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Statistics Sierra Leone says over 455,000 jobs in 4 years

By Kenneth Thompson

Statistics Sierra Leone has revealed that about 455,449 Sierra Leoneans are likely to be employed by 2017, betting its projections on what it said was the improved business environment that would continue to attract foreign direct investment.

An annual report released yesterday on what the institution had gathered from the performances of ten government ministries, departments and agencies, MDAs,over the last twelve months, said 14,609 of Sierra Leone’s employees were working for national and international non-government organizations.

OCTEA faces ‘defiant’ school authorities

By Septimus Senessie in Kono

Chairman of the community and teacher’s’ association of the United God’s Is Our Light Primary School at Saque Town in Koidu and church overseer has said that they will be “defiant” to any relocation plan by the OCTEA mining company if their demands are not met.

OSD beat man to ‘coma’ in Kono

By Septimus Senessie in Kono

About eight officers of the Operations Support Division of the Sierra Leone Police, attached to the Tankoro Police Division in Kono, are alleged to have beaten up a man to coma.

The forty-year old man, Tamba Lebbie, was said to have passed out after the group of police personnel allegedly assaulted him at the Gulf International Secondary School in Koidu.

Sierra Leone police beat up 98.1 reporter

By Bampia Bundu

A journalist working for Radio Democracy 98.1 has complained to the journalists’ body, SLAJ that he was “manhandled” and later “assaulted” by police officers while covering the Ansarul violence in Freetown.

Alex Laurence Koroma claimed that the security personnel forcefully took the recorder from him when they realized he was trying to get some sound bites from the rowdy school pupils who had clashed with the police.

4,000 students may repeat at FBC

By Fasalie Sulaiman Kamara

Public relations officer of the National Union of Sierra Leone Students has warned that some 4,000 students, about 60% of Fourah Bay College may repeat as a result of some “new administrative policies”.

Speaking to Politico after the cancellation by students’ warden of a meeting scheduled earlier by some ‘concerned students’, Thomas Moore Conteh said they had been invited as apparent body to listen to the concerns of the students at FBC .

Police blamed for student death

By Kenneth Thompson & Bampia Bundu

A pupil of the Ansarul Islamic Secondary School was alleged to have been shot dead by police following a violent clash between pupils and traders accused of occupying the premises of the school on Guard Street in Freetown.

According to some pupils who owned up to claims of obstructing a whole learning day by protesting, they were being “disturbed by the loud music coming from the traders who sell their wares very close to their classes”.

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