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Showing posts from April, 2015

All Rise!

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Sierra Leone's Superior Court judiciary is made up of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal and the High Court of Justice.  As in other British colonies, judges are often addressed as "My lord" or "Your ladyship" and other court officials are referred to as "Master" or "Your Worship." Although former British colonies such as Kenya and India have either completely retired or scaled back use of judicial wigs, Hong Kong and Sierra Leone remain attached to this centuries-old British custom. On Nairaland , a forum for Nigerians online, one commentator wrote: Judicial wigs, which once served as the clearest signpost of [an] hierarchical order that afforded most citizens no access to the law, clearly has no place in modern Nigeria. Along with those gowns - adopted  in 1685.

Moa East, The Resilient Wharf

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Almost five years ago, a Concord Times reporter had this to say about Moa Wharf, a low lying coastal slum area in Freetown's eastend where three families were quarantined recently. Moa wharf is home to an estimated population of seven thousand people, many of them children.  Life in Moa wharf, as in many Sierra Leonean slums, is difficult. Hundreds of thousands of people live with no proper sanitation. On March 18, the newly confirmed Ebola cases  in the Western Area Urban, were from the Tripoli-Moa Wharf hotspot. International Organization for Migration (Sierra Leone) staff visited with Medair and the U.S. Office for Foreign Disaster Assistance. IOM witnessed as Medair delivered Emergency Interim Care Kits to three quarantined families in the Moa Wharf community in eastern Freetown, they wrote on their Facebook page. As well as care kits, instructions were given on how to use the kits and mix chlorine properly. Basic food supplies were also distributed to over

Honda Boys to Okada boys (and Girls)

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Two-wheeled transport is catching on fast. In Sierra Leone, scooters and small motorcycles are the fastest growing transport industry. A new scooter (also known as Okada) retails at around Le4.8 million (about US$1,000). Many of the imported brands are from China, India, Taiwan as well as South Africa. They include iconic names like Suzuki, Jonway, Bashan, Bajaj, Big Boy, Gomoto, Zongshen, and Honda. 'Honda boys to Okada boys and girls' Hadi Bah, the popular Sierra Leone 365 commentator, notes Okada riding first started in 1970's Koinadugu District, where the riders were simply known as “Honda boys.” Koinadugu is a district in the Northern Province of Sierra Leone. It is the largest district in geographical area. It has a total area of 12,121 km2 (4,680 sq. mi). "Isolated and served by a poor road network,” Bah writes, “enterprising young men began making money using Japanese-made Honda and Yamaha motorcycles to convey passengers all over the district.” Bah

Have (Rich Country) Passport, Will Travel

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No surprises in the newly published Passport Index. Have (Rich) Passport. Will travel. A ccording to Arton Capital, which compiles the Passport Index and empowers high net worth people to become global citizens, the country list is based on the 193 United Nations member countries and 6 territories (Macao, Kosovo, etc.) for a total of 199. W ithout a doubt, western nations give passport holders the most global mobility. They  can visit more countries without a visa. In the top 5, passports with the number of countries they offer access to are: 1. U.S., U.K. (147 countries) 2. France, South Korea, Germany (145) 3. Sweden, Italy (144) 4. Denmark, Singapore, Finland, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands (143) 5. Switzerland (142) I sland nation Seychelles has the highest passport power in Africa, followed by Mauritius and South Africa, with one of the largest economies in Africa. In the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Guinea leads, topping even global super p

Mano River Union Recovery: 'A Test for the Global Community'

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The World Bank Group announced Friday, April 17 that it would provide at least US$650 million during the next 12 to 18 months to help Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia recover from the social and economic impact of the Ebola crisis and advance their longer-term development needs. The new World Bank Group pledge brings the organization’s total financing for Ebola response and recovery efforts to date to US$1.62 billion. W orld Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim chaired a high-level roundtable at which the heads of state of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia presented their Ebola recovery plans to finance and development ministers and international partners. President Alpha Condé of Guinea, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, and President Ernest Bai Koroma of Sierra Leone presented their Ebola recovery plans to global development leaders at the meeting. T he additional funding announcement comes as the World Bank Group releases new GDP estimates showing that the Ebola epidemic conti

President Koroma looks beyond Ebola: Joint Recovery Program for Mano River Union

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President Koroma gave a passionate speech for Sierra Leone and the Mano River Union region to top investors at a luncheon hosted by the Corporate Council on Africa Thursday. The Corporate Council on Africa (CCA) is the premier American organization devoted to United States-Africa business relations and includes as members more than 180 companies, which represent nearly 85 percent of total U.S. private sector investments in Africa. CCA’s members range from America’s smallest to largest corporations. They represent a diverse pool of industries from Africa's most promising sectors, including agribusiness, capacity building, energy, finance, health, ICT, infrastructure and security. B elow is a transcript of President Koroma's remarks : Ebola has had disastrous consequences. We’ve lost a huge number of our compatriots, the economy is almost grounding to a halt, and the nation, and the region, has been isolated. But because of the support we have received from the internatio

Mano River Union at the White House

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President Barack Obama met with presidents from the three Mano River Union countries that have been most affected by the recent Ebola outbreak Wednesday. The photo shows President Ernest Koroma (left), President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, President Obama, and President Alpha Condé of Guinea in the Cabinet Room of the White House Wednesday, April 15, 2015 P resident Obama discussed  the progress made in the international Ebola response to date  with his West African counterparts. They also reviewed how the United States can continue to partner with the Mano River region to pursue the ultimate goal of getting zero Ebola cases, turn sights to long-term economic recovery, and establish capacity to prevent future outbreaks from becoming epidemics. "We're proud to partner with you, and we intend to see this through until the job is done," Obama told Presidents Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Alpha Condé of Guinea and Ernest Bai Koroma of Sierra Leone. "La

Sister Cities | New Haven Supports Freetown's Response to the Ebola Outbreak

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Last November, the city of New Haven kicked off a community-wide effort to raise $100,000 to help Sierra Leone's Ebola fight.  In a downtown Washington D.C. hotel Tuesday, New Haven city leaders met President Koroma to give him the good news. Freetown has been one of New Haven’s sister cities since 1997. "New Haven delegation just told President Koroma that their citizenry of 130,000 people raised $140,000 in cash to purchase ambulances and other goods to help the fight against Ebola," Sylvia Blyden wrote on WhatsApp's Media Junction. I n a gathering held at President Koroma's Washington D.C. hotel Tuesday, ahead of this week's World Bank-International Monetary Fund events focused on the global economy, international development and the world's financial markets, the president welcomed representatives of New Haven’s “Citizen’s to Drive Out Ebola campaign.” According to a State House press release, the delegation from New Haven was led by the c

Sewa News Op-Ed | 'A protest full of peace: How I see what I saw at Lafayette'

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Sierra Leoneans came to Lafayette from all corners of America. It was a moment that ignited the grandeur, splendor, beauty, and spaciousness of Sierra Leonean hospitality. It was a beautiful day in Richmond, the District of Columbia, and Maryland. The Sun dished out its bounty of soft, caressing rays injecting warmth into winter-beaten bodies. I woke up at 5:00AM to get ready for the trip to Washington D.C.’s Lafayette Park. L afayette was the site of a protest that marked another significant moment in the tattered recent history of Sierra Leone. A moment that brought together old, middle-aged, young, men and women of all ethnicities, religions, political affiliations, and from all regions of Sierra Leone to exercise, in a remarkably peaceful manner, their civic responsibility. It was beautiful to behold a large but disciplined crowd of Sierra Leoneans stand together to protect and preserve the sanctity of their national constitution; to protect the dignity of their Nation,

‘A Sidewalk Separated the Park from the Street’

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C ompeting rallies on the legality of Samuel Sam-Sumana’s dismissal in March as Vice President of Sierra Leone took place a sidewalk away from each other in Washington D.C. on Saturday. The weekend demonstrations in the capital of the United States followed similar protests in London on Thursday. Scores of Concerned Sierra Leoneans USA members gathered in Lafayette Park Saturday to support a petition now in the West African nation’s Supreme Court. The goal of that petition is to block the replacement of Sam Sumana from carrying out his duties, pending a ruling on the legality of Sumana’s removal from office in March. Many wearing green, from across North America and Europe, the group of a hundred or more people included high-profile figures, such as the wife of Kandeh Yumkella,  who recently announced his resignation as director general of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO). Yumkella reportedly donated $2,000 to the movement leading the debate

Sierra Leone's Landmark Constitutional Case Begins Today

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Archive photo of President Koroma looking on as three Supreme Court judges are sworn in to office at State House  Freetown -- (April 9, 2015) Five Supreme Court judges including the Acting Chief Justice Valesius Thomas heard a 'Notice of Motion' by J.B. Jenkins Johnston, the lead counsel for the plaintiff Samuel Sumana. The plaintiff is seeking an interlocutory injunction "to restrain Victor Bockarie Foh from acting as and/or carrying the functions of the Vice President of Sierra Leone pending the determination of the matter before the Supreme Court, in respect of the action of the President to "relieve" his Vice President." Lead Counsel for the second respondent Victor Foh is Ajibola Manley-Spaine. Berthan Macauley Jr. is lead counsel for the first respondent, the Attorney General of Sierra Leone. T he Supreme Court of Sierra Leone will dispense legal insight into two questions: Whether the Constitution of Sierra Leone empowers the President &q

Ebola: The More We Learn, the More We Realize How Much We Don't Know

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Alex Bonapha, chairman, Kailahun District Council O bservers say the controversy erupting in Kailahun over the case of a dead baby might just open up critical questions on the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. "While the child appears to be at the center of this controversy, the real question being raised here is the mode of transmission: Is this virus transmitted or transfused?" asks Chernor Bah, chairman of the African Socialist Movement of Sierra Leone. Bah thinks “we need to listen to Mr. Bonapha's concerns.” A lex Bonapha is chairman of Kailahun District Council. In a tersely worded statement sent out Saturday, Bonapha said: "We are strongly contesting the validity of the one case today in Kailahun.  A young child of 9 months, fell ill and was hospitalised at the Nixon Memorial Hospital in Segbwema. They requested blood transfusion and a donor offered his blood. Eventually the child died and a swab was collected to verify the cause of death. It is this

Beyond 90 days |Sexually-transmitted Ebola

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“W ith regards the development of a strange positive case of Ebola appearing in a 9-month-old baby in Kailahun, everyone should vigorously be concerned,” writes Sylvia Blyden. The former special executive assistant to President Koroma recently spoke on the impact, consequences, prospects and challenges facing young people because of Ebola. Blyden represented Sierra Leone as a global youth activist on a panel at Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London on January 20, 2015. On Saturday, April 4, 2015, the chief executive officer in Kailahun, the eastern district where the 9-month-old baby reportedly died, confirmed that swab tests have shown the baby was positive for Ebola virus disease, but he expressed some reservation because both parents showed no signs of Ebola. In a media group she manages on WhatsApp, Blyden, a medical doctor, asked whether the child had been breast fed and suggested that the mother’s milk be PCR tested. Polymerase chain reac