Tuesday, 14 February 2012

THE SALONE VAGABONE KING,,,SAD- ( NEW STATESMAN)

TAKE OVER DAY OF COUP April 29 1992



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The vagabon  king

Simon Akam Published 02 February 2012



When 25-year-old Valentine Strasser seized power in Sierra Leone in 1992, he became the world’s youngest head of state. Today he lives with his mother and spends his days drinking gin by the roadside. What went wrong?





SITTING IN STATE HOUSE
TAKE OVER -D DAY
 


There are two ways to drive inland from Freetown. The first is to go through the eastern, poorer quarters of the Sierra Leonean capital. There decrepit vehicles jam narrow streets lined with mouldering clapboard houses. With such heavy congestion, it can take many hours to make the journey. The alternative is to take the so-called mountain road. You drive up into the hills, past the camp of the British army-led training team left over from Tony Blair's little war in 2000. Soon the tarmac ends and a dirt road threads past straggling villages into the forest. The track of reddish laterite – which bypasses the city and its traffic – is treacherous after rain, and traces a route down into a broad valley. A mile or so before it rejoins the main highway leading inland, a side road branches off to the left through a quiet village. At the far end of the settlement stands a faded sheet-metal advertisement for Goodyear tyres. And there, most afternoons, a tall man with close-cropped, greying hair sits on an open porch by the side of the road, often dressed in just a pair of shorts. If you arrive late in the day he may be drinking gin from a plastic sachet. His name is Valentine Strasser; he is 45, and was once the youngest head of state in the world. It is ten years since the end of the 11-year civil war in Sierra Leone. In 2007 power changed hands at the ballot box – and yet, to the outside world, the iconography of that long war – child soldiers, violent amputations and conflict diamonds – is ineradicable. The story of Strasser, who seized power in a military coup at the age of 25 in 1992 and ruled for four years until he was deposed by the same method, is unusual even by the experience of West African dictatorships. His improbable rise to executive power and his precipitous fall to roadside penury is a parable of the human consequences of premature kingship. Strasser says he was born on 15 September 1966 in Freetown. His father was a teacher, his mother a small-time businesswoman. After attending the Sierra Leone Grammar School (founded in 1845), he became an army officer, serving in neighbouring Liberia as part of a regional peacekeeping mission, the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG). Like Sierra Leone, Liberia was established as a colony of freed slaves. Civil war had broken out there in 1989, and in 1991 ECOMOG was attempting to secure order in the capital, Monrovia. "Fighting was going on every corner from three factions," Strasser told me one evening, speaking softly and with a slight lilt. After seven months in Liberia, he returned home. The war followed him. In March 1991, rebel fighters crossed over from Liberia into the remote eastern part of the country. This incursion of as many as 2,000 men, most of whom were on loan from the Liberian warlord Charles Taylor, marked the beginning of Sierra Leone's decade-long conflict. Led by Foday Sankoh, the rebels came to be known as the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Sankoh was a former army corporal and one-time jobbing photographer and, like others among the initial RUF leadership, he had received training at al-Mathabh al-Thauriya al-Alamiya, Muammar al-Gaddafi's World Revolutionary Headquarters in Benghazi, Libya. By 1991 Sierra Leone was close to ruin. After independence from Britain in 1961, there had been a brief period of relatively functional democracy under the leadership of Sir Milton Margai. He died in 1964 and was succeeded by his less respected stepbrother Albert, who disbursed vital positions in government to people of the Mende tribe regardless of qualifications. The decline accelerated under Siaka Stevens, a trade unionist who was elected in 1967 but did not become prime minister until the following year because of a series of coups. In 1971, Stevens declared himself president. Charming but spectacularly corrupt, he systematically degraded state institutions and operated a system of personal patronage. He plundered Sierra Leone's diamond wealth and even entered into negotiations with an American company to have toxic waste dumped in the country in exchange for a fee of $25m. “At the age of 80, Stevens left office with an estimated fortune of US$500m," says Sareta Ashraph, a London-based lawyer formerly at the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone who is now working on a history of the civil war. "The sheer corruption and violent repression of the Stevens regime extinguished the hopes of an entire generation and laid the foundation for the country's brutal civil war." Following riots in Freetown, Stevens stepped down in 1985. Two years later, at a ceremony held in the grounds of parliament, a local preacher compared the former head of state's reign to a "17-year plague of locusts" in an address that was broadcast on national radio. The next president was Joseph Momoh, a military officer. Despite his initial promises of reform, corruption persisted under him. He acquired the nickname Dandogo, which means "idiot" in the language of the Limba people of northern Sierra Leone. By 1991, Momoh had been in power for six years and the nation was ripe for revolt.

Wounded in action
On Strasser's return from Liberia, he joined a unit fighting the rebel incursion in the east. The conditions for the government troops were wretched. Logistical support was poor, supplies of weapons and ammunition were limited and there was scant medical provision. On 1 May 1991, he received a shrapnel wound to the leg while defending a bridge.
“I was inside a bunker and I got blasted," he said. "It was a shell that actually landed on the sandbags." On another occasion when we spoke he said: "No casevac [casualty evacuation] procedures were made. In terms of helicopters or ambulances to shift the casualties . . . the problem was not with the level of training, but with the equipment that was available and the manpower. My disgruntlement stemmed from the fact that after I got wounded in action, I could not be evacuated, either by an ambulance or a helicopter."
Aware that they were fighting a war that their political masters would not resource properly, Strasser and other junior officers began plotting a coup. On 29 April 1992, they launched Operation Daybreak, raiding the office of the president in central Freetown as well as the lavish old presidential lodge off Spur Road in the West End of the city. They found President Momoh hiding in the bathroom of the lodge, wearing a dressing gown. He was bundled into an army helicopter and taken over the border to Guinea.
Strasser emerged as the public face of the uprising, in part because of his language skills – he spoke English well enough to read out a statement on the radio. As a captain, he was also of a higher rank than his co-conspirators. Some argue, too, that Strasser got the top post because those around him felt that he could be manipulated easily. "He was chosen in spite of, not because of, his leadership capabilities," says Joe Alie, a professor of history at Fourah Bay College in Freetown and the author of a 2007 history of the country since independence.
Joseph Opala, an American historian who first came to Sierra Leone in 1974 as a Peace Corps volunteer and has spent much of his adult life in the country, witnessed the wild early days of the new regime. Avuncular and bearded, he runs a project to restore the former British slave fortress on Bunce Island, near Freetown. Shortly after the 1992 coup, Opala was rounded up by soldiers and taken to State House, the white-walled seat of power in the city centre that bears an odd resemblance to a lighthouse.
The windows in the president's office had been shot out. Momoh's staff stood erect, in abject terror. Sitting around wearing camouflage fatigues and Ray-Ban sunglasses were the young officers who had mounted the insurrection. They were cleaning their Kalashnikovs and were stoned.
Strasser turned to Opala. "A wan know if America go recognise we gobment?" he said, speaking in Krio, the Sierra Leonean lingua franca. Krio is built on an English chassis but has a distinct grammatical structure and uses borrowed words from a plethora of other sources. In response to
Strasser's question ("I want to know if America will recognise our government?"), Opala asked him in turn if he had spoken to the American ambassador. The new leader replied that he had, but that he had not understood what the diplomat had told him. "En English too big," he said. "A no undastan natin way e talk."
An extraordinary scene ensued. At Strasser's direction, Opala left State House and walked through deserted streets to the US embassy, which at the time lay one block away. There he told a jumpy marine guard that he had a personal message for the ambassador from the coup leaders. He was allowed in and explained to the head of mission that the heads of the new government wanted to know if Washington would recognise it. The ambassador, a black American named Johnny Young, said that he had spoken at length to Strasser and had outlined the position of the US administration – that in general it did not acknowledge regimes installed by force but, in this instance, because the previous government had also not been democratically elected and considering the dire condition of the country, it was prepared to make an exception.


Ukrainian connection
In the early days, Captain Strasser's coup was popular. There were promises of a fresh start for the country. Young people mobilised to keep Freetown clean. Celebratory murals and other street art flourished. The new rulers of Sierra Leone called themselves the National Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC). Strasser was the council's chairman.
For all the jubilation, there was still a war to fight. Out in the bush, the army continued fighting the rebels. The junior officers who formed the NPRC had experienced the wretched conditions of the government troops. They wanted to improve matters, so besides tripling the size of the army, they went shopping.
There have been few better periods in history to buy guns than in the early 1990s. The Soviet Union had disintegrated, leaving huge arsenals in the hands of often unpaid and unsupervised officers. Dollars went a long way and official documentation was circumnavigable. Crucially, too, Sierra Leone's new leaders had a Ukrainian connection. During the cold war, the Soviet Union had funded scholarships for students from the developing world. Sierra Leoneans were among those who took up the chance to study in the USSR. One such was Steven Bio, who had studied in Kiev. A cousin of Julius Maada Bio, a member of the new junta, he had useful connections with gunrunners in Ukraine. He would be the go-between.
However, as the arms bazaar began to thrive abroad, the jubilation that had greeted Strasser's assumption of power at home began to diminish. In October 1992, the RUF took Koidu Town, capital of Kono District in the diamond-mining east. The capture of the town marked a step up in the conflict. In Freetown, the NPRC government announced that it had uncovered an attempted coup and disarmed the instigators. Executions followed on a beach on the outskirts of the city, but the 29 people executed were considered to be innocent, and soon afterwards Strasser declared a nationwide period of mourning. "To people who were politically savvy, what it meant was there was no coherent government," Opala told me. "The conclusion was obvious – no one was in charge." (Nineteen years later, the mention of the executions stirred Strasser to anger. "Fuck off, man. In Texas they kill people every day," he said when I pressed him on the subject.) Power in Sierra Leone was now in the hands of a group of very young men. "The children are running the country," it was said. A photograph of Strasser at the 1993 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Limassol, Cyprus, shows a young man in sunglasses and a T-shirt, emblazoned with the words "Sunny Days in Cyprus". There were parties, too. Strasser made Valentine's Day a great national celebration, along with Bob Marley's birthday. The junta favoured pale-skinned women, creating a craze for bleaching among girls in Freetown. Women who tried to lighten their skin tone with chemicals were called "wonchee girls". Older Sierra Leoneans still mention that phrase readily when asked about their impressions of the NPRC. But perhaps the most telling indication of the onset of decadence in Strasser himself was his choice of accommodation.
Kabasa Lodge is in many ways the embodiment of all that is wrong with post-independence Sierra Leone. Built by the kleptocratic Siaka Stevens, it is a monumental structure the size of a missile silo or respectable late-medieval castle, and squats on a hilltop in Juba, in the West End of Freetown, with expansive views both out over the Atlantic and to the forested hills of the peninsula south of the city. It was here that Strasser chose to live. The 1992 coup had decapitated the command structure of the army; brigadiers were expected to take their orders from captains and lieutenants. In the countryside, both rebels and the poorly trained soldiers were often more interested in looting property from civilians than in fighting each other. The line between the resistance and the rebellion became blurred, reflected in the neologism "sobel" – soldier by day, rebel by night. By late 1993, though, the much-enlarged government army was close to defeating the rebels. In December Strasser called a ceasefire, but that turned out to be a mistake: the RUF regrouped and began setting up jungle bases around the country in 1994 and 1995. The rebels were a threat once more and the government was losing control.

Glittering prizes

In the south, the RUF attacked the facilities of Sierra Rutile, a company mining titanium ore, cutting off a crucial source of state revenue. The rebels set up a base in the town of Moyamba which put them within a day's striking distance of Freetown. Vehicle ambushes left few people willing to travel upcountry. With the security situation deteriorating, the NPRC was becoming increasingly unpopular. It was then that Strasser turned to foreign fighters. White mercenaries are a charged subject in Africa, conjuring up a host of associations, from "Mad" Mike Hoare in the Congo of the 1960s to Richard Burton and Roger Moore in the 1978 film The Wild Geese and, more recently, the farce of the 2004 "wonga coup" in Equatorial Guinea. However, in Sierra Leone, shortly after South Africa's first multiracial elections in 1994, ex-apartheid enforcers re-engaged as soldiers of fortune and ended up saving huge numbers of lives. They nearly saved the country, too. In February 1995, the NPRC engaged the services of a company called Gurkha Security Guards (GSG), which employed Nepalese ex-British-army troops led by an American, Robert MacKenzie. MacKenzie had fought in Vietnam and, in spite of an arm injury sustained there, he later passed selection for the Rhodesian SAS. He also worked as a correspondent for Soldier of Fortune magazine. His masterminding of GSG's involvement in Sierra Leone was a debacle: he was quickly ambushed along with Strasser's aide-de-camp, Abu Tarawalli. It is still not known for sure if those responsible were the rebels, or whether he was betrayed by Sierra Leonean army soldiers he was meant to be assisting. After MacKenzie went missing, his wife asked Al J Venter – a writer with a long interest in mercenary affairs – to visit Sierra Leone to investigate what had happened. Venter discovered that a group of nuns had also been captured and taken to the camp where MacKenzie was held. The nuns were eventually released, but before then they saw the American strung up, and his heart cut out. The next group of white mercenaries to land in Sierra Leone was Executive Outcomes, which blazed a trail for private military companies of the modern era. Composed the civil wapredominantly of former South African special forces troops, Executive Outcomes was active in Angola during r there, fighting both for and against Jonas Savimbi's South African-funded rebel army, Unita. The brokers of the deal that brought Executive Outcomes to Sierra Leone included Simon Mann, later of the botched "wonga coup"; Tony Buckingham, who now runs Heritage Oil, a company whose prospectus hints at the risk that the media may mention his previous mercenary adventures; and Eeben Barlow, a former South African special forces officer. The role of Executive Outcomes was to combat the rebels. The mercenaries would be paid in diamond concessions and cash. They arrived in Sierra Leone in small numbers – about a hundred on the ground at any one time. Most of the operatives were black but theleadership was white. They used helicopters, they had their own logistical train and they were fearsomely competent. "These people knew Africa," Venter said. "They set up their own supply units . . . they brought everything with them. They drove [the rebels] well away from Freetown, then they launched an operation into Kono. They did it; they turned the war around in record time." Joseph Opala recalled how Executive Outcomes would give a radio to each of the paramount chiefs, the leaders originally appointed from the ranks of local kings and queens by British colonial administrators at the end of the 19th century. "They said: 'If you call us we will be there in 15 minutes.' And they were." The mercenaries achieved what thousands of UN peacekeepers five years later were unable to do: they stopped the war. "At a total cost of $35m [just one-third of the government's annual defence budget], the fighting in Sierra Leone had ceased and over one million displaced persons returned to their homes," wrote P W Singer of the Brookings Institution in his book Corporate Warriors: the Rise of the Privatised Military Industry. “They did what they were here to do – that I can assure you," Strasser told me. "In fact, fighting stopped. It was a war machine that was capable of handling the security difficulties there at the time." But the mercenaries were soon forced out of Sierra Leone by other countries' disapproval. There was substantial international support for a peace accord that was negotiated in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, in 1996, and the RUF made withdrawal of foreign forces a provision of signing it. Executive Outcomes left in January 1997. Without a disarmament programme in place, the Abidjan agreement proved ineffective. Clashes continued and after another military coup in May 1997 the violence escalated once more. In January 1999, the war reached its nadir when RUF fighters sacked Freetown in Operation No Living Thing. As for Strasser, he was deposed in a palace coup on 16 January 1996. He had gone to inspect a passing-out parade at the military trainin academy in Benguema, less than 30 miles from Freetown. In the afternoon he went, without a substantial security escort, to a meeting at the defence headquarters at Cockerill, back in the capital city. There he was overpowered and bundled into a helicopter and flown to Guinea, just as had happened to Joseph Momoh four years earlier. Strasser's successor, the leader of this second coup, was Julius Maada Bio. The new leader was still only in his early thirties. When I asked Strasser why his reign ended as it did, he refused to accept there had been a coup. He claimed he had merely stepped down at the end of the ten years of military service for which he had signed up. That statement is fantastical, and must be discounted.

 
DEJECTED

Anything for a quiet life

The post-deposition period is perhaps the strangest in Strasser's unusual life, taking him from West Africa to Coventry in the West Midlands. When the international community had negotiated with the NPRC over the reintroduction of civilian rule, one of the incentives offered to members of the junta in return for relinquishing power was the opportunity to study in the west. And even though Strasser had eventually lost power by less graceful means, he was able to take up this chance. Warwick University's decision to consider admitting him was controversial. "When it became known who he was, there was a lot of disquiet in the law school and the university," recalls Roger Leng, an expert in criminal law at Warwick who later taught Strasser. There was a fierce internal row over whether he should be allowed to enter as a student, despite assurances from reputable sources to the university that Strasser was not responsible for human rights violations. Eventually he was accepted and took a foundation course to compensate for his lack of formal qualifications. The intention was that he would then progress to a law degree. Leng was surprised when he met Strasser for the first time. "He was quiet. I don't think really he was equipped to study at this level," he said. "I'd expected a swaggering, arrogant guy and he was quite the opposite." Strasser's second life as a civilian in England did not go well. His unwanted celebrity was a problem. He took up residence in an anonymous red-brick terraced house at 47 Poplar Road in suburban Earlsdon in Coventry, the city nearest the university, but the local and national press began to take an interest in him. He claims, too, that his stipend was inadequate. It even turned out that among Strasser's fellow students in 1996 was a niece of one of the victims of the extrajudicial killings of December 1992. According to him, the woman spoke against him on television and lobbied against him. The archives of the Boar, Warwick University's student newspaper, mention inquiries launched into his presence. "The university's belief that Strasser's studies will contribute to the democratisation process has been attacked by those who consider that an individual with such a brutal background should not be afforded acceptance within wider society," the Boar reported in October 1996. Later he had an unsuccessful affair with a supermarket checkout girl. "She knew who I was, because the papers in Coventry had things about me," Strasser said. "She knew I was a former dictator." Warwick University closed its file on Strasser in January 1998. A spokesman for the university, Peter Dunn, believes he left campus before then. "My recollection was that he wrote to the university staff saying that he was leaving," Dunn said. "One of his concerns was that he was fed up with his history in Sierra Leone being constantly brought up." Strasser corroborated that account. "I saw front-page articles saying 'former dictator' and 'human rights violations'," he said. "It was impossible." After dropping out of Warwick he moved to London, but there he found no peace. Albert Mahoi, a Sierra Leonean who goes by the nickname of Carlos, was running a business in south-east London that offered cosmetics, money transfers and international calls when he met Strasser. Mahoi recalled encountering him at a nightclub in Camberwell; another Sierra Leonean exile was abusing him and Mahoi felt he had to intervene. “I said: 'Don't do that – he was our president,'" Mahoi told me. "I talked to Strasser, I told him to calm down." He bought the former head of state a bottle of Courvoisier. "He was stressed up; you know when someone loses everything. There was no respect for him." With the Guardian newspaper questioning why a one-time West African strongman was living in London, Strasser left the country. The Home Office would not comment on whether his visa had been revoked. In December 2000, he went briefly to the Gambia and then back to Sierra Leone. And he is still there.


Moving with the times

The civil war finally ended in 2002 after a Blair-led British military intervention stiffened a floundering UN peacekeeping mission. The peace has held, and in November the country will hold its third multiparty election since the war's end. Large iron-ore mining projects are coming on line, and the IMF predicts massive GDP growth of 51.4 per cent this year. Yet Sierra Leone remains impoverished; it ranks 180th (out of 187 countries) in the UN's Human Development Index and per-capita GDP stands at just $325 a year. The country also has a large pool of marginalised ex-combatants and other young men who continue to pose a threat to stability. Despite enormous expenditure of foreign aid, corruption remains endemic and progress on infrastructure frustratingly slow. Desmond Luke is a former chief justice who trained at both Cambridge and Oxford. "One of my biggest sadnesses is when I travel out of Sierra Leone and I come back," he told me recently at his house in Freetown. "The only change one really does see is it seems to get dirtier." Some of the figures from the war years are still in politics, too. Maada Bio, who deposed Strasser and was briefly head of state, is now the candidate for the main opposition party in the November presidential election. Strasser lives quietly with his mother, Beatrice, in the house he built at Grafton, east of Freetown. The once-elegant white villa is run-down and the walls are stained. Across the potholed road stand the burnt-out ruins of another house that Strasser had built while in office, but which was bombed by Nigerian fighter jets during the civil war. He receives a government pension of 200,000 leones (£30) a month. That is a recent improvement on the 64,000 leones (£9.40) he used to get. He is desperately poor and does not even have a mobile phone to hand as he sits by the roadside in the afternoons. "It's a new set of circumstances and I've got to accept them," he said of his life with his mother. I asked Sheka Tarawalie, Sierra Leone's deputy minister of information, why the former leader receives such meagre support. "You know, Strasser was not an elected head of state," Tarawalie said. "That is one of the problems. He came in as a military man."

"Bad dictators"

One evening last summer, at the start of the rainy season, I arranged to meet Strasser for a final dinner. I went to see him with a friend and a British researcher resident in Freetown. We drove over the mountain road and picked Strasser up from his house. He sat in the front seat of my Land Rover, wearing trainers and cut-off jeans. At his suggestion, we went to eat at a Safecon petrol station on the main road upcountry. There we sat at a table outside in the evening light. It did not go well. He was drunk at the start of the meal and became agitated. When I raised his time at Warwick, he raged at meI was his assassin, he said. I was the president of America. He became increasingly unstable and threatened to have us arrested, only to change his tone. "I'm not going to arrest you," he shouted. "Otherwise you'll say I'm Idi Amin or another bad dictator like Colonel Gaddafi." Then he wrote this, in block capitals, in my notebook: "Europe still continues to underdevelop Africa. Africa's raw materials are Europe's tool to keep black Africa under so that western Europe continues to improve. Answer, 3,500 words." There was something of Lear in Strasser that evening, the broken king raging at the injustices of the world. I met him again several times after that and he was always sober and lucid. Yet that night I had seen a different Valentine Strasser and begun to understand something of the burdens he carried. As we drove back over the hills in the tropical dark, it was clear to me what a terrible misfortune it was for him to have been crowned by accident.
James Appleton contributed additional reporting from Warwick University
AT ROAD SIDE PALMWINE BAR



1 comment from readers

Kadija xxxxx 02 February 2012 at 22:53

In reference to your article "THE VAGOBOND KING" BY SIMON AKAM.. i am sorry to say that this man had an unfortunate encounter with his destiny... but i believe it is not the end of his life... it is an absolute shame that Sierra Leonean are ignoring someone who was once a Head of State.... no matter what happened the name Strasser will forever be in the history of Sierra Leone.. It does not matter how he was elected, it was destined by God.. If we read the story of Job we saw exactly what happen to him, and how God use satan to destroy him and later brought back total restoration with double portion of everything he lost... I believe this man need to be treated with dignity as how other country threats their ex president or head of state.... in the article it stated that he was not elected, that's is true but he was known world wide as the Head of State of Sierra Leone..that alone should make think that this man should be treated with compassion instead of letting him be a fool around town, rwith every one watching him destroy his life...journalist from outside interviewing him.... He was not the only culprit in his rigime,there were others also, who are very successful, something his wrong... where are they? why are they not helping? Why is the government not helping...the country that I was born and raised are full of loving, caring, compassionate, helpful and forgiving people.. we are open minded, like strangers.. why can't we stand and help this man...Our God is the only one that can judge, and he is the one that can render punishment... How long will you see your fellow brother suffer... Let us remember that God is able to turn things around for this man because he is our Yaweh( our God of deliverance and salvation... he lifted one and putteth another down... Go out the lord is before, help him and you will what the Lord will do for You.... This is written out of compassion.


Day of take over-



NOTE: All coloured photos added by me. Black & white photo in originnal article by Simon Akam . My thanks to Ade Daramy for bringing this article to my attention and Simon Akam for writing it

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UPDATE FROM

   THURSDAY 16/02/2012

THANKS TO  ALUSINE  A SESAY FACEBOOK POST ON  http://www.facebook.com/alusinesesay






SIERRA LEONE: Ex-Sierra Leone president stripped of all power trappings.
"According to Sierra Leone’s minister of Information Ibrahim Ben Kargbo, various regimes had failed to give him support.
Speaking to the Africa Review on phone from Freetown, Mr Kargbo said that the current government of President Ernest Bai Koroma was aware of Mr Strasser's situation and was working to assist him.
“President... Koroma asked me to contact Mr Strasser and after we got in touch with him, the President met him two weeks ago and they discussed modalities on how his situation can be addressed,” he said."
CLICK LINK-


http://www.africareview.com/Special+Reports/Former+president+thrown+to+wolves/-/979182/1328066/-/14efm49/-/




UPDATE FROM PATRIOTIC VANGUARD
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THE 1992 NPRC COUP - A Review 



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On April 29, 1992, Valentine Strasser, a 25 years old soldier, took the reins of Sierra Leone, a small diamond-rich country in West Africa, overseeing the lives of over 4 million people. His rise to power was a mix of fate, chance, and hopeful yet bizarre choices by both patriots and opportunists who felt he could easily be a vessel for their puppetic control. Unfortunately, things took a turn for the worse for Strasser, and a single poor decision continues to haunt him to this day.

He went from being the commander-in-chief and head of state of Sierra Leone, embodying power and affluence, to a deposed, destitute, wretched, and homeless individual, castigated and despised worldwide, except by his mother, who painstakingly cares for him whenever he returns from begging for dry gin in the neighborhood. The aftermath of his downfall was further complicated by the amputation of his leg in 2019. The question remains, how did he end up here? 

The events that unfolded after he seized power were more dramatic than strategic. But what went wrong? 

This is the story of Valentine Esegragbo Melvin Strasser, the youngest African head of state ever, who plummeted from power to become a destitute beggar.

His ascension to power inspired the youth and the young at heart, who believed that a youth had finally emerged to champion their cause. Before, the youth was the Cinderella in the political, economic, and social machinery of the government. However, Strasser was neither trained nor groomed to steer the complex machinery and routine of government. Numerous folk were left petrified, some gasping for breath or biting their nails. His youthfulness as naivety multiplied his woes as well as the hatred of his endless foes. Again Strasser was chosen not necesarily because of his leadership or military expertise, but simply because he was one of the few who had completed secondary school, and his English was good enough to read the junta's declaration on the radio. As captain, he held a higher rank than his co-conspirators, and some argued that Strasser was chosen because those around him felt he could be easily manipulated.

Once in power, he vigorously pursued the rebel war against rebel leader Foday Sankoh as one of his top priorities. But he was able to bag little success. He broke the deadlock by hiring the mercenary firm Executive Outcomes to supplement the army: since most of them had defected to beef up the Revolutionary United Forces, the rebel army. Strasser’s government was highly welcomed and popular, with people even snapping up calendars decorated with Strasser as their redeemer. In no time, the redeemer introduced reforms by endorsing a two-year transition to democracy. The soldiers launched a cleanup campaign to rid the streets of garbage, and the economy began to improve, with gas and electricity becoming available again. Ambulances, which had all but disappeared from Freetown, were imported and put back to use. Freetown was painted with inspirational slogans and images of national heroes. Street crime was reduced, and inflation was lowered from 115% annually to less than 15%. The perpetually adversed Sierra Leoneans were pregnant with hope, believing that Strasser was the expected Messiah, who would usher the chlorophyll of change and champion the redemption of the people of Sierra Leone. Down the road their dreams would be prematurely shattered.

Strasser seemed to be in control and proved his critics wrong who had judged him based on his age. However, after a brief period, the euphoria faded. Eight months into his presidency, Strasser made the worst blunder that would haunt him long after he left power. He executed 29 innocent civilians by firing squad on a beach outside Freetown for a foiled attempted coup in December 1992. Some of the men involved in the plotting were even in prison at the time. Realizing his mistake, Strasser apologized and declared a nationwide period of mourning. He also promoted himself and his colleagues in the army ranks, which sowed confusion and resentment within the military. This meant that junior officers were suddenly taking orders from those who had previously been their peers.


In a coup led by his deputy, Brigadier General Julius Maada Bio, along with Colonel Tom Nyuma and Captain Komba Mondeh, Stresser was kicked out. Bio quickly rose as the leader of the coup, with the support of Nyuma and Mondeh and took over as Head of State of Sierra Leone.

Although Bio was only 30 at the time and harbored ambitions of becoming president, he allowed the election campaign to proceed. In March 1996, Ahmed Tejan Kabbah, a 64-year-old politician, was elected president.


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EXECUTIVE OUTCOMES



Monday, 13 February 2012

"ET TU BRUTE? JULIUS (Maada Bio) CEASER -LAST WORDS?

"ET TU BRUTE?
JULIUS MAADA BIO- CRIES IN JULIUS CEASER'S LAST WORDS AS HIS COUP MAKING PARTNER TOM NYUMA DUMPS HIM, AND ACKOWLEDGES PRESIDENT KOROMA'S POSITIVE LEADERSHIP.

First Strasser, Now Nyuma sees reality and follows the path of National Truth. Other SLPP Chiefs also begining to see Bio as a BURDEN and backs away from him following his recent intimidating Lies.   


TOM NYUMA TURNS RED AND JOINS THE APC


“Looking at developments all over the country it is easy to infer the President has a good initiative; all patriots must support it,” Mr.Tom Nyuma's words on day of defection from SLPP
http://news.sl/drwebsite/publish/article_200519851.shtml

     http://news.sl/drwebsite/publish/article_200519895.shtml



http://news.sl/drwebsite/publish/article_200519904.shtml


UPDATE BY DR. SYLVIA BLYDEN - 13- FEBRUARY 2012





Tom Nyuma has confirmed that he has given up on his previous ambition of running for a second term as Kailahun District Council Chairman under the SLPP. He announces he is quitting politics for good and will be going into private business after November 2012. He has also withdrawn his previous open support for Julius M...aada Bio and has lately been seen by my correspondents as he earnestly pushes for President Ernest Koroma's development strides to be given a second chance. Meanwhile, the APC Campaign Team is foraging into Kailahun - hungry for some green supportive food AND THEY ARE BEING SUCCESSFUL IN QUITE A FEW PLACES. Some few surprises are coming up in the Kailahun district. At least four(4) of the current sitting Paramount Chiefs in Kailahun have made it clear to me this weekend that they can not support Julius Maada Bio for the presidency of the country. Three of them told me that his recent press release has now totally convinced them he is dangerous for this country whilst the 4th one says he has always been APC even before 2007 elections.... WATCH THIS SPACE...

http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fnews.sl%2Fdrwebsite%2Fpublish%2Farticle_200519684.shtml&h=CAQH6KnoQ



MORE  UPDATE BY DR. SYLVIA BLYDEN - 13- FEBRUARY 2012





This is getting comical just as I told you guys it will get to be. The SLPP is yet to provide a scrap of evidence for their serious allegations in the Bio release. But guess what they did this morning in their newspapers? Instead of publishing the evidence, they published an old 2007 letter from Ernest Bai Koroma to the former American Ambassador in which Koroma, as opposition leader, complains a ...litany of complaints about the SLPP planning to use ex-combatants to disrupt the September 2007 run-off elections. Back then, Koroma cited Maada Bio, Tom Nyuma and John Benjamin as being involved. Well, the SLPP which is still to provide us the evidence of their outlandish claims, now allege that since Ernest Koroma made similar claims in 2007, it means Maada Bio can also make the same claims and get away with it. They praise former Police IG Acha Kamara for ignoring Koroma's letter back then and lambast current Police IG Francis Munu for inviting Maada Bio to clear the air over supposedly similar claims. However, the fault in the 'logic' is that Koroma's claims were not overtly inciting a tribal and regional call to arms and MOST IMPORTANTLY, as Jarrah Kawusu-Konte of State House just informed me on the phone, "Ernest Koroma was saying the truth back in 2007 whilst in 2012, Maada Bio is lying". According to Jarrah, "if the President had not been saying the truth about the SLPP back then, you can be sure the SLPP would have come out swinging against that letter but even though the letter was well publicised in 2007, the SLPP did not say anything to deny the allegations. This shows you the President was saying the truth about the SLPP's plans". And Jarrah also had a word or two for the "red herring gimmick" which he says "still does not provide answers to the questions the whole of Sierra Leone is asking which is, Where is the evidence to support Maada Bio's serious allegations he has requested to be sent to the U.N. Security Council and the ICC?"
An opinion article I published in today's Awareness Times can be read at the link below



http://news.sl/drwebsite/publish/article_200519684.shtml


BUT THE APC MUST BEWERE OF THOSE WHO BRING "TROJAN GIFTS"!!!

"Lt. Col Tom Nyuma who was recently deported by the Homeland Security and Naturalization Services has been implicated in an assassination attempt on the life of the APC Presidential flabearer in the city of Bo........".

" Tom Nyuma was deported as a result of domestic violence, a very serious offence in the United States of America. He was employed as a security officer in Texas and later relocated to Ohio until his deportation to Sierra Leone. It was as a result of his violent behaviour that led to the action taken by the American government coupled with his unpalatable Human Rights record......" [----Standard Times------].. CLICK LINK


http://www.standardtimespress.org/cgi-bin/artman/publish/article_1697.shtml

BUT THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME THAT TOM NYUMA IS LEANING TOWARDS PRESIDENT KOROMA. HE CLEARLY EMBRACES THE FACT THE THERE ARE SUCCESSES IN THE PRESIDENT'S FIRST TERM OF OFFICE AND MUST BE ALLOWED ANOTHER TERM AT LEAST - SO NYUMA  DUMPS BIO IF NOT FOR ANYTHING ELSE BUT HAS FINALLY REALISED THAT THE INTEREST OF THE COUNTRY AND THE PEOPLE MUST COME FIRST--

  CLICK  LINKS BELOW AND READ ON......

http://www.cocorioko.net/?p=4454



http://www.expotimesonline.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=126:the-tom-nyuma-scare&catid=63:hi-tech&Itemid=82





SUNDAY 12/02/2012---- UPDATE  PER SYLVIA BLYDE   FACE BOOK POST

Following my status update on this issue, I can now affirm that not only is Tom Nyuma not running under the SLPP ticket but to help increase the chances of APC in Kailahun, Tom Nyuma is presently considering to run as an independent candidate and SPLIT the SLPP votes in Kailahun for the position of Kailahun Local Government Chairman... PK, NA LIE AR DEY LIE BACK EHN? Watch this space brother!
WE SHALL KEEP AN EYE ON THIS  DEVELOPMENT

Friday, 10 February 2012

SIERRA LEONE PLENTY PROBLEM (SLPP) GROUP'S ACTIONS, NOW LEADS TO "DEN MORE CRAZZY"

SLPP Man (Baboon) Caught Impersonating the Hard Working Monkey

apcworldwidenews.com/?p=235

apcworldwidenews.com  ;   In Foday Marris  Post
SLPP Baboon Caught Impersonating the Hard Working Monkey.

For over four years now, the government of president Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma has been telling Sierra Leoneans that Sierra Leone is a construction zone. Under the president’s agenda for change massive construction IS going on all over the country. The evidence of hard-work can be seen all around the 12 districts of Sierra Leone. However, it seems as if some Sierra Leone Problem People are determined to take the country back to the old days of political violens, underdevelopment and retrogression.
As if the president’s call fell on deaf ears, a former resident of New Jersey, USA decided to go to Sierra Leone and disturb the work in progress. The said individual traveled from the United States to Burkina Faso, then traveled by road through Liberia, into Kailahun where he was received by senior members of Sierra Leone’s most Senior Problem People (SPP). Upon his arrival, KJM as he was nicknamed was informed of the operation codenamed PPSLD (Problem People for Sierra Leone Destruction).
When he was ready to begin his clandestine mission, KJM disguised himself as a monkey by dipping himself into raw acid to get rid of his hair. His main objective as prescribed by Senior Problem People was so that he could look more like a monkey than a baboon. He wanted to blend in with the working monkeys. Unfortunately, for him he was identified by vigilant voters who are determined not to allow any Problem Person to disturb the peace, tranquility, progress and development of Sierra Leone.
Through another Sierra Leone Problem Person, KJM filed the following falls report regarding voter registration at Constituency 111.
“This morning, February 10, 2012, while voters were peacefully standing in line trying to register, the notorious Lansana Fadika pulled up in a few trucks loaded with thugs and escorted by Siarra Leone Police and tried to force his way ahead of the people already in line in order for him and his Thugs to register ahead them. When objections were raised by the people in line against Fadika’s brazen attempt to register ahead of the people already there, he and his thugs started harassing, intimidating, threatening and verbally assaulting the people.






Fortunately one of our most powerful and fearless supporters, Mr. Kathos J. Mattai was already in line waiting to get his registration form. He also complained about the brazen audacity of Fadika and his men, and then they threatened “to deal with him” for voicing his objection. As the thugs tried to pounce on him, he warned them of their misbehavior and breach of peace and even threatened to alert the American Embassy since he is also an American citizen. That was the only element of restraint that stopped the thugs from physically assaulting him.
Some of the complaints by the people in line was that Fadika did not even belong in Constituency 111 and so he should not be registering there at all. STAY TUNED, MORE NEWS TO FOLLOW ON THIS VOTER REGISTRATION INTIMIDATION BY FADIKA IN CONSTITUENCY 111.”
This false report comes after Flag-Bearer Baboon, Murder Bio, raised a false alarm when he issued a press release that said; “It has come to the attention of the Sierra Leone Problem People (SLPP), that the ruling Action Progress and Commitmern people, (APC) has embarked on transporting ex-combatants from different parts of the country to register in towns in the South and the Eastern Provinces, the strongholds of the Opposition SLPP. Ex-combatants armed with weapons and other offensive instruments have already been ferried to Moyamba, Bo, Kenema, Pujehun, Kailahun and Zimmi. In addition, foreign nationals and ex-combatants from neighbouring countries are also being transported by Sierra Leone’s Ambassadors accredited to those countries for the purpose of swelling APC votes in the elections.”
The Sierra Leone Problem People, whohave caused most of the Sierra Leone Peoples Problems will not succeed in their political strategy of violence. This is why KJM’s moves were tracked by government and he has been finally caught. The people of Sierra Leone are on the look out for two more suspects they believe are Alpha Saidu Bangura and Jeffrey Macarthy, two men who paralyze their opponents with profanities Sierra Leonans refer to as “mammy cuss.” Both men have a striking resemblance with KJM. If you see them, please do not confront them because they are armed with the worst kind of profanities. Contact the nearest law enforcement agency for their arrest.
Photo: Courtesy Mirror News
WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-Fb0XtATFc

Monday, 30 January 2012

A TWIST IN THE TAIL OF THE S L P P-(Maada Bio- THE LIAR)

                                       
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Its Getting Worse by the DAy- BIO may be indicted for inciting violence after Bleeping another LIE

click link
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fapcworldwidenews.com%2F%3Fp%3D211&h=uAQGAvzGqAQHeb9LBkgK5R1bk3gLP6pO9CnHNEkVrGPz_cQ

Sierra Leone’s Ruling Party May Take Legal Action Against Main Opposition Candidate, Julius Maada Bio


Read Dr. Sylvia Byyden's update........(by kind permission)










Lansana Fadika, Abdul Lamin (aka AMERIKIN) and Brima Lewally have just finished their testimony against Aziz Carew and Abdul Quee in front of Hon. Justice Browne-Marke. They have been cross-examined by the defence team led by Lawyer Anthony Brewa. The matter was prosecuted by Director of Public Prosecutions Sulaiman Bah and the Attorney-General Frank Kargbo. The accused were again denied bail and ...sent back on remand. In the wake of the national shock at the MAMMY CUSS last week Friday, the Police AIG Operations, Al Shek Kamara had been over television on Tuesday morning to warn political party supporters to refrain from unruly conduct within the Law Courts or they would feel the full weight of the law on them. This morning, as early as 7am, heavily armed police officers were deployed inside and around the Law Courts yard also out on Siaka Stevens Street. There was absolutely no mammy cuss today. SLPP supporters quietly left the premises at the end of the proceedings. Tomorrow, the kidnap case involving SLPP Councillor comes up. The mayor's corruption case was also on today and that one has been adjourned to 13th February based on a plea from Defence Lawyer Yada Williams for sufficient time to study documents tendered by ACC investigator Maada Konneh.
ON A DIFFERENT BUT HIGHLY TOPICAL NOTE, THE SLPP AND JULIUS MAADA BIO ARE YET TO SHOW ONE SCRAP OF EVIDENCE TO BACK UP THE SERIOUS ALLEGATIONS CONTAINED IN BIO'S RECENT RELEASE AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT AND WHICH BIO HAD ASKED OUTGONE SCHULENBURG TO FORMALLY SEND TO THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL. IT IS BELIEVED THAT IS SCHULENBURG'S LAST DEED HE PERFORMED ON BEHALF OF THE SLPP, BEFORE SCHULENBURG ANGRILY STORMED OUT OF SIERRA LEONE ON MONDAY. POLICE BOSS FRANCIS MUNU HAS ASSURED THE NATION ON TV THIS MORNING THAT HE HAS COMMENCED A ROBUST INVESTIGATION INTO THE ALLEGATIONS. HE CONFIRMS THAT PRESIDENT KOROMA HAS ASKED HIM TO INVESTIGATE & INTERROGATE BOTH THE DEFENCE MINISTER AND THE INTERNAL AFFAIRS MINISTER.


MY COMMENTS:
1)

... It seems that the Police are now awake. I woluld personally want to see a move from the Judiciary- Chief Justice and the Bar Association - for the breach of protocol and respect for the Courts by those SLPP Lawyers who showed disrespect and lack of order -that willfully denegrated the level of dignity for the Judiciary. The days indeed are no more when a Judge in the likes of Justice During would have ask Suliaman Banja -Tejansi and others wearing the SLPP badges to court to be sent out for not being 'apropriately dressed': refusal to move out would have led to a charge of contempt of court and sent tp Pdemba Road Prison. I cannot see even SLPP Jurist of those years tolarating such idiosincrcies- certainly not Justices of the Peace such as Chief (Hon) Tom KAMANDA -BONGAY (JP) in the BO Court. It smacks of total lack of morality on the part of the SLPP lawyers and I see their actions as encouragement to break the law- the Public Law to keep the Peace. SHAME ON THEM.

2)
As  regards Maada Bio's platitudes, it draws my memory to the days of Pa Bankole Bright when he made inflmatory statements in 1955 that caused a whole lot of riotous situations. He was charged for INCITEMENTS: if the investigations going on prove to show that  those claims made by Maada Bio were false, I think the Police must take serious action to uphold the law and avoid such incitements to go on, leading to more violence. There must be a limit to the level of tolerance in these matters.


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I find this article fro FREETOWN EXPRESS (November 2011) very amusing and want to share it with those who follow this blog. This is another TWIST in the tail for the SIERRA LEONE PLENTY PROBLEM (SLPP) group.
Please click on the Link and at list- smile (if you cant laugh)


http://www.freetownexpress.com/archives/1616


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And This was posted to my Face book page. Its Stunning.

CLICK BELOW LINK

http://www.newstimeafrica.com/archives/tag/julius-maada-bio

Newstime Africa
A mass murderer’s quest to become president – Julius Maada Bio should be put on trial for crimes against the people of Sierra LeoneSome people do have the audacity to challenge the resolve of a nation. Julius Maada Bio must believe deep within himself that the Sierra Leonean people are daft and can be taken for granted. This daring former junior army officer, who connived with others to overthrow a legitimate and democratically elected government, is seriously nursing [...]




 And -- THIS- Thanks to COCORIOKO- Now, even STRASSER, added a nail to Bio's Cof**** (since last September- ( SLPP DID NOT LISTEN)

 Clikk Link
http://www.cocorioko.net/?p=16765


Ex-NPRC Junta leader Valentine Strasser exposes Maada Bio as a liar, participant in Bambay’s murder and a coward

Filed under: Breaking News,Diaspora,Headlines |

EX-CAPT.STRASSER : GIVES MAADA BIO A MOUTHWASH FOR HIS COWARDICE
For Julius Maada Bio, the hinges are coming off so fast that if he has moral conscience, he would give up his “Pa O Pa ” (At all costs ) blind determination to aspire for the Presidency. Not only are key members of the opposition Sierra Leone People’s Party ( SLPP ) resigning because of the unwise decision to make him Presidential flagbearer of the party , but even his colleagues in the military junta have started expressing their revulsion for a man whose only lovers are the fanatics in the SLPP still living in denial that a terrible choice was made and who, like Bio, are depending on violence to change the political leadership in Sierra Leone (A goal they will achieve only over the dead bodies of true patriots of the land ) . From Freetown , the TORCHLIGHT newspaper reports :
Maada Bio

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What was the SLPP learership thinking when the chose excess baggagr carrier-MAADA BIO -  as Presidetial candidate?
 
Check out this link

Friday, 27 January 2012

LEADERSHIP IS NOT WAR-- 2

MAADA BIO IS TALKING ABSOLUTE BUNKOMS -(NONSENSE). LET ME REMIND BIO THAT "NO AMNESTY OR (FLIMSY ARRANGEMENTS FOR THAT MATTER)  CAN STAND IN THE WAY OF INVESTIGATING CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY".
LIBERTY, FREEDOM & JUSTICE   (FOR ALL)

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MAADA BIO IS TALKING ABSOLUTE 'BUNKOMS'-(NONSENSE). LET ME REMIND BIO THAT "NO AMNESTY OR (FLIMSY ARRANGEMENTS FOR THAT MATTER) CAN STAND IN THE WAY OF INVESTIGATING CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY."
MAADA BIO WAS PART OF A CONSPIRATORIAL GROUP, WHO HAD INITIALLY COMMITTED A CRIME OF TREASON BY OVERTHROWING A LEGITIMATE AND LIVE EFFECTIVE GOVERNMENT THROUGH AN AGREEMENT TO DO SO, AND LATER, AS PART OF THE GROUP OF PLANNERS, WHILST STAYING WITHIN THE INNER CIRCLE AS THE THIRD IN COMMAND, WILFULLY MURDERED 29 INNOCENT PEOPLE. 

TALKING ABOUT FINDINGS OF A COMMISSION THAT ABSOLVED HIM IS A SIMPLE JUVENILE THOUGHT BECAUSE THAT COMMISSION CANNOT AND DOES NOT HAVE THE POWER TO ABSOLVE OR GRANT ANY AMNESTY FOR THE CRIMES OF THAT GROUP OF WICKED YOUNG MEN WHO AUTHORISED, STOOD BY, HELD BACK INFORMATION, WHICH COULD HAVE STOPPED THE GRUESOME OF PAINFUL DEATH OF THOSE INNOCENT PEOPLE.

HE WANTS TO BE A PRESIDENT? THEN, HE MUST TURN HIS ATTENTION TO THE LAWS RELATING TO CONSPIRACY. HE DOES NOT HAVE TO HAVE BEEN A HEAD OF STATE TO BE RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS PART AS A CONSPIRATOR. BY HIS, PRESENCE OR SILENCE, AND MEAR NEGLECT OF HIS RESPONSIBILITY AS A MEMBER OF A GROUP OF LEADERS WHO HAD TAKEN POWER (ILLEGALLY THOUGH), AND THE RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT THE CITIZENRY, MAADA BIO IS AS GUILTY AS HELL FOR THE DEATH OF THOSE 29 PEOPLE, AND I COULD NOT WAIT FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW WHEELS TO START GRINDING AND THE SOONER HE IS ARRESTED AND CHARGED, THE BETTER FOR SIERRA LEONE.  LUNTA! 
·  ·
  Click LINK to hear BIO denying responsibility

 



FODAY MORRIS SAYS-- (IN  FACE BOOK POST..).
A LIAR COULD NOT KEEP A STRAIGHT FACE. 

 
Note how the interviewer approached the suspect from the side. That was a deliberate move to prevent BIO from looking straight into the camera. I will share this video with some of my police and FBI friends for analysis and report to you later.


  FACELESS PAUL KARGBO Says.......
    • Paul Kargbo   - Israel don't let your heatred for Bio cloud your sense of reasoning. Your so called legitimate lost its ligimacy the moment it lost focus of how it can protect its citizens, and manage the affairs of state. The government of which Bio was part of, was widely and generally accepted by the people of Sierra Leone and the international community at that time. So please think wisely and reasonably.




    • Paul. That deceptive popularity - which was not so universal as you think - does not in any way exonerate him (or any of the group) from the crimes they committed: and he was fully implicated in the wicked enterprise. Let me remind you (and I have pointed this before) even the Amnesty at Yamoussoukro in Ivory Coast , cooked up by Ecowas ( and Dr. Abbass Bundu knows this- being a one time Secretary General of that body) was NOT accepted by the United Nations. You claim the Junta was "popular" and accepted by the International Community"? Why then did the then Secretary General of the UN, Kofi Anan, expressed his objection and the August body refused to recognise or endorse the Yamoussoukro Amnesty?. I don't "hate" him or any one. I speak the truth and call for justice for the innocent victims. Examine your conscience and reflect, then you will see the "woods for the trees".
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 O! PAUL;  BY THE WAY, IF YOU ARE READING STILL, PLEASE TAKE NOTE OF THIS NEW PIECE WHICH HAS JUST COME OUT. PLEASE READ IT.   COINCIDENCE? -

TITLE" War crimes immunity for ex-leaders under fire"

CLICK THE LINK.... (or cut & paste)

  http://www.freemalaysiakini.com/?p=13474


Maada and his friends must take a close look at this piece and NOTE THE FOLLOWING BITS:                                   





(Jose Luis Diaz, Head of the Amnesty International office at the United Nations)

 “……measures providing immunity from prosecution for political or military leaders, who may be responsible for human rights violations, war crimes and/or crimes against humanity, are not only a slap in the face of the victims, but they also eat away at the still fragile gains made to consolidate international justice and fight impunity.”

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(Navi Pillay  -UN High Commissioner for Human Rights)

“Amnesties are not permissible…”     “International law and the UN policy are clear on the matter, she said, pointing out that amnesties are not permissible if they prevent the prosecution of individuals who may be criminally responsible for international crimes including war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and gross violations of human rights”.

“… a victim-centred approach to justice is essential to restore stability to a society emerging from a period of violent conflict…Victims have the right to justice, to the truth, to remedy and reparation. These are rights that are well-established internationally.”

“…“Every individual who commits a crime is accountable and should not be allowed to escape justice,”

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(Richard Falk, professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University & former UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories.)

“…the International Criminal Court (ICC) should pursue those leaders in the Middle East and Africa for whom sufficient evidence exists of their responsibility for crimes against humanity and other international crimes,”

[BUT…for PEACE SAKE ?] Richard Falk also said…

“…a domestic amnesty law may be justified to obtain “societal peace” in the aftermath of a peaceful transition from dictatorship, and to avoid the dangers of chaos and civil strife.” 
[But things got worse in Sierra Leone for another six years with thousands of people killed and millions and millions of Leones /pounds/dollars property valves destroyed. This could have been avoided if these coup plotters and power hungry 'soja boys' had not neglected their duties, and kept to the job they were supposed to be doing - i.e. fighting the REBELS in 1991/2 instead of greedily wanting to rule Sierra Leone.]

  Richard Falk added,   “... the argument is different on an international level where there is no convincing rationale for respecting efforts to opt out of accountability for international crimes,”
 [Bio cannot escape. He compounded the situation by his  PALACE COUP on his 'BOSSMAN' STRASSER- at a time when the Junta was in negotiations to hand back power to Civilians an quit Martial Law; he saw his chance, plotted yet again, untrustworthly, increasing his criminal responsibility and hoping to hold on to power: but the pressures of the people and the international community, forced him to bow out (BAWOJE!) after only  one month and 13 days in charge of a country in panic (what a head of state?); then, hand over to his SLPP Leader - Ahmed Tejan KABBAH). And now, tries to HIDE under the banner of Flag bearer for President, thinking foolishly, that he may not be held accountable for his past crimes.???. . .DAI MAN NOR DE SLIP!!
 Maada bio and his cronnies must note that   ”…the court [ICC] can only take up cases in countries that are parties to the Rome Statute which created the ICC and so accept the court’s jurisdiction.”    [Note: Sierra Leone is a party to that Statute.]   
 [Even for States which are not signatories to the Rome Statute]
“…….the Security Council has the power to ask the [ICC] court’s prosecutor to take up situations in states that have not accepted the court’s jurisdiction.”   
 [There is no hiding place for such criminal killers & untrustworthy, tresonable, multiple plotting coup makers]
                                           OVER TO YOU - 'SIR' !!
                                                          Maada Bio March 1996
              Handing over illegitimate power to his then SLPP Leader, Ahmed Tejan Kabbah
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As for the distinction between   “amnesty” and “immunity”, Luis Diaz said, “… the former is granted after the fact (after persons have been convicted, for example), while the latter is tied to a person’s position, usually official.”

 [This opinion does not really reflect the situation in Sierra Leone – None of the perpetrators of the crimes of 29 December 1992-the brutal murder of 29 innocent victims-  have been convicted  nor investigated. Their position surely played a part and some them 9like Maada Bio, Nyuma, Strasser , SAJ Musa) -  ‘profited’ by being awarded scholarships to study abroad- in UK and USA.


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                     And a contributor has added his voice..
       Every coup maker must  READ,LISTEN & LEARN!!

Quote
It is a good thing in the todays politics; the era of military coups are being remembered with the right attitudes prosecutions and show of disapprovals. In Africa we are handicapped by the fear of their over lord powers that is still lurking. We hear from time to time how they want to come into mainstream politics by the back door. I feel once a coupist should never be allowed to enter the political arena.
Disgracefully in the tiny west African country of Sierra Leone we have a former junta leader now selected as the leading candidate to face the incumbent president (civilian). The exjunta man is going around saying he was not part of decisions at the time whereas he became head of the regime and this line is being sold to the international press. he has had articles published in the UK Guardian newspaper justifying why he should be taken seriously.
If the UN is looking at the big countries they should look at this as a global emergency these chaps have to be faced down – a leopard cannot get rid of its spots. If the likes of them cloak themselves in respectable suits and come back metamorphorsised the other behind them will copy the blue prints. Soldiers take an oath to guard the territories of the country not a quick road to political office. Affrifa of Ghana famously said “we are soldiers we like to remain soldiers politics is not our ambition”
If you want to be a politician do not do it in khaki do it by the ballot box but if you come out of khaki with a doubtful record nothing will ever absolve you to justify running for office
.

                                                                                                                                                         Unquote