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- <text>
- <title>
- Sierra Leone: History
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Background Notes: Sierra Leone
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> European contacts with Sierra Leone were among the first in
- West Africa, and Sierra Leone was one of the first West African
- British colonies. Following a visit in 1462, the Portuguese
- explorer, Pedro de Sintra, gave the territory its name, Sierra
- Leone or "lion mountain," unknowingly following the local name
- for the Freetown area, "place of the mountain." The first
- Englishman to arrive, John Hawkins, came in search of slaves in
- 1562. Sir Francis Drake, the fabled adventurer, arrived in 1580.
- </p>
- <p> Foreign settlement did not occur for another two centuries,
- when the British laid plans for a refuge within the British
- Empire for freed slates. In 1787, the site of Freetown received
- the first 400 freedmen from Great Britain. Disease and
- hostility from the indigenous people almost eliminated this
- first group. Five years later, however, another band of
- settlers, 1,000 freed slaves who had fled from the United States
- to Nova Scotia during the American Revolution, arrived under the
- auspices of the newly formed British Sierra Leone Company, which
- exercised administrative control over the successful settlement.
- In 1800, about 550 blacks arrived from Jamaica via Nova Scotia;
- these were the Maroons, escaped slaves who maintained their
- independence in the mountains of Jamaica. The financial burdens
- of administration became too pressing by 1808 for the company,
- and the coastal area was annexed as a British crown colony.
- </p>
- <p> Thousands of slaves were liberated at Freetown the following
- year; most chose to remain in Sierra Leone. These returned
- Africans, or Creoles as they came to be called, were from all
- parts of Africa. Cut off from their homes and traditions by the
- experience of slavery, they assimilated the English style of
- living and built a flourishing trade on the West African coast.
- </p>
- <p> In the early 19th century, Freetown served as the residence
- of the British governor, who also ruled the Gold Coast (now
- Ghana) and The Gambia settlements. Sierra Leone served as the
- educational center of British West Africa as well. Fourah Bay
- College, established in 1827, rapidly became a magnet for
- English-speaking Africans on the west coast. For more than a
- century it was the only European-style university in black
- Africa.
- </p>
- <p> The colonial history of Sierra Leone was not entirely
- placid; the indigenous peoples mounted several unsuccessful
- revolts against British rule and Creole domination in the
- territory. Perhaps the most intensive and best known is the Hut
- Tax War of 1898, which resulted from colonial efforts to bring
- the general population into a system of taxation.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the 20th century history of the colony was peaceful,
- however, and the journey to independence was completed without
- violence. The 1951 constitution provided the framework for
- decolonization. Local ministerial responsibility was introduced
- in 1953 when Sir Milton Margai was appointed chief minister. He
- became prime minister after the successful completion of
- constitutional talks in London in 1960. Independence came in
- April 1961, and Sierra Leone became a parliamentary system
- within the British Commonwealth. In April 1971, it adopted a
- republican constitution, cutting the link to the British
- monarchy but remaining within the Commonwealth. A national
- referendum held in June 1978 overwhelmingly approved a one-party
- republican constitution.
- </p>
- <p>Current Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> Under the 1978 constitution, Sierra Leone is a republic with
- an executive form of government. The president and the Cabinet
- exercise executive authority. The leader of the sole recognized
- constitutionally permitted party (since 1978), chosen by a
- national delegates conference, becomes the only candidate for
- election as president and assumes the office for a 7-year term
- if he receives a majority of valid votes cast in a national
- election.
- </p>
- <p> First and second vice presidents are appointed by the
- president, along with the Cabinet ministers, from among the
- members of the national legislature. Legislative responsibility
- is vested in a unicameral House of Representatives (formerly
- called the Parliament). This consists of 104 seats: 85
- popularly elected members, 12 paramount chiefs elected by
- traditional councils from their respective districts, and 7
- members appointed by the president.
- </p>
- <p> A newly proposed amendment, if accepted by the House of
- Representatives, will increase the total number of seats within
- the House of Representatives to 127. The number of elected
- members would increase to 105 and the number of presidential
- appointed members to 10. The House is elected to a 5-year term,
- but elections may be called earlier, reflecting the
- parliamentary tradition.
- </p>
- <p> The judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, Court of
- Appeals, and High Court of Justice, with judges appointed by
- the president, and magistrates' courts. Local courts administer
- traditional law, with lay judges and procedures that do not
- require legal counsel.
- </p>
- <p> The basic unit of local government generally is a paramount
- chief and a council of elders. A separate, partially elected
- council and a mayor govern Freetown. The three provinces each
- have a governing minister, with Cabinet rank.
- </p>
- <p> Sir Milton Margai's Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) led
- the country to independence and the first general elections
- under a universal adult franchise in May 1962, with Sir Milton
- as prime minister. Upon his death in 1964, his half-brother, Sir
- Albert Margai, succeeded him in office. Sir Albert attempted to
- establish a one-party political system but met fierce
- resistance by the opposition All People's Congress (APC), and
- he ultimately abandoned his effort.
- </p>
- <p> In the closely contested second round of elections, on March
- 17, 1967, the APC won a plurality of the parliamentary seats.
- Accordingly, the governor general (representing the British
- monarch) declared Siaka Stevens, APC leader and mayor of
- Freetown, as the new prime minister. Within a few hours Steven
- and Margai were placed under house arrest by Brig. David
- Lansana, the commander of the Royal Sierra Leone Military
- Forces, on the grounds that the determination of office should
- await the election of the tribal representatives to the House.
- A group of senior army officers overrode this action by seizing
- control of the government on March 23, arresting Brig. Lansana
- and suspending the constitution. The group constituted itself
- as the National Reformation Council (NRC), with Brig. A.T.
- Juxon-Smith as its chairman. The NRC, in turn, was overthrown
- in April 1968 by a "sergeants' revolt," the Anti-Corruption
- Revolutionary Movement. NRC members were imprisoned, and other
- army and police officers deposed. Stevens at last assumed the
- office of prime minister under the restored constitution.
- </p>
- <p> The return to civilian rule led to by-elections beginning in
- the fall of 1968 and the appointment of an all-APC Cabinet.
- Tranquility was not completely restored; in 1970, a state of
- emergency was declared after provincial disturbances, and in
- March 1971 and July 1974, alleged military coups plots were
- uncovered by the government. The leaders of these plots were
- tried and executed. In 1977 student demonstrations against the
- government disrupted Sierra Leonean politics.
- </p>
- <p> Following the adoption of a republican constitution in April
- 1971, Siaka Stevens was appointed president of the republic by
- the House; he was inaugurated for a second 5-year term in April
- 1976. In the national elections that followed in May 1977, the
- APC won 74 seats and the opposing SLPP 15. The next year,
- Stevens' government won approval for the idea of one-party
- government, which the APC had once rejected. Following
- enactment of the 1978 constitution, which made official a
- one-party state, the SLPP members of Parliament joined the APC.
- </p>
- <p> The first elections under the new one-party constitution
- took place May 1, 1982. Elections in about two-thirds of the
- constituencies were contested. Irregularities forced the
- government to cancel elections in 13 constituencies.
- By-elections took place on June 4, 1982. The new Cabinet
- appointed after the election was balanced ethnically between
- Temnes and Mendes. It included as the new finance minister Salia
- Jusu-Sheriff, the former leader of the SLPP. His accession to
- the Cabinet was viewed by many as a step toward making the APC
- a true national party.
- </p>
- <p> Siaka P. Stevens, who had been head of state of Sierra Leone
- for 18 years, retired from that position in November 1985,
- although he continues his role as Chairman of the ruling APC
- Party. In August 1985, the APC named as party candidate to
- succeed Stevens, Stevens' own choice, Sierra Leonean military
- force commander Joseph Saidu Momoh. Momoh was elected president
- in a single-party referendum on October 1, 1985, and officially
- assumed the position on November 28, 1985. A formal
- inauguration was held in January 1986. New parliamentary
- elections were held in May 1986, thus completing the transition
- process begun in 1985.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- July 1986.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-