31 October
1998: ECOWAS heads of state meeting at a summit in Abuja, Nigeria have agreed to
strengthen the ECOMOG force in Sierra Leone. No figures were given for the additional
deployments, but the presidents of Benin, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Mali, and Niger have
all reportedly agreed to send additional troops. The West African leaders also rejected a
demand by Liberian President Charles Taylor that ECOMOG troops in Liberia should remain,
but be put under his command. ECOWAS leaders adopted "almost without debate" a
draft treaty setting up permanent Mechanism for Conflict Prevention, Management and
Resolution, Peacekeeping and Security. On Friday, the
proposal received the support of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU). OAU
Secretary-General Salim Ahmed Salim said the mechanism should emphasise solving problems
before they escalate into full scale war. Salim also urged more international support for
the Sierra Leone government in its military struggle against AFRC/RUF rebels. The ECOWAS
summit also saw the launch of the new ECOWAS travellers cheques approved by a committee of
ECOWAS central bank governors designed to facilitate trade, tourism, commercial, and
cross-border transactions within the sub-region. The cheque, in denominations of 5, 10,
20, 50, and 100 West African Unit of Accounts (one West African Unit of Account = $1.36),
is considered to be a major step aimed at establishing a single monetary zone by the year
2000. On Saturday, the summit elected Togolese President Gnassingbe Eyadema as ECOWAS
chairman for 1998-99, to be replaced by Malian President Alpha Oumar Konare from 1999 to
the year 2000. Efforts to resolve the conflict in Guinea-Bissau stalled, but the West
African leaders called on the parties to the conflict to consolidate the existing
ceasefire agreement and decided to send a ceasefire observer team to the country. Also on
the summit's agenda were appointments within ECOWAS, the distribution of posts in the
ECOWAS Fund, the debate of steps leading to economic integration, and the drafting
of a final communiqué.The London-based law firm Akainyah and Company has conditionally
agreed to represent RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh in an appeal of his conviction and
death sentence handed down last week by Freetown's High Court. Sankoh was forced to defend
himself in his treason trial after no lawyer could be found to take his case. Prison
authorities said Sankoh danced with joy in his cell, saying "I accept, I accept. I
thank God that the lawyers...are coming to defend me," when he learned of the firm's
offer. "The government is considering the demands and requests in the letter to see
what we can afford to do and what we cannot," Minister of Justice and
Attorney-General Solomon Berewa said Saturday. He added that the government was reviewing
the financial conditions it was being asked to meet in connection with Sankoh's defence,
which he described as "onerous" and would be difficult for the government to
meet. "Airfare, hotel bills, trnasport, security and protectionwe can give them
of course security and administrative office space, staff and equipment, including
secretary, telephone, fax, computer, e-mail facilities, all these things," he said.
"They are talking of three persons coming...The amount (is) quite outside the reach
of government." Berewa said the government was very anxious to have the firm
defend Sankoh, (but) "we have our own rates here which would be applied." He
said he would be in contact with the firm on Monday and "make suggestions to
them." Berewa denied that security was a factor in the in Sankoh's inability to
secure counsel. "No, its not security at all. It wasnt security, I think,
in the case of members of the bar association. I dont think it was that. I mean,
they just, perhaps, felt they were all victims of what Foday Sankoh did. And, I mean, they
had the right to decide whom to defend." He added that security should not be a
problem for the foreign lawyers, but "If they want to have personal security, we can
always arrange that for them." Akainyah and Company reportedly wrote to Berewa saying
it was "prepared to accept instructions to act subject to satisfactory
arrangements." The firm is "requesting the UN Human Rights Officer in Freetown,
Michael O'Flaherty, be given the facility to meet Sankoh to inform him about the
representation and obtain his instructions as to whether he wishes them to act on his
behalf," a source was quoted as saying. "If Sankoh agrees, then the
Attorney-General should send by courier the transcript and record of the high court
proceedings and the case law relied upon by the prosecution," the source added.
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa said Saturday that RUF leader
Corporal Foday Sankoh had lodged a formal appeal against the death sentence. "I
received notice of the appeal yesterday from the Appeals Court," Berewa said.
The African Commission on Human and People's Rights said in Banjul, Gambia that it will
appeal to President Kabbah to halt the executions in Sierra Leone. "The commission
decided to send commissioner Ben Salem to Sierra Leone to meet President Ahmad Tejan
Kabbah so as to ask him not to proceed with further execution of those sentenced to
death," the Commission said in a statement at the conclusion of its 24th session.
Chief of Defence Staff Maxwell Khobe has accused elements of Liberian President Charles
Taylor's former militia, the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL), of prolonging the
Sierra Leone crisis by providing support for the AFRC/RUF rebels. "As I am talking to
you now, NPFL forces are counting their losses after being repelled in a surprise attack
Friday night at Mende Kelema" Khobe said Saturday. The Liberian government has
repeatedly denied the involvement of organised Liberian involvement in Sierra Leone,
despite the capture of NPFL and ULIMO-K fighters in Sierra Leone by the ECOMOG force.
Khobe said Sierra Leonean forces and ECOMOG were now poised to "flush out" rebel
forces. "All we need is sufficient manpower, and once this is given by the ECOWAS
leaders, the operation will be over in no time," he said. Khobe said some 3,000
soldiers of the former Sierra Leone Army had been retrained, while the demobilisation and
reintegration process continues.
Some 50 people were killed in Koidu Sunday when an old diamond pit under the post
office collapsed on hundreds of would-be diamond diggers. Scores of others were dragged
alive from the pit, in the center of the city. "Hundreds of people rushed to dig up
the old pit inside the national post office building when they heard that a gang had found
a big diamond in gravel originally dug from the pit," a Civil Defence Forces officer
said. He added that the pit, which was more than 100 feet deep, had collapsed on the
illicit miners, killing more than 50 people including several Sierra Leone soldiers
stationed at the town. Minister of Mineral Resources Mohammed Swarry Deen said the
government had received news of the disaster, but had no officials there. "It is a
no-go area for us because of the fighting going on between the rebels and the ECOMOG
troops and Sierra Leone soldiers," he said. A local chief in Koidu said the accident
was not the first of its kind, but that it was by far the worst. "In the past four or
five months dozens of people have died when diamond pits in the town collapsed on them, or
in gang killings and fights over diamonds," he said.
30 October: AFRC/RUF rebels herded 48 civilians into a room, locked
them in, and blew up the building during last Saturday's attack on the northern town of
Alikalia, ECOMOG task force commander Brigadier-General Abu Ahmadu told reporters in a
Thursday night briefing. "ECOMOG troops in its mopping up in (the) district
discovered the 48 bodies, which included women and children," Ahmadu said. He called
"this inhuman act by rebels, to lock up the 48 civilians and kill them with
explosives" a change in strategy by the rebels, from the mutilating of villagers by
hacking off their limbs to rounding up "civilians who don't compromise with them and
carrying out mass executions." Ahmadu also said his forces had overrun the
rebel base at Koinadugu.
Japan will give the United Nations $960,000 in emergency grants-in-aid to help promote
stability in Sierra Leone, Japanese foreign ministry officials said on Friday. The U.N. is
expected to use the money to secure employment for former soldiers, the Kyodo
news agency reported.
29 October: Police in Guinea have begun screening thousands of Sierra
Leonean refugees after Guinean dissidents in exile threatened to disrupt Guinea's
elections in December, officials in Freetown said Thursday. Guinean state radio said last
week that dissidents living in Liberia were threatening to invade Guinea if Lansana Conte
stood for re-election. The radio also told all Sierra Leonean nationals to report to
police stations for identity checks and registration. "Thousands of Sierra Leoneans
in Conakry...and other Guinean towns are reporting to police stations where police are
screening them for rebels still hiding in the country," a Sierra Leonean official
said. Many AFRC supporters reportedly fled to Guinea when the junta was ousted by ECOMOG
troops in February. "The Guinean government is not taking the threat from the
dissidents lightly," a Guinean official said in Freetown. "Guinean police are
screening Sierra Leoneans...(who) could act as advance parties or join forces with
(Guinean) rebels if they try to carry out attacks. Since the weekend, the Guinean military
has sent truckloads of troops into Kissidougou and Gueckedou near the border with northern
Sierra Leone to track down and destroy rebels."
Sierra Leone's Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Dr. Sama
Banya, has signed an agreement in Beijing under which the Chinese government will provide
52 million yuan ($6.3 million) in financial and technical assistance to Sierra Leone. A
Sierra Leone government news release said that ten million yan will be applied toward the
country's current reconstruction programme, with the balance to be utilised for restarting
those programmes interrupted by last year's coup. Chinese Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan
said that he hoped arrangements could be concluded for President Kabbah's recently
postponed visit to be scheduled for early next year. Said Banya, "The main thrust of
my visit, apart from President Kabbah's proposed visit, is to prevail on the government of
the people's Republic of China to use its best endeavours to assist Sierra Leone to become
self-sufficient in food production." He noted that Sierra Leone's Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and the Environment, Dr. Harry
Will, may visit China in the near future.
Shops in Sierra Leone are refusing to accept bank notes bearing the picture of former
President Joseph Momoh, who stands accused of collaborating with the AFRC military junta
and is currently on trial for treason in Freetown. A "senior cabinet minister",
who declined to be named, told Reuters on Thursday that the Central Bank was
preparing to withdraw the notes. The Central Bank official has denied the claim. "All
currencies bearing the portrait of former President Momoh are still legal tender in the
country and it is criminal to refuse them in business," the official said.
Momoh's face appears on 100 and 500 leone notes. The minister said it was "highly
likely" that Momoh would be convicted of treason next week. "The currency of the
country is an icon, a symbol of national pride and achievement, and to have the picture of
a convict on our currency displayed abroad is bad, it will damage the image of Sierra
Leone," the minister said. Sierra Leoneans have been trying to dispose of the notes
this week after rumours that they were about to be withdrawn. The Central Bank official
said the bank had issued a directive to commercial banks on Monday to separate notes
bearing Momoh's picture from other notes in transactions with the Central Bank. The
commercial banks passed the directive on to their depositors on Tuesday, setting off the
panic. "We only instructed the banks to separate the notes bearing the portrait of
Momoh from the rest because they are old and cause problems for bank clerks counting them
as they stick together," the Central Bank official said.
President Kabbah has arrived in Abuja, Nigeria for the two day ECOWAS Heads of State
Summit. ECOWAS officials said South African President Nelson Mandela was expected to
arrive on Thursday evening and would address the summit on Friday. Heading the agenda will
be the conflict in Guinea-Bissau, the creation of an ECOWAS Mechanism for Conflict
Prevention, Management and Resolution, Peacekeeping and Security, and the introduction of
an ECOWAS travellers cheque to facilitate travel among the 16 member countries.
28 October: Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman accused AFRC/RUF
rebels Wednesday of disemboweling pregnant women and causing the deaths of about 50
civilians who attempted to flee two rebel attacks on the town of Alakalia on Saturday.
Norman confirmed reports from local authorities that about 50 persons died trying to cross
the Pampana River in dugout canoes. He said the rebels had arrived at the town by canoe,
and put the total death toll from the attacks at 130. Officials earlier had put the death
toll from the attack at about 80, including 55 rebels. "We are certain that former
military leader Johnny Paul Koroma...backed by RUF rebels and junta fighters, are the ones
causing atrocities in the northern region," Norman said while visiting the wounded at
Connaught Hospital in Freetown. "What Koroma and his rebels group are now doing is
attacking villages and towns, beheading, cutting throats, chopping off hands and feet,
disemboweling pregnant women, killing their brothers and sisters." He told
journalists that while rebel attacks continued in the north, "the southern region is
relatively quiet and thousands of people who fled their homes have returned."
Liberian President Charles Taylor directed the Liberia Refugee, Repatriation, and
Resettlement Commission (LRRRC) to dismantle refugee camps near Monrovia within three
months, and has ordered that the thousands of refugees sheltering be returned to their own
countries, according to the independent Inquirer newspaper. International aid
agencies working in Liberia "are teaching us laziness. We can not sit and wait for
relief food in these camps for ever," Taylor was quoted as saying. If the agencies
wished to help, he added, they should take the displaced persons home and get them to
start farming. "We want to be able to feed ourselves, so teach us how to fish instead
of providing us fish every day," he said. Some refugees say their towns and villages
had been burned down, leaving them nothing to return to, while others point out that the
security situation in the countryside is still precarious. Taylor also instructed the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to take refugees from neighbouring
countries directly to their home countries, rather than keeping them in transit camps.
Members of the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday expressed renewed concern at
intensified rebel activity in Sierra Leone. Following consultations, the current Security
Council President, Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock of the U.K., said Council members
were concerned about atrocities perpetrated against the civilian population, the use of
child combatants, and the continuing humanitarian and refugee crisis in the country.
Security Council members noted that fighting on the Sierra Leone-Liberian border had
increased tensions between the two countries, and called for continued dialogue and the
implementation of confidence-building measures agreed upon between the two countries in
July. Council members called on member states and the international community to make
further contributions to support deployment of the ECOMOG force, and to assist the
government's disarmament, demobilisation, and reintegration programme to address the
humanitarian needs of the country. Council members stressed that the only lasting solution
to the cycle of violence in Sierra Leone was one based on national reconciliation, and
encouraged all efforts in this direction, including on the part of the Sierra Leone
government itself, Greenstock said.
CARE will begin distribution of food to some 250,000 refugees in 60 refugee camps near
Gueckedou on November 1. "The security situation in this corner of Africa has the
potential to become as intense as the Sudan and Somalia crises," said CARE official
Mike Godfrey. He said some 600,000 Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees were camped in
Guinea, making for one of the largest refugee populations in West Africa.
"Considering Sierra Leone's and Liberia's instability, we are not optimistic right
now," said Godfrey. "The lives of these families on the run will either stay the
same or get worse." CARE is deploying a team of experts who, along with Guinean
staff, will distribute 120 tons of food a day, consisting of wheat flour, corn and soya
blend, cooking oil, salt, and milk, to camps spread over "incredibly
difficult" terrain. "The men and women in these camps were small merchants,
farmers, fishermen and teachers in their communities," Godfrey said. "They are
proud and capable people who fled their homes out of terror. They want to go home, but in
the meantime are doing the best they can given the circumstances." CARE is
distributing food in Guinea as part of a 14 month $14 million response to the humanitarian
disaster there.
Chief of Defence Staff Maxwell Khobe has called on the rebels to lay down their arms
and benefit from a government offer of amnesty.
27 October: Some 50 more persons will face trial on charges they
collaborated with the AFRC military junta, Minister of Justice and Attorney-General
Solomon Berewa said on Tuesday. He said they would be tried only after the Appeals Court
had dealt with the case of RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh, who was sentenced to death by
Freetown's High Court on Friday. "We are putting about 50 more people on trial after
this, including 16 military officers and soldiers for...their deeds of complicity with the
ousted military junta," Berewa said. Senior court sources said many of the defendants
would face treason charges, which carry the death penalty.
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa said Tuesday that local lawyers
were still refusing to defend RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh, who has requested legal
counsel to represent him before the Appeals Court. "Yesterday, I wrote to legal
organisations and human rights organisations in Britain, Canada and other Commonwealth
countries to (ask them to) do all they can to get a lawyer for the rebel leader as his
case will come up early, in fact in a matter of weeks, in the Appeals Court," Berewa
said. "Lawyers in Sierra Leone are still refusing to defend him and Corporal Sankoh
himself is working now on the papers for his appeal to the court." Berewa said
Sankoh's case would take precedence over the appeals of 27 civilians convicted and
sentenced to death in two separate trials, saying Sankoh was only one person and the
paperwork in his case would take less time to complete.
A high level five member British government delegation has arrived in Freetown to
discuss security reform in Sierra Leone. The delegates, who arrived over the weekend, held
wide-ranging talks with President Kabbah on Monday, according to SLBS (state radio), which
said that the delegation is assessing the government's plan for the creation and training
of a new 5,000 man army. The delegation includes officials from the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office, the Department for International Development, and the Ministry of
Defence, the radio said.
British High Comissioner Peter Penfold has announced that British government has
approved £5 million in assistance to Sierra Leone to help the country meet the cost of
importing essential commodities.
ECOWAS Heads of State will consider a three-year moratorium on the import, export, and
manufacture of light arms in the region when they meet for a summit in Abuja on Friday and
Saturday. The moratorium, if approved, would underscore "the firm resolve of member
states to control the proliferation of light weapons at the
national, regional and international levels," an ECOWAS stastement said. The
proposed moratorium would be enforced under the United Nations Programme for Coordination
and Assistance for Security and Development, the statement said.
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Sama Banya met with his
Chinese counterpart, Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan, in Beijing on Tuesday. As reported by
the official Chinese Xinhua news service, Tang said China is prepared to work
with Sierra Leone "in an effort to protect the legal rights and interests of
developing nations." Tang said the Chinese government appreciated Sierra Leone's
adherence to the "one China" policy, and noted Sierra Leone's progress in the
peace process. Banya pointed to numerous examples of Chinese - Sierra Leonean cooperation
throughout Sierra Leone. "Sierra Leone will always adhere to its 'one China' stance
regardless of whatever might happen," he told Tang. Later, in a meeting with Chinese
Vice President Hu Jintao, Hu said that China was willing to support the peace process in
Sierra Leone and to continue to provide aid for the country's reconstruction. He said the
two countries could continue to explore new channels and forms for expanding economic
trade and cooperation. Banya replied that Sierra Leone's government and people were
grateful for China's support, and that his country was ready to learn from China's
reforms, particularly in the development of agriculture.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin has signed a decree "On Measures for the
Implementation of U.N. Security Council Resolution No. 1171 of June 5, 1998", lifting
all sanctions against Sierra Leone, the Russian news agency Itar-Tass reported on
Tuesday. The primary precondition for lifting the sanctions had been the restoration of
civilian rule.
26 October: ECOMOG troops have found the bodies of 35 more rebels at
Alikalia, bring the total number of dead from the weekend attack to over 70, an ECOMOG
officer said on Monday. "We found 35 more bodies of rebels...during mopping-up
operations yesterday, bringing the total number of rebels killed during the fighting to
55," the officer said. Captured rebel fighters said they were now on a "genocide
mission to slaughter civilians" following the imposition of the death sentence on RUF
leader Corporal Foday Sankoh, the officer added. On Sunday, an ECOMOG officer said 14
rebels had been captured during three hours of fighting for control of the town. "We
massacred them," another officer said on Monday. "But they also massacred
civilians in Alikalia...They turned their guns on civilians as they fled, killing many of
them and setting their houses on fire." He did not provide civilian casualty figures,
but earlier reports said the rebels had killed about 30 people.
ECOMOG troops, backed by Civil Defence Forces (CDF) militiamen killed 83 rebels in a
six hour battle at Tombodu, in Kono District, over the weekend, local journalists reported
on Monday. The clash occurred after rebels attacked residents of the town as they returned
home Saturday, killing several of them. "It was during mopping-up operations in the
area when loyalist forces found the bodies of 83 rebels," a correspondent was quoted
as saying.
The Civil Defence Forces (CDF) have located and captured a new rebel base, known as
"Joe Town," about half a mile from Ngandorhun in Kono District, according to CDF
officer Sellu Conteh. He said about 50 rebels and a large cache of arms and ammunition
were captured in a battle which lasted about two hours. Also captured were lists of about
50 top rebel commanders, junta fugitives, and Liberian mercenaries, Conteh added. He said
two rebel child soldiers had been captured and are now reportedly being detained in
Kenema.
ECOMOG officers are preventing the force from capturing the last 20% of the country
still in the hands of AFRC/RUF rebels because they are involved in the illicit diamond
trade, ECOMOG soldiers alleged on Monday. The soldiers, who are in Lagos on medical leave,
told the Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the rebels were paying off some of their
officers in diamonds. The soldiers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the rebels
appeared to have been strengthened recently by new supplies of weapons, which they alleged
were being supplied by Liberian President Charles Taylor. Nigerian officials declined to
comment on the soldiers' allegations.
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa was quoted as saying Monday
that RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh could ask a lawyer from a Commonwealth country to
handle his appeal if he is unable to find one in Sierra Leone. Sankoh was forced to defend
himself in his treason trial after no lawyer could be found willing to represent him.
Berewa said he hoped Sankoh would have legal representation, but added that "lawyers
in Sierra Leone, especially human rights lawyers, refuse to take the case."
The conflicts in Sierra Leone and Guinea Bissau, and a draft treaty which would set up
a permanent regional conflict resolution mechanism with a military dimension, top the
agenda of ECOWAS foreign ministers as they meet in Abuja Monday for a two day conference
in advance of Heads of State Summit. ECOWAS Director of Information Adrienne Diop said the
treaty would allow ECOWAS to set up a permanent mechanism for conflict resolution, instead
of intervening on an ad hoc basis. "Setting up the draft mechanism, all
problems will be solved through ECOWAS...We have now decided we are not going to work on
ad hoc committees again," she said. "It is very important now that our subregion
is able to prevent conflicts and whenever they erupt, we are able to really deal with them
so that they would not move to other countries." Other issues to be discussed are
communications between the countries, the movement of property and people, and the illegal
drug trade in the region, Diop added. Central bank governors met Monday, and will be
joined Tuesday by finance ministers, to discuss the creation of an ECOWAS travellers
cheque to facilitate travel among the 16 member countries.
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Sama Banya arrived in
Beijing, China Monday on a seven day official visit. Banya and Chinese Foreign Minister
Tang Jiaxuan are expected to discuss bilateral ties "and other issues of common
concern" on Tuesday, according to the official Chinese news agency, Xinhua.
Banya and his entourage will also visit the cities of Shenzhen and Shanghai.
A football tournament of Mano River Union states is being organised which would bring
together the soccer teams of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, Liberian Sports Minister
Francois Massaquoi said Friday at a meeting of the ECOWAS Citizens Union in Monrovia. He
said such a tournament would foster unity among member states, and urged ECOWAS citizens
to work out modalities for the tournament.
25 October: AFRC/RUF rebels have beheaded several men and women at
Alikalia, and chopped off the arms of several others, including children, military
officers, survivors, and aid workers said on Sunday. Residents said about 300 well armed
rebels attacked the town, some 20 miles north of Kabala. An ECOMOG officer said more than
20 rebels were killed and 14 captured during a three hour battle on Saturday. The rebels
told townspeople the attack was in retaliation for the death sentence imposed on RUF
leader Corporal Foday Sankoh by Freetown's High Court on Friday.
RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh was transferred Saturday from a secret location where
he was detained during his trial to Pademba Road Prison, according to prison authorities.
24 October: RUF commander Sam Bockarie appealed to "the
international community and the world at large" on Saturday to prevail on President
Kabbah not to carry out the execution of RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh. "I think
it is about time now for us to reconcile rather than kill one another," Bockarie said
in a BBC interview. He added that executing Sankoh "will only escalate the situation,
but it will not solve the problem." Bockarie warned that if Sankoh's appeal were to
be turned down, the consequences would be unpredictable. "We are really organised, we
are well armed, and we are in thousands," he said. "I am not suggesting (Kabbah)
should kill, but to save this situation. I think it is better for the international
community to intervene now to resolve this issue peacefully, rather than them sitting by
and watching as Kabbah and his [word indistinct] killing others, which may escalate the
situation. Kabbah cannot provide security for this nation -- I can assure that."
23 October: RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh was sentenced to death
Friday after a 12-member jury found him guilty on 7 of 9 counts of treason. The jury,
which deliberated for less than two hours before returning its verdict, rejected Sankoh's
argument that he had been granted amnesty under the 1996 Abidjan Peace Accord. "I
thank my brothers, members of the jury, for taking such a decision," Sankoh told
them. Sankoh appealed to the judge for leniency, but High Court Justice Samuel Ademosu was
unmoved. "You shall be taken from here to some place of maximum security where you
shall be hanged by the neck until you die," Ademosu told Sankoh. "Had you not
given the order for your rebels to come out of the bush and join forces with the AFRC, the
atrocities could have been averted," he added. "Had it not been for you, the
atrocities committed and trauma experienced by the people of this country would not have
happened. For that you deserve nothing less than death." Ademosu said he was imposing
the death sentence as a deterrent and to take account of atrocities committed by Sankoh's
RUF fighters. Sankoh replied, "Thank you Lord." As the handcuffed RUF leader was
led from the court he began singing war songs. As described by BBC correspondent Winston
Ojukutu-Macaulay: "People were expecting the verdict and the sentence. So everybody
was quiet until such time when Sankoh was leaving the court. He started singing his war
songs. And then people started standing up. And then the ECOMOG security and the SSD
personnel in the court started shouting that everybody should sit down, because everybody
wanted to see his reaction. And the noise when he was singing, it sort of caught people by
surprise, and they stood up to see where the sound was coming from, only to realize that
it was Sankoh who was singing one of his war songs." The RUF leader has 21 days to
appeal his sentence, and he has vowed to do so. Sankoh, who was compelled to defend
himself after no attorney could be found to take his case, told the court that the law is
a schoolmaster and that he was a new man to the law. In the absence of legal
representation, he requested that the court provide him with a lawyer for his appeal.
AFRC/RUF rebels threatened Friday to attack Freetown in retaliation for Monday's
execution of 24 military officers condemned to death in connection with last year's
military coup.
22 October: High Court Justice Samuel Ademosu began his address to the
jury trying RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh Thursday, a day after Sankoh concluded his
own defence. Court officials said Ademosu was expected to ask the jury to retire and
consider its verdict, which is expected next week. In summing up his defence Wednesday,
Sankoh told the 12-member jury that his trial was illegal under the 1996 Abidjan Peace
Accord. He submitted a copy of the accord in evidence to support his argument that it
granted amnesty to RUF rebels. "To consolidate peace and in the cause of
reconciliation, no RUF rebels shall be taken to court for action done," Sankoh said,
reading from the document. He said the accord remained in effect because it had not been
formally renounced by either party.
Guinea has deployed some 3,000 troops along the border with Sierra Leone, with about
1,000 Guinean soldiers entering the country with their tanks as part of security measures
in advance of elections in December, Guinean officials said Thursday. Aid workers said
thousands of Kambia residents lined the streets to cheer the Guineans when they entered
the town on Tuesday. "The 3,000 troops completed their deployment at the weekend and
1,000 of them have moved into Kambia and Kukuna in the northern part of Sierra
Leone," one officer said.
The Sierra Leone government has rescinded an order to deport en masse foreign
nationals who failed to produce valid residence or work permits by last week, but labour
officials said the government would not relent in its crackdown against illegal aliens in
the country. "Close to 5,000, Lebanese, Indians, Europeans, Americans, and African
nationals have registered and secured work permits," SLBS (state radio) said on
Wednesday.
Sierra Leone's Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Dr. Sama
Banya, will visit Beijing, China from October 26 to November 1 at the invitation of
Chinese Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan. The announcement was made by Chinese Foreign
Ministry Spokesman Tang Guoqiang and reported by China's Xinhua news service.
The United States Senate on Wednesday confirmed Joseph H. Melrose Jr. as Ambassador to
the Republic of Sierra Leone.
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has said he "regrets" Monday's
execution of 24 military officers condemned to death last week in connection with last
year's militar coup. "He hopes that the government of Sierra Leone ensure the due
process in further trials," a spokeswoman for Annan said. "The secretary-general
regrets the executions of 24 military officers in Sierra Leone on October 19, despite his
appeal to the government to consider, at a minimum, a stay of execution pending review of
the proceedings before relevant international monitoring bodies."
The European Union (EU) has also condemned the Monday's executions. "The EU
condemns the execution of 24 soldiers by firing squad, which took place on October 19,
1998 in Sierra Leone," said a statement issued by the current Austrian EU presidency.
While the EU recognised that the former military junta had committed "appalling
atrocities" upon the civilian population and that those responsible should be brought
to justice, it pointed out that the condemned soldiers had not been accorded the right of
appeal to a higher court. "The EU is convinced that the executions which have just
been carried out will not be conducive to fostering the peace and reconciliation process,
which the international community is aiming to encourage," the statement concluded.
21 October: Freetown's High Court has imposed sentences of death on 11
of 16 civilians convicted of treason on Monday in connection with last year's coup. Five
others were given jail sentences. During the two days since the verdicts were delivered by
an 11 member jury, the defendants and their lawyers made passionate pleas to Justice A.
Bankole Rashid not to sentence them to death, and to temper justice with mercy. As
reported by BBC correspondent Winston Ojukutu-Macaulay: "With the sound of crying
coming from the public gallery, Justice Rashid told each of the 11 condemned prisoners
that they would be taken from the High Court to a lawful prison, and then to a place of
execution, where they would suffer death by hanging. And as the crying spread across the
public gallery where relatives of the condemned prisoners were sitting, the judge said,
'May the Lord have mercy upon your soul.' This statement brought a sharp reply from Mrs
Nancy Steele, the 75 year old woman sentenced to death. Punching the air with her fist and
turning to her family, she said, 'May the Lord have mercy upon us all. Dont cry for
me. I am innocent.'"
Among those sentenced to death, as compiled from several news wire services, were
Brigadier (Rtd.) Modibo I. Leslie Lymon, Ahmed Charrid Dumbuya, Claude Victor Campbell,
Nancy Steele, Kaindeh Bangura, Mahila Mansana, and
Mohamed Basiru Savage.
Convicted on Monday were Brigadier (Rtd.) Modibo I. Leslie Lymon, who until December
had served as the AFRC's Secretary of State for Internal Affairs, former Attorney-General
Claude Victor Campbell, John Ajina Sesay, Eric Kwaku Dixon, Ahmed Charrid Dumbuya, the
AFRC's head of the National Power Authority; Sorie Allie Fofanah, Samuel Sanpha Sesay,
Tommy Anthony Patrick, Lawrence Loving Lamin, businessman Mohamed Basiru Savage, Kainde
Bangura, Mayilla Yansaneh, Phillip Sankoh, Harry Ben Alpha, former Freetown deputy mayor
Nancy Steele, and Sorie Samuel Sesay. Those acquitted were Mabinty Scott, Winifred
Cummings, and Alim Jalloh Jamboria. One defendant, Abdul B. Sankoh, died in prison. 20
additional defendants are facing treason charges before a separate court.
RUF commander Sam "Maskita" Bockarie said he would avenge Monday's execution
of 24 military officers condemned for treason in connection with last year's military
coup.
The three civilian defendants who were acquitted on Monday, along with three military
officers acquitted on October 12 and two civilians cleared on August 24, have not been
been released, and have been returned to Pademba Road Prison under the State of Emergency
regulations.
President Kabbah held "bilateral and regional" talks with Nigerian leader
General Abdulsalam Abubakar in Abuja Wednesday, ahead of next week's ECOWAS summit.
Abubakar is the current ECOWAS chairman. According to a Sierra Leone government news
release, the two leaders discussed the establishment of a new military in Sierra Leone,
and issues relating to the the upcoming ECOWAS summit "so that they could harmonise
their position on matters on the agenda."
Kamajor militiamen have destroyed a boat on a river along the border with Liberia
suspected of ferrying rebels into the country, Lagos Voice of Nigeria reported on
Wednesday. Local residents have recovered about six bodies from the river, the report
said.
Sierra Leoneans will no longer be able to enter Hong Kong without visas, the Hong Kong
Immigration Department announced on Wednesday. Citizens of Nigeria, Nepal, and Angola will
also need to apply for visas after October 28 under the revised regulations. "It is
our practice to review visa requirements for foreign visitors from time to time," an
Immigration Department spokesman said. "Changes are made where necessary to take into
account factors such as our ties with individual countries and track record of
travelers." The spokesman said Hong Kong would continue to adopt a liberal visa
policy for foreign visitors.
Police in Geneva, Switzerland have arrested 24 men in an operation aimed at breaking up
a network of cocaine dealers in the city. 22 of the detainees were Africans, including 19
asylum seekers from Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Somalia, and Mauritania. A police
statement said 58 persons had been rounded up near the main train station on Tuesday, but
that the others had been released. "This operation aimed to strike at the nest of
drug dealers, mainly of cocaine, dominated by Africans in Geneva for the past few
years," police spokesman Eric Grandjean said.
20 October: The London-based human rights group Amnesty International
(AI) has "deplored" the execution of 34 soldiers sentenced to death in
connection with last year's military coup after what AI termed an "unfair
trial". "These executions violate Sierra Leones international human rights
commitments and will do nothing to contribute to the process of reconciliation in Sierra
Leone," AI said in a statement issued on Tuesday. The statement stressed that under
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), ratified by President
Kabbah's government in 1996, "Everyone convicted of a crime shall have the right to
his conviction and sentence being reviewed by a higher tribunal according to law."
Under the Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, to which Sierra Leone is a party, individuals
may have recourse to the United Nations Human Rights Committee where rights have been
violated. Applications on behalf of 18 of the condemned had been submitted to the U.N.
Human Rights Committee, AI said. "Amnesty International acknowledges the
governments responsibility to bring to justice, in accordance with international
standards, those responsible for the crimes committed while the Armed Forces Revolutionary
Council (AFRC) was in power and insists that there should be no impunity for human rights
violations," the AI statement said. "The organization, however, unconditionally
opposes the death penalty which has never been shown to have any special power to reduce
crime or political violence, or to meet any genuine social need."
Justice Ministry officials were quoted as saying on Monday that more soldiers and
civilians were expected to be put on trial next week.
19 October: 24 of the 34 soldiers condemned to death by a military
tribunal on October 12 were publicly executed by firing squad at Goderich Beach in
Freetown at 4:30 on Monday morning. President Kabbah commuted the sentences of 10 others
to life imprisonment. Heavily armed ECOMOG troops sealed off the execution grounds as the
condemned soldiers were brought in, all of them dressed in black and heard chanting
"I have faith in God" and "I have surrendered to Jesus." As described
to the BBC by Foday Bankolay Fofanah of the Punch newspaper, the prisoners were
then bound to execution posts and hooded. Firing squad members, their faces coloured with
charcoal and masked with green leaves, took up their positions facing the convicts. After
some brief instructions, they opened fire "and they were just shooting at
random." BBC correspondent Winston Ojukutu-Macaulay described the execution.
"They were sort of bunched together, and they were just sort of firing continuously
at the bodies, as the soldiers were sort of directing them on one or two occasions one or
two of the officers from where I was standing would shout that that person is still alive,
and then they would just go, and just hear this continuous firing again."
Ojukutu-Macaulay said that as officials left in a motorcade, "a crowd of people came
up and some of them were clapping, saying thanks to ECOMOG officers such as General Khobe
and some of the other senior ECOMOG officers, and Sierra Leone police officers were
driving off the scene." According to Reuters, "cheering from the
crowd, including people watching from nearby rooftops, practically drowned out the burst
of gunfire as the firing squad went to work." Ojukutu-Macaulay said coffins had been
brought to the execution grounds, and that he was told the bodies would be placed in the
coffins and taken to Kingtom, in the center of Freetown, where they would be buried later
in the day. The Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported that a trench, believed to be
a mass grave, had been dug "under tight security" at a local cemetery over the
weekend by Special Division forces and ECOMOG troops.
Those executed were Corporal Tamba Gborie, Sergeant Alfred Abu "Zagallo"
Sankoh, Squadron Leader Victor L. King, Brigadier Hassan Karim Conteh, Lieutenant Marouf
Sesay, Lieutenant Jim Kelly Jalloh, Captain Idrissa Keita Khemolai, Captain Simbo Sankoh,
Colonel John Amadu Sonica Conteh, Lieutenant Commander Samuel Kandu-Boy Gilbert,
Lieutenant Commander Abdul Aziz Dumbuya, Lieutenant Commander P.F. Foday, Captain Josiah
Boisy Pratt, Captain Abubakarr Kamara, Captain Albert Johnny Moore, Major Bayoh
"Bios" Conteh, Major Augustine Fannah Kamara, Major Abdul Masakama Koroma, Major
Kula Samba, Lieutenant Colonel David Boisy Palmer, Colonel Daniel Kobina Anderson, Colonel
Abdul Karim Sesay, Colonel James Max Kanga, and Colonel Samuel Francis Yariemah Koroma.
Those whose sentences were commuted to life imprisonment were Lieutenant Colonel
Anthony Bockarie Mansaray, Colonel Alpha Saba Kamara, Colonel P.C. Nelson Williams,
Lieutenant Commander Francis Momoh Duwai, Major Tamba Anthony Abu, Flying Officer Arnold
H. Amadu, Captain R. Beresford Harleston, WO II Jonathan Dero-Showers, Lieutenant
Commander L.D. Howard, and Lieutenant Colonel Bashiru S. Conteh.
The British government has condemned Monday's execution of 24 military officers.
Foreign Office Minister of State for Africa Tony Lloyd said President Kabbah had rejected
his personal telephone appeals for clemency. "I regret that 24 executions have been
carried out in Sierra Leone following military courts martial," Lloyd said in a
statement. "We understand the demand within Sierra Leone for justice to be seen to be
done following the appalling and brutal butchery carried out under the junta. But the
country needs to embark on a proper process of reconciliation. Britain opposes the death
penalty wherever it applies." Lloyd said he had talked to Kabbah on October 16 to
appeal for clemency. "I hope these executions will be the last in Sierra Leone,"
he added. Labour MP Andrew Mackinlay, who is a member of the Commons Foreign Affairs
Committee investigating the Sandline "Arms to Africa Affair", called the
executions "deeply worrying." He called for a full Foreign Office
statement on when the government knew the sentences were to be carried out and what
representations had been made on behalf of the condemned. "This is deplorable. We
were we assured that President Kabbah -- who has received support from Britain and was
endorsed by Tony Blair who actually said `the good guys won' -- ran a democratic
government," he said. "It raises grave questions as to the government's claim to
be a democracy."
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan unsuccessfully appealed to the Sierra Leone
government on Monday for a stay of execution of the 24 military officers. His appeal was
published in a report to the United Nations Security Council after the 24 were executed
earlier in the day. Annan expressed concern that those sentenced to death had no legal
right of appeal. "I urge the government, at a minimum, to consider a stay of
execution of sentences pending review of the proceedings before relevant international
monitoring bodies," he said. Annan also condemned the "summary executions,
torture, mutilations, rapes, looting and other acts of barbarism" carried out be
elements of the former junta. He said he was particularly outraged by the "senseless
acts of terror perpetrated against children."
The international human rights monitoring group Human Rights Watch expressed
"outrage" over the execution of 24 soldiers, which were carried out only three
days after the group had appealed to President Kabbah to commute the sentences. "The
decision to carry out the death sentences without the basic right to appeal is extremely disappointing," said Peter Takirambudde,
executive director of the Africa division of Human Rights Watch. "This will
not sow the seeds of national reconciliation nor help to
establish a state based on respect of international human
rights standards."
In a press release issued from State House on Monday, President Kabbah defended the
decision to proceed with the executions of the 24 officers, saying the decision on whether
or not to commute the condemned officers' sentences "included the degree of their
involvement and their participation in the planning, instigation and execution of mutiny
of the 25th May 1997 and in their activities with the AFRC from that date until it was
ousted from power; their failure in their duty to prevent the mutiny itself when they had
the ability and opportunity to prevent it; the level of human rights abuses and mayhem
perpetrated or instigated against the people of this country and their role in it; the
absence of any remorse on their part during or after the trial in respect of their proved
role in some of the most despicable of the atrocities associated with the AFRC, and thus
the legitimate fear that they will not hesitate to repeat the same conduct if they had
another opportunity to do so in future." Kabbah called those whose sentences were
commuted "cowards and opportunists" but said that they "became remorseful
for their association with the AFRC and at some stage even became useful agents for the
democratic forces." He said the executions were not acts of retribution, but were
intended to act as a deterrent against the anarchy and trauma experienced by Sierra
Leoneans during junta rule. At the same time, Kabbah renewed his offer of amnesty to
AFRC/RUF rebels still in the bush, especially "to those who were undoubtedly deceived
into joining the band of heartless people who have been responsible for the suffering of
peace loving Sierra Leoneans."
16 of 19 civilians on trial for treason before Freetown's High Court were found guilty
on Monday. Convicted were Brigadier Rtd. Modibo I. Leslie Lymon, who until December had
served as the AFRC's Secretary of State for Internal Affairs, former magistrate Claude
Victor Campbell, John Ajina Sesay, Eric Kwaku Dixon, Ahmed Charrid Dumbuya, Sorie Allie
Fofanah, Samuel Sanpha Sesay, Tommy Anthony Patrick, Lawrence Loving Lamin, Mohamed Basiru
Savage, Kainde Bangura, Mayilla Yansaneh, Phillip Sankoh, Harry Ben Alpha, Nancy Steele,
and Sorie Samuel Sesay. Those acquitted were Mabinty Scott, Winifred Cummings, and Alim
Jalloh Jamboria. One defendant, Abdul B. Sankoh, died in prison. Sentences were expected
to be handed down on Tuesday.
Four convicts on death row in Bamako, Mali have broken out of prison, the Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported on Monday. The four -- three Sierra Leoneans and a
Malian -- were "convicted of committing several armed
robberies and feared for their cruelty, typically targeted expatriates," the AFP said, quoting police officers. Prison authorities
had been preparing to transfer the four to a prison in the north of the country.
United States Charge d'Affairs Cheryl Martin turned over
four sea containers containing 63,000 pounds of medical supplies and equipment to the
Ministry of Health and Sanitation on Monday.
17 October: The former President of the Liberian Interim Government of
National Unity, Amos Sawyer, said Saturday that the Sierra Leone conflict should be given
the same priority as those in Bosnia and Kosovo. "NATO said no to the behaviour of
the Yugoslav government in Bosnia. It has again done the same with regard to Kosovo. Why
shouldn't we do the same in Sierra Leone?" he asked. Sawyer said the international
community should mobilise against AFRC/RUF rebels who continue to commit atrocities in the
country. "The situation in Sierra Leone is no longer an ECOMOG affair or for
neigbours alone," he said. "The vicious actions of these guerrillas have to be
ended by the international community as a whole."
Ebrahim Samba, the World Health Organisation's Regional Director for Africa, and U.S.
Surgeon-General Dr. David Satcher, have warned a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee in
Washington, D.C. that Africa's vaccination programmes may be starting to falter.
"Unless the last bastion of polio in Africa is eliminated, the whole world is at
risk," Samba told the senators. He later told reporters that wars in countries such
as Sierra Leone, Liberia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo had badly interfered
with the vaccination programme.
16 October: A crisis between Sierra Leone and Liberia following
allegations that Liberia had massed troops along their common border has been averted
after a telephone conversation between President Kabbah and Liberian President Charles
Taylor. "As a result of a telephone conversation between the two of them, that
situation about troop movement turned out to be a misunderstanding which has been
clarified," Presidential spokesman Septimus Kaikai told the BBC on Friday. He said
the two presidents had agreed to work together for peace and security in the sub-region.
"But in addition to that, there was agreed to be regular telephone conversations with
each other so as to improve and strengthen (the) relationship between the two
countries," Kaikai added.
RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh told Freetown's High Court Friday that he was entirely
innocent and that he had been extradited illegally from Nigeria. "I am innocent and I
did no wrong," Sankoh told the court. "The extradition was wrong under
international law. I should have been tried by the judicial process of Nigeria, which
never happened. I am convinced that I am a victim of internal and external conspiracy,
manipulation to get rid of me, Corporal Sankoh, and the RUF organisation of which I am the
leader." Sankoh charged that the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party was involved in a
conspiracy against him. "This is a court of justice. We don't talk politics here, we
talk law and justice," Justice Samuel Ademosu cautioned him. "What is happening
in this court is politics, so warn Attorney-General Berewa to stop," Sankoh replied.
A verdict is expected Monday in the trial of 19 civilians accused of treason. They face
the death penalty if found guilty.
The international human rights monitoring group Human Rights Watch released an open
letter to President Kabbah on Friday calling on him to commute the death sentences of 34
soldiers accused of treason. As a party to the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) as well as the Optional Protocol, which
allows for individual communications, Sierra Leone is obliged to guarantee review of the
cases by a higher court, Human Rights Watch Africa Division Executive Director
Peter Takirambudde argued. "The lack of a right to
appeal to a higher court for the thirty-four who now face
execution by firing squad-is in sharp contrast to...statements by your government calling
for respect for international human rights norms." The letter urged the Sierra
Leone government, "as a Party to the ICCPR, to in a timely fashion make structural
changes in the military court system to ensure the right to appeal." In a press
release accompanying the letter, Takirambudde said: "The Sierra Leonean government
has repeatedly said it is committed to international human rights standards. These cases
will be an important test for them."
15 October: President Kabbah has submitted a formal complaint to the
United Nations alleging that the Liberian government has massed 5,000 troops along the
Liberia-Sierra Leone with the aim of destabilising Sierra Leone. United Nations Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Liberia, Felix
Downes-Thomas, said he considered the allegations so serious that he
travelled to Ganta, Liberia to confront Liberian President Charles Taylor with the
accusations, saying he could not wait until Taylor returned to Monrovia. The Liberian
government responded on Thursday, calling the allegations "unfortunate and
irresponsible." Information Minister Joe Mulbah, who had accompanied Taylor on his
rural tour, said: "The Liberian government is angry. The allegations have no element
of truth. At this moment when Liberia is at peace, who needs war in the region?" He
reiterated the Liberian government's invitation to the U.N., the OAU, and ECOWAS to send a
team of investigators to the border area to ascertain the facts for themselves. A Liberian
foreign ministry statement issued Thursday called President Kabbah's allegations lies.
"The government expresses disappointment over the lies and fabrications perpetrated
by authorities of the government of Sierra Leone against the Liberian government,
especially at the time when efforts are being made to re-awaken the spirit of cooperation
under the Mano River Union," the statement said. It added that President Kabbah made
the accusations to "a certain western country and the U.N." based on reports by
Chief of Defence Staff Brigadier Maxwell Khobe. "The government of Liberian calls on
the U.N., ECOMOG, the press, and other interested parties to send investigative teams to
the border to ascertain the truth of Kabbah's allegation," the statement said.
"(The Liberian government regards) these allegations and fabrications as a pretext of
a planned border incursion into Liberia from Sierra Leone, (but) Liberia stands ready to
protect and defend its territorial integrity." ECOMOG task force commander General
Abubakar Ahmadu said Thursday that "foreign fighters from Liberia" were
assisting RUF rebels in the south of the country. These fighters should "desist from
attacking ECOMOG, or else ECOMOG troops will go on the offensive and crush them, whether
they are Sierra Leoneans or foreign rebels," Ahmadu said at a weekly security
briefing. "We have captured many of these ... Liberian rebels so we have enough proof
to know these fighters are also building up massive troops near the southern border,"
he added.
Chief of Defence Staff Maxwell Khobe has confirmed death
sentences imposed on 34 military officers by a military tribunal on Monday.
Four persons were killed Wednesday when a Red Cross relief
convoy was ambushed at Joru. The dead, all Sierra Leonean nationals, were employees of a
commercial transport company contracted by the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC). An ICRC press statement issued on Thursday said the seven-truck convoy was
"duly marked with the red cross emblem" when it was attacked. All other
persons, including ICRC staff members who were on board, were reported to be safe and are
were now back in Kenema. The convoy was returning from Zimmi, where it had delivered food
to the most vulnerable members of the region's population. "At this stage, no further
information regarding the circumstances of the incident is available and it is too early
to evaluate the impact this incident could have on ICRC operations in the region,"
the statement said. "The ICRC deplores the losses of innocent lives and condemns this
serious violation of international humanitarian law."
The RUF still maintains important bases at Kailahun, Gangagama, and Koindu,
ECOMOG task force commander General Abubakar Ahmadu said Thursday. He said the RUF had
launched attacks near Kenema in the east, and had attacked the towns of Mabalonto and
Mange in the north, where they had managed to hold a strategic bridge for several hours.
"But we retook the bridge, killing several rebels," Ahmadu said, adding that his
men had captured 40 rebels at Mange. Ahmadu said ECOMOG lacked the resources to finish the
war and was waiting for reinforcements from Guinea and the Ivory Coast.
Hundreds of Lebanese, Asians, and West African immigrants have applied for residence
and work permits, a labour official said Thursday. A government statement last week
warned foreigners without valid documents to regularise their status by October 14 or face
deportation or the closure of their businesses. "Starting from today our ministry has
embarked on a massive search for illegal immigrants," the official said. He added
that the government was not targeting specific nationalities, but that Lebanese and Asians
in the retail sector were among the most affected. Most of the approximately 15,000
Lebanese in Sierra Leone fled following last year's military coup. About 10,000 Lebanese
and an unknown number of Indians have returned to the country following the reinstatement
of the civilian government.
Three villages in Guinea were attacked by "armed bandits" thought to be
Sierra Leonean rebels on October 7, according to a source in Conakry quoted by the AFP.
The attacks occurred in at Koundouleah, Bendou, and Woldou, in
Faranah District, 250 miles southwest of Conakry near
the Sierra Leone border. Five villagers were reported missing after the attacks by an
unknown number of raiders who stole cattle and goats and burned at least 40 houses.
The United States government has reportedly decided to
extend by an additional year the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) granted to Sierra
Leoneans living in the U.S. The renewal will apply only to those who benefited from TPS
during the original period of 4 November 1997 to 3 November 1998.
14 October: RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh, who is defending himself
in his treason trial before Freetown's High Court, said Tuesday that he would call
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah as his principal witness. Sankoh told High Court Justice
Samuel Ademusu that Kabbah and two government ministers, Dr. Julius Spencer and Shirley
Gbujama, had vital documents which were relevant to his case. When Ademusu suggested that
the documents could be tendered without the necessity of President Kabbah coming to court,
Sankoh insisted that Kabbah must appear in person. Ademusu advised Sankoh to withdraw his
request as he was not in a position to issue a subpoena for President Kabbah, and he
warned Sankoh against calling witnesses who would demolish his case. Sankoh then requested
as witnesses AFRC Chairman Lt.-Col. Johnny Paul Koroma, former RUF spokesman Gibril
Massaquoi who facing treason charges, and AFRC press spokesman Captain Paul Thomas.
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa told the court that Koroma and
Thomas were still at large, and he asked Sankoh why RUF commander Sam "Maskita"
Bockarie was not included on his witness list. Sankoh replied, "Don't provoke
me!" He explained he had been in Nigerian detention for several months and did
not know that Koroma and the RUF were still fighting in the bush. Sankoh will begin his
defence on Friday, October 16 from the dock, and it is likely that Massaquoi and the two
government ministers will appear in court.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), in its Emergency Report No. 4 issued
Tuesday, said CARE had completed food distribution to a total of 36, 834 internally
displaced persons at Masingbi in the period up to October 6. Distribution of a
supplementary ration of corn-soya blend is to begin next week. Two WFP trucks remain in
the town to support CARE in ensuring adequate and complete distribution coverage. The
report also spoke of fighting between Kamajors and AFRC/RUF rebels at Bandajuma,
Mendekelema, and Nyiema, Yawei Chiefdom, in Kenema District. There has been no new influx
of refugees into Kenema during the past week, and the city is reported calm. The current
verified WFP caseload at Kenema is 13,190 persons. Displaced persons not living with
relatives have received a one month distribution from Catholic Relief Services (CRS).
The WFP is also providing short-term food aid to 4,920 persons at Segbwema and Daru
as a result of "the same disturbances." The WFP is also continuing to
assist Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea under a six month plan approved by the FAO and
WFP in August. The operation will provide 17,700 tons of assorted food commodities to
200,000 new refugees in the forest region of Guinea. The refugees, mostly from Kono and
Kailahun Districts, have been registered and accommodated by the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
13 October: The Sierra Leone government and Nord Resources, a 50%
owner of Sierra Rutile Limited, have concluded talks on reopening the Sierra Rutile mine,
Director of Mines Tucker Barewa said on Tuesday. "It is now left to parliament to
approve agreements reached between the government and the company for the company to
legally restart the titanium oxide mine," Barewa said. "It is now mainly left to
Sierra Rutile to decide when to restart as the government is anxious they reopen the
mine." Barewa gave no specifics on the talks with Nord Resources, but official
sources said they concerned taxes and spending on infrastructure by the company. Barewa
said he expected at least a partial reopening of the mine in the coming months. A Nord
Resources press release issued October 9 said the company had received a $14.2 million
insurance settlement for damage to Sierra Rutile's facilities in 1995. The company
currently has debts of $6 million and cash on hand of $7.2 million "which will be
used primarily to pursue the restart of the project," the statement said. In July,
Nord Resources appointed the firm of NM Rothschild & Sons to help arrange financing to
restart mining operations. The company said the economics of the new mining operations
appeared attractive, and that the market for titanium dioxide continues to show strength.
"SRL has made significant progress towards reaching formal agreement with the
Government of Sierra Leone, which would allow the project to proceed under favorable
terms. The Government has been cooperative and Nord believes a satisfactory agreement can
be concluded in a timely manner," the press release
stated. The company said it is involved in on-going discussions with the other 50% owner
of Sierra Rutile Limited, Consolidated Rutile Limited, regarding the future of the
project.
AFRC/RUF rebels are in virtual control of Kono District,
with the ECOMOG force in control of only four towns, Liberian Star Radio reported on
Tuesday. ECOMOG officials were quoted as saying that the fight against the rebels in Kono
was made difficult by the terrain and the lack of logistics.
AFRC/RUF rebels attacked a mini hydro dam eight miles from
Kenema on Monday, Liberian Star Radio reported. No casualty figures were
available. The report said government forces were on their way to the area.
Tunisian authorities have detained 34 Ghanaians, 10 Sierra Leoneans, 8 Somalis and one
Liberian who were found aboard two boats abandoned in Tunisian territorial waters. The
boats' owners, said to be Moroccans, abandoned the boats and passengers when they were
intercepted by a Tunisian naval patrol. The would-be immigrants, bound for Europe,
were reported to be safe and well and will be returned to their countries of origin,
Tunisian authorities said.
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General Solomon Berewa defended a military court's
decision to impose the death sentence on 34 military officers Monday, saying that the
death penalty was part of Sierra Leone's colonial heritage. "Exactly 100 years ago
this year, the colonial masters in 1898 executed 96 people for refusing to pay the hut tax
of 26 pence...So the capital sentence is not new to Sierra Leone. It is part of our
history and a legacy from colonialism," Berewa said.
Minister of Information, Communications, Tourism and Culture Dr. Julius Spencer has
addressed pleas for clemency for 34 military officers condemned to death on Monday by
stating that "over 99% of the people of Sierra Leone have expressed the view that the
law of Sierra Leone should take its course." In a press release issued on Tuesday,
Spencer detailed junta atrocities, while claiming that the defendants had shown no
remorse, and had been making plans to escape from prison. "For these reasons,
therefore, and without prejudice to the recommendation of the Prerogative of Mercy
Committee required by the Constitution of Sierra Leone, Government will do all that is
humanely possible to deal with pleas for clemency, but in the final analysis, the
experience and concerns of the people of Sierra Leone will have to prevail," Spencer
said. "Any deterrent measure taken will focus on the leaders rather than those who
have been erroneously deceived into taking part in the mayhem and commission of heinous
crimes."
12 October: A military court in Freetown convicted 34 military
officers Monday on charges of "treason, murder, and collaborating with the
enemy," and immediately sentenced the condemned men and one woman to death by firing
squad. Three other defendants were acquitted, and one defendant died during the two month
trial. "In the case of the 34 condemned to death, you will be taken to some public
place where you will be executed by firing squad," Court Martial President Tom Carew
told them. Sierra Leonean military law provides no mechanism for appeal, and only
President Kabbah can grant clemency after confirmation of the sentences and deliberation
by the so-called Prerogative of Mercy Committee. The 34, manacled in pairs, were led from
the court and transported to prison in armored vehicles. AFRC Secretary-General Abdul
Karim Sesay, walking on crutches, clutched the shirt of Brig. Samuel Koroma as the two
were taken from the court.
Those found guilty and condemned to death were: Cpl. Tamba Gborie, Sgt. Alfred Abu
Sankoh, Brig. Hassan Conteh, Col. James Max Kanga, Col. Abdul Karim Sesay, Sqn. Ldr.
Victor L. King, Col. Daniel Kobina Anderson, Col. Samuel Francis Yariemeh Koroma, Lt. Cdr.
Samuel Kandu-Boy Gilbert, Lt. Col. David Boisy Palmer, Lt. Col. Anthony Bockarie Mansaray,
Col. Alpha Saba Kamara, Col. John Amadu Sonica Conteh, Maj. Kula Samba, Col. P.C. Nelson
Williams, Maj. Abdul Masakama Koroma, Lt. Cdr. Francis Momoh Duwai, Maj. Augustine Fannah
Kamara, Maj. Tamba Anthony Abu, Maj. Bayoh Conteh, Capt. Albert Johnny Moore, Capt. Abu
Bakarr Kamara, Capt. Simbo Sankoh, Capt. Idrissa Keita Khemolai, Lt. Jim Kelly Jalloh,
Capt. Josiah Boisy Pratt, Flying Offr. Arnold H. Amadu, Capt. R. Beresford Harleston, Lt.
Marouf Sesay, WO II Jonathan Dero-Showers, Col. P.F. Foday, Lt. Cdr. L.D. Howard, Lt. Col.
Bashiru S. Conteh, and Lt. Cdr. Abdul Aziz Dumbuya. (Note: Defendants are listed with the
military rank they held prior to the coup. The Sierra Leone government has declined to
recognise military promotions made under AFRC rule.)
Col. Saa Sinnah was found not guilty on all charges and acquitted. Charges against Lt.
A.M. Keita and Lt. A.B.S. Bah were also dismissed for lack of evidence.
The London-based human rights organization Amnesty International, which opposes the
death penalty in all cases and without exception, expressed concern Monday that the
execution of the 34 condemned military officers could be imminent, and appealed to
President Kabbah to grant them clemency. "We have repeatedly urged the government to
establish a judicial appeal procedure against sentences passed by the court martial,"
Amnesty said in a statement. "We fear that these executions could be carried out
before applications are submitted and considered by the United Nations Human Rights
Committee." Amnesty pointed out that President Kabbah had signed the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in 1996, which stipulates that
"Anyone sentenced to death shall have the right to appeal to a court of higher
jurisdiction," and that steps should be taken to ensure that such appeals shall
become mandatory. "The use of the death penalty will not contribute to the process of
reconciliation in Sierra Leone," Amnesty said.
Minister of Information, Communication, Tourism and Culture Dr. Julius Spencer
acknowledged Monday that the government had received pleas for clemency from
"friendly governments and some human rights organisations," on behalf of 34
military officers condemned to death, but stressed the need for the country's laws to be
carried out. "Justice now needs to be done to the surviving relatives of those killed
and to the victims of the atrocities experienced," Spencer said in a statement.
"The law should also be applied in appropriate cases as a deterrent to avert a
recurrence of this nightmare and to protect the citizens and the nation itself. If
Government does not enforce the law effectively and appropriately now, it will fail in
bringing such mayhem to an end and so fail in its primary duty of protecting the people of
this country." The government had taken care to assure due process, fairness, and
transparency in the judicial process, and to ensure that the accused were accorded all of
their rights under the law, Spencer said. He emphasised that the government's future
course of action in this case would be based on the need to protect the people of Sierra
Leone, while taking into account its other obligations as a government. "This
therefore means that the death sentence in any particular situation will be carried out
only in deserving cases, having due regard to the degree of involvement and participation
of any of the individuals concerned," Spencer concluded.
The World Bank has extended a $40 million grant to Sierra Leone to help revive
agriculture in the country, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and the Environment Dr.
Harry Will said on Monday. "According to the World Bank's conditionalities the money
must be spent on construction of feeder roads, the provision of farm inputs for farmers,
food processing, purchase of equipment and capacity building," Will said. A World
Bank team has been working with the Sierra Leone government to rehabilitate the
agricultural sector, which has been devastated by civil strife.
20 people are confirmed dead following two days of strike action by Sierra Leonean
hospital workers, Liberian Star Radio reported on Monday. The workers had been
demanding two months salary arrears. Patients at hospitals in Freetown have reportedly
begun discharging themselves, while others continue to die for lack of care. Health
authorities have promised the striking workers that they would be paid on Tuesday, but the
workers have refused to return to work until they are paid, the report said.
11 October: ECOMOG has wrested control of a strategic bridge at Mange
from rebel control Saturday after three days of fighting, ECOMOG and relief officials said
on Sunday. "The rebels fled north leaving more than 60 people dead, scores wounded
and most of the town empty," an ECOMOG officer said upon his return to Freetown. The
rebels attacked the town on Wednesday in an action aimed at cutting a major road link to
Guinea. Relief officials said some 15,000 residents fled following the attack, in which
about 25 people are known dead. Most of those who remained were the elderly and infirm or
abandoned children, they added. Relief officials predicted that the final death toll could
rise, as rebels set fire to more than 40 homes, most likely with people inside. ECOMOG
officers said the rebels had apparently received new weapons prior to the attack.
"They came at us with brand new sub-machine guns and rocket launchers," one
officer said. Traffic between Freetown and Conakry resumed on Sunday, with travellers
reporting houses in Mange still smouldering. "There were thick pools of blood along
the road and even splattered across the walls of some buildings," one driver
reported.
10 October: The Tunisian navy intercepted two ships on Thursday,
carrying 54 illegal immigrants from Sierra Leone, Somalia, Ghana, and Liberia. The
government-controlled Tunisian newspaper La Presse reported Saturday that the two
ships, which were captained by Moroccans, had kept in radio contact, suggesting that they
were part of a large illegal immigration network. A preliminary investigation indicated
that one ship had put to sea from a port near Ceuta in Morocco, while the other came from
Libya. In an agreement with Italy signed last August, Tunisia agreed to increase patrols
to crack down on illegal immigrant traffic passing through Tunisian waters from North
African countries to the Italian islands of Sicily and Pantelleria.
The United States House of Representatives passed a resolution Saturday to condemn
terrorism in Sierra Leone.
9 October: At least 25 people were killed Thursday when rebels
attacked the town of Mange, 90 miles north of Freetown, military sources said on Friday.
"More than 200 rebels attacked Mange yesterday from three fronts in an attempt to
seize the strategic bridge there and cut the road link to Guinea," an ECOMOG officer
said. He added that 25 people, most of them civilians, died when ECOMOG troops clashed
with the rebels. Aid workers and fleeing residents, however, put the death toll much
higher. Hospital workers in Port Loko said many wounded from Mange were arriving for there
treatment. The ECOMOG officer denied reports by aid workers that the rebels had overrun
ECOMOG positions at Mange.
More than 7,500 Sierra Leoneans have crossed into Guinea from northern and northwestern
Sierra Leone in the past two weeks, fleeing renewed rebel attacks, according the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) staff at Forecariah. Refugees are
continuing to cross the border from several towns, frightened of further rebel raids
around the town of Kakuna where houses were burned and more than a dozen people were
killed on September 28. A UNHCR statement on Friday said the new refugees were being taken
to existing camps at Forecariah, and shelters were being constructed as quickly as
possible on account of the current rainy season. "Many families were split up in the
panic to get out of the villages, and medical staff on the spot have treated several
people for bullet wounds," the statement said. Tension among the new arrivals is said
to be running high as they fear more fighting between rebels and ECOMOG troops in the area
adjacent to the border. Guinean authorities have increased security along the Sierra Leone
border, according to the UNHCR statement.
The Sierra Leone government has allocated $90,000 for ECOMOG operations in the country,
Liberian Star Radio reported on Friday. The funding was allocated in the
government's budget for the fourth quarter of the fiscal year. The amount is the second
provided to ECOMOG by the Sierra Leone government, which allocated nearly Le 2 billion for
ECOMOG operations in its fiscal budget.
Ministers of the eight-nation Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) said Friday
they were deeply worried about a rash of killings by AFRC/RUF rebels in Sierra Leone. In
response to a RUF peace overture made last week through the Commonwealth secretariat, the
U.N. and the OAU, CMAG ministers called on the RUF "as a mark of their good
faith, to make an immediate statement accepting the terms for talks conveyed to them by
the Commonwealth Secretary-General." The Group urged the RUF to recognise the
legitimacy and authority of President Kabbah's government, to accept an unconditional and
indefinite cessation of hostilities, and to enter into talks to bring about an immediate
end to the conflict. "The Group expressed grave concern over the humanitarian
situation in Sierra Leone, in particular the continuing atrocities by remnants of the
junta forces. The Group condemned these outrages unreservedly," CMAG said in a
statement. CMAG members include Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Botswana, Barbados,
Malaysia, Zimbabwe, and Ghana.
An ECOMOG source quoted on Friday by Liberian Star Radio said troops are expected to
arrive from Ivory Coast, Togo, Mali, Niger, and the Gambia as early as this week to
strengthen the ECOMOG offensive against AFRC/RUF rebels, code named "Operation Tiger
Tail."
Health authorities in Sierra Leone have said that at least 53 persons have died of AIDS
since January, and that a further 200 are infected with the HIV virus, Liberian Star
Radio reported on Friday. The coordinator of the Sexually Transmitted Diseases and
Aids Control Programme, Dr. Andrew Kosia, said the spread of the disease was due to
unprotected sex. Since 1980, over 600 cases of AIDS have been diagnosed, and of these over
300 people have died of the disease. The Inter-Press Service (IPS) quoted the
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) representative
in Nigeria, Emmanuel Apea, as saying that about 64,000 Sierra Leoneans between ages 15 and
49 are infected with the AIDS virus. This number compares with 650,000, or 10% of the
population, believed to be infected in the Ivory Coast; 2.2 million in Nigeria, 350,000 in
Burkina Faso, 42,000 in Liberia, and 13,000 in Gambia.
Three witnesses have testified for the prosecution in the treason trial of RUF leader
Corporal Foday Sankoh. As described by Liberian Star Radio, the first state
witness, an official of the West African Examination Council in Freetown, played a
recording Thursday purporting to be of Sankoh ordering his men to join the AFRC military
government of Johnny Paul Koroma. The second state witness, who was a signal officer in
the RUF, produced a recording in which Sankoh was alleged to have ordered his fighters to
attack Sierra Leone. The third state witness, Mohamed Keita, told the High Court that his
parents were killed and his village looted by RUF rebels. He said people attempting to
escape the siege of their village were killed. A video was played in court, showing Sankoh
in command of the RUF militia.
8 October: The Sierra Leone government will launch a crackdown on
illegal aliens according to an official statement read over SLBS (state radio) on
Thursday. The statement said a large number of Lebanese, Indians, and West African
immigrants had entered the country and secured employment without valid permits. Those
found in violation of the country's labour and immigration laws after October 14
"will face the full force of the law," including closure of their businesses,
the statement said.
Kamajor militiamen displayed three captured members of the Armed Forces of Liberia at
Kenema Wednesday in support of claims that the Liberian government has been assisting
AFRC/RUF rebels in their fight against the government. According to BBC
correspondent Prince Brima, they were among 15 rebels captured in a Kamajor ambush in
Kailahun District. Kamajor battalion commander Nsimi Hassan Jalloh said the three,
identified as Sergeant Mori Sani, Corporal Momoh Fahnbuleh, and Private Patrick Kaidi,
were ambushed along with AFRC/RUF fighters at Bumbuna Crossing Point as they tried to
infiltrate into Kenema District. Sergeant Sani, interviewed on Thursday morning, said they
had been assigned by the Liberian authorities to assist the AFRC and RUF in their fight
against ECOMOG and the Kamajors in eastern Sierra Leone. He added that there were other
Armed Forces of Liberia troops fighting alongside the rebels in other parts of Sierra
Leone. Deputy Defence Minister and Civil Defence Forces head Sam Hinga Norman said that
M-60 rifles were captured from the Liberians, and that this was the first time these
weapons had been seen during the Sierra Leone conflict. Norman, who had been stationed at
Kenema since the beginning the current offensive, left for Freetown Thursday morning,
reportedly to brief President Kabbah about the evidence of Liberian involvement, Brima
said.
Civilians who fled fighting in Sierra Leone said Thursday that rebels killed 28
civilians in an attack on the town of Kakuna earlier this week. Witnesses said the rebels
cut limbs off seven other people and burned down some 60 homes in Tonko Limba Chiefdom.
One witness, Saidu Kamara, told the AFP that rebels clad in black t-shirts and armed with
heavy guns attacked from three directions. The Electronic Mail & Guardian quoted
witnesses who said that more than 100 AFRC/RUF rebels attacked the town wearing t-shirts
bearing the picture of the late rap star Tupac Shakur. The raid has prompted Kakuna
residents to ban the shirts, which can be purchased in Sierra Leone's major cities for
about $3. Anyone wearing the shirt is branded as a rebel and interrogated or punished, the
report said. A Sierra Leonean military official said the cost of combat uniforms is beyond
the reach of the rebels. ''A military combat uniform costs
more than $10 and is not easily accessible to the rag-tag rebels, so they go for
cheaper stuffs," he said. "'In any case, dressing in Tupac's t-shirts perhaps reinforces
the rebels' love for violence because Tupac is no good role model anyway."
Two delegates from the Libya Arab Investment Co (LAAICO) met with investors, tourism
officials and government ministers this week to evaluate investment opportunities in
Sierra Leone, particularly in the tourism sector. Amer Jweda, who met Tuesday with
Minister of Information, Communications, Tourism and Culture Dr. Julius Spencer to discuss
a joint venture, noted that LAAICO's investments in Africa included the Golden Tulip Hotel
in Accra, Ghana. Spencer said the Sierra Leone government "is now moving in the
direction of diverting its interest in some economic industries."
Military sources in Freetown told the AFP Thursday that security forces had recaptured
the towns of Sambalu, Mofindo, Niahun, and Giema in Kailahun District during an offensive
earlier this week. They said 25 rebels were killed in the operation.
Liberian factional leader Roosevelt Johnson is reportedly still in Freetown, the Pan
African News Agency reported Monday, citing an independent newspaper report. Johnson
reportedly remained in Sierra Leone after refusing an offer of temporary asylum by Nigeria
after Ghana refused to admit him. Johnson is expected to remain in custody and will likely
be returned to Liberia to stand trial on charges of treason. 21 of his followers face
similar charges.
7 October: Sierra Leone has received $28.7 million in aid from the
World Bank, the European Union, and Britain, which will allow the government to draw up a
budget for the remainder of 1998. A senior finance ministry official said Wednesday that
the World Bank had released $15 million of a planned $55 million package, Britain had
given about $8.2 million, and the United Nations about $5.5 million. Minister of Finance
and Economic Planning James Jonah was working on a budget for the fourth quarter of 1998
which will concentrate on education, health, defence, and energy, the official said.
A military team from the Ivory Coast is holding talks with ECOMOG officials and Sierra
Leonean commanders in Freetown on deploying troops in Sierra Leone to help end the
rebellion, an ECOMOG source said Wednesday. The Ivorian team, which arrived in Freetown on
Tuesday, is expected to sign an agreement stipulating the terms of the deployment.
"We are in urgent need of more men to be able to crush the rebels once and for
all," the source said. "They are now working on the number of troops the Ivorian
government is going to deploy in Sierra Leone." He said ECOMOG was asking for 2,000
troops, while the Ivory Coast wanted to send 1,000 soldiers initially.
ECOMOG Chief Information Officer Lieutenant-Colonel Jimoh Okunlola said Tuesday that
the move of ECOMOG's headquarters from Monrovia to Freetown is imminent. "ECOMOG is
setting up its headquarters in Freetown," Okunlola said. "In the past month, we
have been shipping machinery and flying in our officers and men. The move is almost
complete and the field commander is now here and we are busy setting up the headquarters.
There are a few more personnel who are still being moved over from Monrovia. When that is
finished shortly, the headquarters will become fully operational." Okunlola said a
residual force would remain in Liberia. "We have left a skeleton but strong-enough
force in Monrovia to take care of the security situation, if fighting breaks out there
again, until reinforcements can be sent," he said.
More parastatals are being investigated by a Special Parliamentary Select Committee set up to look into allegations of mismanagement by senior
parastatal management, the BBC reported on Wednesday. Security will reportedly be stepped
up around buildings occupied by parastatals following Sunday's suspicious fire at the
Sierra Leone Lottery Building.
Judge-Advocate Captain Godwin Ayamalechi, presiding at the
court martial of 38 military officers and soldiers of the Sierra Leone Army accused in
connection with last year's military coup, indicated Tuesday that the court will render a
verdict on Monday, according to a government news release issued on Wednesday. Ayamalechi
said he would begin his address Wednesday and conclude Thursday, after which the court
would be adjourned to allow the panelists at least three days to deliberate over the
verdict. Defence Counsel Captain S.I. Musa, in his final address to the bench, urged the
Judge-Advocate to be fair and not to allow prejudicial comments. "You are next to God
and into your hands I commit the accused," Musa concluded.
AFRC/RUF rebels attacked the town of Kasseh Bureh, about 20 miles from Port Loko,
killing 8 civilians and mutilating 10 more, relief workers said on Monday. They said the
death toll was likely to rise as the rebels had set fire to at least 20 homes in the town.
The attack caused a mass exodus from villages in the area.
ECOMOG commanders have put the rebel death toll from Monday's Kamajor ambush in eastern
Sierra Leone at 82, Reuters reported on Wednesday.
Andrea Rosario-Gborie, the wife of Corporal Tamba Gborie, said Wednesday that she would
end her hunger strike as of midnight Wednesday. Rosario-Gborie announced her hunger
strike on Saturday in protest over the U.S. State Department's silence over treatment of
her husband and his 37 co-defendants on trial before a military tribunal in Freetown for
their role in last year's military coup.
6 October: Kamajor militiamen clashed with rebels late in eastern
Sierra Leone Monday killing at least 52 and wounding many others in a six hour battle,
Staff Officer Francis Silikie said on Tuesday. 15 of the rebel casualties were reported to
be women. That battle, which included hand-to-hand combat between the two sides,
reportedly occurred after Kamajors disguised as women lured the rebels into a trap on a
road near Mandekelema village, 30 miles from the Liberian border. Silikie said at least
one Kamajor was killed and three others were missing. An unknown number of rebels were
killed when they tried to cross a small river, he added. Kamajor officers paraded several
captured rebels in front of journalists. "These are the lucky ones," said
Silikie. "Some of the rebel commanders killed have not been identified because they
were completely mutilated by fighters for our just cause." There was no independent
verification of casualty figures, but journalists reported seeing five wounded Kamajors
arriving at Kenema Government Hospital Tuesday in a blood-soaked lorry.
Ten people have been arrested in connection with Sunday's fire at the national lottery
headquarters in Freetown, the head of Sierra Leone's Criminal Investigation Department,
Amadou Kaikai, said Tuesday. The fire broke out two weeks after the government sacked the
parastatal's board and senior management, and moved to take over the national lottery amid
allegations of massive fraud. The fire gutted the entire third floor of the Sierra Leone
Lottery Building, where sensitive information was kept. The lottery's accounting records
were presumed to have been destroyed. Kaikai said four dismissed senior lottery officials
were among those detained, including former deputy manager Vandi Coker, former company
secretary Villan Kargbo, former marketing officer Abubakar Kamara, and the company's chief
accountant. "The whole episode was an act of sabotage." Minister of Information,
Communications, Tourism and Culture Julius Spencer told the Mail
newspaper."Nothing will stop government from ensuring that Sierra Leone becomes a
corruption-free society," he added.
A cholera epidemic has claimed some 55 lives, an official at Sierra Leone's Disease
Prevention and Control Agency said on Monday. Haroun Turay said most of the fatalities
occurred in Freetown, but deaths were also recorded in Port Loko and Kambia. Turay said
clinics were distributing rehydration salts to combat the epidemic, which he said was
"now going down."
Mutilations, massacres, and other atrocities carried out by AFRC/RUF rebels are on the
rise again, a diplomat in Freetown told the AFP. "We are noting a higher level of
mutilations, amputations, rape, atrocious tortures, people being burned alive, and
villages destroyed," the diplomat said.
Sierra Leone is one of 13 African countries facing food shortfalls and requiring urgent
assistance, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation said Tuesday. It listed
the countries as Angola, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia,
Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Uganda, and Zambia.
5 October: RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh pleaded not guilty Monday
to charges of treason, after High Court Justice Samuel Ademusu ruled that the trial should
proceed despite Sankoh not having a lawyer to represent him. Asked by Ademusu whether he
was able to defend himself, Sankoh replied, "God will defend me, but it is advisable
for me to have legal representation from an overseas country." Ademusu ruled that
under Sierra Leone's Public Order Act on States of Emergency, the trial could proceed. A
decree published last month under the emergency provisions under emergency provisions
which give President Kabbah the power to enact laws stipulated that
"a trial shall not be invalidated or adjourned merely because of the absence of a
legal practitioner representing that person." Ademusu had asked judicial
authorities to give Sankoh a list of defence lawyers so that he could choose one, but the
Freetown Bar Association refused to comply. At the request of the government, the United
Nations is working to secure defence counsel for Sankoh. A 12-member jury was sworn in at
the hearing, and the proceedings were adjourned until Tuesday.
68 children have reportedly died of measles or starvation in the war-ravaged areas of
Kailahun District during the past week. The coordinator of the Kailahun District
Development Foundation, Andrew Baio, was quoted as saying there was severe hunger in the
district, and that his organisation had had to step in to distribute food to vulnerable
groups, especially women, children, and the aged. BBC correspondent Prince Brima said
Monday he saw hundreds of people arriving at Daru and Segbwema from the war-affected over
the weekend in very bad shape. Dr. Joseph Musa, the medical superintendent at Nixon
Memorial Hospital, said many of those arriving from Segbwema were suffering from measles
and malaria. "Prices of foodstuffs in the area have skyrocketed as most farms and
plantations were burnt down by rebel troops," Brima added. ECOMOG troops reportedly
captured the gold and diamond mining town of Sandaru Saturday after a fierce battle with
RUF troops, who had held the town for the past six months. Brima said that although
there had been no independent confirmation of the claim, "I did see truckloads of
troops from Kenema yesterday morning moving towards the area."
4 October: The Sierra Leone Lottery Building went up in flames Sunday,
barely two weeks after the government sacked the parastatal's board and senior management
and moved to take over the national lottery amid allegations of massive fraud. Security
guards said the fire started mysteriously on the building's third storey, and that the
lottery's accounting records were presumed to have been destroyed. Ministers have ordered
a police investigation into the cause of the fire.
AFRC/RUF rebels have called on the government to participate in peace talks sponsored
by the United Nations or the Commonwealth, diplomatic and government sources said on
Sunday. A Western diplomat said the rebels had contacted both the U.N. office in Freetown
and the Commonwealth secretariat in London, asking them to facilitate talks. "The
Commonwealth secretary-general told the rebels that if they wanted the Commonwealth
secretariat to play a role in getting the government to meet the rebels in talks, the
rebels must first of all recognise the government of President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and also
lay down their arms," the diplomat said. He said the U.N. had not yet responded.
Presidential spokesman Septimus Kaikai said the government was not interested in a
power-sharing arrangement, which is what the rebels appeared to want. "We made that
categorically clear to them when we talked with rebel leader Colonel Sam Bockarie on the
phone a few days ago," Kaikai said. "The time for that is past. We told them to
lay down their arms and surrender to the U.N. observer mission in the country and then we
will decide from that point what to do." The Western diplomat said the government
seemed confident that the rebels could be defeated militarily since ECOMOG and the Civil
Defence Forces stepped up their offensive last month, so a diplomatic breakthrough was
unlikely.
The world's five poorest nations, as measured a per-capita income of only $90 per
annum, are Sierra Leone, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, and
Mozambique, according to a World Bank report that was issued on Sunday. The richest
countries were Switzerland ($44,320), Japan ($37,850), Norway ($36,090), Singapore
($32,940), Denmark ($32,500), the United States ($28,740), and Germany ($28,260).
Sierra Leone was defeated by Morocco 3-0 in their African Nations Cup Group 2
qualifying match played Saturday night at Casablanca before a crowd of 25,000. Scoring for
Morocco were Youssef Chippo (22nd minute), Salaheddine Bassir (42nd minute), and
Abdeljalil Haddad Camachou ( 82nd minute). Morocco's coach, Henri Michel, indicated he was
pleased with the result. "It was important to win this one because we have some very
difficult games to come away from home," he said. Other first round results: Congo
over Namibia 1-0 at Windhoek; South Africa 1-0 over Angola at Johannesburg; Kenya tied
Madagascar 1-1 at Nairobi, and Uganda over Algeria 2-1 at Kampala. (Sunday) Ghana over
Cameroon 3-1; Nigeria tied Burkina Faso 0-0 at Ouagadougou; Tunisia 2-1 over Liberia;
Ivory Coast over Mali at Bamako; Mozambique over Eritrea 3-1 at Maputo. The next round of
qualifying matches will be played in January.
3 October: More than 50 people have been killed in rebel raids in
clashes between Guinean ECOMOG and AFRC/RUF rebels in Kambia District, relief workers and
survivors said on Saturday. The raids began on Monday, and ECOMOG says the rebels have
again resorted to hacking off the limbs of civilians. "The fighting started on Monday
when the rebels attacked Kukuna in the Kambia district less than ten miles from the border
with Guinea,'' a Guinean ECOMOG officer said in Freetown. He said the Guineans had
intervened, leading to fighting in the towns and villages in the area. The current state
of the fighting was not immediately clear, but relief workers said up to 5,000 persons had
been forced to flee their homes. "More than 3,000 have fled across the border into
Guinea,'' one said. Relief workers reported that at least 25 people had been mutilated by
rebels wielding machetes.
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Director-General Carol Bellamy complained to
Sierra Leone leaders Friday that the recruitment of child soldiers was still going
on, despite the government's commitment to end the practice. UNICEF estimates there are
some 4,000 child soldiers involved in the Sierra Leone conflict; 2,500 recruited by the
RUF and the rest serving with the Kamajor militia. "We have reports saying
recruitments are still going on, Bellamy said, adding that "The fact that the
conflict is (still going) on shouldn't justify recruitment of children." On Thursday,
Deputy Defence Minister Sam Hinga Norman cited "difficulties" in discharging
teenage soldiers, including lack of resources and the fact that the fighting was
continuing. Bellamy urged Sierra Leone to halt further recruitment, to demobilise all
soldiers under age 18, and to release all child soldiers of war. While the government
recently announced an amnesty for child prisoners, UNICEF says a number of children are
still being held by ECOMOG. President Kabbah assured Bellamy of his government's
"full commitment" to the demobilisation of child soldiers, adding that those
discharged were being cared for by various institutions. Bellamy responded that she had
seen children with the Kamajors at Bo on Thursday. "They came for registration but it
was clear they were going back" to the front, she said. Kabbah, described by the AFP
as "smiling, but clearly annoyed," said "We don't need to be reminded of
all that." Following a visit to a hospital in Freetown run by the International
Committee of the Red Cross for victims of rebel atrocities, Bellamy said she was
horrified. "If you care about your country and fight for it, how can you kill the
children, which are the future of the country?" she asked.
Andrea Rosario-Gborie, an African-American filmmaker and the wife of Corporal Tamba
Gborie, who is on trial before a court martial for his part in last year's military coup,
said Saturday she will go on a hunger strike in front of the U.S. Department of State
beginning Sunday to protest the State Department's silence over treatment of her husband
and his 37 co-defendants. It was Gborie who announced on SLBS (state radio) the coup that
overthrew President Kabbah in May 1997. "The European Union, Great Britain and
Amnesty International among others have urged President Kabbah to set some sort of appeals
process in place for all those facing the death penalty," Rosario-Gborie said.
"To date no such process has been put in place, and my husband as First Accused faces
immediate execution. President Kabbah has justified Sierra Leone's use of the death
penalty by saying that many countries, including the United States of America, still have
the death penalty. But in the United States, we also have a lengthy appeals process that
insures due process of law that must be exhausted before the death penalty can be carried
out." She disputed whether her husband or RUF leader Foday Sankoh could receive a
fair trial in Sierra Leone, and called for the defendants to be tried or to have their
appeals heard in another ECOWAS country, with the exception of Nigeria which has played a
leading role in the ECOMOG force. "I was assured by the Department of State that my
husband and the others on trial in Sierra Leone would be treated fairly. They have not
been treated fairly," Rosario-Gborie said. "I have
been told that the Department of State is in favor of a negotiated settlement. But they
continue to pump money into armed conflict." She said she will remain on hunger
strike until the United States joins those in the international community who have urged
President Kabbah to "to institute proper
appeals for all those who face death sentences in a neutral country."
2 October: More than 3,000 Sierra Leoneans have fled to Guinea
in the past week to escape fighting in Sierra Leone, United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) spokeswoman Judith Kumin said on Friday. "There is no respite for
the population in Sierra Leone," Kumin said. "More than 3,000 Sierra Leoneans
crossed into the Forecariah area on Tuesday after rebels reportedly killed civilians and
burned down dozens of houses in Kukuna village, four kilometers (2.5 miles) from the
border with Guinea. This is an indication that fighting has moved to the northwest,
whereas up to now it had been in the northeast." A UNHCR briefing paper said the
arrivals in Forecariah, between Freetown and Conakry on the coast, were the first in the
region for some time. Approximately 3,300 refugees had been given rations for two weeks
and transferred to existing camps. The UNHCR estimates there are currently some 340,000
Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea including 210,000 who arrived this year, making it one
of the largest refugee populations in the world. Previously, rebels had attacked refugee
camps in Guinea, along Sierra Leone's eastern border. In a raid on a refugee camp at
Tomandou, near Gueckedou, on September 1, rebels killed seven Sierra Leonean refugees and
several Guineans. "UNHCR has moved thousands of refugees from Tomandou, among the
most vulnerable of the sites in the forested region, to camps farther inside Guinea,"
Kumin said.
ECOMOG, backed by the Civil Defence Forces, have captured the gold mining town of
Sandaru in eastern Sierra Leone, military sources said Friday. They said ECOMOG troops and
Kamajor militiamen entered the town on Tuesday after three days of heavy fighting and
rebels retreated, leaving behind more than 40 dead. Aid agencies in Kenema said hundreds
of displaced persons from Sandaru were streaming into the town.
The United Nations is trying to find a lawyer to represent RUF leader Corporal Foday
Sankoh, SLBS (state radio) said on Friday. According to the SLBS report, Sankoh had agreed
to allow the United Nations Observer Mission in Sierra Leone to find him a lawyer.
"The United Nations has started the process," the radio said. Liberian Star
Radio reported that Sierra Leone's High Court has ordered an inquiry to determine
whether the Nigerian government has money belonging to Sankoh. Sankoh told the court
Thursday that he could not pay for legal representation because money which had been given
to him by the United Nations and several countries supporting the peace process had been
seized by the Nigerian authorities.
1 October: RUF leader Corporal Foday Sankoh appeared in court for the
third time Thursday, and complained that he was unable to afford a lawyer to defend him.
His claim was disputed by the prosecutor, Attorney-General and Minister of Justice Solomon
Berewa, who showed Sankoh a hand-written document indicating that before his arrest in
March 1997, a Mohamed Talib, working with the Libyan Embassy in Accra, Ghana, had given
him half a million dollars. Sankoh, after a long silence, denied knowing any Mohamed Talib
and said the signature on the document was not his. He said that while in Accra he had
received $29,700 from a friend named Mohamed, but that it was not the Mohamed Talib Berewa
was referring to. Under cross-examination, Sankoh acknowledged that he had received money
from the government of the Ivory Coast, Ivorian Foreign Minister Amara Essy, the United
Nations, some foreign ambassadors in Abidjan and Accra, and some other countries
supporting the Abidjan Peace Accord. Sankoh said he had also received $50,000 from the
late Nigerian leader General Sani Abacha, but that this money, along with other money in
pounds sterling, CFA francs, and Canadian dollars, was taken from him by the Nigerian
authorities when he was arrested in Lagos in March 1997. Sankoh said the money was for the
purpose of transforming the RUF into a political organisation. Justice Samuel Ademusu
ordered the master and registrar to forward a list of names of solicitors to the High
Court, and said the court should inquire about Sankoh's money in Nigeria. The
handcuffed RUF leader reportedly urged the court to continue, but instead Ademusu
adjourned the proceedings until Monday, October 5.
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Director-General Carol Bellamy has again called
for the demobilisation of some 4,000 child soldiers in Sierra Leone. Deputy Defence
Minister Sam Hinga Norman replied that he was committed to the demobilisation of all
children, but that it could not be accomplished while fighting continued. Bellamy,
accompanied by a team of UNICEF officials, began a visit to Freetown on Thursday.
Heavy seasonal rains have caused flooding in Grand Cape Mount County, Liberia, near the
Sierra Leone border, causing more than 5,000 persons to flee their homes. The United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has said that heavy rains throughout Sierra
Leone, Liberia, and Guinea have halted the repatriation of tens of thousands of people
displaced by conflict in the sub-region.
The application period for the United States diversity lottery began on October 1 and
will run through the end of the month. The winners will be determined on the basis of a
computer-generated lottery drawing, and will be notified between April and July or 1999.
Countries whose citizens qualify for the diversity lottery within Africa include Sierra
Leone, Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde,
Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali,
Mauritania, Mauritius, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sao Tome and
Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo,
Tunisia, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe.