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Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone,[note 1] officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country on the southwest coast of West Africa. It shares its southeastern border with Liberia, and the northern half is surrounded by Guinea. Covering a total area of 71,740 km2 (27,699 sq mi),[12] it has a tropical climate, with environments ranging from savanna to rainforests. It has a population of 7,092,113 as of the 2015 census.[13] Freetown is the capital and largest city. The country is divided into five administrative regions, which are subdivided into 16 districts.[14][15]

Republic of Sierra Leone
Motto: "Unity, Freedom, Justice"
Anthem: "High We Exalt Thee, Realm of the Free"
Location of Sierra Leone (dark green)
Capital
and largest city
Freetown
08°30′00″N 12°06′00″W / 8.50000°N 12.10000°W / 8.50000; -12.10000Coordinates: 08°30′00″N 12°06′00″W / 8.50000°N 12.10000°W / 8.50000; -12.10000
Official languagesEnglish
Ethnic groups
(2015[1])
Religion
(2020)[2]
Islam (78.5%)
Christianity (20.4%)
Others (1.1%)
Demonym(s)Sierra Leonean
GovernmentUnitary presidential republic
• President
Julius Maada Bio
Mohamed Juldeh Jalloh
Jacob Jusu Saffa[3]
Abass Chernor Bundu
LegislatureParliament
Independence 
• Dominion
27 April 1961
• Republic
19 April 1971
Area
• Total
71,740 km2 (27,700 sq mi) (117th)
• Water (%)
1.1
Population
• 2022 estimate
8,692,606[4] (100th)
• Density
112/km2 (290.1/sq mi) (114tha)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$16.4  billion [5] (152nd)
• Per capita
$1,972[5] (185th)
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$4.1  billion[5] (170th)
• Per capita
$494[5] (193th)
Gini (2018)35.7[6]
medium
HDI (2021) 0.477[7]
low · 181st
CurrencyLeone (SLL)
Time zoneUTC (GMT)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+232
ISO 3166 codeSL
Internet TLD.sl
  1. Rank based on 2007 figure

It is a constitutional republic with a unicameral parliament and a directly elected president serving a five-year term with a maximum of two terms. It is a secular nation with the constitution providing for the separation of state and religion and freedom of conscience (which includes freedom of thoughts and religion).[16] Muslims make up about three-quarters of the population, with a Christian minority.[17]

Sierra Leone, as the country and its borders are known, was founded by the British Crown in two phases: first, the coastal Sierra Leone Colony in 1808 (for returning Africans after the abolition of slavery); second, the inland Protectorate in 1896 (as the Crown needed to establish more dominion inland following the outcome of the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885). Hence, it formally became known as the Sierra Leone Colony and Protectorate or simply British Sierra Leone.[18][19] It gained independence from the United Kingdom on 27 April 1961, and became a Commonwealth realm on the same day; its name changed to the Dominion of Sierra Leone. Sir Milton Margai became its first prime minister.[20] During decades following independence, Sierra Leone witnessed an increase in political activities, transformations, turmoil, humanitarian and socio-economic crises. It had its first general elections as an independent nation on 27 May 1961. Margai's Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) won a plurality of parliamentary seats and he was re-elected Prime Minister. A new constitution was adopted in 1971, paving the way for Sierra Leone becoming a republic, and Siaka Stevens, leader of the All People's Congress (APC), becoming the first executive president of the Republic of Sierra Leone. Stevens held on to this position for 14 years (until 1985) under a one-party system of government facilitated by the 1978 Constitution. Stevens' hand-picked successor Joseph Saidu Momoh promised to return the country to a multi-party system; a constitution was adopted in 1991 that provided the means for a multi-party democracy. A civil war broke out the same year, which went on for 11 years. In 1992, President Momoh was ousted in a coup led by Sierra Leone Army captain Valentine Strasser. Strasser was later ousted by his army colleague and second-in-command Julius Maada Bio, for failing to commit to a quick transfer to civilian rule. Bio would then return the country back to a democratic republic in 1996 through a general election.[21] In 1996, the prospect of a transformation back to a multi-party democracy emerged, with the national debate "Peace before Elections vs Elections before Peace". Eventually, "Elections before Peace" won the debate.[21] Ahmad Tejan Kabbah won the 1996 presidential election and became the first multi-party democratically elected president of Sierra Leone. Kabbah's presidency included a focus on fostering national unity and reconciliation, trust in government, peace and stability, the improvement in relations with countries, and the refounding of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces with special assistance and training led by the Government of the United Kingdom.[22][23]

About 18 ethnic groups inhabit Sierra Leone; the two largest are Temne and Mende peoples. About 2% of the country's population are Creole people, descendants of freed African-American and Afro-Caribbean slaves. English is the official language used in schools and government administration. Krio is spoken by 97% of the country's population. Sierra Leone has diamond, gold, bauxite and aluminium. It is a member of the United Nations, African Union, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Mano River Union, Commonwealth of Nations, IMF, World Bank, WTO, African Development Bank, and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. It is home to Sub-Saharan Africa's first Western-style university: Fourah Bay College (established in 1827).[24]

Etymology

It takes its name from the Lion Mountains near Freetown. Originally named Serra Leoa (Portuguese for 'lioness mountains') by Portuguese explorer Pedro de Sintra in 1462, the later name is derived from the Venetian spelling, which was introduced by Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto and subsequently copied by other European mapmakers.[25]

History

Early history

 
Fragments of prehistoric pottery from Kamabai Rock Shelter
 
Bunce Island, 1805, during the period the slave factory was run by John and Alexander Anderson
 
An 1835 illustration of liberated Africans arriving in Sierra Leone
 
The colony of Freetown in 1856
 
Houses at Sierra-Leone (May 1853, X, p. 55)[26]

Archaeological finds show that Sierra Leone has been inhabited continuously for at least 2,500 years;[27] populated successively by societies who migrated from other parts of Africa.[28] The use of iron was adopted by the ninth century, and by 1000 AD, agriculture was being practised along the coast.[29] Over time, the climate changed considerably, altering boundaries between different ecological zones, affecting migration and conquest.[30]

Sierra Leone's dense tropical rainforest and swampy environment were considered impenetrable; it was also host to the tsetse fly, which carried a disease fatal to horses and the zebu cattle used by the Mande-speaking people. This environment protected its people from conquest by the Mandinka and other African empires,[30][31] and limited the influence of the Mali Empire. Islam was introduced by Susu traders, merchants and migrants from the north and east, becoming widely adopted in the 18th century.[32]

European trading

European contacts within Sierra Leone were among the first in West Africa during the 15th century. In 1462, Portuguese explorer Pedro de Sintra mapped the hills surrounding what is now Freetown Harbour, naming the shaped formation Serra da Leoa or "Serra Leoa" (Portuguese for Lioness Mountains).[33] The Spanish rendering of this geographic formation is Sierra Leona, which later was adapted, misspelled and became the country's current name. Though according to Professor C. Magbaily Fyle, this might have been a misinterpretation from historians. According to Professor Fyle, there has been evidence of travellers calling the region Serra Lyoa long before 1462 (before the first arrival of Sintra to the region). This would imply that the identity of the person who named Sierra Leone is unknown.[34] Soon after Sintra's expedition, Portuguese traders started arriving at the harbour. By 1495, they had built a fortified trading post on the coast.[35]

Traders from European nations, such as the Dutch Republic, England and France also started to arrive to Sierra Leone and establish trading stations. These stations quickly began to primarily deal in slaves, who were brought to the coast by indigenous traders from interior areas undergoing wars and conflicts over territory. The Europeans made payments, called Cole, for rent, tribute, and trading rights, to the king of an area. Local Afro-European merchants often acted as middlemen, the Europeans advancing them goods to trade to indigenous merchants, most often for slaves and ivory.[36][37] Sir Francis Drake reached Sierra Leone on 22 July 1580 as the last stop of his voyage along the west coast of Africa. Bunce Island, an island on the Sierra Leone River, was used as a base by European slavers as a place for slave ships to dock before sailing via the Middle Passage to the Americas. Until the passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807, the island was operated by the London-based firm Grant, Oswald & Company, who occupied it in 1748.[38]

Black Poor of London

In the late 18th century, many African Americans claimed the protection of the British Crown. There were thousands of these Black Loyalists, people of African descent who joined the British military forces during the American Revolutionary War.[39] Many of these Loyalists had been slaves who had escaped to join the British, lured by promises of freedom (emancipation). The official documentation known as the Book of Negroes lists thousands of freed slaves whom the British evacuated from the nascent United States and resettled in colonies elsewhere in British North America (north to Canada, or south to the West Indies).

Pro-slavery advocates accused the Black Poor of being responsible for a large proportion of crime in 18th century London. While the broader community included some women, the Black Poor seems to have exclusively consisted of men, some of whom developed relationships with local women and often married them. Slave owner Edward Long criticized marriage between black men and white women.[40] However, on the voyage between Plymouth, England and Sierra Leone, seventy European girlfriends and wives accompanied the Black Poor settlers.[41]

Many in London thought that moving them to Sierra Leone would lift them out of poverty.[42] The Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme was proposed by entomologist Henry Smeathman and drew interest from humanitarians like Granville Sharp, who saw it as a means of showing the pro-slavery lobby that black people could contribute towards the running of the new colony of Sierra Leone. Government officials soon became involved in the scheme as well, although their interest was spurred by the possibility of resettling a large group of poor citizens elsewhere.[43] William Pitt the Younger, prime minister and leader of the Tory party, had an active interest in the Scheme because he saw it as a means to repatriate the Black Poor to Africa, since "it was necessary they should be sent somewhere, and be no longer suffered to infest the streets of London".[40]

Province of Freedom

In January 1787, the Atlantic and the Belisarius set sail for Sierra Leone, but bad weather forced them to divert to Plymouth, during which time about 50 passengers died. Another 24 were discharged, and another 23 ran away. Eventually, with some more recruitment, 411 passengers sailed to Sierra Leone in April 1787. On the voyage between Plymouth and Sierra Leone, 96 passengers died.[40][44][45][46]

In 1787 the British Crown founded a settlement in Sierra Leone in what was called the "Province of Freedom". About 400 black and 60 white colonists reached Sierra Leone on 15 May 1787. After they established Granville Town, most of the first group of colonists died, owing to disease and warfare with the indigenous African peoples (Temne), who resisted their encroachment. When the ships left them in September, their numbers had been reduced to "276 persons, namely 212 black men, 30 black women, 5 white men and 29 white women".[40]

The settlers that remained forcibly captured land from a local African chieftain, but he retaliated, attacking the settlement, which was reduced to a mere 64 settlers comprising 39 black men, 19 black women, and six white women. Black settlers were captured by unscrupulous traders and sold as slaves, and the remaining colonists were forced to arm themselves for their own protection.[40] The 64 remaining colonists established a second Granville Town.[47][48]

Nova Scotians

Following the American Revolution, more than 3,000 Black Loyalists had also been settled in Nova Scotia, where they were finally granted land. They founded Birchtown, but faced harsh northern winters and racial discrimination from nearby Shelburne. Thomas Peters pressed British authorities for relief and more aid; together with British abolitionist John Clarkson, the Sierra Leone Company was established to relocate Black Loyalists who wanted to take their chances in West Africa. In 1792 nearly 1,200 persons from Nova Scotia crossed the Atlantic to build the second (and only permanent) Colony of Sierra Leone and the settlement of Freetown on 11 March 1792. In Sierra Leone they were called the Nova Scotian Settlers, the Nova Scotians, or the Settlers. Clarkson initially banned the survivors of Granville Town from joining the new settlement, blaming them for the demise of Granville Town.[40] The Settlers built Freetown in the styles they knew from their lives in the American South; they also continued American fashion and American manners. In addition, many continued to practise Methodism in Freetown.

In the 1790s, the Settlers, including adult women, voted for the first time in elections.[49] In 1792, in a move that foreshadowed the women's suffrage movements in Britain, the heads of all households, of which a third were women, were given the right to vote.[50] Black settlers in Sierra Leone enjoyed much more autonomy than their white equivalent in European countries. Black migrants elected different levels of political representatives, 'tithingmen', who represented each dozen settlers and 'hundreders' who represented larger amounts. This sort of representation was not available in Nova Scotia.[51] The initial process of society-building in Freetown was a harsh struggle. The Crown did not supply enough basic supplies and provisions and the Settlers were continually threatened by illegal slave trading and the risk of re-enslavement.[52]

Jamaican Maroons and Liberated Africans

The Sierra Leone Company, controlled by London investors, refused to allow the settlers to take freehold of the land. In 1799 some of the settlers revolted. The Crown subdued the revolt by bringing in forces of more than 500 Jamaican Maroons, whom they transported from Cudjoe's Town (Trelawny Town) via Nova Scotia in 1800. Led by Colonel Montague James, the Maroons helped the colonial forces to put down the revolt, and in the process the Jamaican Maroons in Sierra Leone secured the best houses and farms.[53]

On 1 January 1808, Thomas Ludlam, the Governor of the Sierra Leone Company and a leading abolitionist, surrendered the company's charter. This ended its 16 years of running the Colony. The British Crown reorganised the Sierra Leone Company as the African Institution; it was directed to improve the local economy. Its members represented both British who hoped to inspire local entrepreneurs and those with interest in the Macauley & Babington Company, which held the (British) monopoly on Sierra Leone trade.[54]

At about the same time (following the abolition of the slave trade in 1807), Royal Navy crews delivered thousands of formerly enslaved Africans to Freetown, after liberating them from illegal slave ships. These Liberated Africans or recaptives were sold for $20 a head as apprentices to the white settlers, Nova Scotian Settlers, and the Jamaican Maroons. Many Liberated Africans were treated poorly and even abused because some of the original settlers considered them their property. Cut off from their various homelands and traditions, the Liberated Africans were forced to assimilate to the Western styles of Settlers and Maroons. For example, some of the Liberated Africans were forced to change their name to a more Western sounding one.[55] Though some people happily embraced these changes because they considered it as being part of the community, some were not happy with these changes and wanted to keep their own identity. Many Liberated Africans were so unhappy that they risked the possibility of being sold back into slavery by leaving Sierra Leone and going back to their original villages.[55] The Liberated Africans eventually modified their customs to adopt those of the Nova Scotians, Maroons and Europeans, yet kept some of their ethnic traditions.[56] As the Liberated Africans became successful traders[55] and spread Christianity throughout West Africa, they intermarried with the Nova Scotians and Maroons, and the two groups eventually became a fusion of African and Western societies.[56]: 3–4, 223–255 

These Liberated Africans were from many areas of Africa, but principally the west coast. During the 19th century, freed African Americans, some Americo Liberian "refugees", and particularly Afro-Caribbeans, mainly Jamaican Maroons, also immigrated and settled in Freetown. Together these peoples formed the Krio ethnicity and an English-based creole language, (Krio), which is the lingua franca and de facto national language used among many of the ethnicities in the country.[57][58][59][60]

Colonial era (1800–1961)

 
Bai Bureh, Temne leader of the Hut Tax War of 1898 against British rule

The settlement of Sierra Leone in the 1800s was unique in that the population was composed of displaced Africans who were brought to the colony after the British abolition of the slave trade in 1807. Upon arrival in Sierra Leone, each recaptive was given a registration number, and information on their physical qualities would be entered into the Register of Liberated Africans. Oftentimes the documentation would be overwhelmingly subjective and would result in inaccurate entries, making them difficult to track. In addition, differences between the Register of Liberated Africans of 1808 and the List of Captured Negroes of 1812 (which emulated the 1808 document) revealed some disparities in the entries of the recaptives, specifically in the names; many recaptives decided to change their given names to more anglicised versions which contributed to the difficulty in tracking them after they arrived in Sierra Leone.[61]

In the early 19th century, Freetown served as the residence of the British colonial governor of the region, who also administered the Gold Coast (now Ghana) and the Gambia settlements. Sierra Leone developed as the educational centre of British West Africa.[62] The British established Fourah Bay College in 1827, which 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. Samuel Ajayi Crowther was the first student to be enrolled at Fourah Bay.[63] Fourah Bay College soon became a magnet for Sierra Leone Creoles and other Africans seeking higher education in British West Africa. These included Nigerians, Ghanaians, Ivorians and many more, especially in the fields of theology and education. Freetown was known as the "Athens of Africa" due to the large number of excellent schools in Freetown and surrounding areas.[64]

 
Temne leader Bai Bureh seen here in 1898 after his surrender, sitting relaxed in his traditional dress with a handkerchief in his hands, while a Sierra Leonean West African Frontier Force soldier stands guard next to him

The British interacted mostly with the Krios in Freetown, who did most of the trading with the indigenous peoples of the interior. Educated Krios held numerous positions in the colonial government, giving them status and well-paying positions. Following the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885, the British decided that they needed to establish more dominion over the inland areas, to satisfy what was described by the European powers as "effective occupation" of territories. In 1896 it annexed these areas, declaring them the Sierra Leone Protectorate.[65] With this change, the British began to expand their administration in the region, recruiting British citizens to posts and pushing Krios out of positions in government and even the desirable residential areas in Freetown.[65]

During the British annexation in Sierra Leone, several chiefs in the northern and southern parts of the country were resisting the "hut tax" imposed by the colonial administrators but they used diplomacy to achieve their goal. In the north, from 1820 to 1906, there was a Limba chief named Almamy Suluku who ruled his territory for many years, fighting to protect his territory, while at the same time using diplomacy to trick the protectorate administrators while sending fighters to assist Bai Bureh, a prominent Temne chief in Kasseh who was fighting against the imposition of the "hut tax" by the colonial administrators. The war was later known as the Hut Tax War. Another prominent figure in Sierra Leone history is Bai Sherbro (c. 1830–1912). Bai Sherbro was a chief and warrior on Bonthe Island, in the southwestern part of the country. He, like Bai Bureh, resisted the British. Sherbro also sent fighters to assist Bai Bureh in the fight against the British. Sherbro was influential and powerful and the British greatly feared him. Bai Sherbro was captured and with Bai Bureh, exiled to the Gold Coast (modern Ghana).

Nyagua (c.  1842–1906), also known as the "Tracking King", was a fierce king who captured many districts and many people came to join him for protection. Nyagua also resisted the British. Realizing that he lacked sufficient strength, he resorted to diplomacy. At the same time, he sent warriors to assist Bai Bureh in fighting against the British. The British later captured Nyagua, and he was also exiled to the Gold Coast. Madam Yoko (c.  1849–1906) was a brilliant woman of culture and ambition. She employed her capacity for friendly communications to persuade the British to give her control of the Kpaa Mende chiefdom. She used diplomacy to communicate with many local chiefs who did not trust her friendship with the British. Because Madam Yoko supported the British, some sub-chiefs rebelled, causing Yoko to take refuge in the police barracks. For her loyalty, she was awarded a silver medal by Queen Victoria. Until 1906, Madam Yoko ruled as a paramount chief in the new British Protectorate. It appears that she committed suicide at the age of fifty-five, perhaps due to the loss of support from her own people.

 
Moa River Bridge, Sierra Leone. Lisk-Carew Brothers, Freetown, Sierra Leone

The British annexation of the Protectorate interfered with the sovereignty of indigenous chiefs. They designated chiefs as units of local government, rather than dealing with them individually as had been the previous practice. They did not maintain relationships even with longstanding allies, such as Bai Bureh, who was later unfairly portrayed as a prime instigator of the Hut Tax War.[66]

 
British West African Campaign troops in Freetown, 1914–1916. Published caption: "British expeditionary force preparing to embark at Freetown to attack the German Cameroons, the main object of the attack being the port of Duala. Auxiliary native troops were freely used in African warfare."

Colonel Frederic Cardew, military governor of the Protectorate, in 1898 established a new tax on dwellings and demanded that the chiefs use their people to maintain roads. The taxes were often higher than the value of the dwellings, and 24 chiefs signed a petition to Cardew, stating how destructive this was; their people could not afford to take time off from their subsistence agriculture. They resisted payment of taxes, tensions over the new colonial requirements and the administration's suspicions towards the chiefs, led to the Hut Tax war of 1898, also called the Temne-Mende War. The British fired first; the northern front of mainly Temne people was led by Bai Bureh. The southern front, consisting mostly of Mende people, entered the conflict somewhat later, for other reasons.

For several months, Bureh's fighters had the advantage over the vastly more powerful British forces but both sides suffered hundreds of fatalities.[67] Bureh surrendered on 11 November 1898 to end the destruction of his people's territory and dwellings. Although the British government recommended leniency, Cardew insisted on sending the chief and two allies into exile in the Gold Coast; his government hanged 96 of the chief's warriors. Bureh was allowed to return in 1905, when he resumed his chieftaincy of Kasseh.[66] The defeat of the Temne and Mende in the Hut Tax war ended mass resistance to the Protectorate and colonial government, but intermittent rioting and labour unrest continued throughout the colonial period. Riots in 1955 and 1956 involved "tens of thousands" of Sierra Leoneans in the Protectorate.[68]

 
African Naval ratings march past the Governor of Sierra Leone, Sir Hubert Stevenson.

Domestic slavery, which continued to be practised by local African elites, was abolished in 1928.[69] A notable event in 1935 was the granting of a monopoly on mineral mining to the Sierra Leone Selection Trust, run by De Beers. The monopoly was scheduled to last 98 years. Mining of diamonds in the east and other minerals expanded, drawing labourers there from other parts of the country.

In 1924, the UK government divided the administration of Sierra Leone into Colony and Protectorate, with different political systems constitutionally defined for each. The Colony was Freetown and its coastal area; the Protectorate was defined as the hinterland areas dominated by local chiefs. Antagonism between the two entities escalated to a heated debate in 1947, when proposals were introduced to provide for a single political system for both the Colony and the Protectorate. Most of the proposals came from leaders of the Protectorate, whose population far outnumbered that in the colony. The Krios, led by Isaac Wallace-Johnson, opposed the proposals, as they would have resulted in reducing the political power of the Krios in the Colony.

In 1951, Lamina Sankoh (born: Etheldred Jones) collaborated with educated protectorate leaders from different groups, including Sir Milton Margai, Siaka Stevens, Mohamed Sanusi Mustapha, John Karefa-Smart, Kande Bureh, Sir Albert Margai, Amadu Wurie and Sir Banja Tejan-Sie joined together with the powerful paramount chiefs in the protectorate to form the Sierra Leone People's Party or SLPP as the party of the Protectorate. The SLPP leadership, led by Sir Milton Margai, negotiated with the British and the educated Krio-dominated colony based in Freetown to achieve independence.[70] Owing to the astute politics of Milton Margai, the educated Protectorate elites were able to join forces with the paramount chiefs in the face of Krio intransigence. Later, Margai used the same skills to win over opposition leaders and moderate Krio elements to achieve independence from the UK.[71]

In November 1951, Margai oversaw the drafting of a new constitution, which united the separate Colonial and Protectorate legislatures and provided a framework for decolonisation.[72] In 1953, Sierra Leone was granted local ministerial powers and Margai was elected Chief Minister of Sierra Leone.[72] The new constitution ensured Sierra Leone had a parliamentary system within the Commonwealth of Nations.[72] In May 1957, Sierra Leone held its first parliamentary election. The SLPP, which was then the most popular political party in the colony of Sierra Leone as well as being supported by the powerful paramount chiefs in the provinces, won the most seats in Parliament and Margai was re-elected as Chief Minister by a landslide.

1960 Independence Conference

On 20 April 1960, Milton Margai led a 24-member Sierra Leonean delegation at constitutional conferences that were held with the Government of Queen Elizabeth II and British Colonial Secretary Iain Macleod in negotiations for independence held in London.[73][74]

On the conclusion of talks in London on 4 May 1960, the United Kingdom agreed to grant Sierra Leone independence on 27 April 1961.[73][74]

Independence (1961) and Margai Administration (1961–1964)

On 27 April 1961, Sir Milton Margai led Sierra Leone to independence from Great Britain and became the country's first Prime Minister. Sierra Leone had its own parliament and its own prime minister, and had the ability to make 100% of its own laws, however, as with countries such as Canada and Australia, Sierra Leone remained a "Dominion" and Queen Elizabeth was Queen of the independent Dominion of Sierra Leone.[75][76] Thousands of Sierra Leoneans took to the streets in celebration. The Dominion of Sierra Leone retained a parliamentary system of government and was a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. The leader of the main opposition All People's Congress (APC), Siaka Stevens, along with Isaac Wallace-Johnson, another outspoken critic of the SLPP government, were arrested and placed under house arrest in Freetown, along with sixteen others charged with disrupting the independence celebration.[77]

In May 1962, Sierra Leone held its first general election as an independent nation. The Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) won a plurality of seats in parliament, and Milton Margai was re-elected as prime minister.

Margai was popular among Sierra Leoneans during his time in power, mostly known for his self-effacement. He was neither corrupt nor did he make a lavish display of his power or status.[78] He based the government on the rule of law and the separation of powers, with multiparty political institutions and fairly viable representative structures. Margai used his conservative ideology to lead Sierra Leone without much strife. He appointed government officials to represent various ethnic groups. Margai employed a brokerage style of politics, by sharing political power among political parties and interest groups; especially the involvement of powerful paramount chiefs in the provinces, most of whom were key allies of his government.[citation needed]

After the death of Milton Margai and Albert Margai's tenure (1964–1967)

Upon Milton Margai's unexpected death in 1964, his younger half-brother, Sir Albert Margai, was appointed as Prime Minister by parliament. Sir Albert's leadership was briefly challenged by Foreign Minister John Karefa-Smart, who questioned Sir Albert's succession to the SLPP leadership position. Karefa-Smart led a prominent small minority faction within the SLPP party in opposition of Albert Margai as Prime Minister. However, Karefa-Smart failed to receive broad support within the SLPP in his attempt to oust Albert Margai as both the leader of the SLPP and Prime Minister. The large majority of SLPP members backed Albert Margai over Karefa-Smart. Soon after Albert Margai was sworn in as Prime Minister, he fired several senior government officials who had served in his elder brother Sir Milton's government, viewing them as a threat to his administration, including Karefa-Smart.

Sir Albert resorted to increasingly authoritarian actions in response to protests and enacted several laws against the opposition All People's Congress, whilst attempting to establish a one-party state.[73][74] Sir Albert was opposed to the colonial legacy of allowing executive powers to the Paramount Chiefs, many of whom had been key allies of his late brother Sir Milton. Accordingly, they began to consider Sir Albert a threat to the ruling houses across the country. Margai appointed many non-Creoles to the country's civil service in Freetown, in an overall diversification of the civil service in the capital, which had been dominated by members of the Creole ethnic group. As a result, Albert Margai became unpopular in the Creole community, many of whom had supported Sir Milton. Margai was accused of favouring members of his own Mende ethnic group for prominent positions.

In 1967, riots broke out in Freetown against Margai's policies; in response he declared a state of emergency across the country. Sir Albert was accused of corruption and of a policy of affirmative action in favour of his own Mende ethnic group.[79] Sir Albert Margai took power and sought to make the army homogeneously Mende.[80] He also endeavoured to change Sierra Leone from a democracy to a one-party state.[81] Although possessing the full backing of the country's security forces, he called for free and fair elections.[citation needed]

1967 General Election and military coups (1967–1968)

The APC, with its leader Siaka Stevens, narrowly won a small majority of seats in Parliament over the SLPP in a closely contested 1967 general election. Stevens was sworn in as Prime Minister on 21 March 1967.

Within hours after taking office, Stevens was ousted in a bloodless military coup led by Brigadier General David Lansana, the commander of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces. He was a close ally of Albert Margai, who had appointed him to the position in 1964. Lansana placed Stevens under house arrest in Freetown and insisted that the determination of the Prime Minister should await the election of the tribal representatives to the House. Steven was later freed and fled the country; went into exile in neighbouring Guinea. However, on 23 March 1967, a group of military officers in the Sierra Leone Army led by Brigadier General Andrew Juxon-Smith, staged a counter coup against Commander Lansana. They seized control of the government, arresting Lansana, and suspending the constitution. The group set up the National Reformation Council (NRC), with Andrew Juxon-Smith as its chairman and Head of State of the country.[82]

On 18 April 1968 a group of low ranking soldiers in the Sierra Leone Army who called themselves the Anti-Corruption Revolutionary Movement (ACRM), led by Brigadier General John Amadu Bangura, overthrew the NRC junta. The ACRM junta arrested many senior NRC members. They reinstated the constitution and returned power to Stevens, who at last assumed the office of Prime Minister.[83]

Stevens had Bangura arrested in 1970 and charged with conspiracy and treason. He was found guilty and sentenced to death, despite the fact that it was Bangura whose actions led to Stevens return to power.[84] Brigadier Lansana and Hinga Norman, the main army officers involved in the first coup (1967), were unceremoniously dismissed from the armed forces and made to serve time in prison. Norman was a guard to Governor-general Sir Henry Lightfoot-Boston.[20] Lansana was later tried and found guilty of treason, and sentenced to death in 1975.[20]

One-party state and dawn of the 'Republic' (1968–1991)

 
An APC political rally in the northern town of Kabala outside the home of supporters of the rival SLPP in 1968

Stevens assumed power as Prime Minister again in 1968, following a series of coups, with a great deal of hope and ambition.[20] Much trust was placed upon him as he championed multi-party politics. Stevens had campaigned on a platform of bringing the tribes together under socialist principles. During his first decade or so in power, Stevens renegotiated some of what he called "useless prefinanced schemes" contracted by his predecessors, both Albert Margai of the SLPP and Juxon-Smith of the NRC. Some of these policies by the SLPP and the NRC were said to have left the country in an economically deprived state.[20]

Stevens reorganised the country's oil refinery, the government-owned Cape Sierra Hotel, and a cement factory.[85] He cancelled Juxon-Smith's construction of a church and mosque on the grounds of Victoria Park (now known as Freetown Amusement Park – since 2017). Stevens began efforts that would later improve transportation and movements between the provinces and the city of Freetown. Roads and hospitals were constructed in the provinces, and Paramount Chiefs and provincial peoples became a prominent force in Freetown.

Under the pressure of several coup attempts, real or perceived, Stevens' rule grew more and more authoritarian, and his relationship with some of his ardent supporters deteriorated. He removed the SLPP party from competitive politics in general elections, some believed, through the use of violence and intimidation. To maintain the support of the military, Stevens retained the popular John Amadu Bangura as head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces.

After the return to civilian rule, by-elections were held (beginning in autumn 1968) and an all-APC cabinet was appointed. Calm was not completely restored. In November 1968, unrest in the provinces led Stevens to declare a state of emergency across the country. Many senior officers in the Sierra Leone Army were greatly disappointed with Stevens' policies and his handling of the Sierra Leone Military, but none could confront Stevens. Brigadier General Bangura, who had reinstated Stevens as Prime Minister, was widely considered the only person who could control Stevens. The army was devoted to Bangura, and this made him potentially dangerous to Stevens. In January 1970, Bangura was arrested and charged with conspiracy and plotting to commit a coup against the Stevens government. After a trial that lasted a few months, Bangura was convicted and sentenced to death. On 29 March 1970, Brigadier Bangura was executed by hanging in Freetown.

After the execution of Bangura, a group of soldiers loyal to the executed general held a mutiny in Freetown and other parts of the country in opposition to Stevens' government. Dozens of soldiers were arrested and convicted by a court martial in Freetown for their participation in the mutiny against the president. Among the soldiers arrested was a little-known army corporal, Foday Sankoh, a strong Bangura supporter, who would later form the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Corporal Sankoh was convicted and jailed for seven years at the Pademba Road Prison in Freetown.

In April 1971, a new republican constitution was adopted under which Stevens became president. In the 1972 by-elections, the opposition SLPP complained of intimidation and procedural obstruction by the APC and militia. These problems became so severe that the SLPP boycotted the 1973 general election; as a result the APC won 84 of the 85 elected seats.[86]

An alleged plot to overthrow president Stevens failed in 1974 and its leaders were executed. In mid-1974, Guinean soldiers, as requested by Stevens, were stationed in the country to help maintain his hold on power, as Stevens was a close ally of then-Guinean president Ahmed Sékou Touré. In March 1976, Stevens was elected without opposition for a second five-year term as president. On 19 July 1975, 14 senior army and government officials, including David Lansana, former cabinet minister Mohamed Sorie Forna (father of writer Aminatta Forna), Brigadier General Ibrahim Bash Taqi and Lieutenant Habib Lansana Kamara were executed after being convicted of attempting a coup to topple president Stevens' government.

In 1977, a nationwide student demonstration against the government disrupted Sierra Leone politics. The demonstration was quickly put down by the army and Stevens' own personal Special Security Division (SSD), a heavily armed paramilitary force he had created to protect him and maintain his hold on power.[87] SSD officers were loyal to Stevens and were deployed across the country to clamp down on any rebellion or protest against Stevens' government. A general election was called later that year in which corruption was again endemic; the APC won 74 seats and the SLPP 15. In 1978, the APC-dominant parliament approved a new constitution making the country a one-party state. The 1978 constitution made the APC the only legal political party in Sierra Leone.[88] This move led to another major demonstration against the government in many parts of the country, but it was also put down by the army and Stevens' SSD force.

Stevens is generally criticised for dictatorial methods and government corruption, but on a positive note, he kept the country stable and from collapsing into civil war. He created several government institutions that are still in use today.[citation needed] Stevens also reduced ethnic polarisation in government by incorporating members of various ethnic groups into his all-dominant APC government.

Siaka Stevens retired from politics in November 1985 after being in power for eighteen years. The APC named a new presidential candidate to succeed Stevens at party's last delegate conference, held in Freetown in November 1985. The candidate was Major General Joseph Saidu Momoh, head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces and Stevens' own choice to succeed him. As head of the armed forces, General Momoh had been loyal to Stevens, who had appointed him to the position. Like Stevens, Momoh was also a member of the minority Limba ethnic group.

As the sole candidate, Momoh was elected president without opposition and sworn in as Sierra Leone's second president on 28 November 1985 in Freetown. A one-party parliamentary election between APC members was held in May 1986. President Momoh appointed his former military colleague and key ally, Major General Mohamed Tarawalie to succeed him as the head of the Sierra Leone Military. General Tarawalie was also a strong loyalist and key Momoh supporter. President Momoh named James Bambay Kamara as the head of the Sierra Leone Police. Bambay Kamara was also a strong Momoh loyalist and supporter. Momoh broke from former President Siaka Stevens by integrating the powerful SSD into the Sierra Leone Police as a special paramilitary force. Under President Stevens, the SSD had been a powerful personal force used to maintain his hold on power, independent from the Sierra Leone Military and Sierra Leone Police Force. The Sierra Leone Police under Bambay Kamara's leadership was accused of physical violence, arrest and intimidation against critics of President Momoh's government.

President Momoh's strong links with the army and his verbal attacks on corruption earned him much-needed initial support among Sierra Leoneans. With the lack of new faces in the new APC cabinet under president Momoh and the return of many of the old faces from Stevens' government, criticisms soon arose that Momoh was simply perpetuating the rule of Stevens.

The next few years under the Momoh administration were characterised by corruption, which Momoh defused by sacking several senior cabinet ministers. To formalise his war against corruption, President Momoh announced a "Code of Conduct for Political Leaders and Public Servants". After an alleged attempt to overthrow President Momoh in March 1987, more than 60 senior government officials were arrested, including Vice-President Francis Minah, who was removed from office, convicted of plotting the coup, and executed by hanging in 1989, along with five others.

Sierra Leone Civil War (1991–2002) and the NPRC regime (1992–1996)

 
A school in Koindu destroyed during the Civil War; in total 1,270 primary schools were destroyed in the War.[89]

In October 1990, owing to mounting pressure from both within and outside the country for political and economic reforms, president Momoh set up a constitutional review commission to assess the 1978 one-party constitution. Based on the commission's recommendations, a constitution re-establishing a multi-party system was approved by the exclusive APC Parliament by a 60% majority vote, becoming effective on 1 October 1991. There was great suspicion that president Momoh was not serious about his promise of political reform, as APC rule continued to be increasingly marked by abuses of power.

The brutal civil war that was going on in neighbouring Liberia played a significant role in the outbreak of fighting in Sierra Leone. Charles Taylor – then leader of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia – reportedly helped form the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) under the command of former Sierra Leonean army corporal Foday Saybana Sankoh, an ethnic Temne from Tonkolili District in Northern Sierra Leone. Sankoh was a British trained former army corporal who had also undergone guerrilla training in Libya. Taylor's aim was for the RUF to attack the bases of Nigerian dominated peacekeeping troops in Sierra Leone who were opposed to his rebel movement in Liberia.

On 29 April 1992, a group of young soldiers in the Sierra Leone Army, led by seven army officers—Lieutenant Sahr Sandy, Captain Valentine Strasser, Lieutenant Solomon "SAJ" Musa, Captain Komba Mondeh, Lieutenant Tom Nyuma, Captain Julius Maada Bio and Captain Komba Kambo[90]—staged a military coup that sent president Momoh into exile in Guinea, and the young soldiers established the National Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC), with 25-year-old Captain Valentine Strasser as its chairman and Head of State of the country.[91] The NPRC Junta immediately suspended the constitution, banned all political parties, limited freedom of speech and freedom of the press and enacted a rule-by-decree policy, in which soldiers were granted unlimited powers of administrative detention without charge or trial, and challenges against such detentions in court were precluded.

SAJ Musa, a childhood friend of Strasser, became the deputy chairman and deputy leader of the NPRC government. Strasser became the world's youngest Head of State when he seized power just three days after his 25th birthday. The NPRC junta established the National Supreme Council of State as the military highest command and final authority in all matters and was exclusively made up of the highest-ranking NPRC soldiers, included Strasser himself and the original soldiers who toppled president Momoh.[91]

One of the top-ranking soldiers in the NPRC Junta, Lieutenant Sahr Sandy, a trusted ally of Strasser, was assassinated, allegedly by Major S.I.M. Turay, a key loyalist of ousted president Momoh. A heavily armed military manhunt was carried out across the country to find Lieutenant Sandy's killer. However, the main suspect, Major S.I.M. Turay, went into hiding and fled the country to Guinea, fearing for his life. Dozens of soldiers loyal to the ousted president Momoh were arrested, including Colonel Kahota M. Dumbuya and Major Yayah Turay. Lieutenant Sandy was given a state funeral and his funeral prayers service at the cathedral church in Freetown was attended by many high-ranking soldiers of the NPRC junta, including Strasser himself and NPRC deputy leader Sergeant Solomon Musa.

The NPRC Junta maintained relations with ECOWAS and strengthened support for Sierra Leone-based ECOMOG troops fighting in the Liberian war. On 28 December 1992, an alleged coup attempt against the NPRC government of Strasser, aimed at freeing the detained Colonel Yahya Kanu, Colonel Kahota M.S. Dumbuya and former inspector general of police Bambay Kamara, was foiled. Several Junior army officers led by Sergeant Mohamed Lamin Bangura were identified as being behind the coup plot. The coup plot led to the execution of seventeen soldiers by firing squad. Some of those executed include Colonel Kahota Dumbuya, Major Yayah Kanu and Sergeant Mohamed Lamin Bangura. Several prominent members of the Momoh government who had been in detention at the Pa Demba Road prison, including former inspector general of police Bambay Kamara, were also executed.[92]

On 5 July 1994 SAJ Musa, who was popular among the general population, particularly in Freetown, was arrested and sent into exile after he was accused of planning a coup to topple Strasser, an accusation SAJ Musa denied. Strasser replaced Musa as deputy NPRC chairman with Captain Bio, who was instantly promoted by Strasser to brigadier.

The NPRC's efforts proved to be nearly ineffective as the ousted Momoh administration in repelling the RUF rebels. More and more of the country fell into the hands RUF fighters, and by 1994 they had gotten control of much of the diamond-rich Eastern Province and were getting close toward the capital Freetown. In response, the NPRC hired the services of South African-based private military contractor Executive Outcomes for several hundred mercenary fighters in order to strengthen the response to the advances of the RUF rebels. Within a month they had driven RUF fighters back to enclaves along Sierra Leone's borders and cleared the RUF from the Kono diamond-producing areas of Sierra Leone.

With Strasser's two most senior NPRC allies and commanders Lieutenant Sahr Sandy and Lieutenant Solomon Musa no longer around to defend him, Strasser's leadership within the NPRC's Supreme Council of State became fragile. On 16 January 1996, after about four years in power, Strasser was arrested in a palace coup staged by his fellow NPRC soldiers led by Brigadier Bio at the Defence Headquarters in Freetown.[93] Strasser was immediately flown into exile in a military helicopter to Conakry, Guinea. In his first public broadcast to the nation following the 1996 coup, Brigadier Bio stated that his support for returning Sierra Leone to a democratically elected civilian government and his commitment to ending the civil war were his motivations for the coup.[94]

Kabbah's tenure: government, "dawn of a new republic", the AFRC and end of the Civil War (1996–2007)

Promises of a return to civilian rule were fulfilled by Bio. Prior to conducting the election, Sierra Leoneans and international stakeholders were involved in a major debate on whether the nation should focus on trying to end the long running civil war, or to conduct elections and hence returning governance back to a civilian-led administration with a multi-party system of parliament that would provide the foundation for long-lasting peace and national prosperity. Following the 1995 National Consultative Conference at the Bintumani Hotel in Freetown, dubbed "Bintumani I", which was a Strasser-led initiative, another National Consultative Conference at the same Bintumani Hotel in Freetown, dubbed "Bintumani II", was initiated by the Bio administration that involved both national and international stakeholders, in an effort to find a viable solution to the issues plaguing the country.[21] "Peace before Elections vs Elections before Peace" became a key debate topic and this quickly became a point of national discussion. The discussions eventually concluded with key stakeholders, including Bio's administration and the UN, agreeing that while efforts in finding a peaceful solution to ending the war should continue, a general election should be held as soon as possible.[21] Bio handed power over to Ahmad Tejan Kabbah of the SLPP, after the conclusion of elections in early 1996 which Kabbah won. President Kabbah took power with a great promise of ending the civil war. After taking over, President Kabbah immediately opened dialogue with the RUF and invited their leader Foday Sankoh for peace negotiations.[22]

On 25 May 1997, 17 soldiers in the Sierra Leone army led by Corporal Tamba Gborie, loyal to the detained Major Johnny Paul Koroma, launched a military coup which sent President Kabbah into exile in Guinea and they established the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC). Corporal Gborie quickly went to the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Services headquarters in New England, Freetown to announce the coup to a shocked nation and to alert all soldiers across the country to report for guard duty. The soldiers immediately released Koroma from prison and installed him as their chairman and Head of State.

Koroma suspended the constitution, banned demonstrations, shut down all private radio stations in the country and invited the RUF to join the new junta government, with its leader Foday Sankoh as the Vice-Chairman of the new AFRC-RUF coalition junta government. Within days, Freetown was overwhelmed by the presence of the RUF combatants who came to the city in thousands. The Kamajors, a group of traditional fighters mostly from the Mende ethnic group under the command of deputy Defence Minister Samuel Hinga Norman, remained loyal to President Kabbah and defended the Southern part of Sierra Leone from the soldiers.

After nine months in office, the junta was overthrown by the Nigerian-led ECOMOG forces, and the democratically elected government of president Kabbah was reinstated in February 1998. On 19 October 1998, 24 soldiers in the Sierra Leone army—including Gborie, Brigadier Hassan Karim Conteh, Colonel Samuel Francis Koroma, Major Kula Samba and Colonel Abdul Karim Sesay—were executed by firing squad after they were convicted in a court martial in Freetown, some for orchestrating the 1997 coup that overthrew President Kabbah and others for failure to reverse the mutiny.[95]

In October 1999, the United Nations agreed to send peacekeepers to help restore order and disarm the rebels. The first of the 6,000-member force began arriving in December, and the UN Security Council voted in February 2000 to increase the force to 11,000, and later to 13,000. But in May, when nearly all Nigerian forces had left and UN forces were trying to disarm the RUF in eastern Sierra Leone, Sankoh's forces clashed with the UN troops, and some 500 peacekeepers were taken hostage as the peace accord effectively collapsed. The hostage crisis resulted in more fighting between the RUF and the government as UN troops launched Operation Khukri to end the siege. The Operation was successful with Indian and British Special Forces being the main contingents.

The situation in the country deteriorated to such an extent that British troops were deployed in Operation Palliser, originally simply to evacuate foreign nationals. However, the British exceeded their original mandate and took full military action to finally defeat the rebels and restore order. The British were the catalyst for the ceasefire that ended the civil war. Elements of the British Army, together with administrators and politicians, remained after withdrawal to help train the armed forces, improve the infrastructure of the country and administer financial and material aid. Tony Blair, the Prime Minister of Britain at the time of the British intervention, is regarded as a hero by the people of Sierra Leone, many of whom are keen for more British involvement.[96]

Between 1991 and 2001, about 50,000 people were killed in Sierra Leone's civil war. Hundreds of thousands of people were forced from their homes and many became refugees in Guinea and Liberia. In 2001, UN forces moved into rebel-held areas and began to disarm rebel soldiers. By January 2002, the war was declared over. In May 2002, Kabbah was re-elected president by a landslide. By 2004, the disarmament process was complete. Also in 2004, a UN-backed war crimes court began holding trials of senior leaders from both sides of the war. In December 2005, UN peacekeeping forces pulled out of Sierra Leone.

2007 General Election and the re-emergence of APC

In August 2007, Sierra Leone held presidential and parliamentary elections. However, no presidential candidate won the 50% plus one vote majority stipulated in the constitution on the first round of voting. A runoff election was held in September 2007, and Ernest Bai Koroma, the candidate of the main opposition APC, was elected president. Koroma was re-elected president for a second (and final) term in November 2012.

Struggle with the Ebola epidemic (2014–2016)

In 2014, an Ebola virus epidemic in Sierra Leone began that widely affected the country,[97] including forcing Sierra Leone to declare a state of emergency.[98] By the end of 2014 there were nearly 3000 deaths and about 10,000 cases of the disease in Sierra Leone.[97] The epidemic also led to the Ouse to Ouse Tock in September 2014, a nationwide three-day quarantine.[99] The epidemic occurred as part of the wider Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa. In early August 2014 Sierra Leone cancelled league football (soccer) matches because of the Ebola epidemic.[100] On 16 March 2016, the World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone to be free from Ebola.[101]

14 August 2017 mudslides

Several mudslides occurred in the early hours of 14 August 2017 in and near the country's capital Freetown.

2018 General election

In 2018, Sierra Leone held a general election. The presidential election, in which neither candidate reached the required threshold of 55%, went to a second round of voting, in which Julius Maada Bio was elected with 51% of the vote.[102]

Geography

 
A map of Sierra Leone
 
Sierra Leone map of Köppen climate classification

Sierra Leone is located on the southwest coast of West Africa, lying mostly between latitudes and 10°N (a small area is south of 7°), and longitudes 10° and 14°W. The country is bordered by Guinea to the north and east, Liberia to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west and southwest.[103]

Sierra Leone has a total area of 71,740 km2 (27,699 sq mi), divided into a land area of 71,620 km2 (27,653 sq mi) and water of 120 km2 (46 sq mi).[104] The country has four distinct geographical regions. In eastern Sierra Leone the plateau is interspersed with high mountains, where Mount Bintumani reaches 1,948 m (6,391 ft), the highest point in the country. The upper part of the drainage basin of the Moa River is located in the south of this region.

The centre of the country is a region of lowland plains, containing forests, bush and farmland,[103] that occupies about 43% of Sierra Leone's land area. The northern section of this has been categorised by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Guinean forest-savanna mosaic ecoregion, while the south is rain-forested plains and farmland.

In the west, Sierra Leone has some 400 km (249 mi) of Atlantic coastline, giving it both bountiful marine resources and attractive tourist potential. The coast has areas of low-lying Guinean mangroves swamp. The national capital Freetown sits on a coastal peninsula, situated next to the Sierra Leone Harbour.

The climate is tropical, with two seasons determining the agricultural cycle: the rainy season from May to November, and a dry season from December to May, which includes harmattan, when cool, dry winds blow in off the Sahara Desert and the night-time temperature can be as low as 16 °C (60.8 °F). The average temperature is 26 °C (78.8 °F) and varies from around 26 to 36 °C (78.8 to 96.8 °F) during the year.[105][106]

Biodiversity

Sierra Leone is home to four terrestrial ecoregions: Guinean montane forests, Western Guinean lowland forests, Guinean forest-savanna mosaic, and Guinean mangroves.[107]

Human activities claimed to be responsible or contributing to land degradation in Sierra Leone include unsustainable agricultural land use, poor soil and water management practices, deforestation, removal of natural vegetation, fuelwood consumption and to a lesser extent overgrazing and urbanisation.[108]

Deforestation, both for commercial timber and to make room for agriculture, is the major concern and represents an enormous loss of natural economic wealth to the nation.[108] Mining and slash and burn for land conversion – such as cattle grazing – dramatically diminished forested land in Sierra Leone since the 1980s. It is listed among countries of concern for emissions, as having Low Forest Cover with High Rates of Deforestation (LFHD).[109] There are concerns that heavy logging continues in the Tama-Tonkoli Forest Reserve in the north. Loggers have extended their operations to Nimini, Kono District, Eastern Province; Jui, Western Rural District, Western Area; Loma Mountains National Park, Koinadougu, Northern Province; and with plans to start operations in the Kambui Forest reserve in the Kenema District, Eastern Province.[109] The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 2.76/10, ranking it 154th globally out of 172 countries.[110]

Overfishing is also an issue in Sierra Leone.

Habitat degradation for the African wild dog, Lycaon pictus, has been increased, such that this canid is deemed to have been extirpated in Sierra Leone.[111]

Until 2002, Sierra Leone lacked a forest management system because of the civil war that caused tens of thousands of deaths. Deforestation rates have increased 7.3% since the end of the civil war.[112] On paper, 55 protected areas covered 4.5% of Sierra Leone as of 2003. The country has 2,090 known species of higher plants, 147 mammals, 626 birds, 67 reptiles, 35 amphibians, and 99 fish species.[112]

The Environmental Justice Foundation has documented how the number of illegal fishing vessels in Sierra Leone's waters has multiplied in recent years. The amount of illegal fishing has significantly depleted fish stocks, depriving local fishing communities of an important resource for survival. The situation is particularly serious as fishing provides the only source of income for many communities in a country still recovering from over a decade of civil war.[113]

In June 2005, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and BirdLife International agreed to support a conservation-sustainable development project in the Gola Forest in south eastern Sierra Leone,[114] an important surviving fragment of rainforest in Sierra Leone.

Government and politics

Sierra Leone is a constitutional republic with a directly elected president and a unicameral legislature. The current system of the Government of Sierra Leone is based on the 1991 Sierra Leone Constitution. Sierra Leone has a dominant unitary central government and a weak local government. The executive branch of the Government of Sierra Leone, headed by the president of Sierra Leone has extensive powers and influences. The president is the most powerful government official in Sierra Leone.[115]

Within the confines of the 1991 Constitution, supreme legislative powers are vested in Parliament, which is the law-making body of the nation. Supreme executive authority rests in the president and members of his cabinet and judicial power with the judiciary of which the Chief Justice of Sierra Leone is the head.

The president is the head of state, the head of government and the commander-in-chief of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces. The president appoints and heads a cabinet of ministers, which must be approved by the Parliament. The president is elected by popular vote to a maximum of two five-year terms. The president is the highest and most influential position within the government of Sierra Leone.

To be elected president of Sierra Leone, a candidate must gain at least 55% of the vote. If no candidate gets 55%, there is a second-round runoff between the top two candidates.

The current president of Sierra Leone is former military junta leader Julius Maada Bio.[116] Bio defeated Samura Kamara of the ruling All People's Congress (APC) in the country's tightly contested 2018 presidential election. Bio replaced outgoing President Ernest Bai Koroma after Bio was sworn into office on 4 April 2018 by Chief Justice Abdulai Cham. Bio is the leader of the Sierra Leone People's Party, the current ruling party in Sierra Leone.

Next to the president is the vice-president, who is the second highest-ranking government official in the executive branch of the Sierra Leone Government. As designated by the Sierra Leone Constitution, the vice-president is to become the new president of Sierra Leone upon the death, resignation, or removal of the President.

Parliament

The Parliament of Sierra Leone is unicameral, with 146 seats. Each of the country's 14 districts is represented in parliament. 132 members are elected concurrently with the presidential elections; the other 16 seats are filled by paramount chiefs from the country's 16 administrative districts.[117] The Sierra Leone parliament is led by the Speaker of Parliament, who is the overall leader of Parliament and is directly elected by sitting members of parliament. The current speaker of the Sierra Leone parliament is Abass Bundu, who was elected by members of parliament on 21 January 2014.

The current members of the Parliament of Sierra Leone were elected in the 2012 Sierra Leone parliamentary election. The APC currently has 68 of the 132 elected parliamentary seats and the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) has 49 of the elected 132 parliamentary seats. Sierra Leone's two most dominant parties, the APC and the SLPP, collectively won every elected seat in Parliament in the 2012 Sierra Leone parliamentary election. To be qualified as a Member of Parliament, the person must be a citizen of Sierra Leone, must be at least 21 years old, must be able to speak, read and write the English language with a degree of proficiency to enable him to actively take part in proceedings in Parliament; and must not have any criminal conviction.[115]

Since independence in 1961, Sierra Leone's politics has been dominated by two major political parties: the SLPP and the APC. Other minor political parties have also existed but with no significant support.[118]

Judiciary

 
The Sierra Leone Supreme Court in the capital Freetown, the highest and most powerful court in the country

The judicial power of Sierra Leone is vested in the judiciary, headed by the Chief Justice of Sierra Leone and comprising the Supreme Court of Sierra Leone, which is the highest court in the country, meaning that its rulings, therefore, cannot be appealed against. Other courts include the High Court of Justice, the Court of Appeal, the magistrate courts, and traditional courts in rural villages. The president appoints and parliament approves Justices for the three courts. The Judiciary have jurisdiction in all civil and criminal matters throughout the country. The current acting chief justice of Sierra Leone is Desmond Babatunde Edwards.

Foreign relations

The Sierra Leonean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation is responsible for foreign policy of Sierra Leone. Sierra Leone has diplomatic relations that include China, Russia,[119] Libya, Iran, and Cuba.

Sierra Leone has good relations with the West, including the United States, and has maintained historical ties with the United Kingdom and other former British colonies through its membership of the Commonwealth of Nations.[120] The United Kingdom has played a major role in providing aid to the former colony, together with administrative help and military training since intervening to end the Civil War in 2000.

Former President Siaka Stevens' government had sought closer relations with other West African countries under the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) a policy continued by the current government. Sierra Leone, along with Liberia, Ivory Coast and Guinea, form the Mano River Union (MRU). It is primarily designed to implement development projects and promote regional economic integration between the four countries.[121]

Sierra Leone is also a member of the United Nations and its specialised agencies, the African Union, the African Development Bank (AFDB), the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM).[122] Sierra Leone is a member of the International Criminal Court with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the US military (as covered under Article 98).

Military

The Military of Sierra Leone, officially the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF), are the unified armed forces of Sierra Leone responsible for the territorial security of Sierra Leone's border and defending the national interests of Sierra Leone within the framework of its international obligations. The armed forces were formed after independence in 1961, based on elements of the former British Royal West African Frontier Force present in the country. The Sierra Leone Armed Forces consist of around 15,500 personnel, comprising the largest Sierra Leone Army,[123] the Sierra Leone Navy and the Sierra Leone Air Wing.[124]

The president of Sierra Leone is the Commander in Chief of the military, with the Minister of Defence responsible for defence policy and the formulation of the armed forces. The current Sierra Leonean Defence Minister is retired Major Alfred Paolo Conteh. The Military of Sierra Leone also has a Chief of the Defence Staff who is a uniformed military official responsible for the administration and the operational control of the Sierra Leone military.[125] Brigadier General Alfred Nelson-Williams who was appointed by president Koroma succeeded the retired Major General Edward Sam M'boma on 12 September 2008 as the Chief of Defence Staff of the Military.[126]

When Sierra Leone gained independence in 1961, the Royal Sierra Leone Military Force was created from the Sierra Leone Battalion of the West African Frontier Force.[127] The military seized control in 1968, bringing the National Reformation Council into power. On 19 April 1971, when Sierra Leone became a republic, the Royal Sierra Leone Military Forces were renamed the Republic of Sierra Leone Military Force (RSLMF).[127][128] The RSLMF remained a single-service organisation until 1979, when the Sierra Leone Navy was established. In 1995 Defence Headquarters was established, and the Sierra Leone Air Wing formed. The RSLMF was renamed as the Armed Forces of the Republic of Sierra Leone (AFRSL).

Law enforcement

Law enforcement in Sierra Leone is primarily the responsibility of the Sierra Leone Police (SLP), which is accountable to the Minister of Internal Affairs (appointed by the president). Sierra Leone Police was established by the British colony in 1894; it is one of the oldest police forces in West Africa. It works to prevent crime, protect life and property, detect and prosecute offenders, maintain public order, ensure safety and security, and enhance access to justice. The Sierra Leone Police is headed by the Inspector General of Police, the professional head of the Sierra Leone Police force, who is appointed by the president of Sierra Leone.

Each one of Sierra Leone's 14 districts is headed by a district police commissioner who is the professional head of their respective district. These Police Commissioners report directly to the Inspector General of Police at the Sierra Leone Police headquarters in Freetown. The current Inspector General of Police is Brima Acha Kamara, who was appointed to the position by former president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah.

Human rights

Male same-sex sexual activity is illegal under Section 61 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861, and imprisonment for life is possible.[129][130]

Excessive police brutality is also a frequent problem. Protesters have been killed by security forces, as have prison rioters (in one incident at Pademba Road Prison, 30 inmates and one correction officer were killed). Multiple allegations were made during the COVID-19 lockdown period of police attacking people trying to obtain basic necessities.[131]

Administrative divisions

 
The 14 districts and 2 areas of Sierra Leone

The Republic of Sierra Leone is composed of five regions: the Northern Province, North West Province, Southern Province, the Eastern Province, and the Western Area. Four provinces are further divided into 14 districts; the Western Area is divided into two districts.

The provincial districts are divided into 186 chiefdoms, which have traditionally been led by paramount chiefs, recognised by the British administration in 1896 at the time of organising the Protectorate of Sierra Leone. The Paramount Chiefs are influential, particularly in villages and small rural towns.[132] Each chiefdom has ruling families that were recognised at that time; the Tribal Authority, made up of local notables, elects the paramount chief from the ruling families.[132] Typically, chiefs have the power to "raise taxes, control the judicial system, and allocate land, the most important resource in rural areas."[133]

Within the context of local governance, the districts are governed as localities. Each has a directly elected local district council to exercise authority and carry out functions at a local level.[134][135] In total, there are 19 local councils: 13 district councils, one for each of the 12 districts and one for the Western Area Rural, and six municipalities also have elected local councils. The six municipalities include Freetown, which functions as the local government for the Western Area Urban District, and Bo, Bonthe, Kenema, Koidu, and Makeni.[134][136][137]

While the district councils are under the oversight of their respective provincial administrations, the municipalities are directly overseen by the Ministry of Local Government & Community Development and thus administratively independent of district and provincial administrations.

District Capital Area (km2) Province Population
(2004 census)[138]
Population
(2015 census)[139]
Bombali District Makeni 7,985 Northern
Province
408,390 606,183[140]
Koinadugu District Kabala 12,121 265,758 408,097[141]
Port Loko District Port Loko 5,719 453,746 614,063[141]
Tonkolili District Magburaka 7,003 347,197 530,776[142]
Kambia District Kambia 3,108 270,462 343,686[143]
Kenema District Kenema 6,053 Eastern
Province
497,948 609,873[144]
Kono District Koidu Town 5,641 335,401 505,767[145]
Kailahun District Kailahun 3,859 358,190 525,372[145]
Bo District Bo 5,219 Southern
Province
463,668 574,201[146]
Bonthe District Mattru Jong 3,468 139,687 200,730[147]
Pujehun District Pujehun 4,105 228,392 345,577
Moyamba District Moyamba 6,902 260,910 318,064
Western Area Urban District Freetown 13 Western
Area
772,873 1,050,301
Western Area Rural District Waterloo 544 174,249 442,951

Economy

 
Historical GDP per capita development
 
A proportional representation of Sierra Leone exports, 2019

By the 1990s, economic activity was declining and economic infrastructure had become seriously degraded. Over the next decade, much of the formal economy was destroyed in the country's civil war. Since the end of hostilities in January 2002, massive infusions of outside assistance have helped Sierra Leone begin to recover.[148]

Much of the recovery will depend on the success of the government's efforts to limit corruption by officials, which many feel was the chief cause of the civil war. A key indicator of success will be the effectiveness of government management of its diamond sector.

There is high unemployment, particularly among the youth and ex-combatants. Authorities have been slow to implement reforms in the civil service, and the pace of the privatisation programme is also slackening and donors have urged its advancement.

The currency is the leone. The central bank is the Bank of Sierra Leone. Sierra Leone operates a floating exchange rate system, and foreign currencies can be exchanged at any of the commercial banks, recognised foreign exchange bureaux and most hotels. Credit card use is limited in Sierra Leone, though they may be used at some hotels and restaurants. There are a few internationally linked automated teller machines that accept Visa cards in Freetown operated by ProCredit Bank.

Agriculture

 
A farmer with his rice harvest in Sierra Leone. Two-thirds of Sierra Leone's population are directly involved in subsistence agriculture.[149]

Two-thirds of the population of Sierra Leone are directly involved in subsistence agriculture.[149] Agriculture accounted for 58 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2007.[150]

Agriculture is the largest employer with 80 per cent of the population working in the sector.[151] Rice is the most important staple crop in Sierra Leone with 85 per cent of farmers cultivating rice during the rainy season[152] and an annual consumption of 76 kg per person.[153]

Mining

Rich in minerals, Sierra Leone has relied on mining, especially diamonds, for its economic base. The country is among the top ten diamond producing nations. Mineral exports remain the main currency earner. Sierra Leone is a major producer of gem-quality diamonds. Though rich in diamonds, it has historically struggled to manage their exploitation and export.

Sierra Leone is known for its blood diamonds that were mined and sold to diamond conglomerates during the civil war, to buy the weapons that fuelled its atrocities.[154] In the 1970s and early 1980s, economic growth rate slowed because of a decline in the mining sector and increasing corruption among government officials.

Percentage of GDP by sector (2007)[150]
Rank Sector Percentage
of GDP
1 Agriculture 58.5
2 Other services 10.4
3 Trade and tourism 9.5
4 Wholesale and retail trade 9.0
5 Mining and quarrying 4.5
6 Government Services 4.0
7 Manufacturing and handicrafts 2.0
8 Construction 1.7
9 Electricity and water 0.4

Annual production of Sierra Leone's diamond estimates range between US$250 million–$300 million. Some of that is smuggled, where it is possibly used for money laundering or financing illicit activities. Formal exports have dramatically improved since the civil war, with efforts to improve the management of them having some success. In October 2000, a UN-approved certification system for exporting diamonds from the country was put in place and led to a dramatic increase in legal exports. In 2001, the government created a mining community development fund (DACDF), 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.

Transport infrastructure

 
The road from Kenema to Kailahun District

There are several systems of transport in Sierra Leone, which has a road, air and water infrastructure, including a network of highways and several airports. There are 11,300 kilometres (7,000 miles) of highways in Sierra Leone, of which 904 km (562 mi)[104] are paved (about 8% of the roads). Sierra Leone's highways are linked to Conakry, Guinea, and Monrovia, Liberia.

Sierra Leone has the largest natural harbour on the African continent, allowing international shipping through the Queen Elizabeth II Quay in the Cline Town area of eastern Freetown or through Government Wharf in central Freetown. There are 800 km (497 mi) of waterways in Sierra Leone, of which 600 km (373 mi) are navigable year-round. Major port cities are Bonthe, Freetown, Sherbro Island and Pepel.

There are ten regional airports in Sierra Leone, and one international airport. The Freetown International Airport located in the coastal town of Lungi in Northern Sierra Leone is the primary airport for domestic and international travel to or from Sierra Leone. Passengers cross the river to Aberdeen Heliports in Freetown by hovercraft, ferry or a helicopter. Helicopters are also available from the airport to other major cities in the country. The airport has paved runways longer than 3,047 metres (9,997 feet). The other airports have unpaved runways, and seven have runways from 914 to 1,523 metres (2,999 to 4,997 feet) long; the remaining two have shorter runways.

Sierra Leone appears on the EU list of prohibited countries with regard to the certification of airlines. This means that no airline registered in Sierra Leone may operate services of any kind within the European Union. This is due to substandard safety standards.[155]

As of March 2023, the country's only international airport had regularly scheduled direct flights to Istanbul, Paris, Brussels and most major cities in West Africa.

In September 2014 there were many Districts with travel restrictions including Kailahun, Kenema, Bombali, Tonkolili, and Port Loko because of Ebola.[156]

Energy in Sierra Leone

 
Sierra Leone electricity production by source

Overview

As of 2016, about 12% of the population of Sierra Leone had access to electricity. Of that 12%, 10% was in the capital Freetown, and the remaining 90% of the country used 2% of the nation's electricity.[157] The majority of the population relies on biomass fuels for their daily survival, with firewood and coal used most prevalently.[158] The burning of these sources has been reported to have adverse health effects on women and children.[158] A 2012 study was done on the correlation between Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI), and burning biomass fuels in the home. The results were that 64% of children were diagnosed with ARI where firewood stoves were used, and 44% where charcoal stoves were used.[158] The use of coal and firewood has also posed environmental concerns as they are both in conflict with the push for more sustainable sources of energy.[159] As a result, the commercialisation of firewood and coal has been a point of contention with aid donors and government agencies such as the Ministry of Energy and Water Resources and the Forestry Division.[159] There have been strong pushes for both solar and hydropower to become the dominant sources of energy in Sierra Leone because of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, particularly goal number seven (affordable and clean energy). Sierra Leone's tropical climate, heavy annual rainfall, and abundance of rivers give it the potential to realistically pursue more solar and hydropower alternatives.[160]

Solar energy

In conjunction with the UK's Department for International Development (DFID), Sierra Leone has set the goal to provide solar power to all of its citizens by 2025.[161] This overarching goal has been broken down into smaller goals as well. The first of these goals is to provide solar power to at least 50,000 homes in 2016, the second is 250,000 homes by 2017, and finally to provide power to 1,000,000 people by 2020.[161] This initiative falls under the Energy Africa access campaign which seeks to provide electricity to 14 different African countries by 2030.[157] Previous to this compact agreement, Sierra Leone's private sector for solar energy was weak, as it provided energy to less than 5% of the target population.[157] Part of the reason for this was due to the import duties and taxes and the lack of quality control.[157] To ensure that the Energy Africa goal is met, Sierra Leone has agreed to remove its import duties and Value Added Tax (VAT) on certified solar products.[161] This change will attempt to encourage foreign investment while providing affordable, quality solar products to its citizens. It is estimated that there will be a 30% to 40% cost reduction on solar products with the lack of duties and taxes.[157]

Hydroelectric power

As of 2012, Sierra Leone has 3 main hydroelectric plants. The first is the Guma plant which was decommissioned in 1982, the second is the Dodo Plant which is located in the Eastern Province, and finally the Bumbuna plant.[160] There is also potential for several new hydroelectric plants to be opened on the Sewa River, Pampana River, Seli River, Moa River, and Little Scarcies.[160] Amongst all these projects, both finished and potential, the Bumbuna dam still remains the largest of the hydroelectric projects in Sierra Leone.[160] It is located near the Seli River and Freetown and was estimated to produce about 50 megawatts of electricity.[162] There were plans to increase its capacity 400 megawatts by 2017 which would cost around $750 million.[163] It has been projected that the Bumbuna dam could potentially reduce the amount of spending on foreign fuel and save the country at least $2 million a month.[164] In the past this project received its funding of over $200 million from a combination of the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the Italian company Salini Impregilo.[162]

Demographics

 
Sierra Leone's total population, from 1961 to 2013

In 2019 Sierra Leone had a population of 7,813,215[165] and a growth rate of 2.216% a year.[104] The country's population is mostly young, with an estimated 41.7% under 15, and rural, with an estimated 62% of people living outside the cities.[104] As a result of migration to cities, the population is becoming more urban with an estimated rate of urbanisation growth of 2.9% a year.[104][166]

Population density varies greatly within Sierra Leone. The Western Area Urban District, including Freetown, the capital and largest city, has a population density of 1,224 persons per square km. The largest district geographically, Koinadugu, has a much lower density of 21.4 persons per square km.[166]

English is the official language,[167] spoken at schools, government administration and in the media. Krio (derived from English and several indigenous African languages, and the language of the Sierra Leone Krio people) is the most widely spoken language in virtually all parts of Sierra Leone. As the Krio language is spoken by 90% of the country's population,[104][168] it unites all the different ethnic groups, especially in their trade and interaction with each other.[169]

After the contribution made by the Bangladesh UN Peacekeeping Force in the Sierra Leone Civil War under the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone, the government of Ahmad Tejan Kabbah declared Bengali an honorary official language in December 2002.[170][171]

According to the World Refugee Survey 2008, published by the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, Sierra Leone had a population of 8,700 refugees and asylum seekers at the end of 2007. Nearly 20,000 Liberian refugees voluntarily returned to Liberia over the course of 2007. Of the refugees remaining in Sierra Leone, nearly all were Liberian.[172]

 
Largest cities or towns in Sierra Leone
Government of Sierra Leone 2004 Census[173]
Rank Name District Pop.
 
Freetown
 
Bo
1 Freetown Western Area Urban District 853,651  
Kenema
 
Makeni
2 Bo Bo District 149,957
3 Kenema Kenema District 128,402
4 Makeni Bombali District 82,940
5 Koidu Town Kono District 80,025
6 Lunsar Port Loko District 24,450
7 Port Loko Port Loko District 23,195
8 Pandebu-Tokpombu Kenema District 20,219
9 Kabala Koinadugu District 19,074
10 Waterloo Western Area Urban District 18,579

The populations quoted above for the five largest cities are from the 2004 census. The figure for Freetown is for the Western Urban Area (Greater Freetown). Other figures are estimates from the source cited. Different sources give different estimates. Some claim that Magburaka should be included in the above list, but there is considerable difference among sources. One source estimates the population at 14,915,[174] whilst another puts it as high as 85,313.[175] "Pandebu-Tokpombu" is presumably the extended town of Torgbonbu, which had a population of 10,716 in the 2004 census. "Gbendembu" had a larger population of 12,139 in that census. In the 2004 census, Waterloo had a population of 34,079.

Religion

Religion in Sierra Leone (2020)[2]
Religion percent
Islam
78.5%
Christianity
20.4%
Other faiths
1.1%
 
A mosque and a church in Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone is officially a secular state. Islam and Christianity are the two main religions in the country. The constitution of Sierra Leone provides for freedom of religion and the Sierra Leone Government generally protects it. The Sierra Leonean Government is constitutionally forbidden from establishing a state religion, though Muslim and Christian prayers are usually held in the country at the beginning of major political occasions, including presidential inaugurations and the official opening of the new session of Parliament.

Surveys of the religious make up of Sierra Leone vary widely, though Muslims make up the majority of the population. Based on 2015 estimates of the population of Sierra Leone, 77% of the population are Muslims, 22% are Christians, and 1% practise African traditional religion.

According to a 2020 estimates by the Pew Research Center[176] 78.5% of Sierra Leone's population are Muslims (mostly Sunni), 20.4% are Christians (mostly Protestants) and 1.1% belong to a traditional African religion or other beliefs. The Inter-Religious Council of Sierra Leone estimated that 77% of Sierra Leone's population are Muslims, 21% are Christians, and 2% are followers of traditional African religion.[177] Most of Sierra Leone's ethnic groups are Muslim majority, including the country's two largest ethnic groups: the Mende and Temne.

Sierra Leone is regarded as one of the most religiously tolerant countries in the world.[178][179][180] Most the major Muslim and Christian holidays are officially national holidays in the country, and religious conflict is rare.[181]

The country is home to the Sierra Leone Inter-Religious Council, which is made up of both Christian and Muslim religious leaders to promote peace and tolerance throughout the country.[182][183][184] The Islamic holidays of Eid al-Fitr, Eid al-Adha and Maulid-un-Nabi (Birthday of the Islamic prophet Muhammad) are observed as national holidays in Sierra Leone. The Christian holidays of Christmas, Boxing Day, Good Friday and Easter are also national holidays in Sierra Leone. In politics, the overwhelming majority of Sierra Leoneans vote for a candidate without regard of the candidate being a Muslim or a Christian.[citation needed] All of Sierra Leone's Heads of State have been Christians except Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, who was a Muslim.

The overwhelming majority of Sierra Leonean Muslims, are adherent to the Sunni tradition of Islam in practice. Most of the Mosques and Islamic schools across Sierra Leone are based in Sunni Islam. Ahmadiyya Muslims make up about 10% of the country's Muslim population. Sierra Leone has a vibrant Ahmaddiya Muslim population, especially in the southern city of Bo, which is home to a large Ahmadiyya Muslim population. There are five hundred Ahmadiyya Mosque across Sierra Leone.[185] Shia Islam does not have a strong presence in Sierra Leone, and there are virtually no Shia Muslims in the country. Most Sierra Leonean Muslims of the Sunni and Ahmadiyya sect generally pray together in the same mosque.[186][187] The vast majority of Sierra Leonean Muslims are adherent to the Maliki school of Sunni Islam. The Maliki school is by far the largest and most dominant Islamic school of jurisprudence across Sierra Leone. Many Ahmadiyya Muslims in Sierra Leone also follow the Maliki Jurisprudence.

The Sierra Leone Islamic Supreme Council is the highest Islamic religious organisation in Sierra Leone and is made up of the country's Imams, Islamic scholars, and other Islamic clerics across the country. Sheikh Muhammad Taha Jalloh is the president of the Sierra Leone Supreme Islamic Council.[188] The United Council of Imams, is an influential Islamic religious body in Sierra Leone, that is made up of all imams of mosques throughout Sierra Leone. The president of the United Council of Imam is Sheikh Alhaji Muhammad Habib Sheriff.[189] The two largest mosques in Sierra Leone are the Freetown Central Mosque and the Ghadafi Central Mosque (built by former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi), both located in the capital Freetown.

The large majority of Sierra Leonean Christians are Protestant, of which the largest groups are the WesleyanMethodists.[190][191][192][193][194] Other Christian Protestant denominations with significant presence in the country include Presbyterians,[195] Baptists,[196] Seventh-day Adventists[197] Anglicans,[198] Lutherans,[199][200] and Pentecostals.[201] The Council of Churches is the Christian religious organisation that is made up of Protestant churches across Sierra Leone. Recently there has been an increase of Pentecostal churches, especially in Freetown.

In September 2017, a Sierra Leone-based Nigerian Pentecostal Christian pastor name Victor Ajisafe was arrested by the Sierra Leone Police and held in jail after he made controversial remarks against Islam and Sierra Leonean Muslims in particular at his church sermon in the capital Freetown. Ajisafe was apparently angry after a Zimbabwean Muslim cleric Mufti Menk had visited Sierra Leone and preached to large crowds.[202] Many Christian organisations in Sierra Leone, including the Council of Churches condemned Ajisafe's sermon against Islam and Muslims. Ajisafe's church was temporarily shut down by the Sierra Leone government and his church licence was temporarily suspended too. The incident brought religious tension in Sierra Leone, in a country known for its high level of religious tolerance, as many Sierra Leonean Muslims at home and abroad called for Ajisafe to be deported back to his home country of Nigeria. The pastor while in Sierra Leone police custody apologised to Sierra Leonean Muslims and to the government of Sierra Leone. After several days in jail, Ajisafe was released, his church licence was given back to him, and his church was later reopened under strict government condition during several months of probation.

Non-denominational Protestants form a significant minority of Sierra Leone's Christian population.[203] Catholics are the largest group of non-Protestant Christians in Sierra Leone, forming about 8% of Sierra Leone's population and 26% of the Christian population in Sierra Leone.[204] The Jehovah’s Witnesses[205] and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints[206][207] are the two most prominent non-Trinitarian Christians in Sierra Leone, and they form a small but significant minority of the Christian population in Sierra Leone. A small community of Orthodox Christians resides in the capital Freetown.[208]

Ethnic groups

Ethnic groups
of Sierra Leone
[13]
Temne 32.5%
Mende 30.2%
Fula 12.4%
Limba 4.4%
kono 3.4%
Susu 2.9%
Loko 2.9%
Koranko 2.8%
Sherbro 2.6%
Mandingo 2.4%
Krio 1.3%

Sierra Leone is home to about sixteen ethnic groups, each with its own language. The largest and most influential are the Temne at about 35.5% and the Mende at about 33.2%. The Temne predominate in the Northern Sierra Leone and some areas around the capital of Sierra Leone. The Mende predominate in South-Eastern Sierra Leone (with the exception of Kono District).

The vast majority of Temne are Muslims at over 85%; with a significant Christian minority at about 10%. The Mende are also Muslim majority at about 70%, though with a large Christian minority at about 30%. Sierra Leone's national politics centres on the competition between the north-west, dominated by the Temne, and the south-east dominated by the Mende. The vast majority of the Mende support the Sierra Leone People's Party; while the majority of the Temne support the All People's Congress.[209]

The Mende, who are believed to be descendants of the Mane,[citation needed] originally occupied the Liberian hinterland. They began moving into Sierra Leone slowly and peacefully in the eighteenth century. The Temne are said to have migrated from Futa Jallon, which is in present-day Guinea.

The third-largest ethnic group are the Limba at about 8.4% of the population. The Limba are native people of Sierra Leone. They have no tradition of origin, and it is believed that they have lived in Sierra Leone since before the European encounter. The Limba are primarily found in Northern Sierra Leone, particularly in Bombali, Kambia and Koinadugu District. The Limba are about 60% Christian and 40% Muslims. The Limba are close political allies of the neighbouring Temne.

Since independence, the Limba have traditionally been influential in Sierra Leone's politics, along with the Mende. The vast majority of Limba support the All People's Congress (APC) political party. Sierra Leone's first and second presidents, Siaka Stevens and Joseph Saidu Momoh, respectively, were both ethnic Limba. Sierra Leone's former defense minister Alfred Paolo Conteh is an ethnic Limba.

One of the biggest minority ethnic groups are the Fula at around 3.8% of the population. Descendants of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Fula migrant settlers from the Fouta Djalon region of Guinea, they live primarily in the northeast and the western area of Sierra Leone. The Fula are virtually all Muslims at over 99%. The Fula are primarily traders, and many live in middle-class homes. Because of their trading, the Fulas are found in nearly all parts of the country.

The other ethnic groups are the Mandingo (also known as Mandinka). They are descendants of traders from Guinea who migrated to Sierra Leone during the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. The Mandinka are predominantly found in the east and the northern part of the country. They predominate in the large towns, most notably Karina, in Bombali District in the north; Kabala and Falaba in Koinadugu District in the north; and Yengema, Kono District in the east of the country. Like the Fula, the Mandinka are virtually all Muslims at over 99℅. Sierra Leone's third president, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, and Sierra Leone's first Vice-President, Sorie Ibrahim Koroma, were both ethnic Mandingo.

Next in proportion are the Kono, who live primarily in Kono District in Eastern Sierra Leone. The Kono are descendants of migrants from Guinea; today their workers are known primarily as diamond miners. The majority of the Kono ethnic group are Christians, though with an influential Muslim minority. Sierra Leone's former Vice-President Alhaji Samuel Sam-Sumana is an ethnic Kono.

The small but significant Creole or Krio people (descendants of freed African American, West Indian and Liberated African slaves who settled in Freetown between 1787 and about 1885) make up about 3% of the population. They primarily occupy the capital city of Freetown and its surrounding Western Area. Creole or Krio culture reflects the Western culture and ideals within which many of their ancestors originated – they also had close ties with British officials and colonial administration during years of development.

The Creoles or Krio have traditionally dominated Sierra Leone's judiciary and Freetown's elected city council. One of the first ethnic groups to become educated according to Western traditions, they have traditionally been appointed to positions in the civil service, beginning during the colonial years. They continue to be influential in the civil service. The Creoles or Krios are virtually all Christians at about 99%.

The Oku people are the descendants of liberated muslim Yorubas from Southwest Nigeria, who were released from slave ships and resettled in Sierra Leone as Liberated Africans or came as settlers in the mid-19th century. The Oku people primarily reside in the communities of Fourah Bay, Fula Town, and Aberdeen in Freetown. The Oku are virtually all Muslims at about 99%.

Other minority ethnic groups are the Kuranko, who are related to the Mandingo and are largely Muslims. The Kuranko are believed to have begun arriving in Sierra Leone from Guinea in about 1600 and settled in the north, particularly in Koinadugu District. The Kuranko are primarily farmers; leaders among them have traditionally held several senior positions in the Military. The current Governor of the Bank of Sierra Leone Kaifala Marah is an ethnic Kuranko. The Kuranko are largely Muslim majority.

The Loko in the north are native people of Sierra Leone, believed to have lived in Sierra Leone since the time of European encounter. Like the neighbouring Temne, the Loko are Muslim majority. The Susu and their related Yalunka are traders; both groups are primarily found in the far north in Kambia and Koinadugu District close to the border with Guinea. The Susu and Yalunka kingdom was established in the early fifth seventh century[clarification needed] before the Mali empire, which was extended from Mali, Senegal, Guinea Bissau, Guinea Conakry to the northern part of Sierra Leone. They are the original owners of the Futa Djallon region covered by a vars land area both the Susu and Yalunka people are descendants of the Mande people. They are virtually all Muslims. The Yalunka also spelled Jallonke, Yalonga, Djallonké, Djallonka or Dialonké, are Mande people who have lived in the Djallon, a mountainous region in Sierra Leone, Mali, Senegal, Guinea Bissau and Guinea Conakry West Africa over 520 years ago. The name Yalunka literally means "inhabitants of the Jallon (mountains)". Manga Sewa was born in Falaba, Solima chiefdom, in the Northern Province of British Sierra Leone to Yalunka parents. His father was a Yalunka paramount chief of Solima, a prosperous chieftaincy. Its capital, Falaba, was on the rich trading routes leading to the coast. Manga Sewa's father had several wives and dozens of children. are traders; both groups are primarily found in the far north in Kambia and Koinadugu District close to the border with Guinea. The Susu and Yalunka are both descendants of migrants from Guinea; they both are virtually all Muslims at over 99%.

The Kissi live further inland in South-Eastern Sierra Leone. They predominate in the large town of Koindu and its surrounding areas in Kailahun District. The vast majority of Kissi are Christians. The much smaller Vai and Kru peoples are primarily found in Kailahun and Pujehun Districts near the border with Liberia. The Kru predominate in the Kroubay neighbourhood in the capital of Freetown. The Vai are largely Muslim majority at about 90%, while the Kru are virtually all Christians at over 99%.

On the coast in Bonthe District in the south are the Sherbro. Native to Sierra Leone, they have occupied Sherbro Island since it was founded. The Sherbro are primarily fisherman and farmers, and they are predominantly found in Bonthe District. The Sherbro are virtually all Christians, and their paramount chiefs had a history of intermarriage with British colonists and traders.

A small number of Sierra Leoneans are of partial or full Lebanese ancestry, descendants of traders who first came to the nation in the 19th century. They are locally known as Sierra Leonean-Lebanese. The Sierra Leonean-Lebanese community are primarily traders and they mostly live in middle-class households in the urban areas, primarily in Freetown, Bo, Kenema, Koidu Town and Makeni.

Gender equality

Household

Although women account for about 50 per cent of the population in Sierra Leone, only 28 per cent are household heads.[210] As in the rest of the countries, education is a key factor in succeeding in aspects such as a well-paid job and covering the needs of a house. Rural areas are the most common to lack access to education having only male-headed four per cent ahead of females with basic education and 1.2 per cent more at post-graduate level.[210]

In Sierra Leone, normally, men are automatically positioned as household heads; and their status does not change if their marital status changes over time.[210] However, female household does change depending on their marital status. A woman can be the head of the house only if she remains single for the rest of her life. But if a woman gets married, she will not be entitled as the head of the house any more.[210] Females can take over the household head if they become widowed or divorced.[210]

In the labour field, it is expected that the household will financially provide for the needs of the family. However, females face gender discrimination making them the target of lower incomes and financial struggle.[210] In numbers, females present a lower per cent (6.3) versus males (15.2) when it comes to be paid employees.[210]

War

Children who have been forced to be part of a war have experienced severe mental and emotional damage in Sierra Leone. However, the damage and way to deal with the effects of war depends on the gender of the kids. Both genders experienced and were involved in high levels of violence. Females, experiencing higher levels of rapes, presented greater signs of depression and anxiety.[211] Males, on the other hand, presented higher levels of anxiety and hostility.[211] Males also showed to be more vulnerable to depression after losing a caregiver.[211]

Female economy

Women face discrimination when it comes to obtaining financial, social, and cultural help to start a business.[80] It is difficult to avoid the economic paralysis in Sierra Leone given that more than half of the population in the country is women.[80] Due to the lack of access to basic education, women are the least prepared when it comes to processing business licences, registering names or contracting.[80] Not having the capital to start a new business is the biggest barrier for women.[80] With the lack of technology, mostly in all Sierra Leone, it is hard to help a business to function.[80]

Education

 
A secondary school class in Pendembu, Kailahun District

Education in Sierra Leone is legally required for all children for six years at primary level (Class P1-P6) and three years in junior secondary education,[212] but a shortage of schools and teachers has made implementation impossible.[89] Two thirds of the adult population of the country are illiterate.[213]

The Sierra Leone Civil War resulted in the destruction of 1,270 primary schools, and in 2001, 67% of all school-age children were out of school.[89] The situation has improved considerably since then with primary school enrolment doubling between 2001 and 2005 and the reconstruction of many schools since the end of the war.[214] Students at primary schools are usually 6 to 12 years old, and in secondary schools 13 to 18. Primary education is free and compulsory in government-sponsored public schools.

The country has three universities: Fourah Bay College, founded in 1827 (the oldest university in West Africa),[215] University of Makeni (established initially in September 2005 as The Fatima Institute, the college was granted university status in August 2009, and assumed the name University of Makeni, or UNIMAK), and Njala University, primarily located in Bo District. Njala University was established as the Njala Agricultural Experimental Station in 1910 and became a university in 2005.[216] Teacher training colleges and religious seminaries are found in many parts of the country.

Health

The CIA estimated that the average life expectancy in Sierra Leone was 57.39 years.[217]

The prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the population is 1.6%, higher than the world average of 1% but lower than the average of 6.1% across Sub-Saharan Africa.[218]

Medical care is not readily accessible, with doctors and hospitals out of reach for many villagers. While free health care may be provided in some villages, the medical staff is poorly paid and sometimes charge for their services, taking advantage of the fact that the villagers are not aware of their right to free medical care.[219]

A dialysis machine, the first of its kind in the country, was donated by Israel.[220]

According to an Overseas Development Institute report, private health expenditure accounts for 85.7% of total spending on health.[221]

Emergency medical response

Having had no formal emergency medical services previously, the First Responder Coalition of Sierra Leone (FRCSL) was formed in June 2019 in Makeni to facilitate the development of emergency first responder programs nationwide.[222] The founding members of the Coalition included the Sierra Leone Red Cross Society (the first chairing organisation), LFR International (proposed the formation), the University of Makeni, Agency for Rural Community Transformation, and the Holy Spirit Hospital.[222] The establishment of the Coalition was concurrent with the declaration by the 72nd World Health Assembly that emergency care systems are essential to universal health coverage.[223] Between June and July 2019, the FRCSL trained 1,000 community members from Makeni to be first responders and equipped each trainee with a first aid kit.[224]

Endemic and infectious diseases

Sierra Leone suffers from epidemic outbreaks of diseases, including yellow fever, cholera, Ebola, lassa fever and meningitis.[225][226] Yellow fever and malaria are endemic to Sierra Leone.[226]

Maternal and child health

According to 2017 estimates, Sierra Leone has the third highest maternal mortality rate in the world.[227] For every 100 liveborn children, one mother dies due to complications of giving birth.[227]

In the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) conducted by UNICEF in 2012, the prevalence of female genital mutilation in Sierra Leone was 94%.[228] As of 2014, Sierra Leone was estimated as having the 11th highest infant mortality rate in the world.[229]

One of the consequences women in Sierra Leone face after a prolonged and obstructed labour that would have required a c-section is obstetric fistula. This condition often drives women into poverty and isolation.[230]

The AWC- Aberdeen Women's Centre in Freetown, the second busiest hospital in Sierra Leone, delivering up to 3000 babies each year.[231] The centre provides free surgery for women suffering from this condition.

The centre provides a variety of maternal and child health services and is supported by not for profit organisations such as Freedom from Fistula,[232] The Aminata Maternal Foundation,[233][better source needed] and UNFPA.[234]

Mental health

Mental healthcare in Sierra Leone is almost non-existent. Many sufferers try to cure themselves with the help of traditional healers.[235] During the Civil War (1991–2002), many soldiers took part in atrocities and many children were forced to fight. This left them traumatised, with an estimated 400,000 people (by 2009) being mentally ill. Thousands of former child soldiers have fallen into substance abuse as they try to blunt their memories.[236]

Potable water supply

The water supply in Sierra Leone is characterised by limited access to safe drinking water. Despite efforts by the government and numerous non-governmental organisations, access has not much improved since the end of the Sierra Leone Civil War in 2002, stagnating at about 50% and even declining in rural areas.[237] It is hoped that a new dam in Orugu, for which China committed financing in 2009, will alleviate water scarcity.[238]

According to a national survey carried out in 2006, 84% of the urban population and 32% of the rural population had access to an improved water source. Those with access in rural areas were served almost exclusively by protected wells. The 68% of the rural population without access to an improved water source relied on surface water (50%), unprotected wells (9%) and unprotected springs (9%). Only 20% of the urban population and 1% of the rural population had access to piped drinking water in their home. Compared to the 2000 survey access has increased in urban areas, but has declined in rural areas, possibly because facilities have broken down because of a lack of maintenance.[237][239]

With a new decentralisation policy, embodied in the Local Government Act of 2004, responsibility for water supply in areas outside the capital was passed from the central government to local councils. In Freetown, the Guma Valley Water Company remains in charge of the water supply.

 
A situation map of the Ebola outbreak as of 8 August 2014

2014 Ebola outbreak

Ebola is prevalent in Africa where social and economic inequalities are common. The central African countries are the most prevalent of EVD; like the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Uganda, and Gabon[240]

In 2014 there was an outbreak of the Ebola virus in West Africa. As of 19 October 2014, there had been 3,706 cases of Ebola in Sierra Leone, and 1,259 deaths, including that of the leading physician trying to control the outbreak, Sheik Umar Khan.[241][242] In early August 2014 Guinea closed its borders to Sierra Leone to help contain the spreading of the virus, which originated in Guinea, as more new cases of the disease were being reported in Sierra Leone than in Guinea. Aside from the human cost, the outbreak was severely eroding the economy. By September 2014, with the closure of borders, the cancellation of airline flights, the evacuation of foreign workers and a collapse of cross-border trade, the national deficit of Sierra Leone and other affected countries was widening to the point where the IMF was considering expanding its financial support.[243]

Culture

Polygamy

As of 2019, 30% of women and 14% of men were in a polygamous unions in Sierra Leone. "The percentage of women with one or more co-wives has decreased gradually over time, from 37% in 2008 and 35% in 2013 to 30% in 2019."[244]

Food and customs

 
Rice farming in Rolako

Rice is the staple food of Sierra Leone and is consumed at virtually every meal daily. The rice is prepared in numerous ways, and topped with a variety of sauces made from some of Sierra Leone's favourite toppings, including potato leaves, cassava leaves, crain crain, okra soup, fried fish and groundnut stew.[245]

Along the streets of towns and cities across Sierra Leone, one can find foods consisting of fruit, vegetables and snacks such as fresh mangoes, oranges, pineapple, fried plantains, ginger beer, fried potato, fried cassava with pepper sauce; small bags of popcorn or peanuts, bread, roasted corn, or skewers of grilled meat or shrimp.

Poyo is a popular Sierra Leonean drink. It is a sweet, lightly fermented palm wine,[246] and is found in bars in towns and villages across the country. Poyo bars are areas of lively informal debate about politics, football, basketball, entertainment and other issues.

Media

 
A radio listener in Kailahun

Media in Sierra Leone began with the introduction of the first printing press in Africa at the start of the 19th century. A strong free journalistic tradition developed with the creation of several newspapers. In the 1860s, the country became a journalist hub for Africa, with professionals travelling to the country from across the continent. At the end of the 19th century, the industry went into decline, and when radio was introduced in the 1930s, it became the primary communication media in the country.

The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Service (SLBS) was created by the colonial government in 1934 making it the earliest English language radio broadcaster service in West Africa. The service began broadcasting television in 1963, with coverage extended to all the districts in the country in 1978. In April 2010, the SLBS merged with the United Nations peacekeeping radio station in Sierra Leone to form the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation,[247][248] the government-owned current national broadcaster in Sierra Leone.

The Sierra Leone constitution guarantees freedom of speech, and freedom of the press; however, the government maintains strong control of media, and at times restricts these rights in practice.[249][250][251][252][253][254] Some subjects are seen as taboo by society and members of the political elite; imprisonment and violence have been used by the political establishment against journalists.[255][256]

Under legislation enacted in 1980, all newspapers must register with the Ministry of Information and pay sizeable registration fees. The Criminal Libel Law, including Seditious Libel Law of 1965, is used to control what is published in the media.[256]

In 2006, President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah committed to reforming the laws governing the press and media to create a freer system for journalists to work in.[256] As of 2013 Sierra Leone is ranked 61st (up two slots from 63rd in 2012) out of 179 countries on Reporters Without Borders' Press Freedom Index.[257]

Print media is not widely read in Sierra Leone, especially outside Freetown and other major cities, partially due to the low levels of literacy in the country.[258] In 2007 there were 15 daily newspapers in the country, as well as those published weekly.[259] Among newspaper readership, young people are likely to read newspapers weekly and older people daily. The majority of newspapers are privately run and are often critical of the government. The standard of print journalism tends to be low owing to lack of training, and people trust the information published in newspapers less than that found on the radio.[258]

 
Isata Mahoi shown editing radio programmes in Talking Drum studio Freetown; she is also an actress in the Sierra Leone radio soap opera Atunda Ayenda

Radio is the most popular and most-trusted media in Sierra Leone, with 85% of people having access to a radio and 72% of people in the country listening to the radio daily.[258] These levels do vary between areas of the country, with the Western Area having the highest levels and Kailahun the lowest. Stations mainly consist of local commercial stations with a limited broadcast range, combined with a few stations with national coverage – Capital Radio Sierra Leone being the largest of the commercial stations.

The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNIOSIL) ran one of the most popular stations in the country, broadcasting programs in a range of languages. The UN mission was restructured in 2008 and it was decided that the UN Radio would be merged with SLBS to form the new Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC). This merger eventually happened in 2011 after the necessary legislation was enacted. SLBC transmits radio on FM and has two television services, one of which is uplinked by satellite for international consumption. FM relays of the BBC World Service (in Freetown, Bo, Kenema and Makeni), Radio France Internationale (Freetown only) and Voice of America (Freetown only) are also broadcast.

Outside the capital Freetown and other major cities, television is not watched by a great many people, although Bo, Kenema and Makeni are served by their own relays of the main SLBC service. There are three free terrestrial television stations in Sierra Leone, one run by the government SLBC and the other two are private stations in Freetown, Star TV which is run by the owner of the Standard-Times newspaper and AYV – Africa Young Voices. Several religious funded TV stations operate intermittently. Two other commercial TV operators (ABC and AIT) closed after they were not profitable. In 2007, a pay-per-view service was also introduced by GTV as part of a pan-African television service in addition to the nine-year-old sub-Saharan Digital satellite television service (DStv) originating from Multichoice Africa in South Africa. GTV subsequently went out of business, leaving DStv as the only provider of subscription satellite television in the country. Several organisations planned to operate digital terrestrial subscription TV services, with Multichoice's Go TV having built infrastructure ahead of getting a licence and ultimately failing to get a licence. ITV and SATCON are currently operational.

Internet access in Sierra Leone has been sparse but is on the increase, especially since the introduction of 3G/4G cellular phone services across the country. There are several main internet service providers (ISPs) operating in the country. Freetown has internet cafés and other businesses offering internet access. Problems experienced with access to the Internet include an intermittent electricity supply and a slow connection speed in the country outside Freetown.

Arts

The arts in Sierra Leone are a mixture of tradition and hybrid African and western styles.[260][261][262]

Sports

Association football is by far the most popular sport in Sierra Leone. Children, youth and adult are frequently seen playing street football across Sierra Leone. There are organised youth and adult football tournaments across the country, and there are various primary and secondary schools with football teams across Sierra Leone.

The Sierra Leone national football team, popularly known as the Leone Stars, represents the country in international competitions. It has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup but participated in the 1994 and 1996 African Cup of Nations. When the national football team, the Leone Stars, have a match, Sierra Leoneans across the country come together united in support of the national team and people rush to their local radio and television stations to follow the live match. The country's national television network, The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC) broadcasts the national football team live match, along with many local radio stations across the country.

When the Leone Stars win an important match, many youth across the county rush to the street to celebrate. Many of the Sierra Leone national team footballers play for teams based in Europe although virtually all of them started professional football in the Sierra Leone National Premier League. Many of the national team footballers are celebrities across Sierra Leone and they are often well known by the general population. Some of Sierra Leonean international footballers include Mohamed Kallon, Mohamed Bangura, Rodney Strasser, Kei Kamara, Ibrahim Teteh Bangura, Mustapha Dumbuya, Christian Caulker, Alhassan Bangura, Sheriff Suma, Osman Kakay, Mohamed Kamara, Umaru Bangura and Julius Gibrilla Woobay.

The Sierra Leone National Premier League is the top professional football league in Sierra Leone and is controlled by the Sierra Leone Football Association. Fourteen clubs from across the country compete in the Sierra Leone Premier League. The two biggest and most successful football clubs are East End Lions and Mighty Blackpool. East End Lions and Mighty Blackpool have an intense rivalry and when they play each other the national stadium in Freetown is often sold out and supporters of both clubs often clash with each other before and after the game. There is a huge police presence inside and outside the national stadium during a match between the two great rivals to prevent a clash. Many Sierra Leonean youth follow the local football league.

Many Sierra Leonean youth, children and adults follow the major football leagues in Europe, particularly the English Premier League, Italian Serie A, Spanish La Liga, German Bundesliga and French Ligue 1.

The Sierra Leone cricket team represents Sierra Leone in international cricket competitions and is among the best in West Africa. It became an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council in 2002. It made its international debut at the 2004 African Affiliates Championship, where it finished last of eight teams. But at the equivalent tournament in 2006, Division Three of the African region of the World Cricket League, it finished as runner-up to Mozambique, and just missed promotion to Division Two.

In 2009, the Sierra Leone Under-19 team finished second in the African Under-19 Championship in Zambia, thus qualifying for the Under-19 World Cup qualifying tournament with nine other teams.[263] However, the team was unable to obtain Canadian visas to play in the tournament, which was held in Toronto.[264]

Sierra Leone is the first African country to join the International Floorball Federation.

Tourism

Sierra Leone's Freetown is a favourite destination for tourists. Although the sector was seriously affected during the Civil War, there has been a steady improvement in recent years.[265] The city has a lot to offer to tourists. There is a vast expanse of beaches stretching along the Freetown Peninsula. The Lumley-Aberdeen beach stretches all the way from Cape Sierra Leone down to Lumley. There are also other popular beaches like the world renowned River Number 2 Beach, Laka Beach, Tokeh Beach, Bureh Beach, and Mama Beach. The Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary, which is located within the peninsula's vast rainforest reserve, just a few kilometres from the centre of Freetown, has a collection of rare and endangered chimpanzees. Other popular destinations for tourists include the Freetown Cotton Tree, located in Central Freetown, a significant national monument and integral to the founding of the city; Bunce Island, which is a boat ride from the city, is home to the ruins of the slave fortress that was being used during the Transatlantic slave trade; the Sierra Leone Museum, which has a collection of both precolonial as well as colonial artifacts and other items of historical significance; the National Railway Museum; or take a journey around the city's coastline with the popular Sea Coach Express. The Aberdenn-Lumley area is a favourite destination for those venturing into the city's nightlife.

See also

Notes

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sierra, leone, other, uses, disambiguation, note, officially, republic, country, southwest, coast, west, africa, shares, southeastern, border, with, liberia, northern, half, surrounded, guinea, covering, total, area, tropical, climate, with, environments, rang. For other uses see Sierra Leone disambiguation Sierra Leone note 1 officially the Republic of Sierra Leone is a country on the southwest coast of West Africa It shares its southeastern border with Liberia and the northern half is surrounded by Guinea Covering a total area of 71 740 km2 27 699 sq mi 12 it has a tropical climate with environments ranging from savanna to rainforests It has a population of 7 092 113 as of the 2015 census 13 Freetown is the capital and largest city The country is divided into five administrative regions which are subdivided into 16 districts 14 15 Republic of Sierra LeoneFlag Coat of armsMotto Unity Freedom Justice Anthem High We Exalt Thee Realm of the Free source source track track Location of Sierra Leone dark green Capitaland largest cityFreetown08 30 00 N 12 06 00 W 8 50000 N 12 10000 W 8 50000 12 10000 Coordinates 08 30 00 N 12 06 00 W 8 50000 N 12 10000 W 8 50000 12 10000Official languagesEnglishEthnic groups 2015 1 35 5 Mende33 2 Temne6 4 Limba4 4 Kono3 4 Fula2 9 Susu2 9 Loko2 8 Koranko2 6 Sherbro2 4 Mandingo1 3 KrioReligion 2020 2 Islam 78 5 Christianity 20 4 Others 1 1 Demonym s Sierra LeoneanGovernmentUnitary presidential republic PresidentJulius Maada Bio Vice PresidentMohamed Juldeh Jalloh Chief MinisterJacob Jusu Saffa 3 Speaker of ParliamentAbass Chernor BunduLegislatureParliamentIndependence from the United Kingdom Dominion27 April 1961 Republic19 April 1971Area Total71 740 km2 27 700 sq mi 117th Water 1 1Population 2022 estimate8 692 606 4 100th Density112 km2 290 1 sq mi 114tha GDP PPP 2022 estimate Total 16 4 billion 5 152nd Per capita 1 972 5 185th GDP nominal 2022 estimate Total 4 1 billion 5 170th Per capita 494 5 193th Gini 2018 35 7 6 mediumHDI 2021 0 477 7 low 181stCurrencyLeone SLL Time zoneUTC GMT Date formatdd mm yyyyDriving siderightCalling code 232ISO 3166 codeSLInternet TLD slRank based on 2007 figureIt is a constitutional republic with a unicameral parliament and a directly elected president serving a five year term with a maximum of two terms It is a secular nation with the constitution providing for the separation of state and religion and freedom of conscience which includes freedom of thoughts and religion 16 Muslims make up about three quarters of the population with a Christian minority 17 Sierra Leone as the country and its borders are known was founded by the British Crown in two phases first the coastal Sierra Leone Colony in 1808 for returning Africans after the abolition of slavery second the inland Protectorate in 1896 as the Crown needed to establish more dominion inland following the outcome of the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 Hence it formally became known as the Sierra Leone Colony and Protectorate or simply British Sierra Leone 18 19 It gained independence from the United Kingdom on 27 April 1961 and became a Commonwealth realm on the same day its name changed to the Dominion of Sierra Leone Sir Milton Margai became its first prime minister 20 During decades following independence Sierra Leone witnessed an increase in political activities transformations turmoil humanitarian and socio economic crises It had its first general elections as an independent nation on 27 May 1961 Margai s Sierra Leone People s Party SLPP won a plurality of parliamentary seats and he was re elected Prime Minister A new constitution was adopted in 1971 paving the way for Sierra Leone becoming a republic and Siaka Stevens leader of the All People s Congress APC becoming the first executive president of the Republic of Sierra Leone Stevens held on to this position for 14 years until 1985 under a one party system of government facilitated by the 1978 Constitution Stevens hand picked successor Joseph Saidu Momoh promised to return the country to a multi party system a constitution was adopted in 1991 that provided the means for a multi party democracy A civil war broke out the same year which went on for 11 years In 1992 President Momoh was ousted in a coup led by Sierra Leone Army captain Valentine Strasser Strasser was later ousted by his army colleague and second in command Julius Maada Bio for failing to commit to a quick transfer to civilian rule Bio would then return the country back to a democratic republic in 1996 through a general election 21 In 1996 the prospect of a transformation back to a multi party democracy emerged with the national debate Peace before Elections vs Elections before Peace Eventually Elections before Peace won the debate 21 Ahmad Tejan Kabbah won the 1996 presidential election and became the first multi party democratically elected president of Sierra Leone Kabbah s presidency included a focus on fostering national unity and reconciliation trust in government peace and stability the improvement in relations with countries and the refounding of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces with special assistance and training led by the Government of the United Kingdom 22 23 About 18 ethnic groups inhabit Sierra Leone the two largest are Temne and Mende peoples About 2 of the country s population are Creole people descendants of freed African American and Afro Caribbean slaves English is the official language used in schools and government administration Krio is spoken by 97 of the country s population Sierra Leone has diamond gold bauxite and aluminium It is a member of the United Nations African Union Economic Community of West African States ECOWAS Mano River Union Commonwealth of Nations IMF World Bank WTO African Development Bank and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation It is home to Sub Saharan Africa s first Western style university Fourah Bay College established in 1827 24 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 European trading 2 3 Black Poor of London 2 4 Province of Freedom 2 5 Nova Scotians 2 6 Jamaican Maroons and Liberated Africans 2 7 Colonial era 1800 1961 2 8 1960 Independence Conference 2 9 Independence 1961 and Margai Administration 1961 1964 2 10 After the death of Milton Margai and Albert Margai s tenure 1964 1967 2 11 1967 General Election and military coups 1967 1968 2 12 One party state and dawn of the Republic 1968 1991 2 13 Sierra Leone Civil War 1991 2002 and the NPRC regime 1992 1996 2 14 Kabbah s tenure government dawn of a new republic the AFRC and end of the Civil War 1996 2007 2 15 2007 General Election and the re emergence of APC 2 16 Struggle with the Ebola epidemic 2014 2016 2 17 14 August 2017 mudslides 2 18 2018 General election 3 Geography 3 1 Biodiversity 4 Government and politics 4 1 Parliament 4 2 Judiciary 4 3 Foreign relations 4 4 Military 4 5 Law enforcement 4 6 Human rights 4 7 Administrative divisions 5 Economy 5 1 Agriculture 5 2 Mining 5 3 Transport infrastructure 5 4 Energy in Sierra Leone 5 4 1 Overview 5 4 2 Solar energy 5 4 3 Hydroelectric power 6 Demographics 6 1 Religion 6 2 Ethnic groups 6 3 Gender equality 6 3 1 Household 6 3 2 War 6 3 3 Female economy 6 4 Education 7 Health 7 1 Emergency medical response 7 2 Endemic and infectious diseases 7 3 Maternal and child health 7 4 Mental health 7 5 Potable water supply 7 6 2014 Ebola outbreak 8 Culture 8 1 Polygamy 8 2 Food and customs 8 3 Media 8 4 Arts 8 5 Sports 9 Tourism 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 13 1 Fiction and memoir 13 1 1 Secondary sources 14 External linksEtymology EditIt takes its name from the Lion Mountains near Freetown Originally named Serra Leoa Portuguese for lioness mountains by Portuguese explorer Pedro de Sintra in 1462 the later name is derived from the Venetian spelling which was introduced by Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto and subsequently copied by other European mapmakers 25 History EditMain article History of Sierra Leone Early history Edit Fragments of prehistoric pottery from Kamabai Rock Shelter Bunce Island 1805 during the period the slave factory was run by John and Alexander Anderson An 1835 illustration of liberated Africans arriving in Sierra Leone The colony of Freetown in 1856 Houses at Sierra Leone May 1853 X p 55 26 Archaeological finds show that Sierra Leone has been inhabited continuously for at least 2 500 years 27 populated successively by societies who migrated from other parts of Africa 28 The use of iron was adopted by the ninth century and by 1000 AD agriculture was being practised along the coast 29 Over time the climate changed considerably altering boundaries between different ecological zones affecting migration and conquest 30 Sierra Leone s dense tropical rainforest and swampy environment were considered impenetrable it was also host to the tsetse fly which carried a disease fatal to horses and the zebu cattle used by the Mande speaking people This environment protected its people from conquest by the Mandinka and other African empires 30 31 and limited the influence of the Mali Empire Islam was introduced by Susu traders merchants and migrants from the north and east becoming widely adopted in the 18th century 32 European trading Edit European contacts within Sierra Leone were among the first in West Africa during the 15th century In 1462 Portuguese explorer Pedro de Sintra mapped the hills surrounding what is now Freetown Harbour naming the shaped formation Serra da Leoa or Serra Leoa Portuguese for Lioness Mountains 33 The Spanish rendering of this geographic formation is Sierra Leona which later was adapted misspelled and became the country s current name Though according to Professor C Magbaily Fyle this might have been a misinterpretation from historians According to Professor Fyle there has been evidence of travellers calling the region Serra Lyoa long before 1462 before the first arrival of Sintra to the region This would imply that the identity of the person who named Sierra Leone is unknown 34 Soon after Sintra s expedition Portuguese traders started arriving at the harbour By 1495 they had built a fortified trading post on the coast 35 Traders from European nations such as the Dutch Republic England and France also started to arrive to Sierra Leone and establish trading stations These stations quickly began to primarily deal in slaves who were brought to the coast by indigenous traders from interior areas undergoing wars and conflicts over territory The Europeans made payments called Cole for rent tribute and trading rights to the king of an area Local Afro European merchants often acted as middlemen the Europeans advancing them goods to trade to indigenous merchants most often for slaves and ivory 36 37 Sir Francis Drake reached Sierra Leone on 22 July 1580 as the last stop of his voyage along the west coast of Africa Bunce Island an island on the Sierra Leone River was used as a base by European slavers as a place for slave ships to dock before sailing via the Middle Passage to the Americas Until the passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807 the island was operated by the London based firm Grant Oswald amp Company who occupied it in 1748 38 Black Poor of London Edit In the late 18th century many African Americans claimed the protection of the British Crown There were thousands of these Black Loyalists people of African descent who joined the British military forces during the American Revolutionary War 39 Many of these Loyalists had been slaves who had escaped to join the British lured by promises of freedom emancipation The official documentation known as the Book of Negroes lists thousands of freed slaves whom the British evacuated from the nascent United States and resettled in colonies elsewhere in British North America north to Canada or south to the West Indies Pro slavery advocates accused the Black Poor of being responsible for a large proportion of crime in 18th century London While the broader community included some women the Black Poor seems to have exclusively consisted of men some of whom developed relationships with local women and often married them Slave owner Edward Long criticized marriage between black men and white women 40 However on the voyage between Plymouth England and Sierra Leone seventy European girlfriends and wives accompanied the Black Poor settlers 41 Many in London thought that moving them to Sierra Leone would lift them out of poverty 42 The Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme was proposed by entomologist Henry Smeathman and drew interest from humanitarians like Granville Sharp who saw it as a means of showing the pro slavery lobby that black people could contribute towards the running of the new colony of Sierra Leone Government officials soon became involved in the scheme as well although their interest was spurred by the possibility of resettling a large group of poor citizens elsewhere 43 William Pitt the Younger prime minister and leader of the Tory party had an active interest in the Scheme because he saw it as a means to repatriate the Black Poor to Africa since it was necessary they should be sent somewhere and be no longer suffered to infest the streets of London 40 Province of Freedom Edit In January 1787 the Atlantic and the Belisarius set sail for Sierra Leone but bad weather forced them to divert to Plymouth during which time about 50 passengers died Another 24 were discharged and another 23 ran away Eventually with some more recruitment 411 passengers sailed to Sierra Leone in April 1787 On the voyage between Plymouth and Sierra Leone 96 passengers died 40 44 45 46 In 1787 the British Crown founded a settlement in Sierra Leone in what was called the Province of Freedom About 400 black and 60 white colonists reached Sierra Leone on 15 May 1787 After they established Granville Town most of the first group of colonists died owing to disease and warfare with the indigenous African peoples Temne who resisted their encroachment When the ships left them in September their numbers had been reduced to 276 persons namely 212 black men 30 black women 5 white men and 29 white women 40 The settlers that remained forcibly captured land from a local African chieftain but he retaliated attacking the settlement which was reduced to a mere 64 settlers comprising 39 black men 19 black women and six white women Black settlers were captured by unscrupulous traders and sold as slaves and the remaining colonists were forced to arm themselves for their own protection 40 The 64 remaining colonists established a second Granville Town 47 48 Nova Scotians Edit Main article Nova Scotian Settlers Following the American Revolution more than 3 000 Black Loyalists had also been settled in Nova Scotia where they were finally granted land They founded Birchtown but faced harsh northern winters and racial discrimination from nearby Shelburne Thomas Peters pressed British authorities for relief and more aid together with British abolitionist John Clarkson the Sierra Leone Company was established to relocate Black Loyalists who wanted to take their chances in West Africa In 1792 nearly 1 200 persons from Nova Scotia crossed the Atlantic to build the second and only permanent Colony of Sierra Leone and the settlement of Freetown on 11 March 1792 In Sierra Leone they were called the Nova Scotian Settlers the Nova Scotians or the Settlers Clarkson initially banned the survivors of Granville Town from joining the new settlement blaming them for the demise of Granville Town 40 The Settlers built Freetown in the styles they knew from their lives in the American South they also continued American fashion and American manners In addition many continued to practise Methodism in Freetown In the 1790s the Settlers including adult women voted for the first time in elections 49 In 1792 in a move that foreshadowed the women s suffrage movements in Britain the heads of all households of which a third were women were given the right to vote 50 Black settlers in Sierra Leone enjoyed much more autonomy than their white equivalent in European countries Black migrants elected different levels of political representatives tithingmen who represented each dozen settlers and hundreders who represented larger amounts This sort of representation was not available in Nova Scotia 51 The initial process of society building in Freetown was a harsh struggle The Crown did not supply enough basic supplies and provisions and the Settlers were continually threatened by illegal slave trading and the risk of re enslavement 52 Jamaican Maroons and Liberated Africans Edit The Sierra Leone Company controlled by London investors refused to allow the settlers to take freehold of the land In 1799 some of the settlers revolted The Crown subdued the revolt by bringing in forces of more than 500 Jamaican Maroons whom they transported from Cudjoe s Town Trelawny Town via Nova Scotia in 1800 Led by Colonel Montague James the Maroons helped the colonial forces to put down the revolt and in the process the Jamaican Maroons in Sierra Leone secured the best houses and farms 53 On 1 January 1808 Thomas Ludlam the Governor of the Sierra Leone Company and a leading abolitionist surrendered the company s charter This ended its 16 years of running the Colony The British Crown reorganised the Sierra Leone Company as the African Institution it was directed to improve the local economy Its members represented both British who hoped to inspire local entrepreneurs and those with interest in the Macauley amp Babington Company which held the British monopoly on Sierra Leone trade 54 At about the same time following the abolition of the slave trade in 1807 Royal Navy crews delivered thousands of formerly enslaved Africans to Freetown after liberating them from illegal slave ships These Liberated Africans or recaptives were sold for 20 a head as apprentices to the white settlers Nova Scotian Settlers and the Jamaican Maroons Many Liberated Africans were treated poorly and even abused because some of the original settlers considered them their property Cut off from their various homelands and traditions the Liberated Africans were forced to assimilate to the Western styles of Settlers and Maroons For example some of the Liberated Africans were forced to change their name to a more Western sounding one 55 Though some people happily embraced these changes because they considered it as being part of the community some were not happy with these changes and wanted to keep their own identity Many Liberated Africans were so unhappy that they risked the possibility of being sold back into slavery by leaving Sierra Leone and going back to their original villages 55 The Liberated Africans eventually modified their customs to adopt those of the Nova Scotians Maroons and Europeans yet kept some of their ethnic traditions 56 As the Liberated Africans became successful traders 55 and spread Christianity throughout West Africa they intermarried with the Nova Scotians and Maroons and the two groups eventually became a fusion of African and Western societies 56 3 4 223 255 These Liberated Africans were from many areas of Africa but principally the west coast During the 19th century freed African Americans some Americo Liberian refugees and particularly Afro Caribbeans mainly Jamaican Maroons also immigrated and settled in Freetown Together these peoples formed the Krio ethnicity and an English based creole language Krio which is the lingua franca and de facto national language used among many of the ethnicities in the country 57 58 59 60 Colonial era 1800 1961 Edit Main article Sierra Leone Colony and Protectorate Bai Bureh Temne leader of the Hut Tax War of 1898 against British rule The settlement of Sierra Leone in the 1800s was unique in that the population was composed of displaced Africans who were brought to the colony after the British abolition of the slave trade in 1807 Upon arrival in Sierra Leone each recaptive was given a registration number and information on their physical qualities would be entered into the Register of Liberated Africans Oftentimes the documentation would be overwhelmingly subjective and would result in inaccurate entries making them difficult to track In addition differences between the Register of Liberated Africans of 1808 and the List of Captured Negroes of 1812 which emulated the 1808 document revealed some disparities in the entries of the recaptives specifically in the names many recaptives decided to change their given names to more anglicised versions which contributed to the difficulty in tracking them after they arrived in Sierra Leone 61 In the early 19th century Freetown served as the residence of the British colonial governor of the region who also administered the Gold Coast now Ghana and the Gambia settlements Sierra Leone developed as the educational centre of British West Africa 62 The British established Fourah Bay College in 1827 which 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 Samuel Ajayi Crowther was the first student to be enrolled at Fourah Bay 63 Fourah Bay College soon became a magnet for Sierra Leone Creoles and other Africans seeking higher education in British West Africa These included Nigerians Ghanaians Ivorians and many more especially in the fields of theology and education Freetown was known as the Athens of Africa due to the large number of excellent schools in Freetown and surrounding areas 64 Temne leader Bai Bureh seen here in 1898 after his surrender sitting relaxed in his traditional dress with a handkerchief in his hands while a Sierra Leonean West African Frontier Force soldier stands guard next to him The British interacted mostly with the Krios in Freetown who did most of the trading with the indigenous peoples of the interior Educated Krios held numerous positions in the colonial government giving them status and well paying positions Following the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 the British decided that they needed to establish more dominion over the inland areas to satisfy what was described by the European powers as effective occupation of territories In 1896 it annexed these areas declaring them the Sierra Leone Protectorate 65 With this change the British began to expand their administration in the region recruiting British citizens to posts and pushing Krios out of positions in government and even the desirable residential areas in Freetown 65 During the British annexation in Sierra Leone several chiefs in the northern and southern parts of the country were resisting the hut tax imposed by the colonial administrators but they used diplomacy to achieve their goal In the north from 1820 to 1906 there was a Limba chief named Almamy Suluku who ruled his territory for many years fighting to protect his territory while at the same time using diplomacy to trick the protectorate administrators while sending fighters to assist Bai Bureh a prominent Temne chief in Kasseh who was fighting against the imposition of the hut tax by the colonial administrators The war was later known as the Hut Tax War Another prominent figure in Sierra Leone history is Bai Sherbro c 1830 1912 Bai Sherbro was a chief and warrior on Bonthe Island in the southwestern part of the country He like Bai Bureh resisted the British Sherbro also sent fighters to assist Bai Bureh in the fight against the British Sherbro was influential and powerful and the British greatly feared him Bai Sherbro was captured and with Bai Bureh exiled to the Gold Coast modern Ghana Nyagua c 1842 1906 also known as the Tracking King was a fierce king who captured many districts and many people came to join him for protection Nyagua also resisted the British Realizing that he lacked sufficient strength he resorted to diplomacy At the same time he sent warriors to assist Bai Bureh in fighting against the British The British later captured Nyagua and he was also exiled to the Gold Coast Madam Yoko c 1849 1906 was a brilliant woman of culture and ambition She employed her capacity for friendly communications to persuade the British to give her control of the Kpaa Mende chiefdom She used diplomacy to communicate with many local chiefs who did not trust her friendship with the British Because Madam Yoko supported the British some sub chiefs rebelled causing Yoko to take refuge in the police barracks For her loyalty she was awarded a silver medal by Queen Victoria Until 1906 Madam Yoko ruled as a paramount chief in the new British Protectorate It appears that she committed suicide at the age of fifty five perhaps due to the loss of support from her own people Moa River Bridge Sierra Leone Lisk Carew Brothers Freetown Sierra Leone The British annexation of the Protectorate interfered with the sovereignty of indigenous chiefs They designated chiefs as units of local government rather than dealing with them individually as had been the previous practice They did not maintain relationships even with longstanding allies such as Bai Bureh who was later unfairly portrayed as a prime instigator of the Hut Tax War 66 British West African Campaign troops in Freetown 1914 1916 Published caption British expeditionary force preparing to embark at Freetown to attack the German Cameroons the main object of the attack being the port of Duala Auxiliary native troops were freely used in African warfare Colonel Frederic Cardew military governor of the Protectorate in 1898 established a new tax on dwellings and demanded that the chiefs use their people to maintain roads The taxes were often higher than the value of the dwellings and 24 chiefs signed a petition to Cardew stating how destructive this was their people could not afford to take time off from their subsistence agriculture They resisted payment of taxes tensions over the new colonial requirements and the administration s suspicions towards the chiefs led to the Hut Tax war of 1898 also called the Temne Mende War The British fired first the northern front of mainly Temne people was led by Bai Bureh The southern front consisting mostly of Mende people entered the conflict somewhat later for other reasons For several months Bureh s fighters had the advantage over the vastly more powerful British forces but both sides suffered hundreds of fatalities 67 Bureh surrendered on 11 November 1898 to end the destruction of his people s territory and dwellings Although the British government recommended leniency Cardew insisted on sending the chief and two allies into exile in the Gold Coast his government hanged 96 of the chief s warriors Bureh was allowed to return in 1905 when he resumed his chieftaincy of Kasseh 66 The defeat of the Temne and Mende in the Hut Tax war ended mass resistance to the Protectorate and colonial government but intermittent rioting and labour unrest continued throughout the colonial period Riots in 1955 and 1956 involved tens of thousands of Sierra Leoneans in the Protectorate 68 African Naval ratings march past the Governor of Sierra Leone Sir Hubert Stevenson Domestic slavery which continued to be practised by local African elites was abolished in 1928 69 A notable event in 1935 was the granting of a monopoly on mineral mining to the Sierra Leone Selection Trust run by De Beers The monopoly was scheduled to last 98 years Mining of diamonds in the east and other minerals expanded drawing labourers there from other parts of the country In 1924 the UK government divided the administration of Sierra Leone into Colony and Protectorate with different political systems constitutionally defined for each The Colony was Freetown and its coastal area the Protectorate was defined as the hinterland areas dominated by local chiefs Antagonism between the two entities escalated to a heated debate in 1947 when proposals were introduced to provide for a single political system for both the Colony and the Protectorate Most of the proposals came from leaders of the Protectorate whose population far outnumbered that in the colony The Krios led by Isaac Wallace Johnson opposed the proposals as they would have resulted in reducing the political power of the Krios in the Colony In 1951 Lamina Sankoh born Etheldred Jones collaborated with educated protectorate leaders from different groups including Sir Milton Margai Siaka Stevens Mohamed Sanusi Mustapha John Karefa Smart Kande Bureh Sir Albert Margai Amadu Wurie and Sir Banja Tejan Sie joined together with the powerful paramount chiefs in the protectorate to form the Sierra Leone People s Party or SLPP as the party of the Protectorate The SLPP leadership led by Sir Milton Margai negotiated with the British and the educated Krio dominated colony based in Freetown to achieve independence 70 Owing to the astute politics of Milton Margai the educated Protectorate elites were able to join forces with the paramount chiefs in the face of Krio intransigence Later Margai used the same skills to win over opposition leaders and moderate Krio elements to achieve independence from the UK 71 In November 1951 Margai oversaw the drafting of a new constitution which united the separate Colonial and Protectorate legislatures and provided a framework for decolonisation 72 In 1953 Sierra Leone was granted local ministerial powers and Margai was elected Chief Minister of Sierra Leone 72 The new constitution ensured Sierra Leone had a parliamentary system within the Commonwealth of Nations 72 In May 1957 Sierra Leone held its first parliamentary election The SLPP which was then the most popular political party in the colony of Sierra Leone as well as being supported by the powerful paramount chiefs in the provinces won the most seats in Parliament and Margai was re elected as Chief Minister by a landslide 1960 Independence Conference Edit On 20 April 1960 Milton Margai led a 24 member Sierra Leonean delegation at constitutional conferences that were held with the Government of Queen Elizabeth II and British Colonial Secretary Iain Macleod in negotiations for independence held in London 73 74 On the conclusion of talks in London on 4 May 1960 the United Kingdom agreed to grant Sierra Leone independence on 27 April 1961 73 74 Independence 1961 and Margai Administration 1961 1964 Edit On 27 April 1961 Sir Milton Margai led Sierra Leone to independence from Great Britain and became the country s first Prime Minister Sierra Leone had its own parliament and its own prime minister and had the ability to make 100 of its own laws however as with countries such as Canada and Australia Sierra Leone remained a Dominion and Queen Elizabeth was Queen of the independent Dominion of Sierra Leone 75 76 Thousands of Sierra Leoneans took to the streets in celebration The Dominion of Sierra Leone retained a parliamentary system of government and was a member of the Commonwealth of Nations The leader of the main opposition All People s Congress APC Siaka Stevens along with Isaac Wallace Johnson another outspoken critic of the SLPP government were arrested and placed under house arrest in Freetown along with sixteen others charged with disrupting the independence celebration 77 In May 1962 Sierra Leone held its first general election as an independent nation The Sierra Leone People s Party SLPP won a plurality of seats in parliament and Milton Margai was re elected as prime minister Margai was popular among Sierra Leoneans during his time in power mostly known for his self effacement He was neither corrupt nor did he make a lavish display of his power or status 78 He based the government on the rule of law and the separation of powers with multiparty political institutions and fairly viable representative structures Margai used his conservative ideology to lead Sierra Leone without much strife He appointed government officials to represent various ethnic groups Margai employed a brokerage style of politics by sharing political power among political parties and interest groups especially the involvement of powerful paramount chiefs in the provinces most of whom were key allies of his government citation needed After the death of Milton Margai and Albert Margai s tenure 1964 1967 Edit Upon Milton Margai s unexpected death in 1964 his younger half brother Sir Albert Margai was appointed as Prime Minister by parliament Sir Albert s leadership was briefly challenged by Foreign Minister John Karefa Smart who questioned Sir Albert s succession to the SLPP leadership position Karefa Smart led a prominent small minority faction within the SLPP party in opposition of Albert Margai as Prime Minister However Karefa Smart failed to receive broad support within the SLPP in his attempt to oust Albert Margai as both the leader of the SLPP and Prime Minister The large majority of SLPP members backed Albert Margai over Karefa Smart Soon after Albert Margai was sworn in as Prime Minister he fired several senior government officials who had served in his elder brother Sir Milton s government viewing them as a threat to his administration including Karefa Smart Sir Albert resorted to increasingly authoritarian actions in response to protests and enacted several laws against the opposition All People s Congress whilst attempting to establish a one party state 73 74 Sir Albert was opposed to the colonial legacy of allowing executive powers to the Paramount Chiefs many of whom had been key allies of his late brother Sir Milton Accordingly they began to consider Sir Albert a threat to the ruling houses across the country Margai appointed many non Creoles to the country s civil service in Freetown in an overall diversification of the civil service in the capital which had been dominated by members of the Creole ethnic group As a result Albert Margai became unpopular in the Creole community many of whom had supported Sir Milton Margai was accused of favouring members of his own Mende ethnic group for prominent positions In 1967 riots broke out in Freetown against Margai s policies in response he declared a state of emergency across the country Sir Albert was accused of corruption and of a policy of affirmative action in favour of his own Mende ethnic group 79 Sir Albert Margai took power and sought to make the army homogeneously Mende 80 He also endeavoured to change Sierra Leone from a democracy to a one party state 81 Although possessing the full backing of the country s security forces he called for free and fair elections citation needed 1967 General Election and military coups 1967 1968 Edit The APC with its leader Siaka Stevens narrowly won a small majority of seats in Parliament over the SLPP in a closely contested 1967 general election Stevens was sworn in as Prime Minister on 21 March 1967 Within hours after taking office Stevens was ousted in a bloodless military coup led by Brigadier General David Lansana the commander of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces He was a close ally of Albert Margai who had appointed him to the position in 1964 Lansana placed Stevens under house arrest in Freetown and insisted that the determination of the Prime Minister should await the election of the tribal representatives to the House Steven was later freed and fled the country went into exile in neighbouring Guinea However on 23 March 1967 a group of military officers in the Sierra Leone Army led by Brigadier General Andrew Juxon Smith staged a counter coup against Commander Lansana They seized control of the government arresting Lansana and suspending the constitution The group set up the National Reformation Council NRC with Andrew Juxon Smith as its chairman and Head of State of the country 82 On 18 April 1968 a group of low ranking soldiers in the Sierra Leone Army who called themselves the Anti Corruption Revolutionary Movement ACRM led by Brigadier General John Amadu Bangura overthrew the NRC junta The ACRM junta arrested many senior NRC members They reinstated the constitution and returned power to Stevens who at last assumed the office of Prime Minister 83 Stevens had Bangura arrested in 1970 and charged with conspiracy and treason He was found guilty and sentenced to death despite the fact that it was Bangura whose actions led to Stevens return to power 84 Brigadier Lansana and Hinga Norman the main army officers involved in the first coup 1967 were unceremoniously dismissed from the armed forces and made to serve time in prison Norman was a guard to Governor general Sir Henry Lightfoot Boston 20 Lansana was later tried and found guilty of treason and sentenced to death in 1975 20 One party state and dawn of the Republic 1968 1991 Edit An APC political rally in the northern town of Kabala outside the home of supporters of the rival SLPP in 1968 Stevens assumed power as Prime Minister again in 1968 following a series of coups with a great deal of hope and ambition 20 Much trust was placed upon him as he championed multi party politics Stevens had campaigned on a platform of bringing the tribes together under socialist principles During his first decade or so in power Stevens renegotiated some of what he called useless prefinanced schemes contracted by his predecessors both Albert Margai of the SLPP and Juxon Smith of the NRC Some of these policies by the SLPP and the NRC were said to have left the country in an economically deprived state 20 Stevens reorganised the country s oil refinery the government owned Cape Sierra Hotel and a cement factory 85 He cancelled Juxon Smith s construction of a church and mosque on the grounds of Victoria Park now known as Freetown Amusement Park since 2017 Stevens began efforts that would later improve transportation and movements between the provinces and the city of Freetown Roads and hospitals were constructed in the provinces and Paramount Chiefs and provincial peoples became a prominent force in Freetown Under the pressure of several coup attempts real or perceived Stevens rule grew more and more authoritarian and his relationship with some of his ardent supporters deteriorated He removed the SLPP party from competitive politics in general elections some believed through the use of violence and intimidation To maintain the support of the military Stevens retained the popular John Amadu Bangura as head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces After the return to civilian rule by elections were held beginning in autumn 1968 and an all APC cabinet was appointed Calm was not completely restored In November 1968 unrest in the provinces led Stevens to declare a state of emergency across the country Many senior officers in the Sierra Leone Army were greatly disappointed with Stevens policies and his handling of the Sierra Leone Military but none could confront Stevens Brigadier General Bangura who had reinstated Stevens as Prime Minister was widely considered the only person who could control Stevens The army was devoted to Bangura and this made him potentially dangerous to Stevens In January 1970 Bangura was arrested and charged with conspiracy and plotting to commit a coup against the Stevens government After a trial that lasted a few months Bangura was convicted and sentenced to death On 29 March 1970 Brigadier Bangura was executed by hanging in Freetown After the execution of Bangura a group of soldiers loyal to the executed general held a mutiny in Freetown and other parts of the country in opposition to Stevens government Dozens of soldiers were arrested and convicted by a court martial in Freetown for their participation in the mutiny against the president Among the soldiers arrested was a little known army corporal Foday Sankoh a strong Bangura supporter who would later form the Revolutionary United Front RUF Corporal Sankoh was convicted and jailed for seven years at the Pademba Road Prison in Freetown In April 1971 a new republican constitution was adopted under which Stevens became president In the 1972 by elections the opposition SLPP complained of intimidation and procedural obstruction by the APC and militia These problems became so severe that the SLPP boycotted the 1973 general election as a result the APC won 84 of the 85 elected seats 86 An alleged plot to overthrow president Stevens failed in 1974 and its leaders were executed In mid 1974 Guinean soldiers as requested by Stevens were stationed in the country to help maintain his hold on power as Stevens was a close ally of then Guinean president Ahmed Sekou Toure In March 1976 Stevens was elected without opposition for a second five year term as president On 19 July 1975 14 senior army and government officials including David Lansana former cabinet minister Mohamed Sorie Forna father of writer Aminatta Forna Brigadier General Ibrahim Bash Taqi and Lieutenant Habib Lansana Kamara were executed after being convicted of attempting a coup to topple president Stevens government In 1977 a nationwide student demonstration against the government disrupted Sierra Leone politics The demonstration was quickly put down by the army and Stevens own personal Special Security Division SSD a heavily armed paramilitary force he had created to protect him and maintain his hold on power 87 SSD officers were loyal to Stevens and were deployed across the country to clamp down on any rebellion or protest against Stevens government A general election was called later that year in which corruption was again endemic the APC won 74 seats and the SLPP 15 In 1978 the APC dominant parliament approved a new constitution making the country a one party state The 1978 constitution made the APC the only legal political party in Sierra Leone 88 This move led to another major demonstration against the government in many parts of the country but it was also put down by the army and Stevens SSD force Stevens is generally criticised for dictatorial methods and government corruption but on a positive note he kept the country stable and from collapsing into civil war He created several government institutions that are still in use today citation needed Stevens also reduced ethnic polarisation in government by incorporating members of various ethnic groups into his all dominant APC government Siaka Stevens retired from politics in November 1985 after being in power for eighteen years The APC named a new presidential candidate to succeed Stevens at party s last delegate conference held in Freetown in November 1985 The candidate was Major General Joseph Saidu Momoh head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces and Stevens own choice to succeed him As head of the armed forces General Momoh had been loyal to Stevens who had appointed him to the position Like Stevens Momoh was also a member of the minority Limba ethnic group As the sole candidate Momoh was elected president without opposition and sworn in as Sierra Leone s second president on 28 November 1985 in Freetown A one party parliamentary election between APC members was held in May 1986 President Momoh appointed his former military colleague and key ally Major General Mohamed Tarawalie to succeed him as the head of the Sierra Leone Military General Tarawalie was also a strong loyalist and key Momoh supporter President Momoh named James Bambay Kamara as the head of the Sierra Leone Police Bambay Kamara was also a strong Momoh loyalist and supporter Momoh broke from former President Siaka Stevens by integrating the powerful SSD into the Sierra Leone Police as a special paramilitary force Under President Stevens the SSD had been a powerful personal force used to maintain his hold on power independent from the Sierra Leone Military and Sierra Leone Police Force The Sierra Leone Police under Bambay Kamara s leadership was accused of physical violence arrest and intimidation against critics of President Momoh s government President Momoh s strong links with the army and his verbal attacks on corruption earned him much needed initial support among Sierra Leoneans With the lack of new faces in the new APC cabinet under president Momoh and the return of many of the old faces from Stevens government criticisms soon arose that Momoh was simply perpetuating the rule of Stevens The next few years under the Momoh administration were characterised by corruption which Momoh defused by sacking several senior cabinet ministers To formalise his war against corruption President Momoh announced a Code of Conduct for Political Leaders and Public Servants After an alleged attempt to overthrow President Momoh in March 1987 more than 60 senior government officials were arrested including Vice President Francis Minah who was removed from office convicted of plotting the coup and executed by hanging in 1989 along with five others Sierra Leone Civil War 1991 2002 and the NPRC regime 1992 1996 Edit Further information Sierra Leone Civil War A school in Koindu destroyed during the Civil War in total 1 270 primary schools were destroyed in the War 89 In October 1990 owing to mounting pressure from both within and outside the country for political and economic reforms president Momoh set up a constitutional review commission to assess the 1978 one party constitution Based on the commission s recommendations a constitution re establishing a multi party system was approved by the exclusive APC Parliament by a 60 majority vote becoming effective on 1 October 1991 There was great suspicion that president Momoh was not serious about his promise of political reform as APC rule continued to be increasingly marked by abuses of power The brutal civil war that was going on in neighbouring Liberia played a significant role in the outbreak of fighting in Sierra Leone Charles Taylor then leader of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia reportedly helped form the Revolutionary United Front RUF under the command of former Sierra Leonean army corporal Foday Saybana Sankoh an ethnic Temne from Tonkolili District in Northern Sierra Leone Sankoh was a British trained former army corporal who had also undergone guerrilla training in Libya Taylor s aim was for the RUF to attack the bases of Nigerian dominated peacekeeping troops in Sierra Leone who were opposed to his rebel movement in Liberia On 29 April 1992 a group of young soldiers in the Sierra Leone Army led by seven army officers Lieutenant Sahr Sandy Captain Valentine Strasser Lieutenant Solomon SAJ Musa Captain Komba Mondeh Lieutenant Tom Nyuma Captain Julius Maada Bio and Captain Komba Kambo 90 staged a military coup that sent president Momoh into exile in Guinea and the young soldiers established the National Provisional Ruling Council NPRC with 25 year old Captain Valentine Strasser as its chairman and Head of State of the country 91 The NPRC Junta immediately suspended the constitution banned all political parties limited freedom of speech and freedom of the press and enacted a rule by decree policy in which soldiers were granted unlimited powers of administrative detention without charge or trial and challenges against such detentions in court were precluded SAJ Musa a childhood friend of Strasser became the deputy chairman and deputy leader of the NPRC government Strasser became the world s youngest Head of State when he seized power just three days after his 25th birthday The NPRC junta established the National Supreme Council of State as the military highest command and final authority in all matters and was exclusively made up of the highest ranking NPRC soldiers included Strasser himself and the original soldiers who toppled president Momoh 91 One of the top ranking soldiers in the NPRC Junta Lieutenant Sahr Sandy a trusted ally of Strasser was assassinated allegedly by Major S I M Turay a key loyalist of ousted president Momoh A heavily armed military manhunt was carried out across the country to find Lieutenant Sandy s killer However the main suspect Major S I M Turay went into hiding and fled the country to Guinea fearing for his life Dozens of soldiers loyal to the ousted president Momoh were arrested including Colonel Kahota M Dumbuya and Major Yayah Turay Lieutenant Sandy was given a state funeral and his funeral prayers service at the cathedral church in Freetown was attended by many high ranking soldiers of the NPRC junta including Strasser himself and NPRC deputy leader Sergeant Solomon Musa The NPRC Junta maintained relations with ECOWAS and strengthened support for Sierra Leone based ECOMOG troops fighting in the Liberian war On 28 December 1992 an alleged coup attempt against the NPRC government of Strasser aimed at freeing the detained Colonel Yahya Kanu Colonel Kahota M S Dumbuya and former inspector general of police Bambay Kamara was foiled Several Junior army officers led by Sergeant Mohamed Lamin Bangura were identified as being behind the coup plot The coup plot led to the execution of seventeen soldiers by firing squad Some of those executed include Colonel Kahota Dumbuya Major Yayah Kanu and Sergeant Mohamed Lamin Bangura Several prominent members of the Momoh government who had been in detention at the Pa Demba Road prison including former inspector general of police Bambay Kamara were also executed 92 On 5 July 1994 SAJ Musa who was popular among the general population particularly in Freetown was arrested and sent into exile after he was accused of planning a coup to topple Strasser an accusation SAJ Musa denied Strasser replaced Musa as deputy NPRC chairman with Captain Bio who was instantly promoted by Strasser to brigadier The NPRC s efforts proved to be nearly ineffective as the ousted Momoh administration in repelling the RUF rebels More and more of the country fell into the hands RUF fighters and by 1994 they had gotten control of much of the diamond rich Eastern Province and were getting close toward the capital Freetown In response the NPRC hired the services of South African based private military contractor Executive Outcomes for several hundred mercenary fighters in order to strengthen the response to the advances of the RUF rebels Within a month they had driven RUF fighters back to enclaves along Sierra Leone s borders and cleared the RUF from the Kono diamond producing areas of Sierra Leone With Strasser s two most senior NPRC allies and commanders Lieutenant Sahr Sandy and Lieutenant Solomon Musa no longer around to defend him Strasser s leadership within the NPRC s Supreme Council of State became fragile On 16 January 1996 after about four years in power Strasser was arrested in a palace coup staged by his fellow NPRC soldiers led by Brigadier Bio at the Defence Headquarters in Freetown 93 Strasser was immediately flown into exile in a military helicopter to Conakry Guinea In his first public broadcast to the nation following the 1996 coup Brigadier Bio stated that his support for returning Sierra Leone to a democratically elected civilian government and his commitment to ending the civil war were his motivations for the coup 94 Kabbah s tenure government dawn of a new republic the AFRC and end of the Civil War 1996 2007 Edit Promises of a return to civilian rule were fulfilled by Bio Prior to conducting the election Sierra Leoneans and international stakeholders were involved in a major debate on whether the nation should focus on trying to end the long running civil war or to conduct elections and hence returning governance back to a civilian led administration with a multi party system of parliament that would provide the foundation for long lasting peace and national prosperity Following the 1995 National Consultative Conference at the Bintumani Hotel in Freetown dubbed Bintumani I which was a Strasser led initiative another National Consultative Conference at the same Bintumani Hotel in Freetown dubbed Bintumani II was initiated by the Bio administration that involved both national and international stakeholders in an effort to find a viable solution to the issues plaguing the country 21 Peace before Elections vs Elections before Peace became a key debate topic and this quickly became a point of national discussion The discussions eventually concluded with key stakeholders including Bio s administration and the UN agreeing that while efforts in finding a peaceful solution to ending the war should continue a general election should be held as soon as possible 21 Bio handed power over to Ahmad Tejan Kabbah of the SLPP after the conclusion of elections in early 1996 which Kabbah won President Kabbah took power with a great promise of ending the civil war After taking over President Kabbah immediately opened dialogue with the RUF and invited their leader Foday Sankoh for peace negotiations 22 On 25 May 1997 17 soldiers in the Sierra Leone army led by Corporal Tamba Gborie loyal to the detained Major Johnny Paul Koroma launched a military coup which sent President Kabbah into exile in Guinea and they established the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council AFRC Corporal Gborie quickly went to the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Services headquarters in New England Freetown to announce the coup to a shocked nation and to alert all soldiers across the country to report for guard duty The soldiers immediately released Koroma from prison and installed him as their chairman and Head of State Koroma suspended the constitution banned demonstrations shut down all private radio stations in the country and invited the RUF to join the new junta government with its leader Foday Sankoh as the Vice Chairman of the new AFRC RUF coalition junta government Within days Freetown was overwhelmed by the presence of the RUF combatants who came to the city in thousands The Kamajors a group of traditional fighters mostly from the Mende ethnic group under the command of deputy Defence Minister Samuel Hinga Norman remained loyal to President Kabbah and defended the Southern part of Sierra Leone from the soldiers After nine months in office the junta was overthrown by the Nigerian led ECOMOG forces and the democratically elected government of president Kabbah was reinstated in February 1998 On 19 October 1998 24 soldiers in the Sierra Leone army including Gborie Brigadier Hassan Karim Conteh Colonel Samuel Francis Koroma Major Kula Samba and Colonel Abdul Karim Sesay were executed by firing squad after they were convicted in a court martial in Freetown some for orchestrating the 1997 coup that overthrew President Kabbah and others for failure to reverse the mutiny 95 In October 1999 the United Nations agreed to send peacekeepers to help restore order and disarm the rebels The first of the 6 000 member force began arriving in December and the UN Security Council voted in February 2000 to increase the force to 11 000 and later to 13 000 But in May when nearly all Nigerian forces had left and UN forces were trying to disarm the RUF in eastern Sierra Leone Sankoh s forces clashed with the UN troops and some 500 peacekeepers were taken hostage as the peace accord effectively collapsed The hostage crisis resulted in more fighting between the RUF and the government as UN troops launched Operation Khukri to end the siege The Operation was successful with Indian and British Special Forces being the main contingents The situation in the country deteriorated to such an extent that British troops were deployed in Operation Palliser originally simply to evacuate foreign nationals However the British exceeded their original mandate and took full military action to finally defeat the rebels and restore order The British were the catalyst for the ceasefire that ended the civil war Elements of the British Army together with administrators and politicians remained after withdrawal to help train the armed forces improve the infrastructure of the country and administer financial and material aid Tony Blair the Prime Minister of Britain at the time of the British intervention is regarded as a hero by the people of Sierra Leone many of whom are keen for more British involvement 96 Between 1991 and 2001 about 50 000 people were killed in Sierra Leone s civil war Hundreds of thousands of people were forced from their homes and many became refugees in Guinea and Liberia In 2001 UN forces moved into rebel held areas and began to disarm rebel soldiers By January 2002 the war was declared over In May 2002 Kabbah was re elected president by a landslide By 2004 the disarmament process was complete Also in 2004 a UN backed war crimes court began holding trials of senior leaders from both sides of the war In December 2005 UN peacekeeping forces pulled out of Sierra Leone 2007 General Election and the re emergence of APC Edit In August 2007 Sierra Leone held presidential and parliamentary elections However no presidential candidate won the 50 plus one vote majority stipulated in the constitution on the first round of voting A runoff election was held in September 2007 and Ernest Bai Koroma the candidate of the main opposition APC was elected president Koroma was re elected president for a second and final term in November 2012 Struggle with the Ebola epidemic 2014 2016 Edit In 2014 an Ebola virus epidemic in Sierra Leone began that widely affected the country 97 including forcing Sierra Leone to declare a state of emergency 98 By the end of 2014 there were nearly 3000 deaths and about 10 000 cases of the disease in Sierra Leone 97 The epidemic also led to the Ouse to Ouse Tock in September 2014 a nationwide three day quarantine 99 The epidemic occurred as part of the wider Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa In early August 2014 Sierra Leone cancelled league football soccer matches because of the Ebola epidemic 100 On 16 March 2016 the World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone to be free from Ebola 101 14 August 2017 mudslides Edit Main article 2017 Sierra Leone mudslides Several mudslides occurred in the early hours of 14 August 2017 in and near the country s capital Freetown 2018 General election Edit Main article 2018 Sierra Leonean general election In 2018 Sierra Leone held a general election The presidential election in which neither candidate reached the required threshold of 55 went to a second round of voting in which Julius Maada Bio was elected with 51 of the vote 102 Geography EditMain article Geography of Sierra Leone A map of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone map of Koppen climate classification Sierra Leone is located on the southwest coast of West Africa lying mostly between latitudes 7 and 10 N a small area is south of 7 and longitudes 10 and 14 W The country is bordered by Guinea to the north and east Liberia to the southeast and the Atlantic Ocean to the west and southwest 103 Sierra Leone has a total area of 71 740 km2 27 699 sq mi divided into a land area of 71 620 km2 27 653 sq mi and water of 120 km2 46 sq mi 104 The country has four distinct geographical regions In eastern Sierra Leone the plateau is interspersed with high mountains where Mount Bintumani reaches 1 948 m 6 391 ft the highest point in the country The upper part of the drainage basin of the Moa River is located in the south of this region The centre of the country is a region of lowland plains containing forests bush and farmland 103 that occupies about 43 of Sierra Leone s land area The northern section of this has been categorised by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Guinean forest savanna mosaic ecoregion while the south is rain forested plains and farmland In the west Sierra Leone has some 400 km 249 mi of Atlantic coastline giving it both bountiful marine resources and attractive tourist potential The coast has areas of low lying Guinean mangroves swamp The national capital Freetown sits on a coastal peninsula situated next to the Sierra Leone Harbour The climate is tropical with two seasons determining the agricultural cycle the rainy season from May to November and a dry season from December to May which includes harmattan when cool dry winds blow in off the Sahara Desert and the night time temperature can be as low as 16 C 60 8 F The average temperature is 26 C 78 8 F and varies from around 26 to 36 C 78 8 to 96 8 F during the year 105 106 Biodiversity Edit See also Wildlife of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone is home to four terrestrial ecoregions Guinean montane forests Western Guinean lowland forests Guinean forest savanna mosaic and Guinean mangroves 107 Human activities claimed to be responsible or contributing to land degradation in Sierra Leone include unsustainable agricultural land use poor soil and water management practices deforestation removal of natural vegetation fuelwood consumption and to a lesser extent overgrazing and urbanisation 108 Deforestation both for commercial timber and to make room for agriculture is the major concern and represents an enormous loss of natural economic wealth to the nation 108 Mining and slash and burn for land conversion such as cattle grazing dramatically diminished forested land in Sierra Leone since the 1980s It is listed among countries of concern for emissions as having Low Forest Cover with High Rates of Deforestation LFHD 109 There are concerns that heavy logging continues in the Tama Tonkoli Forest Reserve in the north Loggers have extended their operations to Nimini Kono District Eastern Province Jui Western Rural District Western Area Loma Mountains National Park Koinadougu Northern Province and with plans to start operations in the Kambui Forest reserve in the Kenema District Eastern Province 109 The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 2 76 10 ranking it 154th globally out of 172 countries 110 Overfishing is also an issue in Sierra Leone Habitat degradation for the African wild dog Lycaon pictus has been increased such that this canid is deemed to have been extirpated in Sierra Leone 111 Until 2002 Sierra Leone lacked a forest management system because of the civil war that caused tens of thousands of deaths Deforestation rates have increased 7 3 since the end of the civil war 112 On paper 55 protected areas covered 4 5 of Sierra Leone as of 2003 The country has 2 090 known species of higher plants 147 mammals 626 birds 67 reptiles 35 amphibians and 99 fish species 112 The Environmental Justice Foundation has documented how the number of illegal fishing vessels in Sierra Leone s waters has multiplied in recent years The amount of illegal fishing has significantly depleted fish stocks depriving local fishing communities of an important resource for survival The situation is particularly serious as fishing provides the only source of income for many communities in a country still recovering from over a decade of civil war 113 In June 2005 the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds RSPB and BirdLife International agreed to support a conservation sustainable development project in the Gola Forest in south eastern Sierra Leone 114 an important surviving fragment of rainforest in Sierra Leone Government and politics EditMain article Politics of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone is a constitutional republic with a directly elected president and a unicameral legislature The current system of the Government of Sierra Leone is based on the 1991 Sierra Leone Constitution Sierra Leone has a dominant unitary central government and a weak local government The executive branch of the Government of Sierra Leone headed by the president of Sierra Leone has extensive powers and influences The president is the most powerful government official in Sierra Leone 115 Within the confines of the 1991 Constitution supreme legislative powers are vested in Parliament which is the law making body of the nation Supreme executive authority rests in the president and members of his cabinet and judicial power with the judiciary of which the Chief Justice of Sierra Leone is the head The president is the head of state the head of government and the commander in chief of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces The president appoints and heads a cabinet of ministers which must be approved by the Parliament The president is elected by popular vote to a maximum of two five year terms The president is the highest and most influential position within the government of Sierra Leone To be elected president of Sierra Leone a candidate must gain at least 55 of the vote If no candidate gets 55 there is a second round runoff between the top two candidates The current president of Sierra Leone is former military junta leader Julius Maada Bio 116 Bio defeated Samura Kamara of the ruling All People s Congress APC in the country s tightly contested 2018 presidential election Bio replaced outgoing President Ernest Bai Koroma after Bio was sworn into office on 4 April 2018 by Chief Justice Abdulai Cham Bio is the leader of the Sierra Leone People s Party the current ruling party in Sierra Leone Next to the president is the vice president who is the second highest ranking government official in the executive branch of the Sierra Leone Government As designated by the Sierra Leone Constitution the vice president is to become the new president of Sierra Leone upon the death resignation or removal of the President Parliament Edit The Parliament of Sierra Leone is unicameral with 146 seats Each of the country s 14 districts is represented in parliament 132 members are elected concurrently with the presidential elections the other 16 seats are filled by paramount chiefs from the country s 16 administrative districts 117 The Sierra Leone parliament is led by the Speaker of Parliament who is the overall leader of Parliament and is directly elected by sitting members of parliament The current speaker of the Sierra Leone parliament is Abass Bundu who was elected by members of parliament on 21 January 2014 The current members of the Parliament of Sierra Leone were elected in the 2012 Sierra Leone parliamentary election The APC currently has 68 of the 132 elected parliamentary seats and the Sierra Leone People s Party SLPP has 49 of the elected 132 parliamentary seats Sierra Leone s two most dominant parties the APC and the SLPP collectively won every elected seat in Parliament in the 2012 Sierra Leone parliamentary election To be qualified as a Member of Parliament the person must be a citizen of Sierra Leone must be at least 21 years old must be able to speak read and write the English language with a degree of proficiency to enable him to actively take part in proceedings in Parliament and must not have any criminal conviction 115 Since independence in 1961 Sierra Leone s politics has been dominated by two major political parties the SLPP and the APC Other minor political parties have also existed but with no significant support 118 Judiciary Edit Main article Judiciary of Sierra Leone The Sierra Leone Supreme Court in the capital Freetown the highest and most powerful court in the country The judicial power of Sierra Leone is vested in the judiciary headed by the Chief Justice of Sierra Leone and comprising the Supreme Court of Sierra Leone which is the highest court in the country meaning that its rulings therefore cannot be appealed against Other courts include the High Court of Justice the Court of Appeal the magistrate courts and traditional courts in rural villages The president appoints and parliament approves Justices for the three courts The Judiciary have jurisdiction in all civil and criminal matters throughout the country The current acting chief justice of Sierra Leone is Desmond Babatunde Edwards Foreign relations Edit Main article Foreign relations of Sierra Leone The Sierra Leonean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation is responsible for foreign policy of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone has diplomatic relations that include China Russia 119 Libya Iran and Cuba Sierra Leone has good relations with the West including the United States and has maintained historical ties with the United Kingdom and other former British colonies through its membership of the Commonwealth of Nations 120 The United Kingdom has played a major role in providing aid to the former colony together with administrative help and military training since intervening to end the Civil War in 2000 Former President Siaka Stevens government had sought closer relations with other West African countries under the Economic Community of West African States ECOWAS a policy continued by the current government Sierra Leone along with Liberia Ivory Coast and Guinea form the Mano River Union MRU It is primarily designed to implement development projects and promote regional economic integration between the four countries 121 Sierra Leone is also a member of the United Nations and its specialised agencies the African Union the African Development Bank AFDB the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation OIC and the Non Aligned Movement NAM 122 Sierra Leone is a member of the International Criminal Court with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the US military as covered under Article 98 Military Edit Main article Military of Sierra Leone The Military of Sierra Leone officially the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces RSLAF are the unified armed forces of Sierra Leone responsible for the territorial security of Sierra Leone s border and defending the national interests of Sierra Leone within the framework of its international obligations The armed forces were formed after independence in 1961 based on elements of the former British Royal West African Frontier Force present in the country The Sierra Leone Armed Forces consist of around 15 500 personnel comprising the largest Sierra Leone Army 123 the Sierra Leone Navy and the Sierra Leone Air Wing 124 The president of Sierra Leone is the Commander in Chief of the military with the Minister of Defence responsible for defence policy and the formulation of the armed forces The current Sierra Leonean Defence Minister is retired Major Alfred Paolo Conteh The Military of Sierra Leone also has a Chief of the Defence Staff who is a uniformed military official responsible for the administration and the operational control of the Sierra Leone military 125 Brigadier General Alfred Nelson Williams who was appointed by president Koroma succeeded the retired Major General Edward Sam M boma on 12 September 2008 as the Chief of Defence Staff of the Military 126 When Sierra Leone gained independence in 1961 the Royal Sierra Leone Military Force was created from the Sierra Leone Battalion of the West African Frontier Force 127 The military seized control in 1968 bringing the National Reformation Council into power On 19 April 1971 when Sierra Leone became a republic the Royal Sierra Leone Military Forces were renamed the Republic of Sierra Leone Military Force RSLMF 127 128 The RSLMF remained a single service organisation until 1979 when the Sierra Leone Navy was established In 1995 Defence Headquarters was established and the Sierra Leone Air Wing formed The RSLMF was renamed as the Armed Forces of the Republic of Sierra Leone AFRSL Law enforcement Edit Law enforcement in Sierra Leone is primarily the responsibility of the Sierra Leone Police SLP which is accountable to the Minister of Internal Affairs appointed by the president Sierra Leone Police was established by the British colony in 1894 it is one of the oldest police forces in West Africa It works to prevent crime protect life and property detect and prosecute offenders maintain public order ensure safety and security and enhance access to justice The Sierra Leone Police is headed by the Inspector General of Police the professional head of the Sierra Leone Police force who is appointed by the president of Sierra Leone Each one of Sierra Leone s 14 districts is headed by a district police commissioner who is the professional head of their respective district These Police Commissioners report directly to the Inspector General of Police at the Sierra Leone Police headquarters in Freetown The current Inspector General of Police is Brima Acha Kamara who was appointed to the position by former president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah Human rights Edit Main article Human rights in Sierra Leone Male same sex sexual activity is illegal under Section 61 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861 and imprisonment for life is possible 129 130 Excessive police brutality is also a frequent problem Protesters have been killed by security forces as have prison rioters in one incident at Pademba Road Prison 30 inmates and one correction officer were killed Multiple allegations were made during the COVID 19 lockdown period of police attacking people trying to obtain basic necessities 131 Administrative divisions Edit Main article Administrative divisions of Sierra Leone The 14 districts and 2 areas of Sierra Leone The Republic of Sierra Leone is composed of five regions the Northern Province North West Province Southern Province the Eastern Province and the Western Area Four provinces are further divided into 14 districts the Western Area is divided into two districts The provincial districts are divided into 186 chiefdoms which have traditionally been led by paramount chiefs recognised by the British administration in 1896 at the time of organising the Protectorate of Sierra Leone The Paramount Chiefs are influential particularly in villages and small rural towns 132 Each chiefdom has ruling families that were recognised at that time the Tribal Authority made up of local notables elects the paramount chief from the ruling families 132 Typically chiefs have the power to raise taxes control the judicial system and allocate land the most important resource in rural areas 133 Within the context of local governance the districts are governed as localities Each has a directly elected local district council to exercise authority and carry out functions at a local level 134 135 In total there are 19 local councils 13 district councils one for each of the 12 districts and one for the Western Area Rural and six municipalities also have elected local councils The six municipalities include Freetown which functions as the local government for the Western Area Urban District and Bo Bonthe Kenema Koidu and Makeni 134 136 137 While the district councils are under the oversight of their respective provincial administrations the municipalities are directly overseen by the Ministry of Local Government amp Community Development and thus administratively independent of district and provincial administrations District Capital Area km2 Province Population 2004 census 138 Population 2015 census 139 Bombali District Makeni 7 985 Northern Province 408 390 606 183 140 Koinadugu District Kabala 12 121 265 758 408 097 141 Port Loko District Port Loko 5 719 453 746 614 063 141 Tonkolili District Magburaka 7 003 347 197 530 776 142 Kambia District Kambia 3 108 270 462 343 686 143 Kenema District Kenema 6 053 Eastern Province 497 948 609 873 144 Kono District Koidu Town 5 641 335 401 505 767 145 Kailahun District Kailahun 3 859 358 190 525 372 145 Bo District Bo 5 219 Southern Province 463 668 574 201 146 Bonthe District Mattru Jong 3 468 139 687 200 730 147 Pujehun District Pujehun 4 105 228 392 345 577Moyamba District Moyamba 6 902 260 910 318 064Western Area Urban District Freetown 13 Western Area 772 873 1 050 301Western Area Rural District Waterloo 544 174 249 442 951Economy EditMain article Economy of Sierra Leone Historical GDP per capita development A proportional representation of Sierra Leone exports 2019 By the 1990s economic activity was declining and economic infrastructure had become seriously degraded Over the next decade much of the formal economy was destroyed in the country s civil war Since the end of hostilities in January 2002 massive infusions of outside assistance have helped Sierra Leone begin to recover 148 Much of the recovery will depend on the success of the government s efforts to limit corruption by officials which many feel was the chief cause of the civil war A key indicator of success will be the effectiveness of government management of its diamond sector There is high unemployment particularly among the youth and ex combatants Authorities have been slow to implement reforms in the civil service and the pace of the privatisation programme is also slackening and donors have urged its advancement The currency is the leone The central bank is the Bank of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone operates a floating exchange rate system and foreign currencies can be exchanged at any of the commercial banks recognised foreign exchange bureaux and most hotels Credit card use is limited in Sierra Leone though they may be used at some hotels and restaurants There are a few internationally linked automated teller machines that accept Visa cards in Freetown operated by ProCredit Bank Agriculture Edit Further information Agriculture in Sierra Leone A farmer with his rice harvest in Sierra Leone Two thirds of Sierra Leone s population are directly involved in subsistence agriculture 149 Two thirds of the population of Sierra Leone are directly involved in subsistence agriculture 149 Agriculture accounted for 58 per cent of gross domestic product GDP in 2007 150 Agriculture is the largest employer with 80 per cent of the population working in the sector 151 Rice is the most important staple crop in Sierra Leone with 85 per cent of farmers cultivating rice during the rainy season 152 and an annual consumption of 76 kg per person 153 Mining Edit Further information Mining in Sierra Leone Rich in minerals Sierra Leone has relied on mining especially diamonds for its economic base The country is among the top ten diamond producing nations Mineral exports remain the main currency earner Sierra Leone is a major producer of gem quality diamonds Though rich in diamonds it has historically struggled to manage their exploitation and export Sierra Leone is known for its blood diamonds that were mined and sold to diamond conglomerates during the civil war to buy the weapons that fuelled its atrocities 154 In the 1970s and early 1980s economic growth rate slowed because of a decline in the mining sector and increasing corruption among government officials Percentage of GDP by sector 2007 150 Rank Sector Percentage of GDP1 Agriculture 58 52 Other services 10 43 Trade and tourism 9 54 Wholesale and retail trade 9 05 Mining and quarrying 4 56 Government Services 4 07 Manufacturing and handicrafts 2 08 Construction 1 79 Electricity and water 0 4Annual production of Sierra Leone s diamond estimates range between US 250 million 300 million Some of that is smuggled where it is possibly used for money laundering or financing illicit activities Formal exports have dramatically improved since the civil war with efforts to improve the management of them having some success In October 2000 a UN approved certification system for exporting diamonds from the country was put in place and led to a dramatic increase in legal exports In 2001 the government created a mining community development fund DACDF 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 Transport infrastructure Edit Main article Transport in Sierra Leone The road from Kenema to Kailahun District There are several systems of transport in Sierra Leone which has a road air and water infrastructure including a network of highways and several airports There are 11 300 kilometres 7 000 miles of highways in Sierra Leone of which 904 km 562 mi 104 are paved about 8 of the roads Sierra Leone s highways are linked to Conakry Guinea and Monrovia Liberia Sierra Leone has the largest natural harbour on the African continent allowing international shipping through the Queen Elizabeth II Quay in the Cline Town area of eastern Freetown or through Government Wharf in central Freetown There are 800 km 497 mi of waterways in Sierra Leone of which 600 km 373 mi are navigable year round Major port cities are Bonthe Freetown Sherbro Island and Pepel There are ten regional airports in Sierra Leone and one international airport The Freetown International Airport located in the coastal town of Lungi in Northern Sierra Leone is the primary airport for domestic and international travel to or from Sierra Leone Passengers cross the river to Aberdeen Heliports in Freetown by hovercraft ferry or a helicopter Helicopters are also available from the airport to other major cities in the country The airport has paved runways longer than 3 047 metres 9 997 feet The other airports have unpaved runways and seven have runways from 914 to 1 523 metres 2 999 to 4 997 feet long the remaining two have shorter runways Sierra Leone appears on the EU list of prohibited countries with regard to the certification of airlines This means that no airline registered in Sierra Leone may operate services of any kind within the European Union This is due to substandard safety standards 155 As of March 2023 the country s only international airport had regularly scheduled direct flights to Istanbul Paris Brussels and most major cities in West Africa In September 2014 there were many Districts with travel restrictions including Kailahun Kenema Bombali Tonkolili and Port Loko because of Ebola 156 Energy in Sierra Leone Edit Sierra Leone electricity production by source Overview Edit As of 2016 about 12 of the population of Sierra Leone had access to electricity Of that 12 10 was in the capital Freetown and the remaining 90 of the country used 2 of the nation s electricity 157 The majority of the population relies on biomass fuels for their daily survival with firewood and coal used most prevalently 158 The burning of these sources has been reported to have adverse health effects on women and children 158 A 2012 study was done on the correlation between Acute Respiratory Infection ARI and burning biomass fuels in the home The results were that 64 of children were diagnosed with ARI where firewood stoves were used and 44 where charcoal stoves were used 158 The use of coal and firewood has also posed environmental concerns as they are both in conflict with the push for more sustainable sources of energy 159 As a result the commercialisation of firewood and coal has been a point of contention with aid donors and government agencies such as the Ministry of Energy and Water Resources and the Forestry Division 159 There have been strong pushes for both solar and hydropower to become the dominant sources of energy in Sierra Leone because of the UN s Sustainable Development Goals particularly goal number seven affordable and clean energy Sierra Leone s tropical climate heavy annual rainfall and abundance of rivers give it the potential to realistically pursue more solar and hydropower alternatives 160 Solar energy Edit In conjunction with the UK s Department for International Development DFID Sierra Leone has set the goal to provide solar power to all of its citizens by 2025 161 This overarching goal has been broken down into smaller goals as well The first of these goals is to provide solar power to at least 50 000 homes in 2016 the second is 250 000 homes by 2017 and finally to provide power to 1 000 000 people by 2020 161 This initiative falls under the Energy Africa access campaign which seeks to provide electricity to 14 different African countries by 2030 157 Previous to this compact agreement Sierra Leone s private sector for solar energy was weak as it provided energy to less than 5 of the target population 157 Part of the reason for this was due to the import duties and taxes and the lack of quality control 157 To ensure that the Energy Africa goal is met Sierra Leone has agreed to remove its import duties and Value Added Tax VAT on certified solar products 161 This change will attempt to encourage foreign investment while providing affordable quality solar products to its citizens It is estimated that there will be a 30 to 40 cost reduction on solar products with the lack of duties and taxes 157 Hydroelectric power Edit As of 2012 Sierra Leone has 3 main hydroelectric plants The first is the Guma plant which was decommissioned in 1982 the second is the Dodo Plant which is located in the Eastern Province and finally the Bumbuna plant 160 There is also potential for several new hydroelectric plants to be opened on the Sewa River Pampana River Seli River Moa River and Little Scarcies 160 Amongst all these projects both finished and potential the Bumbuna dam still remains the largest of the hydroelectric projects in Sierra Leone 160 It is located near the Seli River and Freetown and was estimated to produce about 50 megawatts of electricity 162 There were plans to increase its capacity 400 megawatts by 2017 which would cost around 750 million 163 It has been projected that the Bumbuna dam could potentially reduce the amount of spending on foreign fuel and save the country at least 2 million a month 164 In the past this project received its funding of over 200 million from a combination of the World Bank the African Development Bank and the Italian company Salini Impregilo 162 Demographics EditMain articles Demographics of Sierra Leone and Languages of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone s total population from 1961 to 2013 In 2019 Sierra Leone had a population of 7 813 215 165 and a growth rate of 2 216 a year 104 The country s population is mostly young with an estimated 41 7 under 15 and rural with an estimated 62 of people living outside the cities 104 As a result of migration to cities the population is becoming more urban with an estimated rate of urbanisation growth of 2 9 a year 104 166 Population density varies greatly within Sierra Leone The Western Area Urban District including Freetown the capital and largest city has a population density of 1 224 persons per square km The largest district geographically Koinadugu has a much lower density of 21 4 persons per square km 166 English is the official language 167 spoken at schools government administration and in the media Krio derived from English and several indigenous African languages and the language of the Sierra Leone Krio people is the most widely spoken language in virtually all parts of Sierra Leone As the Krio language is spoken by 90 of the country s population 104 168 it unites all the different ethnic groups especially in their trade and interaction with each other 169 After the contribution made by the Bangladesh UN Peacekeeping Force in the Sierra Leone Civil War under the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone the government of Ahmad Tejan Kabbah declared Bengali an honorary official language in December 2002 170 171 According to the World Refugee Survey 2008 published by the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants Sierra Leone had a population of 8 700 refugees and asylum seekers at the end of 2007 Nearly 20 000 Liberian refugees voluntarily returned to Liberia over the course of 2007 Of the refugees remaining in Sierra Leone nearly all were Liberian 172 vte Largest cities or towns in Sierra Leone Government of Sierra Leone 2004 Census 173 Rank Name District Pop Freetown Bo 1 Freetown Western Area Urban District 853 651 Kenema Makeni2 Bo Bo District 149 9573 Kenema Kenema District 128 4024 Makeni Bombali District 82 9405 Koidu Town Kono District 80 0256 Lunsar Port Loko District 24 4507 Port Loko Port Loko District 23 1958 Pandebu Tokpombu Kenema District 20 2199 Kabala Koinadugu District 19 07410 Waterloo Western Area Urban District 18 579 The populations quoted above for the five largest cities are from the 2004 census The figure for Freetown is for the Western Urban Area Greater Freetown Other figures are estimates from the source cited Different sources give different estimates Some claim that Magburaka should be included in the above list but there is considerable difference among sources One source estimates the population at 14 915 174 whilst another puts it as high as 85 313 175 Pandebu Tokpombu is presumably the extended town of Torgbonbu which had a population of 10 716 in the 2004 census Gbendembu had a larger population of 12 139 in that census In the 2004 census Waterloo had a population of 34 079 Religion Edit Main article Religion in Sierra Leone Religion in Sierra Leone 2020 2 Religion percentIslam 78 5 Christianity 20 4 Other faiths 1 1 A mosque and a church in Sierra Leone Sierra Leone is officially a secular state Islam and Christianity are the two main religions in the country The constitution of Sierra Leone provides for freedom of religion and the Sierra Leone Government generally protects it The Sierra Leonean Government is constitutionally forbidden from establishing a state religion though Muslim and Christian prayers are usually held in the country at the beginning of major political occasions including presidential inaugurations and the official opening of the new session of Parliament Surveys of the religious make up of Sierra Leone vary widely though Muslims make up the majority of the population Based on 2015 estimates of the population of Sierra Leone 77 of the population are Muslims 22 are Christians and 1 practise African traditional religion According to a 2020 estimates by the Pew Research Center 176 78 5 of Sierra Leone s population are Muslims mostly Sunni 20 4 are Christians mostly Protestants and 1 1 belong to a traditional African religion or other beliefs The Inter Religious Council of Sierra Leone estimated that 77 of Sierra Leone s population are Muslims 21 are Christians and 2 are followers of traditional African religion 177 Most of Sierra Leone s ethnic groups are Muslim majority including the country s two largest ethnic groups the Mende and Temne Sierra Leone is regarded as one of the most religiously tolerant countries in the world 178 179 180 Most the major Muslim and Christian holidays are officially national holidays in the country and religious conflict is rare 181 The country is home to the Sierra Leone Inter Religious Council which is made up of both Christian and Muslim religious leaders to promote peace and tolerance throughout the country 182 183 184 The Islamic holidays of Eid al Fitr Eid al Adha and Maulid un Nabi Birthday of the Islamic prophet Muhammad are observed as national holidays in Sierra Leone The Christian holidays of Christmas Boxing Day Good Friday and Easter are also national holidays in Sierra Leone In politics the overwhelming majority of Sierra Leoneans vote for a candidate without regard of the candidate being a Muslim or a Christian citation needed All of Sierra Leone s Heads of State have been Christians except Ahmad Tejan Kabbah who was a Muslim The overwhelming majority of Sierra Leonean Muslims are adherent to the Sunni tradition of Islam in practice Most of the Mosques and Islamic schools across Sierra Leone are based in Sunni Islam Ahmadiyya Muslims make up about 10 of the country s Muslim population Sierra Leone has a vibrant Ahmaddiya Muslim population especially in the southern city of Bo which is home to a large Ahmadiyya Muslim population There are five hundred Ahmadiyya Mosque across Sierra Leone 185 Shia Islam does not have a strong presence in Sierra Leone and there are virtually no Shia Muslims in the country Most Sierra Leonean Muslims of the Sunni and Ahmadiyya sect generally pray together in the same mosque 186 187 The vast majority of Sierra Leonean Muslims are adherent to the Maliki school of Sunni Islam The Maliki school is by far the largest and most dominant Islamic school of jurisprudence across Sierra Leone Many Ahmadiyya Muslims in Sierra Leone also follow the Maliki Jurisprudence The Sierra Leone Islamic Supreme Council is the highest Islamic religious organisation in Sierra Leone and is made up of the country s Imams Islamic scholars and other Islamic clerics across the country Sheikh Muhammad Taha Jalloh is the president of the Sierra Leone Supreme Islamic Council 188 The United Council of Imams is an influential Islamic religious body in Sierra Leone that is made up of all imams of mosques throughout Sierra Leone The president of the United Council of Imam is Sheikh Alhaji Muhammad Habib Sheriff 189 The two largest mosques in Sierra Leone are the Freetown Central Mosque and the Ghadafi Central Mosque built by former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi both located in the capital Freetown The large majority of Sierra Leonean Christians are Protestant of which the largest groups are the Wesleyan Methodists 190 191 192 193 194 Other Christian Protestant denominations with significant presence in the country include Presbyterians 195 Baptists 196 Seventh day Adventists 197 Anglicans 198 Lutherans 199 200 and Pentecostals 201 The Council of Churches is the Christian religious organisation that is made up of Protestant churches across Sierra Leone Recently there has been an increase of Pentecostal churches especially in Freetown In September 2017 a Sierra Leone based Nigerian Pentecostal Christian pastor name Victor Ajisafe was arrested by the Sierra Leone Police and held in jail after he made controversial remarks against Islam and Sierra Leonean Muslims in particular at his church sermon in the capital Freetown Ajisafe was apparently angry after a Zimbabwean Muslim cleric Mufti Menk had visited Sierra Leone and preached to large crowds 202 Many Christian organisations in Sierra Leone including the Council of Churches condemned Ajisafe s sermon against Islam and Muslims Ajisafe s church was temporarily shut down by the Sierra Leone government and his church licence was temporarily suspended too The incident brought religious tension in Sierra Leone in a country known for its high level of religious tolerance as many Sierra Leonean Muslims at home and abroad called for Ajisafe to be deported back to his home country of Nigeria The pastor while in Sierra Leone police custody apologised to Sierra Leonean Muslims and to the government of Sierra Leone After several days in jail Ajisafe was released his church licence was given back to him and his church was later reopened under strict government condition during several months of probation Non denominational Protestants form a significant minority of Sierra Leone s Christian population 203 Catholics are the largest group of non Protestant Christians in Sierra Leone forming about 8 of Sierra Leone s population and 26 of the Christian population in Sierra Leone 204 The Jehovah s Witnesses 205 and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 206 207 are the two most prominent non Trinitarian Christians in Sierra Leone and they form a small but significant minority of the Christian population in Sierra Leone A small community of Orthodox Christians resides in the capital Freetown 208 Ethnic groups Edit Further information Ethnic groups in Sierra Leone The distribution of major ethnic groups within Sierra Leone Ethnic groupsof Sierra Leone 13 Temne 32 5 Mende 30 2 Fula 12 4 Limba 4 4 kono 3 4 Susu 2 9 Loko 2 9 Koranko 2 8 Sherbro 2 6 Mandingo 2 4 Krio 1 3 Sierra Leone is home to about sixteen ethnic groups each with its own language The largest and most influential are the Temne at about 35 5 and the Mende at about 33 2 The Temne predominate in the Northern Sierra Leone and some areas around the capital of Sierra Leone The Mende predominate in South Eastern Sierra Leone with the exception of Kono District The vast majority of Temne are Muslims at over 85 with a significant Christian minority at about 10 The Mende are also Muslim majority at about 70 though with a large Christian minority at about 30 Sierra Leone s national politics centres on the competition between the north west dominated by the Temne and the south east dominated by the Mende The vast majority of the Mende support the Sierra Leone People s Party while the majority of the Temne support the All People s Congress 209 The Mende who are believed to be descendants of the Mane citation needed originally occupied the Liberian hinterland They began moving into Sierra Leone slowly and peacefully in the eighteenth century The Temne are said to have migrated from Futa Jallon which is in present day Guinea The third largest ethnic group are the Limba at about 8 4 of the population The Limba are native people of Sierra Leone They have no tradition of origin and it is believed that they have lived in Sierra Leone since before the European encounter The Limba are primarily found in Northern Sierra Leone particularly in Bombali Kambia and Koinadugu District The Limba are about 60 Christian and 40 Muslims The Limba are close political allies of the neighbouring Temne Since independence the Limba have traditionally been influential in Sierra Leone s politics along with the Mende The vast majority of Limba support the All People s Congress APC political party Sierra Leone s first and second presidents Siaka Stevens and Joseph Saidu Momoh respectively were both ethnic Limba Sierra Leone s former defense minister Alfred Paolo Conteh is an ethnic Limba One of the biggest minority ethnic groups are the Fula at around 3 8 of the population Descendants of seventeenth and eighteenth century Fula migrant settlers from the Fouta Djalon region of Guinea they live primarily in the northeast and the western area of Sierra Leone The Fula are virtually all Muslims at over 99 The Fula are primarily traders and many live in middle class homes Because of their trading the Fulas are found in nearly all parts of the country The other ethnic groups are the Mandingo also known as Mandinka They are descendants of traders from Guinea who migrated to Sierra Leone during the late nineteenth to mid twentieth centuries The Mandinka are predominantly found in the east and the northern part of the country They predominate in the large towns most notably Karina in Bombali District in the north Kabala and Falaba in Koinadugu District in the north and Yengema Kono District in the east of the country Like the Fula the Mandinka are virtually all Muslims at over 99 Sierra Leone s third president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and Sierra Leone s first Vice President Sorie Ibrahim Koroma were both ethnic Mandingo Next in proportion are the Kono who live primarily in Kono District in Eastern Sierra Leone The Kono are descendants of migrants from Guinea today their workers are known primarily as diamond miners The majority of the Kono ethnic group are Christians though with an influential Muslim minority Sierra Leone s former Vice President Alhaji Samuel Sam Sumana is an ethnic Kono The small but significant Creole or Krio people descendants of freed African American West Indian and Liberated African slaves who settled in Freetown between 1787 and about 1885 make up about 3 of the population They primarily occupy the capital city of Freetown and its surrounding Western Area Creole or Krio culture reflects the Western culture and ideals within which many of their ancestors originated they also had close ties with British officials and colonial administration during years of development The Creoles or Krio have traditionally dominated Sierra Leone s judiciary and Freetown s elected city council One of the first ethnic groups to become educated according to Western traditions they have traditionally been appointed to positions in the civil service beginning during the colonial years They continue to be influential in the civil service The Creoles or Krios are virtually all Christians at about 99 The Oku people are the descendants of liberated muslim Yorubas from Southwest Nigeria who were released from slave ships and resettled in Sierra Leone as Liberated Africans or came as settlers in the mid 19th century The Oku people primarily reside in the communities of Fourah Bay Fula Town and Aberdeen in Freetown The Oku are virtually all Muslims at about 99 Other minority ethnic groups are the Kuranko who are related to the Mandingo and are largely Muslims The Kuranko are believed to have begun arriving in Sierra Leone from Guinea in about 1600 and settled in the north particularly in Koinadugu District The Kuranko are primarily farmers leaders among them have traditionally held several senior positions in the Military The current Governor of the Bank of Sierra Leone Kaifala Marah is an ethnic Kuranko The Kuranko are largely Muslim majority The Loko in the north are native people of Sierra Leone believed to have lived in Sierra Leone since the time of European encounter Like the neighbouring Temne the Loko are Muslim majority The Susu and their related Yalunka are traders both groups are primarily found in the far north in Kambia and Koinadugu District close to the border with Guinea The Susu and Yalunka kingdom was established in the early fifth seventh century clarification needed before the Mali empire which was extended from Mali Senegal Guinea Bissau Guinea Conakry to the northern part of Sierra Leone They are the original owners of the Futa Djallon region covered by a vars land area both the Susu and Yalunka people are descendants of the Mande people They are virtually all Muslims The Yalunka also spelled Jallonke Yalonga Djallonke Djallonka or Dialonke are Mande people who have lived in the Djallon a mountainous region in Sierra Leone Mali Senegal Guinea Bissau and Guinea Conakry West Africa over 520 years ago The name Yalunka literally means inhabitants of the Jallon mountains Manga Sewa was born in Falaba Solima chiefdom in the Northern Province of British Sierra Leone to Yalunka parents His father was a Yalunka paramount chief of Solima a prosperous chieftaincy Its capital Falaba was on the rich trading routes leading to the coast Manga Sewa s father had several wives and dozens of children are traders both groups are primarily found in the far north in Kambia and Koinadugu District close to the border with Guinea The Susu and Yalunka are both descendants of migrants from Guinea they both are virtually all Muslims at over 99 The Kissi live further inland in South Eastern Sierra Leone They predominate in the large town of Koindu and its surrounding areas in Kailahun District The vast majority of Kissi are Christians The much smaller Vai and Kru peoples are primarily found in Kailahun and Pujehun Districts near the border with Liberia The Kru predominate in the Kroubay neighbourhood in the capital of Freetown The Vai are largely Muslim majority at about 90 while the Kru are virtually all Christians at over 99 On the coast in Bonthe District in the south are the Sherbro Native to Sierra Leone they have occupied Sherbro Island since it was founded The Sherbro are primarily fisherman and farmers and they are predominantly found in Bonthe District The Sherbro are virtually all Christians and their paramount chiefs had a history of intermarriage with British colonists and traders A small number of Sierra Leoneans are of partial or full Lebanese ancestry descendants of traders who first came to the nation in the 19th century They are locally known as Sierra Leonean Lebanese The Sierra Leonean Lebanese community are primarily traders and they mostly live in middle class households in the urban areas primarily in Freetown Bo Kenema Koidu Town and Makeni Gender equality Edit Household Edit Although women account for about 50 per cent of the population in Sierra Leone only 28 per cent are household heads 210 As in the rest of the countries education is a key factor in succeeding in aspects such as a well paid job and covering the needs of a house Rural areas are the most common to lack access to education having only male headed four per cent ahead of females with basic education and 1 2 per cent more at post graduate level 210 In Sierra Leone normally men are automatically positioned as household heads and their status does not change if their marital status changes over time 210 However female household does change depending on their marital status A woman can be the head of the house only if she remains single for the rest of her life But if a woman gets married she will not be entitled as the head of the house any more 210 Females can take over the household head if they become widowed or divorced 210 In the labour field it is expected that the household will financially provide for the needs of the family However females face gender discrimination making them the target of lower incomes and financial struggle 210 In numbers females present a lower per cent 6 3 versus males 15 2 when it comes to be paid employees 210 War Edit Children who have been forced to be part of a war have experienced severe mental and emotional damage in Sierra Leone However the damage and way to deal with the effects of war depends on the gender of the kids Both genders experienced and were involved in high levels of violence Females experiencing higher levels of rapes presented greater signs of depression and anxiety 211 Males on the other hand presented higher levels of anxiety and hostility 211 Males also showed to be more vulnerable to depression after losing a caregiver 211 Female economy Edit Women face discrimination when it comes to obtaining financial social and cultural help to start a business 80 It is difficult to avoid the economic paralysis in Sierra Leone given that more than half of the population in the country is women 80 Due to the lack of access to basic education women are the least prepared when it comes to processing business licences registering names or contracting 80 Not having the capital to start a new business is the biggest barrier for women 80 With the lack of technology mostly in all Sierra Leone it is hard to help a business to function 80 Education Edit Main article Education in Sierra Leone A secondary school class in Pendembu Kailahun District Education in Sierra Leone is legally required for all children for six years at primary level Class P1 P6 and three years in junior secondary education 212 but a shortage of schools and teachers has made implementation impossible 89 Two thirds of the adult population of the country are illiterate 213 The Sierra Leone Civil War resulted in the destruction of 1 270 primary schools and in 2001 67 of all school age children were out of school 89 The situation has improved considerably since then with primary school enrolment doubling between 2001 and 2005 and the reconstruction of many schools since the end of the war 214 Students at primary schools are usually 6 to 12 years old and in secondary schools 13 to 18 Primary education is free and compulsory in government sponsored public schools The country has three universities Fourah Bay College founded in 1827 the oldest university in West Africa 215 University of Makeni established initially in September 2005 as The Fatima Institute the college was granted university status in August 2009 and assumed the name University of Makeni or UNIMAK and Njala University primarily located in Bo District Njala University was established as the Njala Agricultural Experimental Station in 1910 and became a university in 2005 216 Teacher training colleges and religious seminaries are found in many parts of the country Health EditMain article Health in Sierra LeoneThe CIA estimated that the average life expectancy in Sierra Leone was 57 39 years 217 The prevalence of HIV AIDS in the population is 1 6 higher than the world average of 1 but lower than the average of 6 1 across Sub Saharan Africa 218 Medical care is not readily accessible with doctors and hospitals out of reach for many villagers While free health care may be provided in some villages the medical staff is poorly paid and sometimes charge for their services taking advantage of the fact that the villagers are not aware of their right to free medical care 219 A dialysis machine the first of its kind in the country was donated by Israel 220 According to an Overseas Development Institute report private health expenditure accounts for 85 7 of total spending on health 221 Emergency medical response Edit Having had no formal emergency medical services previously the First Responder Coalition of Sierra Leone FRCSL was formed in June 2019 in Makeni to facilitate the development of emergency first responder programs nationwide 222 The founding members of the Coalition included the Sierra Leone Red Cross Society the first chairing organisation LFR International proposed the formation the University of Makeni Agency for Rural Community Transformation and the Holy Spirit Hospital 222 The establishment of the Coalition was concurrent with the declaration by the 72nd World Health Assembly that emergency care systems are essential to universal health coverage 223 Between June and July 2019 the FRCSL trained 1 000 community members from Makeni to be first responders and equipped each trainee with a first aid kit 224 Endemic and infectious diseases Edit Sierra Leone suffers from epidemic outbreaks of diseases including yellow fever cholera Ebola lassa fever and meningitis 225 226 Yellow fever and malaria are endemic to Sierra Leone 226 Maternal and child health Edit According to 2017 estimates Sierra Leone has the third highest maternal mortality rate in the world 227 For every 100 liveborn children one mother dies due to complications of giving birth 227 In the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey MICS conducted by UNICEF in 2012 the prevalence of female genital mutilation in Sierra Leone was 94 228 As of 2014 update Sierra Leone was estimated as having the 11th highest infant mortality rate in the world 229 One of the consequences women in Sierra Leone face after a prolonged and obstructed labour that would have required a c section is obstetric fistula This condition often drives women into poverty and isolation 230 The AWC Aberdeen Women s Centre in Freetown the second busiest hospital in Sierra Leone delivering up to 3000 babies each year 231 The centre provides free surgery for women suffering from this condition The centre provides a variety of maternal and child health services and is supported by not for profit organisations such as Freedom from Fistula 232 The Aminata Maternal Foundation 233 better source needed and UNFPA 234 Mental health Edit Mental healthcare in Sierra Leone is almost non existent Many sufferers try to cure themselves with the help of traditional healers 235 During the Civil War 1991 2002 many soldiers took part in atrocities and many children were forced to fight This left them traumatised with an estimated 400 000 people by 2009 being mentally ill Thousands of former child soldiers have fallen into substance abuse as they try to blunt their memories 236 Potable water supply Edit Main article Water supply in Sierra Leone The water supply in Sierra Leone is characterised by limited access to safe drinking water Despite efforts by the government and numerous non governmental organisations access has not much improved since the end of the Sierra Leone Civil War in 2002 stagnating at about 50 and even declining in rural areas 237 It is hoped that a new dam in Orugu for which China committed financing in 2009 will alleviate water scarcity 238 According to a national survey carried out in 2006 84 of the urban population and 32 of the rural population had access to an improved water source Those with access in rural areas were served almost exclusively by protected wells The 68 of the rural population without access to an improved water source relied on surface water 50 unprotected wells 9 and unprotected springs 9 Only 20 of the urban population and 1 of the rural population had access to piped drinking water in their home Compared to the 2000 survey access has increased in urban areas but has declined in rural areas possibly because facilities have broken down because of a lack of maintenance 237 239 With a new decentralisation policy embodied in the Local Government Act of 2004 responsibility for water supply in areas outside the capital was passed from the central government to local councils In Freetown the Guma Valley Water Company remains in charge of the water supply A situation map of the Ebola outbreak as of 8 August 2014 2014 Ebola outbreak Edit Further information Ebola virus epidemic in Sierra Leone Ebola is prevalent in Africa where social and economic inequalities are common The central African countries are the most prevalent of EVD like the Democratic Republic of Congo Sudan Uganda and Gabon 240 In 2014 there was an outbreak of the Ebola virus in West Africa As of 19 October 2014 there had been 3 706 cases of Ebola in Sierra Leone and 1 259 deaths including that of the leading physician trying to control the outbreak Sheik Umar Khan 241 242 In early August 2014 Guinea closed its borders to Sierra Leone to help contain the spreading of the virus which originated in Guinea as more new cases of the disease were being reported in Sierra Leone than in Guinea Aside from the human cost the outbreak was severely eroding the economy By September 2014 with the closure of borders the cancellation of airline flights the evacuation of foreign workers and a collapse of cross border trade the national deficit of Sierra Leone and other affected countries was widening to the point where the IMF was considering expanding its financial support 243 Culture EditPolygamy Edit Further information Polygamy in Sierra Leone As of 2019 30 of women and 14 of men were in a polygamous unions in Sierra Leone The percentage of women with one or more co wives has decreased gradually over time from 37 in 2008 and 35 in 2013 to 30 in 2019 244 Food and customs Edit Further information Sierra Leonean cuisine Rice farming in Rolako Rice is the staple food of Sierra Leone and is consumed at virtually every meal daily The rice is prepared in numerous ways and topped with a variety of sauces made from some of Sierra Leone s favourite toppings including potato leaves cassava leaves crain crain okra soup fried fish and groundnut stew 245 Along the streets of towns and cities across Sierra Leone one can find foods consisting of fruit vegetables and snacks such as fresh mangoes oranges pineapple fried plantains ginger beer fried potato fried cassava with pepper sauce small bags of popcorn or peanuts bread roasted corn or skewers of grilled meat or shrimp Poyo is a popular Sierra Leonean drink It is a sweet lightly fermented palm wine 246 and is found in bars in towns and villages across the country Poyo bars are areas of lively informal debate about politics football basketball entertainment and other issues Media Edit Main article Media of Sierra Leone A radio listener in Kailahun Media in Sierra Leone began with the introduction of the first printing press in Africa at the start of the 19th century A strong free journalistic tradition developed with the creation of several newspapers In the 1860s the country became a journalist hub for Africa with professionals travelling to the country from across the continent At the end of the 19th century the industry went into decline and when radio was introduced in the 1930s it became the primary communication media in the country The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Service SLBS was created by the colonial government in 1934 making it the earliest English language radio broadcaster service in West Africa The service began broadcasting television in 1963 with coverage extended to all the districts in the country in 1978 In April 2010 the SLBS merged with the United Nations peacekeeping radio station in Sierra Leone to form the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation 247 248 the government owned current national broadcaster in Sierra Leone The Sierra Leone constitution guarantees freedom of speech and freedom of the press however the government maintains strong control of media and at times restricts these rights in practice 249 250 251 252 253 254 Some subjects are seen as taboo by society and members of the political elite imprisonment and violence have been used by the political establishment against journalists 255 256 Under legislation enacted in 1980 all newspapers must register with the Ministry of Information and pay sizeable registration fees The Criminal Libel Law including Seditious Libel Law of 1965 is used to control what is published in the media 256 In 2006 President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah committed to reforming the laws governing the press and media to create a freer system for journalists to work in 256 As of 2013 update Sierra Leone is ranked 61st up two slots from 63rd in 2012 out of 179 countries on Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index 257 Print media is not widely read in Sierra Leone especially outside Freetown and other major cities partially due to the low levels of literacy in the country 258 In 2007 there were 15 daily newspapers in the country as well as those published weekly 259 Among newspaper readership young people are likely to read newspapers weekly and older people daily The majority of newspapers are privately run and are often critical of the government The standard of print journalism tends to be low owing to lack of training and people trust the information published in newspapers less than that found on the radio 258 Isata Mahoi shown editing radio programmes in Talking Drum studio Freetown she is also an actress in the Sierra Leone radio soap opera Atunda Ayenda Radio is the most popular and most trusted media in Sierra Leone with 85 of people having access to a radio and 72 of people in the country listening to the radio daily 258 These levels do vary between areas of the country with the Western Area having the highest levels and Kailahun the lowest Stations mainly consist of local commercial stations with a limited broadcast range combined with a few stations with national coverage Capital Radio Sierra Leone being the largest of the commercial stations The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone UNIOSIL ran one of the most popular stations in the country broadcasting programs in a range of languages The UN mission was restructured in 2008 and it was decided that the UN Radio would be merged with SLBS to form the new Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation SLBC This merger eventually happened in 2011 after the necessary legislation was enacted SLBC transmits radio on FM and has two television services one of which is uplinked by satellite for international consumption FM relays of the BBC World Service in Freetown Bo Kenema and Makeni Radio France Internationale Freetown only and Voice of America Freetown only are also broadcast Outside the capital Freetown and other major cities television is not watched by a great many people although Bo Kenema and Makeni are served by their own relays of the main SLBC service There are three free terrestrial television stations in Sierra Leone one run by the government SLBC and the other two are private stations in Freetown Star TV which is run by the owner of the Standard Times newspaper and AYV Africa Young Voices Several religious funded TV stations operate intermittently Two other commercial TV operators ABC and AIT closed after they were not profitable In 2007 a pay per view service was also introduced by GTV as part of a pan African television service in addition to the nine year old sub Saharan Digital satellite television service DStv originating from Multichoice Africa in South Africa GTV subsequently went out of business leaving DStv as the only provider of subscription satellite television in the country Several organisations planned to operate digital terrestrial subscription TV services with Multichoice s Go TV having built infrastructure ahead of getting a licence and ultimately failing to get a licence ITV and SATCON are currently operational Internet access in Sierra Leone has been sparse but is on the increase especially since the introduction of 3G 4G cellular phone services across the country There are several main internet service providers ISPs operating in the country Freetown has internet cafes and other businesses offering internet access Problems experienced with access to the Internet include an intermittent electricity supply and a slow connection speed in the country outside Freetown Arts Edit Further information Art in Sierra Leone and Music of Sierra Leone The arts in Sierra Leone are a mixture of tradition and hybrid African and western styles 260 261 262 Odelay mask by Temne people Brooklyn Museum The Koindu danceSports Edit Main article Sport in Sierra Leone National Stadium in Freetown Association football is by far the most popular sport in Sierra Leone Children youth and adult are frequently seen playing street football across Sierra Leone There are organised youth and adult football tournaments across the country and there are various primary and secondary schools with football teams across Sierra Leone The Sierra Leone national football team popularly known as the Leone Stars represents the country in international competitions It has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup but participated in the 1994 and 1996 African Cup of Nations When the national football team the Leone Stars have a match Sierra Leoneans across the country come together united in support of the national team and people rush to their local radio and television stations to follow the live match The country s national television network The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation SLBC broadcasts the national football team live match along with many local radio stations across the country When the Leone Stars win an important match many youth across the county rush to the street to celebrate Many of the Sierra Leone national team footballers play for teams based in Europe although virtually all of them started professional football in the Sierra Leone National Premier League Many of the national team footballers are celebrities across Sierra Leone and they are often well known by the general population Some of Sierra Leonean international footballers include Mohamed Kallon Mohamed Bangura Rodney Strasser Kei Kamara Ibrahim Teteh Bangura Mustapha Dumbuya Christian Caulker Alhassan Bangura Sheriff Suma Osman Kakay Mohamed Kamara Umaru Bangura and Julius Gibrilla Woobay The Sierra Leone National Premier League is the top professional football league in Sierra Leone and is controlled by the Sierra Leone Football Association Fourteen clubs from across the country compete in the Sierra Leone Premier League The two biggest and most successful football clubs are East End Lions and Mighty Blackpool East End Lions and Mighty Blackpool have an intense rivalry and when they play each other the national stadium in Freetown is often sold out and supporters of both clubs often clash with each other before and after the game There is a huge police presence inside and outside the national stadium during a match between the two great rivals to prevent a clash Many Sierra Leonean youth follow the local football league Many Sierra Leonean youth children and adults follow the major football leagues in Europe particularly the English Premier League Italian Serie A Spanish La Liga German Bundesliga and French Ligue 1 The Sierra Leone cricket team represents Sierra Leone in international cricket competitions and is among the best in West Africa It became an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council in 2002 It made its international debut at the 2004 African Affiliates Championship where it finished last of eight teams But at the equivalent tournament in 2006 Division Three of the African region of the World Cricket League it finished as runner up to Mozambique and just missed promotion to Division Two In 2009 the Sierra Leone Under 19 team finished second in the African Under 19 Championship in Zambia thus qualifying for the Under 19 World Cup qualifying tournament with nine other teams 263 However the team was unable to obtain Canadian visas to play in the tournament which was held in Toronto 264 Sierra Leone is the first African country to join the International Floorball Federation Tourism EditMain article Tourism in Sierra Leone Sierra Leone s Freetown is a favourite destination for tourists Although the sector was seriously affected during the Civil War there has been a steady improvement in recent years 265 The city has a lot to offer to tourists There is a vast expanse of beaches stretching along the Freetown Peninsula The Lumley Aberdeen beach stretches all the way from Cape Sierra Leone down to Lumley There are also other popular beaches like the world renowned River Number 2 Beach Laka Beach Tokeh Beach Bureh Beach and Mama Beach The Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary which is located within the peninsula s vast rainforest reserve just a few kilometres from the centre of Freetown has a collection of rare and endangered chimpanzees Other popular destinations for tourists include the Freetown Cotton Tree located in Central Freetown a significant national monument and integral to the founding of the city Bunce Island which is a boat ride from the city is home to the ruins of the slave fortress that was being used during the Transatlantic slave trade the Sierra Leone Museum which has a collection of both precolonial as well as colonial artifacts and other items of historical significance the National Railway Museum or take a journey around the city s coastline with the popular Sea Coach Express The Aberdenn Lumley area is a favourite destination for those venturing into the city s nightlife See also Edit Sierra Leone portal Africa portalOutline of Sierra LeoneNotes Edit s i ˌ ɛr e l i ˈ oʊ n i listen also UK s i ˌ ɛer e US ˌ s ɪer e 9 10 Krio Salone 11 References Edit Sierra Leone 2015 Population and Housing Census National Analytical Report PDF Statistics Sierra Leone Retrieved 28 March 2020 a b Religions in Sierra Leone PEW GRF Abu Alpha 4 May 2021 Big shake up in Sierra Leone s cabinet Politico SL Retrieved 6 May 2021 Sierra Leone The World Factbook 2023 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 24 September 2022 a b c d World Economic Outlook Database October 2022 IMF org International Monetary Fund October 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 GINI index World Bank estimate Sierra Leone World Bank Retrieved 22 March 2020 Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Retrieved 30 September 2022 Lewis M Paul Simons Gary F Fennig Charles D eds 2015 Liberia Ethnologue 18th ed Dallas Texas SIL International Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 9781405881180 Sierra Leone Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 22 April 2019 Salone Definition Sierra Leone country Encarta Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 28 February 2008 Retrieved 19 February 2008 a b Sierra Leone 2015 Population and Housing Census National Analytical Report PDF Statistics Sierra Leone Retrieved 28 March 2020 National Electoral Commission Press Release PDF 6 September 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2017 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Sierra Leone unveils new geographical map Africa Review Archived from the original on 21 February 2018 Retrieved 1 February 2018 OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM May 12 2021 2020 Report on International Religious Freedom Sierra Leone U S Department of State Retrieved October 25 2021 United Nations 5 July 2013 Inter religious cooperation can be vital asset for rebuilding Sierra Leone UN expert Archived Retrieved October 26 2021 Hargreaves J D December 20 2011 The Establishment of the Sierra Leone Protectorate and the Insurrection of 1898 Cambridge Historical Journal Vol 12 1 Retrieved 26 October 2021 UNITED NATIONS INTEGRATED PEACEBUILDING OFFICE IN SIERRA LEONE ABOUT SIERRA LEONE HISTORY Archived Retrieved October 26 2021 a b c d e Humphrey J Fisher 1969 Elections and Coups in Sierra Leone 1967 The Journal of Modern African Studies Vol 7 No 4 December 1969 pp 611 636 26 pages Published By Cambridge University Press Archived Retrieved October 22 2021 a b c d Kandeh J D September 1998 Transition without Rupture Sierra Leone s Transfer Election of 1996 African Studies Review Flight 41 No 2 September 1998 pp 91 111 Cambridge University Press Archived Retrieved October 25 2021 a b University of Central Arkansas 41 Sierra Leone 1961 Present Archived Retrieved 22 October 2021 Davis Dickie 20 November 2017 The British Experience in Africa and Oman The Journal of Complex Operations National Defense University Archived Retrieved October 29 2021 Nwauwa Apollos O 2003 Book review The Athens of West Africa A History of International Education at Fourah Bay College Freetown Sierra Leone by Daniel J Paracka Jr New York Routledge Comparative Education Review Vol 49 4 Archived Retrieved 29 October 2021 5 Thing to Know About Sierra Leone reignministries org Archived from the original on 26 March 2020 Retrieved 14 July 2021 Houses at Sierra Leone The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons X 55 May 1853 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Countries and Their Cultures Culture of Sierra Leone Retrieved 22 February 2008 Sierra Leone History Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 19 February 2008 Sierra Leone History Encyclopedia of the Nations Retrieved 22 February 2008 a b Fyfe Christopher Weighing the Probabilities Review Landlords and Strangers Ecology Society and Trade in Western Africa 1000 1630 By George E Brooks Boulder Westview Press 1994 ISBN 0 8133 1263 9 Utting 1931 p 33 Utting 1931 p 8 Kingfisher Geography Encyclopedia ISBN 1 85613 582 9 p 180 Pedro da cintra did not name Sierra Leone An Exploration into available evidence Sierra Leone Concord Times 22 June 2017 Archived from the original on 6 August 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2017 LeVert Suzanne 2006 Cultures of the World Sierra Leone Marshall Cavendish p 22 ISBN 978 0 7614 2334 8 Christopher Fyfe A History of Sierra Leone Introduction Sibthorpe A B C 1970 The History of Sierra Leone Routledge p 7 ISBN 978 0 7146 1769 5 Hochschild Adam 2006 Bury the Chains Mariner Books pp 25 ISBN 978 0 618 10469 7 Cassandra Pybus Epic Journeys of Freedom Runaway Slaves of the American Revolution and Their Global Quest for Liberty Beacon Press Boston 2006 Graham Russell Hodges Susan Hawkes Cook Alan Edward Brown eds The Black Loyalist Directory African Americans in Exile After the American Revolution JSTOR 2947159 a b c d e f Siva Michael Winter 2021 Why Did the Black Poor of London Not Support the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme History Matters Journal 1 2 25 47 Sivapragasam Michael Why Did Black Londoners not join the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783 1815 Unpublished master s dissertation London Open University 2013 pp 40 43 Peter Fryer in Staying Power The History of Black People in Britain London Pluto Press 1984 p 195 quotes a contemporary commentator who called them indigent unemployed despised and forlorn saying that it was necessary they should be sent somewhere and be no longer suffered to invest sic the streets of London C B Wadstrom An Essay on Colonization 1794 5 II 220 Freed slaves in Sierra Leone The Guardian 31 August 2005 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 September 2020 Black Loyalist Heritage Society Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 19 October 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Gustavus Vassa Olaudah Equiano Plymouth City Council Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 Retrieved 19 October 2007 Economic History of Sierra Leone Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Pham John Peter 2005 Child Soldiers Adult Interests The Global Dimensions of the Sierra Leonean Tragedy Nova Publishers pp 4 8 ISBN 978 1 59454 671 6 Retrieved 17 June 2014 Michael Sivapragasam Why Did Black Londoners Not Join the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783 1815 London Open University 2013 Sierra Leone s struggle for progress The Economist 11 December 2008 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Schama Simon 2006 Rough Crossings p 363 Gilbert Alan Black Patriots and Loyalists Fighting for Emancipation in the War for Independence University of Chicago 2012 p 229 Fyfe Christopher 1992 Our Children Free and Happy Letters from Black Settlers in Africa in the 1790s Edinburgh University Press Schama Simon Rough Crossings London 2005 pp 380 383 Harris Sheldon H 1972 Paul Cuffe Black America and the African Return New York Simon and Schuster pp 32 33 especially note 15 on p 140 a b c Schwarz Suzanne 2021 Reconstructing the Life Histories of Liberated Africans Sierra Leone in the Early Nineteenth Century History in Africa Vol 39 2012 pp 175 207 33 Cambridge University Press Archived Retrieved 27 October 2021 a b Dixon Fyle Mac Cole Gibril Raschid 2006 Introduction New Perspectives on the Sierra Leone Krio New York Peter Lang pp 2 3 ISBN 978 0 8204 7937 8 A substantial part of this ex slave population was Yoruba but members of ethnic groups from other regions of the Atlantic Igbo Efik Fante etc were also very much in evidence in this coterie of Liberated Africans Individuals from ethnic communities indigenous to Sierra Leone were significantly represented among the Liberated Africans Many a Temne Limba Mende and Loko resident of Freetown influenced by local European officials and missionaries would come in time to shed their indigenous names and cultural values to take on a Creole identity which gave them a better chance of success in the rarefied Victorian ambience sic of a progressively westernized Freetown society Thayer James Steel 1991 A Dissenting View of Creole Culture in Sierra Leone pp 215 230 https www persee fr doc cea 0008 0055 1991 num 31 121 2116 Browne Davies Nigel 2014 A Precis of Sources relating to genealogical research on the Sierra Leone Krio people Journal of Sierra Leone Studies Vol 3 Edition 1 2014 https www academia edu 40720522 A Precis of Sources relating to genealogical research on the Sierra Leone Krio people Walker James W 1992 Chapter Five Foundation of Sierra Leone The Black Loyalists The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone 1783 1870 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 94 114 ISBN 978 0 8020 7402 7 originally published by Longman amp Dalhousie University Press 1976 Taylor Bankole Kamara February 2014 Sierra Leone The Land Its People and History New Africa Press p 68 ISBN 9789987160389 Schwarz Suzanne 5 January 2013 Reconstructing the Life Histories of Enslaved Africans Sierra Leone c 1808 19 Paracka Daniel 2003 The Athens of West Africa A History of International Education at Fourah Bay College Freetown Sierra Leone Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 94795 4 Kopytoff Jean Herskovits A Preface to Modern Nigeria The Sierra Leonians in Yoruba 1830 1890 University of Wisconsin Press p 35 Nwauwa Apollos O 2003 Book review The Athens of West Africa A History of International Education at Fourah Bay College Freetown Sierra Leone by Daniel J Paracka Jr New York Routledge Comparative Education Review Vol 49 4 Archived Retrieved 29 October 2021 a b Harris David 2012 Civil War and Democracy in West Africa Conflict Resolution Elections and Justice in Sierra Leone and Liberia I B Tauris p 40 a b Abraham Arthur 1974 Bai Bureh The British and the Hut Tax War The International Journal of African Historical Studies 7 1 99 106 doi 10 2307 216556 ISSN 0361 7882 JSTOR 216556 History Sierra leone org Retrieved 17 January 2007 Killson Martin 1966 Political Change in a West African State A Study of the Modernization Process in Sierra Leone Cambridge Massachusetts USA pp 60 also pp 106 107 110 111 186 188 on other riots and strikes The Committee Office House of Commons 6 March 2006 House of Commons International Development Memoranda Publications parliament UK Archived from the original on 22 July 2015 Retrieved 17 June 2014 Sierra Leone Web Sierra Leonean Heroes Achievement of Independence www sierra leone org How Independence Was Won Newafricanmagazine com Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 19 March 2014 a b c Advocate Nations of Africa Sierra Leone Archived 5 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b c Murtala Mohammed Kamara 28 February 2011 Sierra Leone was ripe for Independence Exclusive 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