31 December 2002: Joe Kangbai Macavoray polled 387 votes
to win the chieftaincy election in Bo District's Tikonko Chiefdom – one
of three elections which were held on Monday. Macavoray was the only
remaining candidate after his main
rival pulled out following the first
round. In the diamond-rich Kamara Chiefdom of Kono District, Aiah Melvin
Ngekia (pictured left) defeated Tamba Fania in second-round balloting by 621 votes to 442.
Ngekia finished second among four candidates in the first round, but
picked up more than 80 percent of the votes from the supporters of three
unsuccessful first-round candidates: Aiah Petiquoi, Tamba Ngekia and Alfred
Teh. Amadu
Sesay won a seven-way contest in Bombali District's Sanda Tenraren
Chiefdom, garnering 100 votes to defeat Amadu T. Sanu with 21, Bakarr
Soriba Bangura and Hassan Munu with seven each, and three other candidates –
Amadu Munu, Alimamy A. Sesay and Abdul K. Munu – who received just one
vote apiece. Monday's three elections mark the midway point in filling
vacancies in nearly half of Sierra Leone's 149 chiefdoms. Since the
country's last chieftaincy elections were held in 1992, 73 traditional
rulers had died or, in some cases, were killed in rebel attacks. National
Electoral Commission Executive-Secretary David Kai-Rogers told the Sierra
Leone Web that, so far, the elections had gone relative smoothly. "There
have been some isolated cases of protest like the one in the Jong Chiefdom
in which there was a roadblock (by supporters of a disqualified house) and
finally government had to intervene, getting some reinforcements of the
SSD – the Special Security unit of the police – to intervene," he
said. "At least the roadblock was cleared and finally we had the
elections. But in all of the other cases, there have been heated arguments
among candidates on certain issues, but finally the elections have been
held. (They've been) very peaceful so far." Paramount chiefs are not
elected by popular vote, but instead are selected by chiefdom councillors,
comprised of town chiefs, section chiefs, and one person in twenty chosen
from local tax payers. Since only men are obliged to pay the local tax,
most councillors are men – but not all. Kai-Rogers noted that in some
chiefdoms, women had paid the tax to make themselves eligible to take part
in the election. "Some females who wants to be councillors are now
paying tax, because to be eligible to be a councillor you have to show
receipt of your local tax being paid," he said. In one northern
chiefdom, which did not have a chieftaincy election this year and where
women are in any case not eligible to be elected as paramount chiefs,
Kai-Rogers said the authorities were surprised to find an unusually high
percentage of women taxpayers. "It was surprising when we looked at
the list for areas like the north, like Tonkolili, where we thought women
don’t participate," he said. "It was a surprise that the
people in the Gbonkolenken
Chiefdom, you
had the majority of the contributors as women."
30 December: Some 300 expatriate Sierra Leoneans
came together in Freetown this week for a five-day Homecoming Summit aimed
at finding ways for Sierra Leone's citizens living abroad to participate
in their country's development. The summit, which was organized jointly by
the U.S.-based Sunrise Group of Companies and the Sierra Leone government,
is seeking to begin a
dialogue between expatriate Sierra Leoneans and their government, and to
explore ways that Sierra Leoneans living abroad can use the skills they
have acquired to help in the creation of national wealth. One of the
summit's organizers was Trade and Industry Minister Dr. Kadi Sesay
(pictured right), who told the Sierra Leone Web on Monday that the
government was eager to reverse the "brain drain" and to attract
Sierra Leonean professionals back to their country. "Now that the war
has ended, we believe that the government should start attracting those
Sierra Leoneans who are now working abroad, many of whom are now living
very successful lives and are making huge contributions in different parts
of the world, to consider coming home to give their own contribution to
the development efforts in this country," she said. Sesay
acknowledged that Sierra Leone's infrastructure might not be able to
support the work of some professionals, and she added that the country's
relatively low pay scale might make it unattractive for some who are used
to higher salaries in the West to resettle in their homeland. But she said
that international agencies like the International Organisation for
Migration (IOM) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) might
help to make up some of the difference. And she added that Sierra Leoneans
unable to return home could still invest in their country, particularly
through joint ventures with other Sierra Leoneans or with foreign
nationals. Sesay said the government was looking at ways to diversify the
economy, and wanted to focus on building up the manufacturing sector
instead of simply selling the country's natural resources. "Even if
you look at our diamonds, we don’t want the expats to just come and
start becoming miners themselves," she said. "There are things
you can do to add value to a diamond – for example, cutting and
polishing our diamonds even before export – and by so doing creating
jobs for people on the ground, and also skills." One possibility the
government was considering, she said, is the creation of export processing
zones to encourage the processing of agricultural and mineral exports
within the country. "We’re trying indeed to diversify and find ways
of attracting people," she said. "We don’t want all of them to
come home. Some of them it will be difficult to get jobs straight away.
But there are a lot of ways in which they can make a contribution."
Sesay insisted that the Homecoming Summit, which ends on Tuesday, will not
be just a "once-and-for-all event," but rather that it is the
beginning of a process. A secretariat will be maintained, she said, and
the inter-departmental planning committee within her ministry which worked
on this week's conference will continue to meet each month to take stock
of what is happening. "We hope we’ll be able to establish a special
website and a database also of Sierra Leoneans living abroad and their
expertise, to know which ones we want to come and give assistance in
certain areas," she said. "But this is just a beginning. It’s
now that the work is really begun, and we think that this is something
that is going to lead to a very fruitful end. And the focus for us is not
just for the Sierra Leoneans that are here. The focus is to be able to
access Sierra Leoneans that are living in different parts of the world,
that have not been able to come this time. And next year we are going to
organize an even bigger forum – better organized, more time spent on it –
and to bring maybe even more Sierra Leoneans that can participate. So this
is the beginning."
One of those who addressed the
Homecoming Summit on Monday was U.S.
Ambassador Peter Chaveas, who hinted that if Sierra Leoneans were
committed to rebuilding their country, the international community was
ready to support their efforts. Chaveas noted the irony that the country
once known as the "Athens of Africa" now suffered from a severe
shortage of trained human capital. And he stressed that the country's
problems which had forced many of the summit's participants to seek
opportunities abroad were largely brought on by Sierra Leoneans
themselves. "Many of Sierra Leone's current leaders are seeking to
make the very best of the possibilities offered by recent
developments," Chaveas said. "Unfortunately, there are others
who give every indication that they have learned nothing from the ugly
experiences of past decades and are intent on returning to business as
usual, on maintaining the traditions that have served Sierra Leone so
badly. The Diaspora can play a critical role in determining who wins this
confrontation but only if you are prepared to make the investment required
to tip the balance." Sierra Leone's richest resource, the ambassador
said, is its people. "If you are seriously committed to using that
resource well, there is a great deal that the international community,
including the United States, can do to support your efforts," he
said. "If you are not committed, then there is nothing we can do to
overcome your lack of commitment."
29 December: The governments of Liberia and Burkina
Faso harbored senior members of the al-Qaeda network for at least two
months after the terrorist group carried out its September 2001 attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the Washington Post said on Sunday.
The report, which draws on the findings of European intelligence agencies
and sources in the region, provides a new insight into efforts by al-Qaeda
to turn its assets into easily concealable diamonds – many of them
purchased from Sierra Leone's RUF
rebels – just weeks after the group
bombed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. In the chronology provided by
the Post, a senior al-Qaeda financial officer, Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah,
arrived in Monrovia in September 1998 at the behest of Ibrahim Bah, a
Libyan-trained Senegalese mercenary who at the time held the rank of
general in the RUF. Bah arranged for Abdullah to meet with senior Liberian
officials and their RUF allies. In March 1999 two other al-Qaeda
operatives,
Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani and Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, made a follow-up visit
to Monrovia and also spent a few days touring Sierra Leone's diamond
fields, then under RUF control. Bah subsequently rented a safe-house in
Monrovia where RUF leaders could sell their illicit diamonds to dealers
who handled the al-Qaeda gems. In return, the rebels received a premium
price for their stones and supplies of weapons and medicine. Evidence of
an RUF - al-Qaeda link first surfaced a year ago in earlier Washington
Post report. That report suggested that al-Qaeda had at first profited by
the diamond trade, and later had effectively cornered the market on Sierra
Leonean diamonds as it sought to turn its cash into gemstones. The rebel
group responded by telling the Sierra Leone Web it would launch an
internal inquiry into the Post allegations. Three months later the RUF
claimed, not surprisingly, that its inquiry had cleared it of any
wrongdoing. RUF leaders, however, provided no details on the
investigation, or proof that it even took place. The new Post report goes
further, and alleges direct involvement by Burkinabe President Blaise
Compaore, who allegedly housed Ghailani and Mohammed in his presidential
complex, and by Liberian President Charles Taylor, who it says was paid $1
million to hide the two al-Qaeda operatives at Camp Gbatala, a military
camp near Taylor's private
farm which serves as a base for his feared Anti-Terrorist Unit.
Sierra Leonean football international
Paul Kpaka is one of 20
nominees
for the Confederation of African Football (CAF) African Player of the Year
for 2002. Kpaka, nicknamed "Senegal," currently plays for the
Belgian club Germinal. He made his debut on the field for Sierra Leone
last October, scoring one of two goals in the Leone Stars' 2-0 Nations Cup
qualifier win over Azingo Nationale of Gabon. Kpaka will miss Sierra
Leone's next Nations Cup outing, against the Atlas Lions of Morocco, after
he was shown a red card in the final minutes of the match for elbowing a
Gabonese defender. The nominees include last year's winner, El Hadji Diouf
of Senegal, and players from Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Ghana, South Africa,
Tunisia and Zimbabwe – all of them playing for teams outside of Africa.
The 20-man field will be reduced to three finalists on Monday.
The Independent Observer was named best newspaper for
2002 and Standard Times reporter Karim Sei best journalist in an awards
ceremony Saturday at Family Kingdom in Aberdeen. The awards were sponsored
by musician Jimmy B. and the group All Works of Life. Radio UNAMSIL
presenter Kumba Brewah, who was called on to host the event with Daniel Moseray of
SLBS television, was named best broadcaster. Minister of Trade and
Industry Dr. Kadi Sesay received the nod as the year's best minister, and Jenkins
Johnson as the best lawyer. President Kabbah received an award for his work
for peace, and RUF interim leader Issa Sesay got an award for his
commitment to peace.
28 December: Alimamy Manie Bangura is the new
paramount chief in B.K. Maconteh (Bureh Kassie Maconteh) Chiefdom, Port
Loko District. His 422 votes were enough for a first-round victory over
five other candidates, including Alhaji Ibrahim Kamara with 168 votes,
Idrissa Bangura with 68, Milton Kamara with 39, Dr. Joseph Tucker with 11,
and Mohamed S.K. Bangura with 4. In Mandu Chiefdom, Kailahun District, Bai
Samuel Coomber defeated Sallah
Bashiru
Coomber by 472 votes to 192 in a two-way contest.
27 December: Lahai A.K. Sowa has won the
chieftaincy in Pujehun District's Sowa Chiefdom, outpolling Lahai Kemoh
Dudu Sowa in Friday's election by 190 votes to 96. Results in two other
elections – Mandu Chiefdom in Kailahun District and B.K. Maconteh
Chiefdom in Port Loko District – were not available
as of late Friday.
24 December: Edgar S. Margai was the winner in
Friday's chieftaincy election for Lower Banta Chiefdom in Moyamba
District. He polled 197 votes to defeat Francis Bismarck Margai and Madam
Mamie Sia Margai, both of whom received 46. In Jawei Chiefdom, Kailahun
District, Musa Ngoumbu-Kal Kallon defeated Moinina Conteh in a second
round runoff by 810 votes to
506. In the north, Bomba Sana Samura garnered 241 votes to win the
chieftaincy in Koinadugu District's Sulima Chiefdom. He defeated Fasineh
B. Samura, who received 60
votes.
23 December: Four Nigerians and a Ghanaian
national are in Sierra Leone Police custody, and officials were searching
Monday for at least three other members of an alleged ‘419' scam ring
thought to be operating in Sierra Leone
and a half-dozen other West
African countries. A Sierra Leonean schoolgirl was also arrested, but
later was released on bail. Raphael Ajukwara, Richard Ekechukwu, Frank
Uche and Uche Okafor, all Nigerians, and Ghanaian Charles Doe were
arrested in a series of police stings which began in Freetown last
Wednesday. Police are still searching for John Edeh and two other men: one
identified only as "Francis," and the other known as
"Alex" or "James" – a
Nigerian who reportedly lives at the UNAMSIL barracks in Freetown.
Dauda
A.K. Jah has won the chieftaincy
in Bo District's Bagbo Chiefdom, defeating K.M.K.S. Coker 155 votes to 96.
The election was held on Friday. In Tonko Limba Chiefdom, Kambia District,
Alfred Momoh Bangura received 141 votes to defeat Foday Alfred Bangura,
with 44. Poll results in Kailahun District's Yawei Chiefdom are being
withheld because of a High Court injunction which barred the conducting of
an election there without a revision of the Councillors List and a New
Declaration of Rights. The injunction was dated December 18, but had not
been received by local polling officials prior to Friday's election. This
brings to four the number of chieftaincy elections which had been
postponed over disputed petitions. National Electoral Commission Executive-Secretary David Kai-Rogers said Monday that attempts would be made to
reschedule those polls for off-days in the election calendar, especially on
Saturdays when no elections have been planned. Otherwise, he said, the
election period
might have to be pushed beyond its scheduled January 20 end date.
22 December: Sierra Leone's Under-17 football
team, the Junior Leone Stars, drew 0-0 with Burkina Faso Sunday in a game
played at the National Stadium in Freetown.
20 December: The United Nations peacekeeping force
has completed the first phase of its withdrawal from Sierra Leone, a
UNAMSIL spokesman said on Friday. The withdrawal began in October. In
September, the United Nations Security Council mandated the 17,000 member
force to downsize by 600 soldiers by the end of December, and by 4,500 by
May 31. By December 2004, only 2,000 peacekeepers are expected to remain
in the country. The Associated Press quoted UNAMSIL spokesman Yousef
Hamdan as saying Friday that a second contingent of 3,900 troops would
begin to leave starting January 1. "The security situation in the
country remains stable," he said. "There's no military
action."
Two months into its operational phase, Sierra
Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) is still plagued by
management problems, funding shortfalls, conflicts with the U.N. Office of
the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), and a lack of leadership
from commissioners, the International Crisis Group (ICG) says in a new report
issued on Friday. The
TRC, one of two transitional justice mechanisms set
up at the end of Sierra Leone's ten-year civil war (the other being the
Special Court), is mandated to record testimonies from perpetrators of
atrocities and their victims, resulting in the creation of "an
impartial, historical record of the conflict," and to "address
impunity; respond to the needs of victims; promote healing and
reconciliation; and prevent a repetition of the violations and abuses
suffered." If the TRC does not act quickly to solve its problems, the
report warns, it risks losing the confidence of civil society and
international donors. Many of the TRC's problems, the ICG says, can be
traced to the initial process by which the Interim Secretariat was staffed –
a process seen by some as marked by political favouritism and a lack of
transparency. The Interim Secretariat failed to carry out many of the
tasks charged to it during the TRC's three-month preparatory phase,
including the hiring of permanent staff and procuring offices in Freetown
and key provincial cities. The recruitment of permanent staff was, in
fact, halted in mid-October after flaws were found in the hiring process.
The positions were re-advertised in mid-November and permanent staff is
expected to be on the ground by January 6. With the deployment of
statement takers on December 4, the ICG notes that the process finally
appears to be picking up speed. But with only one year to complete its
work, the group says the TRC must take swift and concrete steps to fulfill
its mandate. The ICG urged commissioners to come up with a strategic plan
for conducting the operational phrase, and then follow through. The TRC
itself should establish a research branch and also reach out to
disaffected civil society groups and organisations which have specialised
knowledge in such areas as gender violence and children's issues. And
commissioners themselves should become more engaged in the process,
particularly in fundraising, and they should develop a stronger and more
independent voice. Said the ICG: "If the commissioners can
demonstrate a capacity to revitalise the institution, donors will have to
stop playing a 'wait-and-see' game and start contributing funds and other
support to a process that is critical to sustain Sierra Leone's hard won
and still tenuous peace."
The International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) registered hundreds of unaccompanied Liberian
refugee children this year in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Ivory Coast in an
effort to reunite them with their families, the organisation said on
Friday. The children have been given the opportunity to send messages accompanied
by a photograph through the Red Cross network to their families in
Liberia.
19 December: Joseph Tommy Kposowa won the
chieftaincy in Bumpe-Gao Chiefdom, Bo District, on Wednesday. He polled
292 votes to defeat Paul Macavory, who received 167. In Fiama Chiefdom,
Kono District, the winner was Sahr Yongai Kontanday M’briwa, who
defeated Aiah Kontanday Songo-M’briwa 81 votes to 71 in the second
round. In Kasunko Chiefdom, Koinadugu District,
Alfred B. S. Kamara emerged the winner, defeating Abu Bakar Yaribo
Thoronka 194 votes to 178 in a runoff election.
Sierra
Leonean Deputy Defence Minister Joe Blell has been awarded Nigeria's
highest
honour for his years of work as Sierra Leone's Ambassador to Nigeria to
improve the relationship between Freetown and Abuja. Blell received the
Order of the Niger from Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo at a ceremony
in the Nigerian capital on Friday. Of the 214 persons who received awards,
only 13 were non-Nigerians, and only one of those was an African. Blell
said the award reflected his work to enhance relations between the two
countries during his more than eight years in Nigeria. During part of that
time, Blell represented Sierra Leone's then government-in-exile which had
been forced from power in a 1997 military coup. "This was also the
most difficult time, and (the award was for) the role I played in
sustaining fighting for democracy from Nigeria – informing the public
and the government in Nigeria so that the support was kept at a very high
level, and also my relationship in fostering the relationship," Blell
told the Sierra Leone Web. Now back in Freetown, Blell faces the task of
downsizing Sierra Leone's postwar army by some 4,000 troops over the next
four years. Following the end of years of civil war, the government is
proposing to reduce the size of the military from more than 14,000 to a
little over 10,000. Several hundred soldiers are expected to reach the mandatory retirement
age of 55 in each of those years, but Blell said that the bulk of the
others – initially expected to be drawn from the lower ranks –
inducements would be offered to encourage soldiers to leave the service
voluntarily. "The most interesting part is that they’ve given a
very generous package," he said. "Sometimes the problem comes
when you retire people and they don’t get their package, so we’ve
given them a very generous package and a six month training." Skills
training, he said, would be in areas such as carpentry and machinery which
the former soldiers could carry back to their communities. "Sometimes
they come in (to the army) and don’t realize they can leave," he
said. "So they will decide, 'look, once we have the option we can
go.' And now we are giving them the option, because of the
downsizing." From mid-1997 to early 2000, West African troops were
arrayed in Sierra Leone to support the government against rebel forces.
Now the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is looking for
peacekeepers to deploy in strife-torn Ivory Coast. Blell attended the
emergency ECOWAS meeting in Ghana where pledges of troops were made, but
he said Sierra Leone was at least a year away from being ready to
contribute to a peacekeeping force. "We said we were not going to
make pledges because of our present position just coming out of the war,
trying to get ourselves together," he said, adding: "Now that we
are going through retraining and all that, you don’t just want to send
people in the middle of the ball game. Right now we are going through a
reorganization. If it was a year down the road, yes, maybe. But right now
we cannot." The deputy minister also dismissed local press reports of
desertions in the army, especially along the border with Guinea. He
acknowledged there had been cases where soldiers had gone AWOL, but he insisted
this was not a major problem. "Honestly, it is not," he said.
"And this is also the reason why we’re trying to downsize, because
once we downsize and we have a robust and virile military, then we can be
able to provide better services. Even in terms of other areas, we’ll be
able to now having the same amount (of resources) for a smaller army –
better equipped."
Sierra Leone's Ambassador to Libya
was accredited as the country's non-resident envoy to Malta Thursday,
marking the first time that Sierra Leone has had ambassador-level
representation in the Mediterranean island nation. Ambassador Mohamed L.
Samura presented his credentials to President Guido de Marco at a ceremony
in the Maltese capital Valetta. The upgrade in relations between the two
countries followed a brief stopover in Malta by Sierra Leone's foreign
minister earlier in the month. In recent years, Sierra Leone has been
represented in Malta by Honorary Consul Joseph A. Dougall, who described
Thursday's proceedings for the Sierra Leone Web. "Dr. Samura was the
last to present his credentials after two other Ambassadors (for Holland
and Sweden) during a very colourful ceremony held in Valletta," he
said. "He was escorted down the pedestrian only Republic Street by
five horse mounted policemen, in the president's ceremonial Austin
Princess car, accompanied by Madam Nadia Samura, and in another following
car by Mr. Unisa Kamara, the Head of Chancery, and me." Samura, who
was appointed Ambassador to Libya in January 2001, is also accredited to
Tunisia and Algeria. Dougall said he would continue as honorary consul,
"but with an accredited diplomat, bilateral relations to include
trade, industry, tourism and the like will be seriously addressed from
time to time."
Liberia's president has sent a letter
to the United Nations asking that a unit of
peacekeeping troops stationed in Sierra Leone be sent to his country to
oversee next year's elections, he told a meeting of political party
leaders on Thursday. According to the Associated Press, Liberian President
Charles Taylor said his government would uphold a constitutional provision
which bars candidates from standing for president or vice president unless
they have resided in the country for the ten years preceding the election.
"Anybody who thinks this constitutional provision will be changed
must forget it," he said. A number of Liberia's most vocal opposition
leaders fled the country after Taylor's 1997 election, and now live in
exile. No date has yet been set for the election.
18 December: Allieu Sheriff emerged the winner in
Jong Chiefdom's election Monday, defeating four other aspirants to the
chieftaincy. The election was delayed for several hours when supporters of
a disqualified ruling house blocked the road to prevent electoral
commissioners for reaching the chiefdom headquarters town of Mattru. It
finally went ahead at about 3:00 p.m. after reinforcements arrived from
Freetown to open the road. Sheriff received 149 votes, defeating Madam
Susan Sandy with 91, Joshua Tucker with 14, Alice Bunting Williams with 6,
and Joe Tucker with 0 votes. A sixth candidate, Sylvester Basopan Goba,
had originally made it through the Declaration of Right ceremony but was
later disqualified after the government ruled that Goba House, because it was
created after Sierra Leone's independence in 1961, is not a legitimate
ruling house. In Port Loko District, Alhaji Musa Conteh defeated Osman
Tejan Sesay 305 to 135 in T.M. Safroko Chiefdom. Elections in Kasunko
(Koinadugu District), Fiama (Kono District) and Bumpe-Gao (Bo
District) chiefdoms were scheduled to take place on Wednesday.
17 December: Offices briefly went dark last week at
Parliament, at the
government-run
Sierra Leone Broadcasting Service and at the Youyi Building, where many
government ministries are housed, after Sierra Leone's National Power Authority
(NPA) cut off their power for non-payment of their electrical bills. NPA
General Manager Foday Mannah told the Sierra Leone Web their electricity
was turned off for a short time on December 9, adding: "then they
made the necessary arrangements for payment." They are now up to date
on their bills, he said. Mannah was unable to say Tuesday how far in
arrears the three had fallen, but he said those with bills more than three
months past due would be disconnected. "It can go up to 60," he
said. "First 30, 60 – after that one it is aged up to 90 days, then
definitely they are going to be cut off."
An estimated 40 million people are threatened by food
shortages in 25
sub-Saharan
African countries, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said
on Tuesday. Sierra Leone and neighbouring Guinea continue to be heavily
dependent on international food assistance because of the large numbers of
internally displaced persons and refugees within their borders. In
Liberia, civil strife has disrupted agricultural activities, leading to
the prospect of poor harvests. The FAO list includes Angola, Burundi, Cape
Verde, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of
Congo, Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya,
Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritania, Mozambique, Sierra
Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
16 December:
There was some confusion Monday as to whether paramount
chieftaincy elections in Jong Chiefdom would go ahead as scheduled after supporters
of the disqualified Goba House blockaded the road leading to the chiefdom,
an official at the National Electoral Commission told the Sierra Leone
Web. The Goba House supporters demonstrated in Bo Saturday against a
Ministry of Local Government ruling that since Goba House had been created
during the Siaka Stevens administration, it was therefore not a legitimate
ruling house. The supporters blockaded the Sembehun - Mattru road early
Monday, reportedly in an effort to prevent electoral commissioners from
reaching the chiefdom. Meanwhile, the election in Kono District's Gbense
Chiefdom was postponed after the Ministry ruled that petitions would have
to be redone.
Mohamed Dhassie Benya garnered 203
votes Monday to win the chieftaincy in Kenema District's Small Bo
Chiefdom. He defeated Doris Mamie Saffa Nyahayandeh, with 94 votes, and
Foday Jombo, who received 38. The election in Libeisaygahun Chiefdom in
Bombali District, originally scheduled for December 4, went ahead on
Saturday, with Sallu Kargbo defeating James Sesay by 160 votes to 34.
Prince Metzger Bondo Konneh emerged victorious in Makpele Chiefdom,
Pujehun District, with a win Friday over Mohamed B. S. Lakika, 275 votes
to 112. The chieftaincy in Soro Gbema Chiefdom, Pujehun District, went to
Alhaji Bockarie Vanjawa Zembo, who defeated Abu Liawo George Joker on
Wednesday by 213 votes to 117 in a second-round runoff.
United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has decided to appoint Robin
Vincent
as Registrar of the Special Court as from 1 January 2003, Annan's
spokesman said on Monday. Vincent currently serves as Acting Registrar.
The court, which includes five judges appointed by the United Nations and
three appointed by the Government of Sierra Leone, is mandated to
prosecute the handful of persons deemed to bear the greatest
responsibility for atrocities committed during the latter half of Sierra
Leone's decade-long civil war.
14 December: Two students are dead, an unknown
number injured, and about 50 are in police custody following rioting which broke
out in Freetown Friday following a football match, the BBC reported. After
St. Edward's Secondary School defeated Ahmadiyya Muslim Secondary School
on penalties in the finals of the inter-secondary school competition,
fighting broke out between the two schools. "Freetown’s main
traffic routes, including the business district downtown, virtually came
to a standstill yesterday as hundreds of riotous students, some armed with
sticks, knives and stones, went on the rampage," BBC correspondent
Lansana Fofana reported on Saturday. "I saw some vehicles destroyed
by the rioters and public buildings attacked and pelted with stones. The
riotous students even erected barricades on the eastern highways,
searching for their so-called rivals." The identities of the two
victims were not known, but they reportedly died from stab wounds.
"Statements are already being taken from the 50 or so arrested school
pupils at police stations across the city," Fofana said. "Some
even made a brief appearance in court today on charges ranging from
riotous conduct to malicious damage."
13 December: Haja Mariam M. Gassama (nee Kanja) is
the new paramount chief of Gorama Mende Chiefdom in Kenema District,
defeating Thomas Ngeyenge Baio in Wednesday's chieftaincy election 334
votes to 126 in a two-way race. In Kholifa Mabang Chiefdom in Tonkolili
District, where five candidates vied for the chieftaincy, no one received
the required 50 percent in the first round. Four of the five candidates
then withdrew and announced their
support for Alfred Bai Carew. Carew
received 179 of 180 votes in the second round, with one void ballot.
The
United Nations Security Council expressed deep concern over the conflict
in Liberia, saying it was creating a humanitarian crisis and threatening
stability in the region. "The internal conflict and significant
violence in Liberia are producing widespread refugee flows and
displacement of people in Liberia, exacerbating the humanitarian situation
and fuelling the movement of irregular combatants and the flow of weapons
throughout the region," Council President Ambassador Alfonso
Valdivieso of Colombia said in a statement. The Council urged the Liberian
government and the international community to cooperate in order to reach
a ceasefire between government troops and LURD rebels, to establish an
inclusive peace process, and to stop the flow of illegal weapons. Council
members also called for a comprehensive strategy to address the situation
in the region, and said it was would consider sending an assessment team
to the area in the first half of 2003. As part of that strategy, the
Council expressed support for the Rabat Process
– engagement of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea within the framework of
the Mano River Union under the sponsorship of King Mohamed VI of Morocco
– and it encouraged the three countries to follow up on measures to
build confidence and security. "Peace and security in the Mano River
Union region requires the president of Liberia to engage constructively
with the international community...to achieve national reconciliation and
political reform in Liberia," the statement said. "Liberia's
cooperation is also essential to restore fully relations with its
neighbors and to normalize its relations with the international
community."
Exchange rates for the leone against
the U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying
/ Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2100 / 2300. [£] 3000 / 3250.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 3100 / 3300. Frandia: [$] 2300 /
2400 [£] 3150 / 3350. Continental: [$] 2320 / 2480 [£] 3200 / 3600.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2350 / 2400 [£] 3400 / 3500.
11 December: Sierra Leone has reasonable water
resources, but the country ranks low on the ability of its citizens to
access clean water, according to a new study released on Wednesday.
Overall, Sierra Leone ranked 133rd on the Water Poverty Index, which
graded 147 countries in five categories: resources, access, capacity, use,
and environmental impact. On a 20-point scale, Sierra Leone received 13.3
for resources, but only a 4.5 for access
– that is, the measure of a country's ability to access water for
drinking and sanitation, as well as for agricultural and industrial use.
With a 4.3 in capacity, Sierra Leone scored in the bottom five in terms of
its ability to purchase, manage and lobby for improved water, education
and health. The country was ranked 9.0 in terms of use, which measures how
efficiently a country uses its water, and 10.9 in environment, a measure
which looks at ecological sustainability, environmental strategy and
regulation, and numbers of endangered species. While the rankings tended
to reflect a country's overall level of development – Finland, Canada
and Iceland led the list while 14 of the bottom 15 were from Sub-Saharan
Africa
– wealth alone did not guarantee a country a top spot in the ratings.
The United States was ranked worst in terms of water usage, while
countries like the United Kingdom, Germany and the Netherlands ranked
relatively low in terms of water resources.
One year ago the radio soap opera
"Atunda
Ay
nda"
(Lost and Found) first hit the airwaves in Freetown to promote the idea of
disarmament in war-ravaged Sierra Leone. The country's civil war
officially ended in January, and through some 260 episodes the show has
gone on to talk about the issues of demobilisation and reunification, and
now of reintegration, actor Charlie Haffner told the BBC. "Everything
we deal with, what we encounter in the story-making
– it all boiled down to losing and finding," he said. "The war
was about losing property, about losing families, and now that we are back
again on our feet we are sort of regaining and finding and discovering
what we lost." Haffner, who is in London with his acting troupe
"Freetong Players," said the show was now concentrating on the
concept of reintegration of ex-combatants with their families and
communities. "Reintegration is a big word now in Sierra Leone,"
he said. "It’s known, although it’s a big English word, but it’s
known now, and that is what we are focusing now in Atunda Ay
nda
– how people are trying to mix together again." Haffner insisted
that Sierra Leone's peace had not only been successful, he said it was now
a case study for other war-torn countries in Africa to pursue. "Let
Angola come, let Burundi come," he said. "Let them see how we
came about it. Another point is that Sierra Leoneans can sensitise
– we are good at that. And Sierra Leoneans again on the receiving end,
they love sensitisation. They accept this part of them." Atunda Ay
nda
is produced in Freetown by Talking Drum Studio, and received its initial
funding from the National
Committee for Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration. It is now
funded by the Search for Common Ground.
Sierra Leone's Special Court differs
from previous war crimes
tribunals
in that has a local constituency, and it includes judges from both Sierra
Leone and the international community, Court President Geoffrey Robertson
told the BBC. Robertson and the seven other judges were in Sierra Leone
for a weeklong familiarization visit, which commenced with their
swearing-in last Monday. "It’s a new kind of tribunal, which means
that we have judges both from Sierra Leone and nominated by the United
Nations from international countries," he said. "But
importantly, the judges nominated by the United Nations are in the
majority, so there can be no suggestion that local affections will
prevail." The Special Court also differs from the International
Criminal Court and earlier tribunals in the Hague and Arusha, Robertson
said, because it's not "a court without a country."
"In other words, it’s not sitting a long way away from the
atrocities, from the site of the crime. Indeed, we are in the middle of
what was until very recently a war zone." Robertson said he hoped the
court would help the people of Sierra Leone to put the war behind them.
"So many (Sierra Leoneans) have been mutilated," he said.
"So many of them have a close relative
– a child, a parent
– who was killed by the nihilistic brutality of the rebel forces that
they cannot achieve closure. I mean, they have horrors when they go down
the street and meet the man who killed their child. It will help, I think,
give them closure, to get them through the grieving process, to think that
at least the people who were responsible for killing their child
– even if they didn’t wield the machete but who encouraged and incited machete
wielders
– are put away for a
very long time."
10 December: Pa Wusu Alie Kabia claimed a
first-round victory Monday when he polled more than half the votes against
nine other candidates in Marampa Chiefdom's paramount chieftaincy
election. Vote totals: Pa Wusu Alie Kabia (227 votes), Alpha Saidu Kabia
(11 votes) Alusine Kabia (1 vote), footballer Bai Aruna Kabia (77 votes),
David S. Kabia ( 9 votes), Edward B. Kabia (3 votes), Foday Kabia (4
votes), Michael Sorie Kabia (2 votes), Osman Kabia (2 votes), and Sidique
Kabia (4 votes). Marampa Chiefdom includes the headquarters town of
Lunsar, and is located in Port Loko District. In Kagboro Chiefdom, Moyamba
District, Segismond Oldman Caulker defeated former Harford School
principal Rev. Doris Boilon Lenga-Koroma
164 votes to 111 in a runoff after no candidate polled the required 50
percent of the vote in the first round. In Masimera Chiefdom, Port Loko
District, Alhaji Lamin Bangura, with 232 votes, defeated Sulaiman Bangura
(11 votes), A.R. Bangura (20 votes) and Foday Rahman Bangura (43 votes).
That election was held on Saturday. Elections in Koya, Dodo and Kalansogoia
Chiefdoms have been postponed.
Sierra Leone's Special Court
will not make use of testimony taken by the Truth
and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC), the Court's Chief Prosecutor said on
Tuesday. In a speech in Freetown in observance of International Human
Rights Day, Chief Prosecutor David Crane said the Court and the TRC would
operate separately, but that both institutions would work to address
"the entrenched problem of impunity" and to ensure
accountability for human rights abuses committed during Sierra Leone's
decade-long civil war. Some combatants have expressed concern that
statements they made before TRC could be used by the Court to indict them,
but Crane said this would not be the case. "Victims, perpetrators,
and witnesses who testify before the TRC should do so without fear of
having their statements subpoenaed by my office," he said. "My
team of investigators and prosecutors are hard at work putting together
cases against key individuals responsible for serious violations of
international humanitarian law. We are doing this separately from the work
of the TRC." Thousands
– perhaps tens of thousands
– of victims, witnesses and perpetrators are expected to tell their
stories to the TRC. Crane's office, on the other hand, is mandated to try
a handful of those persons he described as "the commanders,
politicians and financiers" deemed to bear the greatest
responsibility for the atrocities. "Together, both institutions
– the TRC and the Special Court
– will work to eliminate the culture of impunity that undermines all
efforts to bring peace and stability to this country," Crane said.
"However, these institutions present opportunities rather than
conclusions. It is still up to all of us present here to make sure that
today represents a turning point from the decade past and the decade
ahead."
The International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) proposes
spending
about $10.7 million less in Sierra Leone next year as the country emerges
from a decade of civil war. The decrease for Sierra Leone is more than
offset, however, by proposed increases for Liberia and Ivory Coast, where
new fighting has caused tens of thousands to flee their homes. Overall,
assistance to Africa will account for 39 percent of the ICRC's $634.8
million budget, with aid to African countries going up one percent over
2002. 20.2 percent of the funds will go to Asia and the Pacific, 6.9
percent to Latin America and the Caribbean, 15.2 percent to Europe and
North America, 13.9 percent to the Middle East and North Africa, and 4.8
percent will be held in a contingency fund.
9 December: George Gbaniey Njiabo won Saturday's
paramount chieftaincy election in Niawa Lenga, Bo District with 72 votes
over Emmanuel Kombay-Nallay, who received 64. In Kenema District's Nomo
Chiefdom, Bockarie Kaba emerged the winner with 82 votes. He defeated Yata
Karmoh, who had 33.
6 December: Albert Moinina Lebbie,
with 127 votes, was declared the winner of Wednesday's paramount chieftaincy election in
Komboya Chiefdom, Bo District. He defeated Alfred Ndoka Demby, who had 90
votes. In Langrama Chiefdom, Kenema District, Prince Mambu Pewa received
82 votes, defeating Ibrahim Tarley with 65. Polling in Libeisaygahun
Chiefdom, Bombali District, was postponed to December 14 due to pending
petitions.
There have been three
cross-border raids from Liberia into Sierra Leone's
Kailahun
District in the past two weeks by combatants searching for food, but the
overall security situation in the country remains stable, the U.N. World
Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday. In addition to their regular patrols,
UNAMSIL and the Sierra Leonean army have temporarily deployed troops in
problem areas along the border. The flow of Liberian refugees into Sierra
Leone has tapered off, but with all of the refugee camps in Sierra Leone
now being full to capacity, any new influx would seriously stretch the resources
of some aid agencies, the WFP said. Meanwhile, the repatriation of Sierra
Leonean refugees from Guinea and Liberia remained on hold over the past
two weeks, and no more than three land convoys are expected from Guinea
before the end of the year. Nationwide, the WFP provided food assistance
in various forms to 136,150 persons between November 18 and December 1,
including distributions to refugees at five camps in Jembe, Gerihun, Jimmi Bagbo,
Gondama and Bandajuma.
The Truth and Reconciliation Committee's Short-listing
Committee met on Thursday to draw up lists of applicants to be interviewed
for full time positions on the commission. Interviews will begin next
week. The commission's hiring of staff fell behind schedule when flaws in
the process were discovered after the initial September 30 application
deadline had passed, forcing commissioners to begin over in mid-November.
Interim consultants and advisors who were recalled to operate the
commission in the interim will depart at the end of December.
Exchange rates for the leone against
the U.S. dollar and pound sterling, posted in Freetown on Friday: [Buying
/ Selling] Standard Chartered Bank: [$] 2100 / 2300. [£] 3000 / 3350.
Commercial Bank: [$] 2150 / 2300. [£] 3100 / 3300. Frandia: [$] 2200 /
2370 [£] 3150 / 3350. Continental: [$] 2250 / 2400 [£] 3200 / 3500.
Dollar Boys (Black Market): [$] 2300 / 2350 [£] 3400 / 3500.
5 December: The former secretary-general and
presidential candidate of the
Revolutionary
United Front Party (RUFP) expressed reservations Thursday about the
Special Court, which is mandated to prosecute those deemed most responsible
for war crimes committed during the country's civil war. Pallo Bangura told the
Sierra Leone Web that war crimes should not be covered up, but he said it
was a question of timing. "Our priorities
– and when I say ‘our’ I mean if you talk to the average man in the
street, the average Sierra Leonean, the disposition is that we should
nurture this peace process," he said. "And the Special Court to
many
– to most people in fact, really
– is not the right track at this critical moment." Bangura said he
thought the Truth and Reconciliation Commission should have prepared the
groundwork for any future action. "But since we are part of the
international community, and since the international community wants it,
then I suppose we have not much choice in it, although of course it was
government’s idea to ask for the Special Court," he said. Bangura
said he didn't expect that prosecutions would lead to new violence in the
country, but he said it might depend on how it's done. "If it is
selective, then it might be seen as a witch hunt, and I don’t know what
would come out of that," he said. "But if...the emphasis is on
impunity, how you reconcile the community with the present state of Sierra
Leone with anger, bitterness, hardly concealed beneath the surface
– honestly, that is for somebody else to decide, but I would have
thought we would have spent some more time and resources
– build up the economy, reconcile, reintegrate various aspects of the
society. This would have been my own personal priority." The former
university lecturer, diplomat and politician resigned from the RUFP in
July, but up to now he has been unable to find a job. For the past month
or so he has been an unpaid volunteer at the Government Rokel Secondary
School, helping students to prepare for their exams. "Well it’s a
job, kind of, because it’s something I’m enjoying doing – some
contribution I really am committed to," he said. But it doesn't pay
the bills. Bangura said at present he had no job prospects that he knew
of, and was only surviving "by God’s grace and through some
relations."
4 December:
Officials from Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
will travel east to Bomaru Wednesday to record their first official
statements in the town where, nearly a dozen years ago, the first shots were fired in the country's decade-long
civil war. The Sierra Leone army will fire a 21-gun salute and local
leaders will pour a libation in honour of the tens of thousands who died
during that conflict. Afterwards, the commission's newly-trained
statement-takers
will fan out across Sierra Leone for three months of interviews with
victims of the war and perpetrators. Before they are finished, according
to Operations Officer Ozonnia Ojielo, they will have visited all of the
country's 149 chiefdoms and taken confidential statements from thousands
of people. The testimonies will form the basis for the commission's report on the causes of the war,
and its consequences for the people of Sierra Leone. For the TRC,
Wednesday's launch was a rare flash of success, and it may be a sign that
the troubled commission's woes are finally behind it. Since its inception
earlier this year, the TRC has been plagued by financial problems and administrative
miscues. Heading the list has been the commission's inability to raise
money. International donors, especially the United States, expressed
skepticism over the commission's initial $9.6 million budget request. Even
after commissioners scaled back their request by a third last July, there
was little sign of donor interest and the TRC's fundraising efforts
remained stalled. Then, despite several months of lead time, the TRC
missed an opportunity for a seamless transition when it failed to hire
permanent staff in time to replace the interim advisors and consultants
whose temporary contracts expired in early October. Plans to move from
temporary offices on Pademba Road to quarters in the government's old
Agriculture Building on Tower Hill had to be shelved after commissioners decided
the offices would prove too costly to repair. In September, the commission
entered its operational phase without a permanent staff or offices of its
own. Most of the blame for the TRC's management problems was laid at the
door of Yasmin Jusu-Sheriff, the TRC's Interim Executive-Secretary. After
an initial two-week extension in October, her contract was not renewed and
she is no longer a candidate for the permanent position. "We had
serious management problems during the preparatory period," one
commissioner said. "Many of the objectives were not attained. Some of
the staff hired by Yasmin did not appear to be very productive. All of
this, inevitably, reflects upon her." But a source close to the TRC
thinks that at least part of the blame for failing to hire new staff should go
to the commissioners.
"Unfortunately,
the commissioners delayed without cause," he said. In an interview
last week with the Sierra Leone Web, TRC chairman Bishop Joseph Humper
(pictured left) acknowledged that the commission's problems were
"man-made" and "a result of bureaucracy," but he
insisted that the commissioners had done their best. Humper related that
the TRC had turned to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and
the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) for assistance in the
recruitment process. "We were asked to look for a firm and we
contacted many people and they brought in their quotations," he said.
"It was too high
– we did not have the money to hire those people. So we went to UNDP and
other areas. They promised to assist us." Representatives from the
United Nations High Commission for Human Rights (UNHCHR) and the UNDP
failed to follow through, Humper said, and the job of sorting through
applications fell to the commissioners. It was a task, he said, that they
were not prepared for. "We here as commission members, we did what
was humanly possible," he said. "We sorted all of this out and
took everything
– the short-listed pile and all the document applications
– all of them
– to UNDP. And they said they were going to look through that to help us
to come up with something." The positions were finally advertised on
September 17, with a closing date of September 30. Then, after the
applications were in and the short-listing had begun, the process had to be
halted because of reported flaws in the procedures. Humper blamed two of
the international commissioners, Prof. William Schabas of Ireland and
Yasmin Sooka of South Africa, for the delay, and suggested it was because
they were unhappy that two candidates had not been considered for
positions. "Probably those (Schabas) had asked to apply, he did not
see their names (on the list)," he said. "And so according to him the elections
were flawed...They condemned everything that we
did, and that is what they sent to Geneva. And so they had to cancel the
first process which would have enabled us to get the staff." Schabas
(right), who was contacted in Ireland for this report, confirmed he had
raised concerns over why the two had not been considered, but he said it
was a question of the process, not of the individual candidates. "I
had no campaign for these two people," he said. "I looked
through the list to see what had happened, and there were things that
weren’t properly explained." Schabas said he was eventually told
one applicant had applied a day too late, and that he never received an
explanation as to why the other was not considered. And, he said, there
didn't seem to be any documentation as to why some candidates were
considered while others were not. "The short list was the only
list," he said. "There was no other list. There was just a short
list, and other than that there was a pile of CVs. So there was no
explanation as to why people were short-listed or weren’t short-listed
– at least that I saw." Of greater concern, he said, was the fact
that the jobs had not been advertised as being local or higher-paid
international positions. The decision to start over was taken by the UNDP,
he said, and the decision to refer the matter to the agency was taken at a
meeting held while he was out of the country. "It was their decision
that we should begin again the process," he said. Now, there are
signs that things may be back on track. The deadline for new applications
closed on November 30 and a new Executive-Secretary
– there are six candidates
– is expected to be announced by the end of the month. The TRC has
secured a block of office space in the old Brookfields Hotel, which until
recently was home to hundreds of pro-government militiamen and their
families. The move should take place before the end of the year. And both
Humper and Schabas pointed out that there were positive signs. Recent
"sensitisation" visits by commissioners to educate people in the
rural areas over the TRC's function were well-received. And Humper said he
was confident donors would come to the TRC's assistance once they saw the
commission was making progress. "They have promised us that they will do
something
– promises yet," he said. "And we have come to them that once
they see us actually working on the ground here, something positive will
come out." Schabas observed that when the history of the TRC is
written, October and November would not come off as its brightest periods.
But, he said, the commission was too important for the people of
Sierra Leone for it to be allowed to fail.
The United
Nations Security Council voted unanimously Wednesday to extend by six
months the ban on the sale of all rough Sierra Leonean diamonds, except
for those exported by the Government of Sierra Leone under a U.N.-approved
Certificate of Origin regime. Earlier, a Sierra Leonean diplomat told the
Sierra Leone Web that the ban was likely to be extended at Wednesday's
Council meeting, adding: "We have no objection to the proposal."
A previous extension, which expires on Wednesday, was for eleven months.
In July 2000 the Security Council imposed a global ban on the sale of
rough Sierra Leonean diamonds as a way of cutting off the rebel
Revolutionary United Front from its main source of funds. The Council made
an exception, however, for diamonds whose origin could be certified by the
government as having come from legitimate sources. That system was set up
with the assistance of the United Nations and the diamond industry, and in
late October 2000 the first parcel of diamonds was exported under the new
system – a system which, by many accounts, has to date achieved only
limited success. In December 2001 the Security Council extended the ban by
eleven months, with effect from 5 January 2002.
Four Sierra
Leoneans were among 98 foreign prisoners from 27 countries who were
released in Thailand Wednesday in honour of King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 75th
birthday, the Agence France-Presse reported. Most of those released had
been convicted on offences such as illegal entry, over-staying their
visas, or using fake documents, an immigration official was quoted as
saying.
3 December: Sierra Leone conducted its first
chieftaincy elections since 1992 on Monday, with the election of new
paramount chiefs in Dasse Chiefdom in the south, Dama Chiefdom in the
east, and Paki-Masabong Chiefdom in the
north. Through January 20,
elections
are scheduled for 63 of the country's 149 chiefdoms which have lost their
traditional leaders over the past decade. Monday's elections were a
"sign of the restoration of civil authority" following Sierra
Leone's ten years of civil war and "symbolic of the return of normalcy,"
Local Government and Community Development Minister Sidikie Brima told the
Sierra Leone Web. In Dasse Chiefdom, Moyamba District, Haja Fatmata Bintu
Koroma Meama Kajue received the support of 138 of the 170 electors,
defeating Hangbai Joseph Luama Musa (one vote), David Sylvester Fallah
Kajue (nine votes), William Prince Bunduka Musa Hangbai (ten votes) and
Joseph Sylvester Meama Kajue (twelve votes). In Dama Chiefdom, Kenema
District, Sandy Momoh Fowai easily defeated Prince D.B. Dakowa, 358 votes
to 22. And in Paki-Masabong Chiefdom, Bombali District, the winner was
Amadu Augustine Conteh with 229 votes over Alfred George Conteh, who
received 32.
Sierra Leone's newly-constituted Special Court
now has three
years
to go after and prosecute those political and military leaders in Sierra
Leone and in the region thought to bear the greatest responsibility for
the systematic atrocities carried out during the country's civil war,
Court President Geoffrey Robertson told the BBC. "In the course of
those three years we hope to try and to deal with on appeal those whom the
prosecution indicts on the allegations that they have been responsible for
the kind of barbarity that qualifies for the description of crime against
humanity," he said. Robertson, who is an English Queens Counsel and
head of the Doughty Street
Chambers, described atrocities carried out in Sierra Leone during the
1990s as "truly barbarous." "They are the crimes of
mass murder, the killing of innocent civilians, I suppose the mutilation
on a systematic basis of the arms and legs of people who voted in the
elections, the recruiting of small children to use them as killers or
otherwise as sex slaves for some of the rebel groups," he said.
Sierra Leone's war crimes tribunal is expected to prosecute just a handful
of people, probably no more than 20 or 30 of those thought to be most
responsible for those crimes. Robertson said the Special Court for Sierra
Leone, unlike previous tribunals for Rwanda and Yugoslavia, would start at
the top. "The International Tribunal in the Hague had to start with a
minor foot soldier back in 1995 and finally got to Mr. Milosevic in the
year 2001," he said. "We are starting with the Mr. Milosevics of
Sierra Leone and that area. We are waiting for the prosecution to assemble
a group of indictments of those political and military leaders who are
most responsible."
Sierra Leone's once-feared rebels
will cooperate with the Special Court, the
group's interim leader said on Tuesday. Issa Sesay, until recently better
known as General Issa, the rebel commander who inherited the leadership of
the splintered Revolutionary United Front (RUF) after the arrest of the
charismatic Foday Sankoh in May 2000, says now that his rebel group is
only interested in peace. "Maybe the court will be against me, I can’t
tell," he told the Sierra Leone Web. "The only thing I know (is)
that we are subject to others
– I mean, towards the international community. And I try very hard to
persuade the men, thousands of men in the RUF and now the RUFP, for them
to disarm or to give the peace a chance." But Sesay said all those
who took part in the conflict should have to answer questions
– not just the RUF. "Not only the RUF did take part during the
war," he said. "You have many factions, and you have mercenaries
who came in the country." Sesay and other RUF leaders once suggested
that any prosecution of Sankoh for war crimes could lead to further
bloodshed in the country. But now, he says, that is all in the past.
"As far as I’m concerned as an interim leader for the RUFP, we don’t
have no more intention in terms of fighting," he said. "In fact,
we don’t even have the strength. We are dedicated to the peace with
whatsoever conditions. They can charge Foday Sankoh in the Special
Court...We have no more interest in terms of violence. We are very
peaceful guys now. And some of us, we even want to further our educational
standard instead of just being in war activities. People are dying of war
in this country and people are tired of war." One of the remaining
concerns for Sierra Leone's still-fragile peace is the upsurge of violence
in neighbouring Liberia, where hundreds of former RUF combatants are
reported to be fighting for both the government forces and LURD rebels.
Sesay insisted he had no knowledge of how many of his former fighters
might be involved in the Liberian conflict. "Since the disarmament
has took place, I’m not in control of these men," he said.
"These men are Sierra Leoneans. The time during the days of war, I’m
in control. But now, since the disarmament, I’m not capable of feeding
them or neither taking care of them." Of his own involvement with the
RUF, Sesay will say little
– only that he joined the group in 1990 or 1991. "I think these
questions are for the Special Court, so let’s just wait for the Special
Court," he said. "We should not be answering questions before
the court." If he has the chance, Sesay said, he would like to go
back to school. And if he is indicted by the court, will be cooperate?
Sesay laughs. "I have to go," he said. "I will never
challenge. I will never challenge. For me, I have to clarify myself. I
want to be a very peaceful gentleman in my future, so I need no more
further embarrassment. Any time the court calls me, I’m available."
Pointing
to the end of his country's civil war, the holding of peaceful elections,
and
hopeful signs for economic recovery, President Kabbah observed Tuesday
that "2002 has been a very good year for the nation as a whole."
In an address to mark the Muslim and
Christian holidays of Eid-ul-Fitri and Christmas and the New Year of 2003,
Kabbah hailed Sierra Leone's tradition of religious tolerance as one of
his country's greatest assets. "Religious tolerance is an effective
instrument for national reconciliation," he said. "It is a
powerful tool for nation-building and the consolidation of peace."
The common denominators found in the two religions, he said, could be used
"to remove those stumbling blocks that tend to separate us from one
another and deter our progress as a nation
– the
stumbling blocks of tribalism and regionalism, the stumbling
blocks of corruption and exploitation, and the stumbling blocks of
character assassination and unjustified suspicion, to name a few."
The president called on Sierra Leoneans to have confidence in their
future, but he warned that while the country had come a long way with the
end of the war and the carrying out of a successful democratic process,
that these alone would not solve all of Sierra Leone's problems. Said
Kabbah: "They have created a conducive environment for us to
concentrate on the task of improving the economic and social well being of
our people, of rebuilding our battered infrastructure and of
reconstructing the national psyche, so that from now onward we shall move
forward as a nation that has learnt from its bitter past experiences and
resolute in our determination to break from that ugly past."
2 December: The eight judges chosen to preside over
Sierra Leone's Special
Court
took their oaths of office Monday, pledging they would carry out their
duties "honestly, faithfully, impartially and conscientiously"
as they were sworn in at an official ceremony in Freetown. The court, a
war crimes tribunal which was formed jointly by the Sierra Leone
government and the United Nations, is mandated to prosecute the handful of
persons deemed to bear the greatest responsibility for
atrocities committed in Sierra Leone during the latter half of the
country's decade-long civil war. The judges – five of them
Africans, two Europeans and one a North American – immediately elected
Geoffrey Robertson of Britain as President of the Court, while Rosolu John Bankole Thompson of Sierra Leone
was chosen to preside over the Trial Chamber. The Special Court, under the
statute agreed between the Sierra Leone government and the United Nations,
consists of two chambers: a three-member Trial Chamber and a five-member
Appeals Chamber. A majority of the judges in each chamber was selected by
the United Nations, and the others were chosen by the Government of Sierra
Leone. The Trial Chamber will consist of Rosolu John Bankole Thompson, a Sierra
Leonean High Court Judge and currently Professor of Law at Eastern
Kentucky University; Pierre Boutet, a liaison officer in Canada's Defence
Department and former Judge Advocate General of the Canadian forces; and
Benjamin Mutanga Itoe, a Cameroonian Supreme Court Judge. Presiding over
the Appeals Chamber will be Nigerian Supreme Court Justice Emmanuel O.
Ayoola;
Gambian Supreme Court Justice Alhaji Hassan B. Jallow, Kosovo Supreme
Court Justice Renate Winter of Austria, Sierra Leone Appeals Court President
George Gelaga
King, and British Queen's Counsel Geoffrey Robertson.
Absent
from Monday's swearing-in of the judges who will preside over the Special
Court for Sierra Leone were some of the most visible, and vocal, victims
of atrocities in Sierra Leone's civil war
– the members of the War Affected Amputee Association. The Association,
which has long been at odds with the government over what it perceives as
the unequal treatment given to perpetrators over victims in the conflict,
said they would refuse to take part in any ceremony attended by senior
government officials. "This government has used us and lied to us and
we will not play any part in this ceremony. We will not let them use us to
bring credit or legitimacy to their unaccountable regime. They are part of
the problem and not the solution," Association President Lamin Jusu
Jaka said in a statement. The group said it would support the court,
however, as long as it was independent of the government "and willing
to look even to the highest offices of this land."
"The amputees believe that the root causes of our suffering are
selfishness and lack of accountability in government and among other
powerful individuals," the group said. "This impunity caused the
war and continues to block development and serious relief to our
community."
Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) has invited 68 governments, diamond dealers, civil
society groups, political parties, members of security forces, and
individuals to submit information on the roles they played in the
country's civil war. The list includes present and former
government
officials, members of the NPRC and AFRC military juntas and the RUF, as
well as a host of local groups and international institutions. The list is expected to grow in length as other "role-players" are
identified. In a statement released on Monday, the TRC said it wanted
those invited to address "the causes of the conflict, the roles of
actors, institutions and countries as well as recommendations in regard to
how a repetition of the conflict can be avoided, how victims may be
assisted to overcome their suffering and have their dignity restored, as
well as addressing the issue of how perpetrators may be reintegrated into
the society in order that the nation may be healed and this society
rebuilt."
1 December: Sierra Leoneans who suffer from AIDS
should not be blamed for
their plight by a society looking to avoid its responsibility in dealing
with the disease as a public health issue, President Kabbah said Sunday in
an address marking World AIDS Day.
Since
1987, 3,599 persons in Sierra Leone have tested positive for the HIV virus
which causes AIDS. 794 people have developed full-blown symptoms of the
disease, and 438 of these have died. A study conducted last April
concluded that 4.9 percent of Sierra Leoneans are HIV-positive, with the
infection rate in Freetown as high as 6.1 percent. Kabbah noted that while
the disease is a biological phenomenon, the AIDS epidemic had to be faced
as both a public health issue and a development problem. And he said the
causes of AIDS – high-risk sexual behaviour, prostitution and drug abuse
– had to be discussed openly, without stigmatizing the victims. "Making
moral judgements over compatriots who
are
already victims of HIV/AIDS serves little purpose," he said. "It
does not help the sick get better. It does not prevent infection or stop
people from taking drugs. Blaming people does not help stop the disease
from spreading. In fact it does the reverse. It increases the negative
impact of the pandemic, and creates obstacles to fighting and treating the
disease." Kabbah said the newly-formed HIV/AIDS Council, which he
chairs, and the National HIV/AIDS Secretariat attached to his office would
work together to reduce the stigmatization and discrimination which are
often attached to AIDS sufferers. To this end, the president
proposed conducting information and awareness campaigns on the
disease; working to provide medical care, counseling and support for those
who are infected by the virus, making available drugs for those who suffer
from AIDS, and strengthening laws to challenge discrimination against
those who are forced to live with HIV.