The Sierra Leone Telegraph: 27 April 2015

There are very dark political clouds engulfing Sierra Leone today – marking the 54th anniversary of independence, as heavily armed police in the south eastern district of Kenema arrest several peaceful protesters and senior executives of the country’s Human Rights Commission (HRC), for speaking out against the discriminatory enforcement of the state of emergency laws.

Several protesters were severely beaten up by the police. One report from Kenema says that the director of HRC is now in police custody, following orders from State House for his immediate arrest.

Today marks the 54th anniversary of Sierra Leone’s independence from British colonial rule. But it seems a different form of neo-colonisation is now poised to strangle all freedoms and civil liberty guaranteed under the country’s constitution.

The ruling APC party’s ideological dogma, which sits comfortably within the Chinese communist manifesto, is now being violently enforced by a radical left-wing group of senior party grandees, led by the former ambassador to Beijing – the new, illegally appointed vice president Victor Foh.

Victor Foh has made his position very clear. His loyalty, he said, is to the ruling APC party and president Koroma, and will stop at nothing to silence anti-government sentiments.

Today’s arrest in Kenema vindicates those in and out of Sierra Leone, who strongly believe that president Koroma and his new vice, are poised to declaring Sierra Leone a one party state.

This is a report by Umaru Fofana from Freetown this afternoon:

“Police in Kenema have fired teargas at antigovernment demonstrators. The police chief in the area, Karrow Kamara says the protesters took to the streets, against the Ebola emergency regulations, chanting antigovernment slogans. He said arrests had been made but wouldn’t specify the number. A state human rights officer was also allegedly beaten and is now in police detention, according to the Human Rights Commission, after he had gone on radio and spoken about his institution’s recent position on the “discriminatory” use of emergency regulations by the police. Police are patrolling the streets and have reportedly surrounded opposition supporters in their office.”

Sierra Leoneans living in the UK and the USA are today protesting in London and Washington, against president Koroma’s violation of the country’s Constitution. Thousands are said to be taking part in those protests.

Few weeks ago, president Koroma unilaterally sacked the elected vice president and put in place a radical left-wing communist politician, who many regard as one of the architects of the country’s two decades of despotic one party rule.

Although the country’s Supreme Court is now considering whether Koroma’s action is unconstitutional, few people in Sierra Leone have confidence in the judiciary.

There are serious concerns now about the safety of opposition politicians and civil rights groups in the country, as president Koroma and his vice, clampdown on free speech and civil liberty.

Where is Sierra Leone heading?

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