In the late 1980s, a common joke told on the streets of Freetown was:
“What did Sierra Leoneans read by before they had candles? … Electricity!” By
then, life expectancy in Sierra Leone was one of the lowest in the world.
Infant mortality was amongst the highest. The literacy rate was just 15%. Since
1978, the country had been a one party state. The effects of a collapse in
world prices for Sierra Leone’s exports were compounded by decades of economic
mismanagement and endemic corruption. When Albert Margai left office in 1967,
after three years as prime minister, he was worth an estimated US$250m –
despite receiving an annual salary of just US$4,000. In 1985, when President
Siaka Stevens stood down, he is said to have amassed a fortune of US$500m. The
Bank of Sierra Leone, in contrast, held US$196,000 in its foreign reserve
accounts. Salaries of lower level public officials went unpaid. Hospitals,
schools and roads fell into disrepair. In 1991, the United Nations ranked
Sierra Leone last
of 160 countries in its Human Development Index. The country was taking its
final steps towards war.
On the eve of the November 2012 presidential, parliamentary and
local council elections, Sierra Leone is often depicted as a country unrecognisable
from a quarter of a century ago. Since the civil war officially ended in 2002,
consecutive national elections have been won by different parties. When Ernest Bai Koroma
and his All People’s Congress (APC) party were elected in 2007, the incumbent
Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) accepted defeat – albeit reluctantly. In
2005, the United Nations’ largest deployment of peacekeepers – numbering 17,500
at its peak – was withdrawn. In 2012, Sierra Leone committed 850
peacekeepers to the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMIS). International
hotel chains Radisson
and Hilton
Worldwide have signed agreements to open outlets in 2013 and 2014
respectively. Free health care for pregnant women, nursing mothers and children
under five was introduced
in April 2010. According to some estimates, Sierra Leone’s economy will
grow by 34%
in 2012 due, in large part, to the onset of iron ore exports.
The achievement of voting the opposition to power in 2007 – an infrequent
occurrence in Africa – was tarnished by virulent accusations of fraud and
manipulation. The decision by the National Electoral Commission (NEC) to nullify
votes cast at polling stations with over 100% voter turn-out provoked outrage from
the incumbent party. Of the 477
invalidated polling stations, 426 were in electoral strongholds of the SLPP.
The party accused the NEC’s Chief Commissioner, Christiana Thorpe, and the
international community of connivance in an orchestrated scheme for regime
change. The NEC maintained that, in the absence of a provision in the electoral
law specifying the body mandated to annul votes in instances of unambiguous electoral
malfeasance, it had the de facto
right – and responsibility – to do so. It also insisted that the annulled votes
would not have affected the final outcome of the election. The SLPP countered
that only the Supreme Court has the authority to cancel votes.
For the 2012 elections, the principal way the NEC has sought to mitigate
electoral fraud is by implementing a system of biometric
voter registration. “Credible elections start with credible voter
registration”, remarked Christiana Thorpe during a presentation at Africa
Research Institute in London in July 2011. Rather than manually registering
voters before each election, biometrics enable creation of a permanent electronic
register which can be updated as new voters become eligible or existing ones die.
The system captures unique data –
thumb prints and facial features – in addition to personal details, and can
identify whether someone has registered more than once by centrally matching thumb
prints. The NEC’s determination to improve the integrity and transparency of
the electoral process is laudable.
The shortcoming of biometric technology is that
it counters the symptoms – not the causes – of electoral fraud. Biometrics
cannot detect whether a registrant is underage, or determine an individual’s
nationality. There is also no evidence of a deliberate strategy by any
political party to rig elections through multiple registrations. All previous
electoral registers have contained names of the deceased, the underage and
foreign nationals – but the most significant type of electoral misdemeanour has
been physical stuffing of ballots and false recording of results by temporary
election workers. Both parties, when in power, have used their position to fund
political campaigns and buy voters. This practice remains widespread. Political
parties continue to organise and condone the intimidation of voters, often
perpetrated by their youth wings. Biometric technology offers little scope to tackle
these transgressions. Elections are more than just a technical exercise.
For many, elections – and the preceding campaigns – provide the true
measure of how Sierra Leone has progressed. As yet the fundamental character of
political competition in Sierra Leone has not been altered. Identity, not
ideology or policy, remains the paramount factor. Ethnic
and regional voting blocs – sustained by entrenched patronage networks and
corruption – are as rigid as ever. The APC draws majority support from the
Temne, Limba and other northern tribes, and Krios of the Western Area, while
the SLPP are favoured by the Mende and tribes of the south-east. Elections
are regarded as “winner takes all” contests with defeat entailing exclusion
and disadvantage for the losers, and their regions.
The past is still utilised in pursuit of political advantage.
Shortly after Julius Maada Bio was
elected leader of the SLPP in July 2011, there were renewed calls for an
inquest into the December 1992 executions of 26
people suspected of plotting to overthrow the government. The extra-judicial
executions – by firing squad – were ordered by the National Provisional Ruling
Council (NPRC), which had itself seized power by force in April 1992. Britain promptly
suspended aid to Sierra Leone. Maada Bio, one of the chief architects of the NPRC
coup, was heavily implicated in the executions. In January 1996, Maada Bio ousted
NPRC leader Valentine Strasser and for a short time was head of state. With
former members of the NPRC junta now prominent within the SLPP, the calls for
an inquest were viewed as brazen political manoeuvring by Koroma and the APC.
In 2011, when Michael von der Schulenburg, then Executive
Representative of the UN Secretary-General in Sierra Leone, criticised the
proposed inquest, relations with President Koroma soured. In 2012, in
a leaked UN document, Schulenburg noted “there can be little doubt that the
decision of the President to force my early departure will be seen – rightly or
wrongly – by virtually every Sierra Leonean as an effort to remove a potential
obstacle to his re-election and as an opening the door to manipulating the
election outcome in his favour”.
Political parties still use violent means to achieve political
goals. Election
campaigns for the 2007 elections were tarnished by clashes organised by the
upper reaches of the APC and SLPP. A return to war was never probable, but
President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah threatened to suspend the vote and impose of a
state of emergency. On 9th September 2011, during a “thank you tour”
to SLPP supporters, Julius Maada Bio’s convoy was pelted with rocks by mobs of APC
supporters in the southern city of Bo. Maada Bio required stitches to the head.
SLPP mobs retaliated by setting fire to the APC district office and residential
properties. A public
enquiry concluded that the violence was both premeditated and orchestrated
by elites of both parties. The government’s recent purchase
of US$4.5 million of predominantly military grade weapons caused a public
outcry due to suggestions that they were intended for the Operational Support
Division (OSD) of the police – a force which within living memory had been used
by President Siaka Stevens as a personal paramilitary unit. After much public –
and international – pressure, the government transferred the weapons to the
army for use by Sierra Leonean peacekeepers in Somalia.
Sierra Leone remains beset with privation that pre-dates the civil war.
Koroma’s insistence that “attitude is everything” – a slogan ubiquitously plastered
across billboards in the capital – offers little solace to Sierra Leoneans who
were promised a “peace dividend”. In reality, many people find themselves in a similar
financial predicament to that of pre-war days. Hype regarding the country’s
economic potential and the unprecedented scale of investment in the mining sector
have raised expectations – but offered few discernible benefits to ordinary
Sierra Leoneans. The purchasing power of low income earners has halved since
2007. Food prices have spiraled. A cholera
epidemic concentrated in the slums of Freetown had killed 392 residents by
September 2012. Youth unemployment remains endemic.
Sierra Leone’s 2012 elections are unlikely to reveal anything new
about the country and its politics. President Koroma is expected to win a
second term, but not because he has transformed the country’s economy. The
incumbent has deployed clever tactics, co-opting proxy parties – including the
Revolutionary United Front Party – to carry out political dirty work, and
enticing high profile SLPP politicians to defect, most notably veteran Tom
Nyuma formerly of the NPRC. The contest is proving harder fought than Koroma
– and many in the international community – anticipated. Efforts to dismiss
Maada Bio as a relic of Sierra Leone’s authoritarian past have met with
resistance due to his popularity amongst “youth” and the military. But despite
his charismatic appeal, many in the country consider Maada Bio to have more
style than substance.
In Sierra Leone, the process of building a modern democratic state
after a decade of war has been heavily contested. Important progress has been
made, particularly in the area of electoral management. But legacies of
identity politics, violence, corruption and inequality have been – and will
continue to be – harder to overcome. While the economy has grown, it is structurally
little different to its pre-war incarnation. The notion that African countries
like Sierra Leone should pursue a model of “authoritarian developmentalism” in
order to hasten wealth and job creation is fanciful. Sierra Leone’s government
budget is minuscule, about US$500m per annum, most of which is from donors who
insist on democratic and liberal economic reforms in exchange. The government
is not in a position to adopt political and economic policies that will
inevitably be unpopular with donors. Nor does it possess the human capital or
institutions to successfully implement such measures.
What is certain is that any further consolidation of democratic
reforms will be intimately tied up with the state of the country’s economy. But
the imperatives of how to create employment and distribute wealth more
equitably have been keenly avoided by Sierra Leone’s political class.
By Jonathan Bhalla and Sareta Ashraph
Jonathan Bhalla is Research Manager at Africa Research Institute
Sareta Ashraph lived and
worked in Freetown, Sierra Leone from 2003-2009. She maintains a keen interest
in the country's history and returns there regularly. Sareta is currently writing
a book on the conflict in Sierra Leone.
In April 2011, Africa Research Institute published “Old Tricks, Young Guns: Elections and
Violence in Sierra Leone”. To download a copy, please
click here.
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