1961: Sierra Leone wins independence

Sierra Leone has become the latest West African state to win independence, after more than 150 years of British colonial rule.

The new nation was born at the stroke of midnight, when its green, white and blue flag was unfurled. A huge crowd, gathered at Brookfields Playground in Freetown to watch the historic moment, broke into tumultuous cheering.

Independence Day formally began as the Duke of Kent handed over royal instruments recognising Sierra Leone as an independent nation.

Sir Maurice Dorman, Governor since 1956, was then sworn in as Governor-General by Chief Justice Beoku Betts. Continue reading

Turning Sierra Leone Into A Republican State – First Published 19th April 2006 & Reproduced Today By Popular Demand

With kind permission from the CEO of Awareness Times

Since 1971 until the overthrow of the APC by the NPRC in April 1992, Sierra Leone under the APC had always celebrated April 19th as its National Holiday. April 19th 1971 was the date that the Siaka Stevens led Government got the assent from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II to declare that Sierra Leone was now a Republic.

In this article, Awareness Times Newspaper is taking a look at the events leading to this declaration from the perspective of top insider of that Siaka Stevens APC regime. Read more on Awareness Times

Towards retirement

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A Time to Work and a Time to Rest

Much of my book (What Life has taught me) has dealt with what life has taught me. At 78 I am glad to claim that I am still learning in the school of life and sometimes hardly receiving passing marks. Those who feel that they have nothing more to learn, or are tired of learning, are most probably tired of living. I am certainly not a member of that club, but I am aware of the limitations resulting from increasing age.
The leadership of a country like Sierra Leone is a very demanding job, combining responsibility for the day-to-day affairs of the country and planning for the future with diplomatic work and the performance of ceremonial functions.

Moreover, the African tradition being what it is, our people expect their leader to be also the father of the nation, to hear personally complaints and suggestions, to settle disputes, including personal ones, to attend functions, to relieve cases of hardship and often to represent the country abroad.

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Unmasking The Political Opportunism of Siaka Stevens: Was APC a Socialist Party?

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“…Sierra Leone under former president Siaka Stevens once tested that socialism road. Albeit president Stevens did not openly declare this country a socialist state, most if not all of his policies had their roots in socialism…the corruption that permeated the political landscape of that time showed that socialism as a system of governance would never be a panacea for this country’s political salvation….the half-assed socialist policies of Siaka Stevens which were continued by ex-president Joseph Saidu Momoh are some of the reasons why this country is at present in a pretty prickle…”

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On politicians

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the African tradition being what it is, men from villages who have achieved prominence in the capital thanks to the support of their fellow villagers, would be expected to reciprocate the help received from their rural constituents, at least by feeding them and looking after them when they arrive in the big city. Frequently, they would also be expected to help them financially, support their applica tions for jobs or favours and provide some presents for their families.

Thus, when one of these men is elected to political office, he does not merely change his job, but also his life style. His environment is liable to change from what is described as the most primitive (on the European scale of values) to the most sophisticated; from a hut in the village, similar to those in which his ancestors have lived for centuries, to the five bedrooms air-conditioned villa or the five-star international hotel; from the company of illiterate bare-footed villagers to that of world statesmen, millionaires and film stars.

The man whose only means of transport may have been his two feet or the crowded Poda Poda now joins the jet set; his eating and drinking habits change rapidly; his children begin to attend some of the best available schools; his wife is soon converted from country rice and cassava roots with all the chores involved in their processing, to the ready husked, glazed, parboiled imported variety available at the supermarket; almost overnight he is transported not only in space but also in time, spanning the centuries at the stroke of an election.

Siaka Stevens on Multi Party

I sincerely hope, however, that our people will adopt the multi party parliamentary system when the long and painful process of fully integrating and unifying our nation has been successfully completed; wher national consciousness has become firmly rooted; when the vast majority of our people have become educated to the point of becoming not only literate but also trained to understand the economic, technical and other issues involved in running a modem state; when the country has become economically viable and self-sufficient in food; when divisiveness can no longer jeopardize its very existence; in brief, when such a system offers the prospect of being really meaningful.

A multi-party state which, as I believe, will become not only feasible but also be put into practice when the social, economic and cultural gaps between the majority of the people and their political leaders is substantially reduced; as it is both in the western world and in the traditional African society where the life styles of the rulers and the ruled can at least be measured on the same scale.

Leader of the Opposition-Part I

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“I do not expect that detainees will be kept longer than is really necessary,” declared the Prime Minister in the House of Representa tives at the time of independence. “As soon as we are satisfied that the country is out of danger, we will let almost all of them out.” Although the state of emergency was not lifted until August, 1961, the moment when we were apparently no longer considered to be a threat to the security of the State came on May 18th, when I and the last fifteen of my fellow detainees were released from Pademba Road prison.

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Siaka Stevens as President -Part III

On the infrastructural level, old-fashioned and dangerous ferries gave way to modern, concrete bridges; footpaths to motor feeder roads, laterite roads, often impassable during the rainy season, to asphalted highways; oil lamps to electric lighting; bacteria bearing brook and ditch water to treated pipe-borne water, shacks and frame houses to modern multi-storeyed buildings. The almost total dependence on foreign vested interests, which political independence from Britain had done little to reduce, gave way to a substantial and growing Sierra Leone share in the management and control of key companies in industry, mining, commerce, banking and insurance. In foreign affairs, virtually exclusive relations with a very small number of traditional partners gave way to cooperation with a broad spectrum of countries around the globe.

If any credit is due for what has been achieved, it should go in the first place to the rank and file of our party, the ordinary men and women, young and old, who elected us to govern the country and who subsequently helped us overcome some of the difficulties and perils which I recalled in the chapters of this book.

Personally, I would neither claim full credit for what has been done, nor apologise for what remains undone. Whatever the temporary difficulties we still have to face — difficulties which I do not wish to minimise — the fact remains that we have built a solid foundation for the future development of Sierra Leone. In this respect, my assessment of our task and the measure of our success are expressed in thesummary of the recently published history of our Party, The Rising Sun, which was researched and written under the direction of the A.P.C. Secretariat including, of course, its Secretary General.

This summary refers to the foundation which we built as one on which “future generations will be able to reply in shaping the economic system and the political institutions of the next stage on the road to national fulfilment”.

It went on to explain that “the most important pillar of this foundation has been the unification of the country, the creation of a national consciousness out of disparate and often conflicting ethnic and social outlooks; the weaving of a fabric which, while binding together the many entities of Sierra leone, preserves the features and cultural identity of each constituent group.

“Then came the effort to educate vastly increased numbers of young people in all parts of the country, an effort representing yet another long-term investment which involved sacrifice of immediate benefit for the sake of future dividends.

“Finally, in the economic sphere, building for the future has involved sacrificing part of the possibility of higher living standards, and of some wealth generating activities liable to produce short-term returns, for the sake of infrastructural projects, such as roads and bridges which are needed for the long-term development of the country.

“Future historians will recognise the extent to which the A.P.C. leaders had to compromise, balancing the temptation to satisfy immediate needs with the statesmanlike responsibility of providing for the requirements of the future and erecting the framework needed for their fulfilment.”

A fuller account of our struggle and of my own political record will be found in the history of our party to which I referred above and which I regard as one of our many minor investments in the future. Indeed, that book is largely intended to acquaint the younger generation with the efforts of their elders and the history of their own country which, as noted by the compilers, has been closely interwoven in recent years with the history of the All People’s Congress Party.

The present book has mainly given me the opportunity to pore over my life, to trace the misfortunes and the successes, and to record the people and places that have meant so much to me. I am lucky that I have had such a full life— I feel that I have enough material to fill not ine, but two books! Most of all I am lucky that I have been able to do so much with the life God gave me. Who would have dreamt that an ordinary little Limba boy would have become President of his country?

I remember that when I was very young my father would tell me tales of heroic deeds and magical things, of brave boys who killed leopards and returned to their tribes and became chiefs — they were the stories that all parents tell to their children as they drift off to sleep at night. And my dreams would often be filled with continuations of these wonderful yarns my father told. I sometimes feel that I have lived a life like one of these tales, that I have made what seemed impossible and improbable to me as a child come true. And so this old man has much to be grateful for, much to give thanks for, much to reflect on as the years pass by.