Feature

Malawi’s Momentous Moment

By Abdul Tejan-Cole

On February 3rd 2020, the Constitutional Court of Malawi delivered a landmark decision nullifying the election of Malawi’s President, Prof. Peter Arthur Mutharika. On May 21 2019, Malawians had voted in tripartite polls to elect a President, Members of the National Assembly and Local Government Councillors.

Road crashes: The emergency on Sierra Leone’s roads

By Mohamed Jaward Nyallay

Almost two years ago, former President of the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ), Frank Kposowa, died in a ghastly road accident, after a government bus ran in to his vehicle whiles he was travelling on the Freetown - Bo highway.

Like Kposowa’s, hundreds more lives have been cut short on Sierra Leone's roads.

Not one, two or three hundred, but 519 people died on the country’s roads in 2019, according to the Sierra Leone Roads Safety Authority (SLRSA).

That brave move by The Gambia and its Attorney General

By Abdul Tejan-Cole

On January 23rd 2020, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivered a provisional ruling in the case of the “Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (The Gambia v. Myanmar).” Not to be confused with the International Criminal Court (ICC), the ICJ is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations. It only hears disputes between states. It does not focus on individuals or criminal prosecutions.

Kenema Congress deepens division in Sierra Leone football

By Mohamed Jaward Nyallay

“Welcome to Kenema”, the signpost just after Bandama checkpoint reads. What the signpost doesn’t tell you is how bad and dusty the road network is in the city. You hear or see the complaints through the media, but you don’t know the scale of the problem, until you get here. This city deserves better. But this is a topic for another day.

“Conclusive” and “Successful” are the two words coming out of the Sierra Leone Football Association in describing the Extra Ordinary Congress that was held in the city last weekend.

On that Retreat for MDAs and the Charge by President Bio

By Gideon Tucker                      

That President Julius Maada Bio invited heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to a retreat at Bintumani hotel, Aberdeen in Freetown last month, was something to expect of any sitting government. The event obviously got the public interested to know about the deliberations and outcome involving these very senior public sector workers who form the nucleus of the state machinery.

The Interview: IMF’s Number 2 man talks on Sierra Leone’s economy

The First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) – the second most senior official there – has ended a three-day visit to Sierra Leone. David Lipton’s visit comes at a time when the country is struggling to create jobs, stabilise the currency and fund its ambitious programmes. He spoke to Umaru Fofana.

Umaru Fofana: Why are you in Sierra Leone?

On the in-tray of the Kenema congress of Sierra Leone football stakeholders

By Mohamed Jaward Nyallay

On Friday delegates and executive members of the Sierra Leone Football Association (SLFA) will converge in Kenema for the second congress in less than two months.

The congress itself will hold on Saturday. It is the second of three congresses that is scheduled by the FA to put the country’s football governance back on track.

Football in Sierra Leone has had its fair share of controversy in the last decade.

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