PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Sierra Leone
Geography
Area: 71,740 sq. km. (29,925 sq. mi.); slightly
smaller than South Carolina.
Cities: Capital--Freetown
(est. 786,900). Provincial
capitals--Southern Province, Bo; Eastern
Province, Kenema; Northern Province, Makeni.
Terrain: Mangrove swamps and beaches and mostly
shallow bays along the coast, wooded hills along
the immediate interior, and a mountainous
plateau in the interior.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Sierra Leonean(s).
Population (2007 est.): 6,144,562.
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 2.292%.
Ethnic groups: Temne 30%, Mende 30%, Krio 1%,
balance spread over 15 other tribal groups, and
a small Lebanese community.
Religions: (est.) Muslim 60%, Christian 30%,
animist 10%.
Languages: English, Krio, Temne, Mende, and 15
other indigenous languages.
Education (2002): Literacy--36%.
Health: Life
expectancy (2007
est.)--40.58 years. Infant
mortality rate--158.27 deaths/1,000 live
births. HIV
infection rate for adults,
ages 15-49 years (2002
est.)--1.4%.
Work force: Agriculture--52.5%; industry--30.6%; services--16.9%.
Government
Type: Republic with a democratically elected
president and unicameral parliament.
Independence: From Britain, April 27, 1961.
Constitution: October 1, 1991.
Political parties: The Political Parties
Registration Commission was formed in late 2005
to review registered parties to see whether they
still met registration requirements. Most of the
parties are inactive.Major parties--Sierra
Leone People’s Party (SLPP), All People's
Congress (APC), Peace and Liberation Party (PLP),
and People’s Movement for Democratic Change (PMDC).
Economy
GDP (2006 est.): $1.233 billion.
GDP growth rate (2006 est.): 6.8%.
Avg. annual inflation rate (2005 IMF est.):
8.5%.
Natural resources: Diamonds, rutile, bauxite,
gold, iron ore, ilmenorutile, platinum, chromite,
manganese, cassiterite, molybdenite, as well as
forests, abundant fresh water, and rich offshore
fishing grounds.
Agriculture: Products--coffee,
cocoa, ginger, palm kernels, cassava, bananas,
citrus, peanuts, cashews, plantains, rice, sweet
potatoes, vegetables. Land--30%
potentially arable, 8% cultivated.
Industry: Types--diamonds,
bauxite, and rutile mining; forestry; fishing;
beverages; cigarettes; flour; cement and other
construction goods; plastics; tourism.
Trade (Oct. 2004-Oct. 2005): Exports--$158
million: rutile, diamonds, bauxite, coffee,
cocoa, fishes. Major
destinations of exports--Belgium, Germany,
U.S., and India. Imports--$330
million: foodstuffs, machinery and equipment,
fuel and lubricants, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
building materials, light consumer goods, used
clothing, textiles. Main
origins of imports--Germany, Cote d’Ivoire
(fuel), U.K., U.S., China (manufactured goods).
PEOPLE
The indigenous population is made up of 18
ethnic groups. The Temne in the north and the
Mende in the South are the largest. About 60,000
are Krio, the descendants of freed slaves who
returned to Sierra Leone from Great Britain and
North America and from slave ships captured on
the high seas. In addition, about 4,000
Lebanese, 500 Indians, and 2,000 Europeans
reside in the country.
In the past, Sierra Leoneans were noted for
their educational achievements, trading
activity, entrepreneurial skills, and arts and
crafts work, particularly woodcarving. Many are
part of larger ethnic networks extending into
several countries, which link West African
states in the area. However, the level of
education and infrastructure has declined
sharply over the last 30 years.
HISTORY
European contacts with Sierra Leone were among
the first in West Africa. In 1652, the first
slaves in North America were brought from Sierra
Leone to the Sea Islands off the coast of the
southern United States. During the 1700s there
was a thriving trade bringing slaves from Sierra
Leone to the plantations of South Carolina and
Georgia where their rice-farming skills made
them particularly valuable.
In 1787 the British helped 400 freed slaves from
the United States, Nova Scotia, and Great
Britain return to Sierra Leone to settle in what
they called the "Province of Freedom." Disease
and hostility from the indigenous people nearly
eliminated the first group of returnees. This
settlement was joined by other groups of freed
slaves and soon became known as Freetown. In
1792, Freetown became one of Britain's first
colonies in West Africa.
Thousands of slaves were returned to or
liberated in Freetown. Most chose to remain in
Sierra Leone. These returned Africans--or Krio
as they came to be called--were from all areas
of Africa. Cut off from their homes and
traditions by the experience of slavery, they
assimilated some aspects of British styles of
life and built a flourishing trade on the West
African coast.
In the early 19th century, Freetown served as
the residence of the British governor who also
ruled the Gold Coast (now Ghana) and The Gambia
settlements. Sierra Leone served as the
educational center of British West Africa as
well. Fourah Bay College, established in 1827,
rapidly became a magnet for English-speaking
Africans on the West Coast. For more than a
century, it was the only European-style
university in western Sub-Saharan Africa.
The colonial history of Sierra Leone was not
placid. The indigenous people mounted several
unsuccessful revolts against British rule and
Krio domination. Most of the 20th century
history of the colony was peaceful, however, and
independence was achieved without violence. The
1951 constitution provided a framework for
decolonization. Local ministerial responsibility
was introduced in 1953, when Sir Milton Margai
was appointed Chief Minister. He became Prime
Minister after successful completion of
constitutional talks in London in 1960.
Independence came in April 1961, and Sierra
Leone opted for a parliamentary system within
the British Commonwealth. Sir Milton's Sierra
Leone Peoples Party (SLPP) led the country to
independence and the first general election
under universal adult franchise in May 1962.
Upon Sir Milton's death in 1964, his
half-brother, Sir Albert Margai, succeeded him
as Prime Minister.
In closely contested elections in March 1967,
the All Peoples Congress (APC) won a plurality
of the parliamentary seats. Accordingly, the
Governor General (representing the British
Monarch) declared Siaka Stevens--APC leader and
Mayor of Freetown--as the new Prime Minister.
Within a few hours, Stevens and Margai were
placed under house arrest by Brigadier David
Lansana, the Commander of the Republic of Sierra
Leone Military Forces (RSLMF), on grounds that
the determination of office should await the
election of the tribal representatives to the
house. Another group of officers soon staged
another coup, only to be later ousted in a third
coup, the "sergeants’ revolt," and Stevens at
last, in April 1968, assumed the office of Prime
Minister under the restored constitution. Siaka
Stevens remained as head of state until 1985.
Under his rule, in 1978, the constitution was
amended and all political parties, other than
the ruling APC, were banned.
In August 1985, the APC named military commander
Maj. Gen. Joseph Saidu Momoh, Steven's own
choice, as the party candidate. Momoh was
elected President in a one-party referendum on
October 1, 1985. In October 1991 Momoh had the
constitution amended once again, re-establishing
a multi-party system. Under Momoh, APC rule was
increasingly marked by abuses of power. Earlier
in 1991, in March, a small band of men who
called themselves the Revolutionary United Front
(RUF) under the leadership of a former-corporal,
Foday Sankoh, began to attack villages in
eastern Sierra Leone on the Liberian border.
Fighting continued in the ensuing months, with
the RUF gaining control of the diamond mines in
the Kono district and pushing the Sierra Leone
army back towards Freetown. On April 29, 1992, a
group of young military officers, led by Capt.
Valentine Strasser, launched a military coup,
which sent Momoh into exile in Guinea and
established the National Provisional Ruling
Council (NPRC) as the ruling authority in Sierra
Leone.
The NPRC proved to be nearly as ineffectual as
the Momoh government in repelling the RUF. More
and more of the country fell to RUF fighters, so
that by 1995 they held much of the countryside
and were on the doorsteps of Freetown. To
retrieve the situation, the NPRC hired several
hundred mercenaries from the private firm
Executive Outcomes. Within a month they had
driven RUF fighters back to enclaves along
Sierra Leone’s borders.
As a result of popular demand and mounting
international pressure, the NPRC agreed to hand
over power to a civilian government via
presidential and parliamentary elections, which
were held in April 1996. Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, a
diplomat who had worked at the UN for more than
20 years, won the presidential election. Because
of the prevailing war conditions, parliamentary
elections were conducted, for the first time,
under the system of proportional representation.
However, on May 25, 1997 the Armed Forces
Revolutionary Council (AFRC), led by Maj. Johnny
Paul Koroma, overthrew President Kabbah and
later invited the RUF to join the government. In
March 1998 the Nigerian-led ECOMOG forces ousted
the AFRC junta after 10 months in office, and
reinstated the democratically elected government
of President Kabbah. The RUF’s renewed attempts
to overthrow the government in January 1999
brought the fighting to parts of Freetown,
leaving thousands dead and wounded. ECOMOG
forces drove back the RUF attack several weeks
later.
With the assistance of the international
community, President Kabbah and RUF leader
Sankoh on July 7, 1999, signed the Lomé Peace
Agreement, which made Sankoh Vice President and
gave other RUF members positions in the
government. The accord called for an
international peacekeeping force run initially
by both ECOMOG and the United Nations. The UN
Security Council established the United Nations
Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) in 1999, with
an initial force of 6,000. ECOMOG forces
departed in April 2000. Almost immediately,
however, the RUF began to violate the agreement,
most notably by holding hundreds of UNAMSIL
personnel hostage and capturing their arms and
ammunition in the first half of 2000. On May 8,
2000, members of the RUF shot and killed as many
as 20 people demonstrating against the RUF
violations outside Sankoh's house in Freetown.
As a result, Sankoh and other senior members of
the RUF were arrested and the group was stripped
of its positions in government.
After the events of May 2000, a new cease-fire
was necessary to reinvigorate the peace process.
This agreement was signed in Abuja in November
of that year. However, Demobilization,
Disarmament, Reintegration (DDR) did not resume,
and fighting continued. In late 2000, Guinean
forces entered Sierra Leone to attack RUF bases
from which attacks had been launched against
Liberian dissidents in Guinea. A second Abuja
Agreement, in May 2001, set the stage for a
resumption of DDR on a wide scale and a
significant reduction in hostilities. As
disarmament progressed, the government began to
reassert its authority in formerly rebel-held
areas. By early 2002, some 72,000 ex-combatants
had been disarmed and demobilized, although many
still awaited re-integration assistance. On
January 18, 2002 President Kabbah declared the
civil war officially over.
In May 2002 President Kabbah was re-elected to a
five-year term along with the SLPP, which also
won a landslide victory. The RUF political wing,
the RUFP, failed to win a single seat in
parliament. The elections were marked by
irregularities and allegations of fraud, but not
to a degree to significantly affect the outcome.
On July 28, 2002 the British withdrew a 200-man
military contingent that had been in country
since the summer of 2000, leaving behind a
105-strong military training team to work to
professionalize the Sierra Leonean army. In
November 2002, UNAMSIL gradually began drawing
down personnel until the end of its formal
peacekeeping mission in December 2005. Following
the end of the UNAMSIL mandate, the UN
established the UN Integrated Office in Sierra
Leone (UNIOSIL), which assumed a peacebuilding
mandate.
In the summer of 2002, Sierra
Leone’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC) and the
Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) began
operations. The Lomé Accord had called for the
establishment of a TRC to provide a forum for
both victims and perpetrators of human rights
violations during the conflict to tell their
stories and to facilitate genuine
reconciliation. The Truth and Reconciliation
Commission released its Final Report to the
government in October 2004. In June 2005, the
Government of Sierra Leone issued a White Paper
on the Commission’s final report which accepted
some but not all of the Commission's
recommendations. Members of civil society groups
dismissed the government’s response as too vague
and continued to criticize the government for
its failure to follow up on the report’s
recommendations.
The Special Court was established by an
agreement between the United Nations and the
Government of Sierra Leone pursuant to Security
Council resolution 1315 (2000) of 14 August
2000. The Court’s mandate is to try those who
"bear the greatest responsibility for the
commission of crimes against humanity, war
crimes and serious violations of international
humanitarian law, as well as crimes under
relevant Sierra Leonean law within the territory
of Sierra Leone since November 30, 1996." The
Special Court has issued indictments
against individuals representing all three
warring factions of Sierra Leone’s civil
conflict in addition to the case against former
Liberian President Charles Ghankay Taylor. On
June 20, 2007, the Court issued its first
verdicts in the trial of the AFRC accused Alex
Tamba Brima, Brima Bazzy Kamara and Santigie
Borbor Kanu all of whom were found guilty on 11
of 14 counts of war crimes and crimes against
humanity. The Court issued an indictment against
a fourth AFRC defendant, former junta leader
Johnny Paul Koroma, who is rumored to have been
killed, though his death remains unconfirmed. In
the trial against the leaders of the Civil
Defense Forces (CDF) accused, on August 2, 2007,
the court found Moinana Fofana and Allieu
Kondewa guilty of war crimes and crimes against
humanity. A third defendant in the CDF trial,
Sam Hinga Norman, the former Minister of
Interior and head of the CDF died in Dakar prior
to the announcement of a judgment. Five alleged
leaders of the RUF, Foday Saybana Sankoh, Sam
Bockarie, Issa Hassan Sesay, Morris Kallon, and
Augustine Gbao, were indicted on 18 counts of
war crimes, crimes against humanity, and other
serious violations of international humanitarian
law. The indictments against Sankoh and Bockarie
were withdrawn on December 8, 2003 due to the
deaths of the two accused. On March 25, 2006,
with the election of Liberian President Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf, Nigerian President Olusegun
Obasanjo permitted transfer of Charles Taylor,
who had been living in exile in the Nigerian
coastal town of Calobar, to Sierra Leone for
prosecution. Two days later, Taylor attempted to
flee Nigeria, but he was apprehended by Nigerian
authorities and transferred to Freetown under UN
guard. Taylor is being tried before the Special
Court on 11 indictments of war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Sierra Leone is a republic with an executive
president and a multi-party system of government
with a 124-seat parliament (112 elected members
and 12 paramount chiefs). On August 11, 2007,
Sierra Leone held nationwide presidential and
parliamentary elections for the first time since
the departure of UN peacekeepers. In the
parliamentary elections, the National Election
Commission reported the All People's Congress
(APC) won a parliamentary majority taking 59 of
112 seats, while the ruling Sierra Leone's
People's Party (SLPP) took 43 seats. The
People's Movement for Democratic Change (PMDC)
won 10 seats in Parliament. In addition to their
peaceful administration, the 2007 parliamentary
elections were notable for the return to a
constituency-based system, as called for in the
1991 constitution. In preparation for the
elections, Sierra Leone redrew parliament’s
constituency boundaries for the first time since
1985.
According to the NEC official results of the
August 11 presidential election, APC
presidential candidate Ernest Koroma won 44.3
percent of the total 1,839,208 votes cast, while
former Vice President and SLPP presidential
candidate, Solomon Berewa, finished with 38.9
percent. PMDC presidential candidate Charles
Margai placed third receiving 13.9 of the vote.
Because none of the candidates won the 55
percent of the vote needed to win in the first
round, a run-off election was held on September
8, 2007. The two leading candidates, former Vice
President Solomon Berewa of the SLPP and Ernest
Bai Koroma of the APC contest the second round.
On September 17 Sierra Leone’s National Election
Commission declared Ernest Bai Koroma the winner
with 54.6 percent of the vote. President Koroma
was sworn in later that day at the Sierra Leone
Statehouse.
Sierra Leone’s judicial system consists of the
Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, High Court of
Justice, and magistrate courts. The president
appoints and parliament approves justices for
the three courts. Local chieftaincy courts
administer customary law with lay judges;
appeals from these lower courts are heard by the
superior courts. Judicial presence outside the
capital district remains limited, which
contributes to excessive delays in the justice
system. Although magistrate courts function in
all 12 judicial districts, magistrates appointed
to those courts did not reside there permanently
and complained that they had insufficient
resources to do their job. Justices of the peace
or customary law partially fill the gap. Civil
rights and religious freedom are respected. A
critical press continues to operate, although
journalists and editors are occasionally
arrested for publishing articles the government
considers inflammatory.
In 2000 the Government of Sierra Leone
promulgated the Anti-Corruption Act to combat
endemic corruption. The Anti Corruption
Commission has not been able to secure
convictions of high-level government officials,
but has worked to raise national awareness of
the problem and build in safeguards in
“corruption hotspot” ministries.
The basic unit of local government outside the
Western Area has generally been the chiefdom,
headed by a paramount chief, who is elected for
a life term. In May 2004, however, the first
local government elections in 32 years were held
in 311 wards nationwide. There are now 12
district councils and 5 town councils outside
the Western Area. The Western Area has a rural
area council and a city council for Freetown,
the nation’s capital. The local councils are
gradually assuming responsibility for functions
previously carried out by the central
government. As devolution progresses, chiefdom
and council authorities are starting to work
together to collect taxes. While district and
town councils are responsible for service
delivery, chiefdom authorities maintain their
own infrastructure of police and courts, which
are also funded by local taxes.
Principal Government Officials
President and Minister of Defense--Ernest Bai
Koroma
Vice President--Samuel Sam-Sumana
Ambassador to the U.S.--Bockari K. Stevens
Sierra Leone maintains an embassy in the United
States at 1701 19th Street, NW, Washington, DC,
20009, tel. 202-939-9261, www.embassyofsierraleone.org;
and a permanent mission to the United Nations in
New York at 245 East 49th Street, New York, New
York 10017, tel. (212) 688-1656.
ECONOMY
Rich in minerals, Sierra Leone has relied on the
mining sector in general, and diamonds in
particular, for its economic base. In the 1970s
and early 1980s, economic growth rate slowed
because of a decline in the mining sector and
increasing corruption among government
officials. By the 1990s economic activity was
declining and economic infrastructure had become
seriously degraded. Over the next decade much of
Sierra Leone’s formal economy was destroyed in
the country’s civil war. Since the cessation of
hostilities in January 2002, massive infusions
of outside assistance have helped Sierra Leone
begin to recover. Full recovery to pre-war
economic levels will require hundreds of
millions of additional dollars and many more
years of serious effort by the Government of
Sierra Leone and donor governments. Much of
Sierra Leone’s recovery will depend on the
success of Government of Sierra Leone efforts to
limit official corruption, which many feel was
the chief culprit for the country’s descent into
civil war. A key indicator of success will be
the effectiveness of government management of
its diamond sector.
About two-thirds of the population engages in
subsistence agriculture, which accounts for
52.5% of national income. The government is
trying to increase food and cash crop production
and upgrade small farmer skills. Also, the
government works with several foreign donors to
operate integrated rural development and
agricultural projects.
Mineral exports remain Sierra Leone's principal
foreign exchange earner. Sierra Leone is a major
producer of gem-quality diamonds. Though rich in
this resource, the country has historically
struggled to manage its exploitation and export.
Annual production estimates range between
$250-300 million. However, not all of that
passes through formal export channels, although
formal exports have dramatically improved since
the days of civil war (1999: $1.2 million; 2000:
$7 million; 2001: $26 million; 2002: $42
million; 2003: $76 million; 2004: $127 million;
2005: $142 million). The balance is smuggled,
where it possibly is used for money laundering
or financing illicit activities. Efforts to
improve the management of the export trade have
met with some success. In October 2000, a
UN-approved export certification system for
exporting diamonds from Sierra Leone was put
into place that led to a dramatic increase in
legal exports. In 2001, the Government of Sierra
Leone created a mining community development
fund, which returns a portion of diamond export
taxes to diamond mining communities. The fund
was created to raise local communities' stake in
the legal diamond trade.
Sierra Leone has one of the world's largest
deposits of rutile, a titanium ore used as paint
pigment and welding rod coatings. Sierra Rutile
Limited, owned by a consortium of U.S. and
European investors, began commercial mining
operations near Bonthe in early 1979. Sierra
Rutile was then the largest nonpetroleum U.S.
investment in West Africa. The export of 88,000
tons realized $75 million in export earnings in
1990. The company and the Government of Sierra
Leone concluded a new agreement on the terms of
the company's concession in Sierra Leone in
1990. Rutile and bauxite mining operations were
suspended when rebels invaded the mining sites
in 1995, but exports resumed in 2005.
Since independence, the Government of Sierra
Leone has encouraged foreign investment,
although the business climate has been hampered
by a shortage of foreign exchange, corruption,
and uncertainty resulting from civil conflicts.
Investors are protected by an agreement that
allows for arbitration under the 1965 World Bank
Convention. Legislation provides for transfer of
interest, dividends, and capital. The government
passed the Investment Promotion Act in August
2004 to attract foreign investors and has been
working with international financial
institutions to lower its administrative
barriers to trade.
Sierra Leone is a member of the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS). With
Liberia and Guinea, it formed the Mano River
Union (MRU) customs union, primarily designed to
implement development projects and promote
regional economic integration. However, the MRU
has been inactive because of domestic problems
and internal and cross-border conflicts in all
three countries. The future of the MRU depends
on the ability of its members to deal with the
fallout from these internal and regional
problems. Sierra Leone’s latest International
Monetary Fund (IMF) poverty reduction and growth
facility (PRGF) expired in June 2005. A new
agreement is not yet in place, but Sierra
Leone’s economic policy is expected to shift
from post-conflict stabilization to
poverty-reduction efforts, including good
governance and fighting corruption; job
creation; and food security.
Sierra Leone continues to rely on significant
amounts of foreign assistance, principally from
multilateral donors. The bilateral donors
include the United States, Italy, and Germany,
but the largest are the United Kingdom and the
European Union.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Sierra Leone has maintained cordial relations
with the West, in particular with the United
Kingdom. It also maintains diplomatic relations
with China, Libya, Cuba, and Iran.
Sierra Leone is a member of the UN and its
specialized agencies, the Commonwealth, the
African Union (AU), the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS), the African
Development Bank (AFDB), the Mano River Union
(MRU), the Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC), and the Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM).
U.S.-SIERRA LEONE RELATIONS
U.S. relations with Sierra Leone began
with missionary activities in the 19th century.
In 1959, the U.S. opened a consulate in Freetown
and elevated it to embassy status when Sierra
Leone became independent in 1961. U.S.-Sierra
Leone relations today are cordial, with ethnic
ties between groups in the two countries
receiving increasing historical interest. Many
thousands of Sierra Leoneans reside in the
United States. In fiscal year 2006, total U.S.
bilateral aid to Sierra Leone in all categories
was $29.538 million. U.S. assistance focused on
the consolidation of peace, democracy and human
rights, health education, particularly combating
HIV/AIDS, and human resources development.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--June
Carter Perry
Deputy Chief of Mission--Elizabeth Susie
Pratt
The U.S.
Embassy is
located at Southridge - Hill Station, Freetown,
Sierra Leone. Telephone: +232 22 515 000 or +232
76 515 000; Fax: +232 22 515 355. To call
Embassy Freetown from the U.S.: 011 232 22 515
000 or 011 232 76 515 000.