SIERRA LEONE: Who might lead Sierra Leone to stability?
Source: IRIN
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DAKAR, 10 August 2007 (IRIN) - Elections in Sierra Leone will have an impact on the
future role the UN will play in the country, according to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. Until recently the country had the largest UN peacekeeping force in the world and still hosts a substantial
UN support office. The elections will "help define an exit strategy" for the UN the Secretary General said in a May report. Of the seven candidates for president, three are considered
strong contenders: The man to beat
Solomon Berewa (SLPP)
The current vice president, Berewa is President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah's chosen successor. The 69-year-old lawyer, commonly called
'Solo B', is known as a shrewd operator and considered by many to have been in control from behind the scenes for years. In the ruling Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) manifesto,
President Kabbah calls Berewa "the best foreman to guide this country as we embark on the next phase of the construction." Berewa is a Mende, the ethnic group that dominates the south and
east of the country. However he is said to have lost support amongst many Mende. One reason, according to the International Crisis Group, is that he was justice minister at the creation of the Special
Court for Sierra Leone which indicted Hinga Norman, who headed the militia that backed the government against rebels in the civil war. Norman, who died in March 2007, was considered a war hero by many
Mende. Mr Clean
Ernest Bai Koroma (APC) Ernest Bai Koroma is "the least politically experienced", according to the Crisis Group, and is widely seen as "a decent and honest
leader". To win Koroma would have to overcome deep resentment and antipathy toward his party the All People's Congress (APC). When in power APC transformed the country into a dysfunctional
one-party state and is seen by many as having sown the seeds for the decade long civil war.
Koroma is a Temne, an ethnic group in the north of the country where APC gets most of its support,
along with in the capital, Freetown. Koroma lost to President Kabbah in the last presidential election in 2002, gaining only 22 percent compared to Kabbah's 70 percent.
The spoiler Charles Frances Margai (PMDC) Like Berewa, Charles Margai is an ethnic Mende. He is also a nephew of the first prime minister and a son of the second. He left the SLPP in 2005 after it passed him
up as its presidential candidate and caused a political storm when he formed the People's Movement for Democratic Change (PMDC). His subsequent arrest by the government on 'conspiracy'
charges threw his supporters into a fury. Margai has effectively divided the ruling party a situation that can only benefit the opposition APC. The party's motto is 'positive
change.' Its manifesto says the party came "in response to [the people's] call for a radical departure from the negative and unprogressive political traditions that have characterised
bad governance over three decades."
The remaining four candidates are: Alhaji Amadu Boie Jalloh (National Democratic Alliance)
Andrew Turay (Convention People's Party)
Kandeh Conteh (Peace and Liberation Party)
Abdul Karim (United National People's Party)
tm/np/dhSIERRA LEONE ELECTIONS First round - 11 August.
Second round (If one
candidate fails to gain 55 percent in the first round) - Tentatively set for 6 September The voters
Some 2.6 million people are registered to vote, or 91 percent of those eligible among Sierra
Leone's population of some six million.
(source: UN Integrated Office in Sierra Leone) Parliamentary Candidates
Unicameral system 124 seats
(112 members elected by popular vote; 12
seats reserved for paramount chiefs and filled through separate elections)
Source: African Elections Database http://africanelections.tripod.com/sl.htmlPOLITICAL
PARTY #
OF CANDIDATES # OF FEMALE CANDIDATES All Peoples
Congress 112
11
Convention People's
Party
62 6
National Democratic
Alliance
88 7
Peace and Liberation
Party
20 2
People's Movement for Democratic
Change 111 12
Sierra Leone People's
Party 112
17
United National People's Party
49 6
Independents
12 3 TOTAL
566 64 11 percent of parliamentary candidates are women. For
the first time in the country's history, NDI says, a number of candidates are persons with disabilities.
(source: National Democratic Institute) International observers
- European Union
- African
Union
- Commonwealth
- Economic Community of West African States © IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org









