spokesman reiterated President
George W. Bush's demand that Taylor step down. "Our position is, first
things first, he needs to leave the country. That's what our focus is,"
Scott McClellan told journalists. "He needs to leave the country, and then
those issues (the war crimes charges) can be addressed." The indictment
against Taylor has been challenged by lawyers for the Liberian government
both at the Special Court in Freetown and at the International Court of
Justice (ICJ) in the Hague. "Liberia contends that the arrest warrant of
Charles Taylor violates customary international law and impugns the honour
and reputation of the presidency and its sovereignty," the ICJ said in a
statement on Wednesday. Meanwhile, the U.S. said Tuesday it would send a
"liaison element" of between six and ten Marines from two American
warships to provide logistical assistance to ECOMIL, the West African
peacekeeping force which is set to deploy in Monrovia. The Liberian
capital was reported to be relatively quiet Tuesday and Wednesday, but
fighting between government forces and MODEL rebels was said to be
continuing in the port city of Buchanan.
5 August: President Kabbah
appeared before his country's Truth and
Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) on Tuesday, and during his two hours and twenty minutes
of testimony related his experience as national leader during the
country's civil war, BBC correspondent Lansana Fofana reported. Kabbah
described the security problems he inherited from NPRC military regime
from his election as president in 1996 until he was overthrown by the AFRC
junta just over a year later. “The army had been politicised,” Kabbah
said, adding that the military's loyalty was not to the civilian
government but to shady political interests. Kabbah expressed frustration
with the collusion between the army and its erstwhile adversary, the RUF.
This alliance, he said, led to the January 1999 invasion of Freetown in
which thousands of civilians were killed and large parts of the city
destroyed. The president acknowledged calling for the setting
up of Sierra Leone's U.N.-backed war crimes tribunal, but avoided
commenting on cases currently before the court. "Also interesting was
President Kabbah’s call for the criminalisation of any attempt by a
sitting president to extend his stay in office, thus ending speculation by
his detractors that he may want to file for office after his term expires
in 2007," Fofana said.
Liberia has filed a complaint against Sierra Leone before the International Court of Justice
(ICJ),
challenging the jurisdiction of the U.N.-backed Special Court in Freetown to prosecute
Liberian President Charles Taylor for war crimes, an ICJ spokesman said on
Tuesday. "The complaint is against the Republic of Sierra Leone, and it
concerns a dispute concerning the indictment and international arrest
warrant of 7 March 2003 which issued against Charles Taylor by the Special
Court for Sierra Leone at Freetown," the spokesman said. "In the document by
which Liberia tries to bring this case, Liberia says the international
arrest warrant against President Taylor violates a fundamental principle of
international law providing for immunity from criminal proceedings of an
incumbent head of state." A similar motion was filed last month with the
Special Court itself. In a BBC interview Tuesday, Liberian
presidential press secretary Vaani Passawe explained the basis for the
challenge. "We want the court to squash (sic.) the indictment on grounds
that the Freetown court is this Sierra Leonean court and it has no
jurisdiction over Liberia or a Liberian subject," he said, adding: "Whenever
we have international court such as in Sierra Leone, individual member
states must sign on to it – a treaty setting it up so that its jurisdiction
will be effective in their own countries." Passawe disputed a suggestion
that Liberia was isolated in its opposition to the indictment against
Taylor. "I’m not sure everybody sides with (the court)," he said. "We have
heard comments from international jurists. We’ve had Africa, West Africa
particularly, voting on that matter on June 4th when the indictment was
unsealed. If West Africa had been in agreement with the court, naturally it
would have been effected in Accra against President Taylor. That West Africa
turned down enforcement suggests that they are not in agreement. We also
have the written commitment from the AU that they are not along with the
indictment."
Liberian President Charles Taylor has pledged to step
down on Monday, but apparently is not prepared to leave Liberia, a spokesman
for Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo said on Tuesday. Earlier, South African President Thabo
Mbeki
(pictured left) said Taylor had assured him he would hand over power on
Monday and leave for exile in Nigeria almost immediately. "President Charles
Taylor of Liberia called and said he’s handing over government to the vice
president on Monday next week, and Vice President Blah will then be
president. He will of course form a government of national unity," Mbeki
told reporters. "President Taylor will leave Liberia after the installation
of that vice president as president on Monday, and will leave as soon as
possible after that, either the same day or the day after, to go to
Nigeria." Last month, Taylor
accepted an offer of asylum from Obasanjo, but has been vague about when he
might take it up. Publicly, the Liberian leader says he wants to remain in
Monrovia until a substantial peacekeeping force is on the ground. He has
also demanded that war crimes charges against him in Sierra Leone be dropped
as the price for his leaving. "The latest information we have is that Mr.
Taylor appears at the present time unwilling to take up our offer of
asylum," Nigerian presidential spokesman Felix Stanley Macebuh said. "As a
matter of fact, the problem is that Mr. Taylor is simply saying that he will
be willing only to leave Liberia if the international court drops the war
crimes charges against him." In a BBC interview on Tuesday, Taylor's press
secretary, Vanni Passawe, said Taylor's departure was no longer a matter of
doubt. "The president is very clear about it that he is leaving Liberia," he
said. For a matter of security reasons we are holding that to our chests,
but I want to assure you that President Taylor will be leaving Liberia
very,
very soon." In New York, the U.N. Secretary-General's Special Representative
to Liberia delivered his most direct warning yet that time was running out
for the Liberian leader. "I would say to him very bluntly, take the Nigerian
offer while it’s still on the table, because that offer will not stay on the
table that long," Jacques Klein (right) told National Public Radio. "Ultimately, I
will have a mandate, the same mandate I had in Eastern Slavonia. In Eastern
Slavonia we brought in the first indicted war criminal – that is the United
Nations. There’s no reason why we can’t do that in Liberia." Meanwhile, 70
more Nigerian troops arrived from Sierra Leone Tuesday to join the new West
African peacekeeping force for Sierra Leone.
4 August: A first group of
192
Nigerian peacekeepers and 33,000 pounds of equipment were airlifted from
Freetown Monday to the war-torn Liberian capital Monrovia, news services
reported. The troops are from UNAMSIL's 15th Nigerian Battalion, now
renamed NIBATT 1, and were ending a year-long tour of duty with the United Nations peacekeeping force in
Sierra Leone. The first batch of 40 troops left Hastings Airfield abroad
two U.N. MI-8 helicopters. About 300 more soldiers from the 734-strong
battalion are expected to arrive on Wednesday.
A second Nigerian battalion is due to arrive from Lagos by the end of next
week. The two battalions will make up a 1,500 member vanguard of what is
expected to be 3,250-strong ECOWAS peacekeeping force. The Nigerians are
expected to camp at Roberts International Airport for a few days before
moving to central Monrovia, about 30 miles away. Meanwhile, two American
warships have reached Liberian waters to back up the West African
Peacekeepers, the Reuters news agency reported. According to a senior U.S.
defence official, the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima and the support
ship USS Carter Hall are near the Liberian coast, and the USS Nashville is
expected within days. In New York, diplomats are working out a mandate for
a United Nations force which is expected to replace the ECOWAS
peacekeepers in October. Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Hedi
Annabi told reporters that the United Nations plans to send "a fairly
sizeable force" which would likely be modeled on the U.N. peacekeeping
force in Sierra Leone. "We are working on a fairly sizable operation that
will be designed taking into account our experience in Sierra Leone
where...things have worked quite well," he said. "In some ways the
problems we will be facing in Liberia are not terribly different and we
will probably take the same approach in designing the structure and the
size of the force. So we're talking in terms of a fairly sizable force."
The Associated Press quoted U.N. officials as saying the Liberian force
would probably not be as large as the force in Sierra Leone. Annabi called
October 1 "a date that might stick under an ideal scenario," but stressed
that nobody knows what conditions on the ground will be by then. "We need
time to prepare troops and train them to do their tasks, and we should not
be rushed unduly into deploying forces that are not ready because it will
come back to haunt us, as it did in Sierra Leone in May 2000," he said.
Former President Joseph Saidu Momoh will receive a state
funeral in Sierra Leone if his family wishes, the president's office said in
a statement Monday. "If the decision of the family is to have the remains of
ex-President Joseph Saidu Momoh brought to Sierra Leone for burial,
Government is prepared to honour him with a state funeral," the statement
said. Momoh died early Sunday at a private clinic in the Guinean capital
Conakry, where he lived in exile. He had been in ill health, and was
hospitalised for the past two weeks for what family members said was a range
of complications from depression and hypertension. The BBC, quoting the
Sierra Leone Embassy in Conakry, said the Guinean government had pledged to
bear the cost of sending the late president's body back to Sierra Leone for
burial. Radio France International quoted officials of his APC party as
saying they were making arrangements to bring his body to Sierra Leone.
The speed with which the
Special Court for Sierra Leone has moved suggests it
may
complete its work within its three year mandate, but a number of concerns
have arisen and the main challenge of running fair and expeditious trials
still lies ahead, the International Crisis Group (ICG) said in a status
report issued on Monday. In particular, the group pointed to concerns by
some in Sierra Leone about the suggestion of outside influence on the court,
and "substantial security concerns" over the indictment and arrest of former
CDF commanders and former Internal Affairs Minister Sam Hinga Norman.
"Another important question is whether the U.N. Security Council will
enhance the Court’s power and prestige by giving it a mandate under Chapter
VII of the charter, which would require all member states of the world
organisation to comply with its orders," the report said. The ICG noted that
the question of granting the Court Chapter VII authority had been
complicated by the effort to remove Liberian President Charles Taylor from
power and to end the conflict in that country, but said a decision on the
issue was needed. "A Chapter VII mandate would not guarantee state
compliance, but without it, the Special Court will continue to face
unnecessary obstacles," the group said.
Nigerian Foreign Minister Oluyemi Adeniji flew to
Monrovia Monday, reportedly
bearing a message for Liberian President Charles Taylor. The contents were
not disclosed. Taylor has accepted an offer of asylum in Nigeria which would
shield him from war crimes charges in Sierra Leone, but he has not said when
he will take it up. Under pressure from ECOWAS to step down as president and
leave the country within three days of the deployment of the first
contingent of West African peacekeepers, Taylor promised last week that
would resign on August 11. He refused to say, however, when he would leave
Liberia. His aides have said Taylor will not leave Liberia unless the
Special Court for Sierra Leone drops war crimes charges against him, and
until there is a substantial peacekeeping force on the ground. But time may
be running out for the Liberian leader. On Sunday, U.N. Special
Representative to Liberia Jacques Kline told the BBC that Taylor was a
"psychopathic killer" who risked forfeiting the Nigerian asylum offer if he
stalled for too long. Adeniji, talking to reporters in Freetown on Friday,
noted that his country had a "specific and personal grudge" against Taylor,
who is blamed for attacking and killing Nigerian peacekeepers during the
first round of Liberia's civil war, but that Nigeria had made a political
decision to remove Taylor from the scene immediately in order to promote a
settlement of the Liberian crisis. "You cannot, because of one person,
sacrifice the interest of the entire populace of the sub-region, not just of
Liberia," he said. "If you don’t start resolving the Liberian crisis, you’re
not sure of what would happen in this place (and) you can’t be sure of what
will happen in Guinea or Côte d'Ivoire." Adeniji was also critical of the
Special Court, which announced its indictment of Taylor on June 4 while the
Liberian president was attending a peace conference in Accra, and demanded
that he be turned over the the court. "To think that the Ghanaian
government, which was playing host and whose president happens to be the
president of ECOWAS, would hand him over on that occasion –
That was asking for too much," Adeniji said. "The African presidents thought
that was a slight, apart from the complication which it would introduce to
any attempt to resolve the conflict."
3 August: Joseph Saidu Momoh,
Sierra Leone's president from 1985
to
1992, died early Sunday in Conakry. The cause of his death was not
immediately known, but APC party leader Ernest Bai Koroma told the Sierra
Leone Web that the former president had been ill for some time, suffering
from both hypertension and diabetes. Momoh, who headed the Sierra Leone
Army from 1971 to 1985 under President Siaka Stevens, was a career soldier
who ultimately rose to the rank of major-general. He resigned his
commission in 1985, however, when Stevens designated him as his successor.
Momoh's tenure in office, a continuation of Stevens' one-party rule, was
plagued by government mismanagement and corruption. As his APC party found
itself more and more isolated around its northern base, Momoh's government
found itself unable to deal effectively with the challenge of Foday
Sankoh's rebellion in the east. He instituted a new constitution in 1991
to pave the way for multi-party democracy, but the reforms came too late.
In April 1992, he was overthrown by a group of mid-ranking military
officers who complained of a lack of support on the battlefield. Momoh
later acknowledged that he had failed the nation, but in a 2001 interview with the website Sierra Leone Live,
Momoh argued that the coup against him was unjustified. "My own argument was
that it does not matter how unpopular, inefficient, corrupt and inept a
government becomes, nobody has the right to remove that government from
power by any means other than constitutional means," he said. In 1997,
Momoh tried unsuccessfully to negotiate a political settlement between the
AFRC/RUF junta and President Kabbah's government-in-exile. Upon the
restoration of Kabbah's civilian government the following year, Momoh was
accused of collaborating with the junta, a charge which he denied. In
November 1998, Momoh was cleared of treason charges but convicted on two
lesser charges of conspiracy. He was sentenced to two concurrent five year
prison terms, but was broken out of jail two months later by rebel forces
who overran the capital. Momoh was later pardoned in the general amnesty
which followed the Lomé Peace Accord. On Sunday, Ernest Bai Koroma
remembered the former president's accomplishments. "Momoh contributed
immensely towards unifying the country, and he will be remembered as the
man who without any pressure ushered in a multi-party democracy in this
country," he said. "Of course his critics will consider him a weak man,
but he was a man who allowed the multi-party democracy to come back, and
he allowed people from the south and east to participate in a position of
prominence in his government. I think that he could be credited for that."
Family members of the late rebel leader Foday Sankoh took
his body to his home town of Magburaka for burial Sunday, the Reuters news
agency reported. His wife Fatou and other family members took his body from
the funeral home after saying a short Muslim prayer. Sankoh's body, dressed
in a white gown and wine-coloured cap, was carried out in a wooden coffin.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has begun
an emergency airlift of food from Freetown to Monrovia, where hundreds of
thousands of people are in desperate need of assistance following two weeks
of fighting. Gregory Blamo, who heads the WFP in Monrovia, told the BBC on
Sunday that half a ton of high-energy biscuits arrived on Saturday. "This
first consignment was delivered to MSF-France," he said. "They run a
supplementary feeding programme at a camp in Salala where we have about
23,000 internally displaced persons. This half a ton consignment is
sufficient for 4,000, and they are going specifically to children,
especially those under five." Blamo said a total of 12 metric tons of food
commodities was due to be flown in to Liberia over the next few days, and
that the airlift would continue until the WFP could gain access to its
warehouses in Monrovia's port. That area is currently controlled by LURD
rebels. "I heard that the stores were broken into and so I want to believe
that some of the food commodities may have been looted," Blamo said. "But I
cannot say exactly how much unless again unless we have access to check."
2 August: Sierra Leonean
forensic pathologist who examined the body of Foday
Sankoh
Saturday concluded the former rebel leader died from pneumonia and other
causes. According to a statement by Sierra Leone's Special Court, Dr.
Joseph Kamara issued a death certificate saying the death was due to
“respiratory failure due to massive pulmonary embolism.” Sankoh died
earlier this week in court custody, where he was awaiting trial on charges
of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during Sierra Leone's
civil war, which he launched from Liberia in March 1991. According to the
Reuters news agency, hundreds of Freetown residents watched and jeered as
Sankoh's body, wrapped in a white sheet and surrounded by heavily-armed
paramilitary police, was carried into Connaught Hospital for the post
mortem. Afterwards, according to an Associated Press account, court
authorities turned the body over to his family in a varnished wood coffin.
"I have lost a great man who cares for his people and country," said his
Senegalese-born widow, Fatou Mbaye Sankoh. "I will miss him forever."
Sankoh is expected to be buried on Sunday.
Two British judges and an investigator are due to arrive
in Freetown shortly to assist Sierra Leone's Anti-Corruption Commission
(ACC), the president's office said on Friday. The announcement came
following a meeting between President Kabbah, Anti-Corruption Commissioner
Val Collier, and British officials. Kabbah was quoted as saying he hoped the
arrival of the three-member team would help the country's judiciary to clear
up the huge backlog of cases awaiting investigation or trial.
Liberian President Charles Taylor has agreed to step down
and hand
over power to a successor on August 11, one week after the arrival of the
first contingent of peacekeepers from a West African force. The announcement
followed a meeting between Taylor and a delegation of senior West African
officials who told Taylor they wanted him to depart for exile in Nigeria
three days after the first of the peacekeepers arrived. "We have to convene
an emergency session of the joint legislature. That should happen on
Thursday," Taylor told reporters following the meeting. "At, oh, 11:59 a.m.
Monday I’ll step down and the new guy might be sworn in by midday on that
Monday," he added. Taylor refused to say when he would leave Nigeria,
however, and his presumed successor, Vice President Moses Blah, insisted
there were conditions. "The president has said very clearly that if he is
going to leave there must be sufficient forces on the ground (and) he wants
the indictment to be lifted off his head," Blah said. Taylor was indicted
last March for war crimes and crimes against humanity involving his alleged
backing of Sierra Leone's brutal RUF rebel group during that country's civil
war. Presidential press secretary Vaani Passawe spoke to reporters later in
the day and said that while while Taylor would step down on the 11th, he
would only leave the country after three months, Radio France International
reported. BBC Monrovia correspondent Jonathan Paye-Layleh said the war
crimes indictment now seemed to be the main sticking point. "(Passawe) is
telling journalists this afternoon that President Taylor wants to leave
Liberia as a free man and that the issue of indictment has to be addressed,"
Paye-Layleh said. "He said the president’s personal safety and dignity is at
stake once the indictment is not resolved. So this means to me that
President Taylor’s leaving this country now is again conditional." Taylor's
forces launched an attack on LURD rebels in Monrovia Saturday, with military
sources saying they had pushed the rebels back retaken three key bridges,
the Reuters news agency reported. Fighting was said to be going on as well
in the port city of Buchanan, which was captured by the MODEL rebel group
earlier this week. Meanwhile, the first 300 troops from UNAMSIL's 734-strong
15th Nigerian Battalion in Sierra Leone are on standby to be airlifted into
Monrovia on Monday. In Freetown, UNAMSIL spokesman Patrick Coker told the
Sierra Leone Web that the Nigerian peacekeepers were ready to go. "NIBATT 15
is currently assembled at Hastings for its pre-deployment training and
preparations to deploy into Monrovia on Monday, 4 August 2003," he said.
"UNAMSIL has been authorized to facilitate the deployment with own air
assets – MI-8 and MI-26 (helicopters) and other
logistic supports, and this will be for the first 30 days of their
operations in Liberia." There was no immediate information on how much money
would be diverted from UNAMSIL to underwrite the cost of peacekeeping
efforts in Liberia.
A battalion of
Nigerian peacekeepers for the ECOWAS peacekeeping force in
Liberia, ECOMIL, should arrive from Sierra Leone by August 4, the United
Nations Secretary-General's Special Representative for Liberia said on
Saturday. "The United Nations will move it with U.N. assets –
that is, U.N. airplanes and helicopters – to
Monrovia," Jacques Klein told the BBC. "That will be followed by a second
Nigerian battalion, we’re hoping around the 14th of August. That will also
be moved by United Nations assets. Then following that, we should have a
third smaller unit from Mali, Ghana and Senegal later in the month." Klein
said that as soon as the situation was stable he would send in a United
Nations assessment team to prepare the groundwork for a U.N. force to
replace the regional peacekeeping effort. "There is 30 or 40 percent of
Liberia nobody’s been into for three or four years, so we have to look at
the humanitarian side, bridges, roads, infrastructure – all those things,"
he said. "That assessment team will take two weeks. They will come back
(and) I will then brief the Security Council. Then the Security Council will
hopefully come up with a solid mandate for a United Nations peacekeeping
mission on or about 1 November." Klein, a senior American diplomat who most
recently served as the U.N. Secretary-General's Special Representative to to
Bosnia and Herzegovina, said he hoped the deployment of a substantial ECOWAS
force would engender President Taylor's departure from the scene and
"trigger the American response" for U.S. participation in the United Nations
force. "President Bush at his news conference the other day did say a
limited number of troops for a limited period of time, which was very
obviously reassuring to everyone," he said. "I think many of the countries
involved in this scenario are looking to the U.S. for that kind of
leadership in a sense, and engagement which would I think would also then
motivate others to help and assist."
Only 40 countries have met a July 31 deadline for
legislation to curb the trade in illegal diamonds, and risk of being
excluded from the global diamond trade if they fail to comply with tough new
industry regulations by the end of the month. Under the Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme which was endorsed last November by more than 50
diamond producing and importing countries (the 15-member European Union
counts as one country), all rough diamonds must be exported in tamper-proof
parcels accompanied by forge-proof Certificates of Origin verifying that
they come from legitimate sources. The Kimberley Process was launched three
years ago in the South African mining town of Kimberley to seek ways to curb
the trade in "conflict diamonds," blamed for fueling wars in Sierra Leone,
Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo. One country which got in just
under the wire was the United States, the world's largest diamond importer.
President George W. Bush signed an executive order bringing the U.S. into
compliance just one day before the deadline. Among the nearly 20 countries
which failed to make the cut were Brazil, a major diamond producer, and the
Czech Republic, a cutting and polishing country. A global coalition of
non-governmental
organisations welcomed publication of the list of countries in compliance,
but warned that without effective and independent monitoring, there was no
way of telling whether illicit gems were still entering the system. "Passing
new regulations is not enough," said Ian Smillie (pictured left) of
Partnership Africa Canada. "We already have laws against theft and human
rights abuse. These have not stopped conflict diamonds in the past. The laws
must have teeth." There is now a one-month grace period while countries
update their legislation to include the names of countries eligible for
diamond trading, Smillie told the Sierra Leone Web on Saturday. He added
that goods already in the pipeline would not be refused until August 31.
Leaders of the former pro-government Kamajor militia are
threatening to disrupt
next
week's cabinet meeting in Bo to register their grievances over what they say
is the government's failure to deliver on promises made to them, BBC Bo
correspondent Richard Margao reported. The Kamajors say that prior to the
disarmament process President Kabbah had "The Kamajors also expressed
dissatisfaction over the manner in which their former leader, Minister of
Internal Affairs Chief Sam Hinga Norman, was arrested by the police," Margao
said. "They called for his unconditional release and his indictment to be
dropped by the international court." President Kabbah has said on several
occasions, most recently in a meeting with U.K.-based SLPP party supporters
in London, that the government has no jurisdiction over the Special Court.
Margao quoted sources close to the provincial secretary's office as saying
that the former Kamajor commanders had been asked to nominate three of their
number to take part in discussion with government authorities in Freetown.
1 August: The United Nations
Security Council voted Friday to authorise an emergency West African
peacekeeping force for war-torn Liberia. Under the U.S.-sponsored
resolution, the ECOWAS-sponsored force, ECOMIL, would remain in Liberia
for two months and then hand over to a multinational United Nations force
in October. The first West African troops, a Nigerian battalion based in
Sierra Leone, is expected to arrive in Liberia on Monday. The resolution
authorises the United Nations peacekeeping force in Sierra Leone to
provide logistical support to ECOMIL for the first 30 days. In approving
the resolution, the Council said it had determined that "the situation in
Liberia constitutes a threat to international peace and security, to
stability in the West Africa sub-region, and to the peace process for
Liberia." The U.N. peacekeepers be asked to "secure the environment" so
that humanitarian aid can be delivered to the desperate population, and to
pave the way for the initial stages of disarming and demobilising
combatants. The resolution gives U.N. peacekeepers Chapter VII authority
under the U.N. charter, meaning the force will be authorised to use
military force to carry out its mandate. The Council called on U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan to submit recommendations on U.N. force's
size, structure and mandate, preferably by August 15.
Liberian President
Charles Taylor has skipped a meeting with a group of high-ranking West
African officials who arrived in Monrovia Friday. The team, which included
ECOWAS Executive-Secretary Mohamed Ibn Chambas and senior ministers from
Nigeria, Ghana and Togo, were in the Liberian capital to finalise
arrangements for Taylor to hand over power and leave for exile in Nigeria
by next Thursday
– three days after the planned arrival of a vanguard force of regional
peacekeepers. Instead, according to the BBC, the officials were told that
Taylor had left for the port of Buchanan, where loyalist forces are
fighting to recapture the city from MODEL rebels. The diplomats insisted,
however, that they would speak to Taylor notwithstanding. "We're going
to wait until we can sit down and talk to him," said Ghanaian Foreign
Minister Nana Akufo-Addo. Liberian officials were quoted as saying the
meeting has been rescheduled for Saturday morning. In an interview with the BBC's Network Africa
programme, ECOWAS Executive-Secretary Mohamed Ibn Chambas said the first
force on the ground would be UNAMSIL's 15th Nigerian Battalion, which
ended its tour of duty in Sierra Leone this week. The logistics, he added,
would be provided
by UNAMSIL. "The second battalion will join from
Nigeria within the week also, and we actually expect that within three
weeks of the deployment of this first battalion the entire West African
contingent of 3,250 will be deployed in Liberia," Chambas said.