''All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing'' - Edmund Burke

Welcome

S I E R R A  H E R A L D

Vol 9 No 1

The tendency sometimes to protect perpetrators for the sake of peace...doesn't help society. Impunity should not be allowed to stand. - Kofi Annan on Waki report

HOME
Mission
Contact us
World Cup with the BBC
UK Serious Fraud Office
World Association for Human Rights - USA
National Union of Journalists (UK)
BBC African Service
Daily Trust of Nigeria
UN Great Lakes
PEN
INASLA
Writer Adichie
Southwark Council
S.L. Web
All Africa.com
Africa Week
AWOKO
Human Rights Watch
Amnesty International
Trial Watch
International Criminal Court
LAWCLA
One World
Royal African Society
University of
East London
Nigeria Anti Corruption Commission
(EFCC)
archive 6

 

 

18 August: The AFRC and its RUF allies moved violently to stop a student-led pro-democracy demonstration Monday. Soldiers and former rebel fighters armed with rocket-propelled grenades, automatic weapons, and machetes made numerous arrests and blocked off streets in Freetown to prevent a march organised by the National Union of Sierra Leone Students (NUSS). One student was reported killed in a clash with soldiers outside the Sierra Leone Nursing School, where students had taken refuge after troops cordoned off the area.

Demonstrators were seen beaten, kicked, and thrown into the backs of military vehicles. A NUSS spokesman said two students were seriously wounded, one by gunshots and another by machete. Even before the march began, RUF units sought out and detained suspected activists. A student leader, David Bockarie, and 26 members of NUSS were arrested and taken to Pademba Road Prison, along with the chairman of the Civil Rights Committee, lawyer Sulaiman Banja Tejan-Sie. Other student leaders have reportedly gone into hiding.

The march was to have begun at Kissy Road, and to proceed via the turntable to Siaka Stevens Street, ending at the law court. Soldiers, firing into the air and driving through the streets at high speed, made arrests anywhere a group of people had gathered. Many students were prevented from reaching the site of the planned march by troops who combed the streets, manned checkpoints, and blockaded the main road to Fourah Bay College. Shops in Freetown were closed and Sierra Leone Commercial Bank, the only bank currently operating in Freetown, also closed its doors.

The radio claimed that only 7 of 35 persons arrested were students, and that at least two students had been caught with AK-47 assault rifles before the demonstration.

Students in Bo also went ahead with demonstrations, despite a show of force by soldiers, RUF "People's Army" fighters, and SSD contingents, all armed with automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, and backed up by trucks carrying anti-aircraft guns. After marching for a short distance, the students were confronted by AFRC forces along Prince William Street. The students sat down peacefully, but were quickly dispersed by soldiers using teargas. The students later regrouped in another part of town, but were again chased away by security forces. The security forces later celebrated their victory over the students by driving through Bo in a fleet of vehicles, singing and brandishing their guns. Sierra Leone's police inspector said on SLBS (state radio) that all security forces will remain on alert to maintain law and order in the country.

AFRC spokesman Allieu Kamara denied reports Monday that the military had used excessive force against student demonstrators. "We have not been beating up students. We have not been chasing them around," Kamara told the BBC. "All we are trying to do is contain them because we do believe that peace is paramount...because without peace the word democracy will not, in fact, flourish."

Kamara said the AFRC had invited student leaders to sit down with them "so that they can explain to them exactly what they want the AFRC to do," but that the students had declined. "They ignored our request, but they were determined definitely to come out on the streets and disrupt." Kamara rejected suggestions that military personnel were beating up opponents. "What they are trying to do is to make sure that there is peace on the streets of Freetown and I assure you that nobody will tell you that they have been beating people indiscriminately," he said.

He said those arrested during the demonstrations were "people that have been stoning, people that have been harassing the personnel that are moving around town to make sure that there is peace and quiet. So all we are trying to do is to contain them."

Kamara alleged that the students were armed and had fired upon the soldiers. "Students are armed with AK-47's," he said. "We have proof and I will assure you that pistols were taken away from them. We got those equipment we don't know."

 

Yearning for the mother country?

The right choice is Kevin McPhilips Travel

©Sierra Herald 2002