Sierra Leone Civil War
When your country is endowed with great riches as Sierra Leone is with its diamond fields, yet ranks as one of the poorest countries in the world because those riches are siphoned off by the ruling elite whilst the general population struggles to survive on a daily basis, you have a society where revolutionary ideology can rapidly take hold.
And that ideology
was spread by one Foday Sankoh (left), a former army corporal, who formed the RUF (Revolutionary United
Front), which started an armed insurrection to overthrow the
existing political classes in 1991 supported by the armed forces
of Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Front of
Liberia (NPFL). A move that was to plunge
Sierra Leone into a bloody, vicious civil war that was to last
over a decade, leave 50,000 dead, nearly two million people displaced and families and communities ripped apart. The civil war had one simple objective,
control over the country's diamonds
and the riches and opulent lifestyles they could
provide.
In the first twelve months of the Sierra Leone civil war, the RUF moved fast against an ineffective government and soon took control of the diamond fields in eastern and southern Sierra Leone. Frustrated at the government's lack of effective response, Captain Valentine Strasser of the Sierra Leone army staged a military coup deposing President Momoh and set about pushing the RUF rebels back towards the border into Liberia.
However Strasser was ousted in a military coup led
by his defence minister, Brigadier Julius Maada Bio
in 1996 and elections were called seeing Ahmad Tejan
Kabbah (right) elected president in February of that year.
Kabbah signed the Abidjan Peace Accord peace deal with the RUF rebels nine months later however before it could be fully implemented he too was ousted by by Major Johnny Paul Koroma (below, left) who installed a military junta in Sierra Leone banning all political parties and abolishing the constitution.
Kabbah fled to Guinea in search of support against the new junta and found it in Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) an agreement between the armies of west Africa to work together primarily led by Nigerian troops and financed by the Nigerian economy.
ECOMOG was
appalled at the level of violence that erupted after
Koroma had declared the war over and it marched on
the capital city of Freetown in support of the
exiled Kabbah government driving the rebels out,
paving the way for Kabbah's return in March 1998
by which time Sankoh had been imprisoned and his
place taken by Sam Bokari, a man known for his
brutal tactics including rape, murder and forced
amputation.
However early in January of the following year, the RUF marched back into Freetown temporarily ousting
the ECOMOG troops in battles that saw 5000 dead
before they were again forced to flee the city.
By now the Sierra Leone civil war had been raging for eight years so when in May 1999 a ceasefire was called, there was cautious optimism for the talks convened in Togo that saw Sankoh of the RUF released from prison and made vice-president of Sierra Leone with control over the diamond mines in exchange for acceptance of UN peacekeeping troops. The Lamo Peace Accord came under pressure just over a year later when RUF rebels led by Sam Bokari again advanced on Freetown killing and abducting hundreds of UN peacekeepers.
That year, 2000, saw governments such as that of the UK intervene to get their nationals out of Sierra Leone, however the tide was turning and by the spring of 2001 the UN had begun to secure the area and disarm the rebels, which saw 45,000 fighters disarmed by the time the war was formally declared over in January 2002. Kabbah went on to secure a victory in subsequent elections whilst Sankoh died whilst awaiting trial for war crimes. This short video about the Sierra Leone civil war serves as a salutatory reminder of a civil war that ripped the country apart and spawned a generation of child soldiers who knew little save for the grasp of power through violence.


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