Click
an area of the map for regional reports.
Table
of Contents
Subscribe here
Give
a Gift
Customer Service
Classroom
Use
Students click here

|
|
From the July 2001 issue of
World Press Review (VOL.48, No.7)
Sierra Leone: A Small-Arms Depot
Foday B. Fofanah World Press
Review correspondent
Freetown, Sierra Leone
 |
A
UNAMSIL peacekeeper checks the weapon he had just received from
a combatant. (Photo: SL) |
In Sierra
Leone, the gruesome consequence of the flow of small arms is there
for all to see. The streets of the capital, Freetown, and other towns
are littered with amputees, casualties of the long civil war. Everyone
in the country is an expert on guns. When gunfire breaks out, civilians
listen to determine whether the sound comes from a homemade single-barreled
gun (local blacksmiths have become proficient at making guns from
scrap metal) or an imported Russian- or German-made rifle. In this
way, people distinguish between “friendly” fire and that of the rebel
Revolutionary United Front (RUF).
The RUF war started in 1991 in a small border town called Boumaru,
close to the Liberian border. From the beginning, the RUF rebellion
was supported actively by the now-defunct NPFL (National Patriotic
Front of Liberia) led by Liberian President Charles Taylor. Evidence
given by captured rebels supports the theory that Taylor has been
stoking the war in Sierra Leone by supplying arms to the rebels in
exchange for diamonds from the rich Sierra Leonean diamond mines.
According to the human-rights organization Partnership Africa Canada
(PAC), “By the end of the 1990s, Liberia had become a major center
for massive diamond-related criminal activity, with connections to
guns, drugs, and money laundering.”
The number of people who may have died as a result of the unbridled
illicit arms trade is pegged at 75,000 by PAC, which did a study last
year on the conflict in Sierra Leone. But the emergence of auxiliary
forces, like the local hunters known as Kamajors, who largely use
locally made guns and other traditional weapons, makes it difficult
to quantify the number of small arms in the country. What is known
is that small arms are the commonest and favorite tools of destruction
in Sierra Leone’s bloody civil war. Easily portable, concealable,
and requiring minimal maintenance and logistical support, they are
smuggled through a porous border. Light and unmarked aircraft are
used to transport arms to remote areas.
Without
foreign support... the fight against small arms in Sierra Leone
would seem to be a losing battle. |
For now,
very little is being done to control the flow of arms. Apart from
occasional cordon-and-search operations by police, the Sierra Leonean
government has not seized the initiative to halt the proliferation
of weapons. The borders remain unpatrolled, while gun-toting fighters
roam the countryside with impunity. Without international support
to increase the country’s capacity to police its borders and train
customs officials and other security agencies, the fight against small
arms in Sierra Leone would seem to be a losing battle.
On May 7, the British-supported United Nations sanctions imposed on
Liberia came into force. Under the sanctions regime, diamond exports
from Liberia will be banned in an effort to halt the smuggling of
so-called “blood diamonds,” used to purchase small arms from rebel-held
areas in Sierra Leone. Foreign travel by senior Liberian officials
will be restricted—ostensibly to bring pressure to bear on the Liberian
government to halt its military support for the Sierra Leonean rebels.
The Liberian government strenuously denies that it has been doing
any gunrunning for the RUF. But a U.N. panel of experts that draws
its membership from specialists in diamonds, aviation, and law enforcement
says that “[Taylor] and a small coterie of officials and private businessmen
around him are in control of a covert sanctions-bursting apparatus
that includes international criminal activity and the arming of the
RUF in Sierra Leone.” The team found “conclusive evidence of [arms]
supply lines to the RUF [that run] through Burkina Faso, Niger, and
Liberia.”
Taylor is just the tip of the iceberg. The U.N. experts also implicated
Gambia, Guinea, and nationals from Belgium, Israel, Kenya, the Netherlands,
Russia, South Africa, Tajikistan, Ukraine, and the United States in
these illegal operations.
Britain and the United States are in possession of unequivocal evidence
dovetailing Liberia and Burkina Faso’s gunrunning activities. A BBC
report from Aug. 6, 2000, titled “West African Diamond Racket Exposed”
alleges that RUF rebels, Taylor, and Burkinabe President Blaise Compaore
met in Burkina Faso on June 5, 2000, where RUF rebels allegedly brought
diamonds to pay for “material support” from Burkina Faso. It is also
alleged that RUF representatives and President Taylor met in the Liberian
capital, Monrovia, a few days later, at which meeting the RUF bought
more military hardware.
Everyone
in the country is an expert on guns... |
The evidence
also reveals that Campaore supplied manpower and equipment, including
weapons from Eastern Europe with false end-user certificates. Statistics
quoted in the BBC report show that 40 percent of the trade in diamonds
from Sierra Leone passes through Burkina Faso and 60 percent through
Liberia. Proceeds from the diamond sales are used to buy arms and
light weapons.
Of the estimated 500 million small arms and weapons that exist globally,
it is not immediately known how many have found their way into Sierra
Leone. Florella Hazeley of the Christian umbrella organization Council
of Churches, which has been spearheading a campaign to stem the flow
of small arms into Sierra Leone, says, “Because of the war situation
and the pending elections, there is so much stockpiling of arms going
on. People don’t trust each other. It is difficult to quantify the
arms flow in the country.”
Figures released by the National Committee for Disarmament, Demobilization,
and Integration (NCDDR), which was set up in 1998, estimate that 45,000
combatants are armed. As of April 17, only 28,189 have been disarmed,
and 16,216 guns and 299,526 rounds of ammunition have been collected.
Some 2,500 child soldiers have joined programs to rehabilitate them
into civilian life, but thousands more remain in the bush. For Sierra
Leoneans, the sanctions against Liberia come as welcome news. As long
as the country’s rich diamond fields remain under RUF control, it
seems unlikely that any amount of persuasion or roundtable talks would
make Taylor halt Liberia’s involvement in the Sierra Leonean crisis.
Against the risk of punishing innocent Liberian citizens must be weighed
the enormous human toll that Taylor’s actions have exacted on Sierra
Leone.
|
Related
Items: |
Kalashnikov
Culture Martin Regg Cohn, writing for The Toronto Star, visits an illegal gun market in Pakistan.
Hope for Gun Control Rests on Conference
Adele Kirsten, writing for Johannesburg's Business
Day, reports on the upcoming United Nations Conference.
Growing
Up as Guerrillas
Children, equipped with light weapons, are on
the front lines of Colombia's bloody civil war. Jan McGirk reports
for London's The Independent
(centrist).
For Patriotism
and Profit
In an interview with Robert Fisk, of London's
The Independent
(centrist), Mikhail Kalashnikov reflects on the legacy of
his invention.
East-Bloc
Connections Fuel War
Oszkar Fuzes, writing for the Budapest daily
Népszabadság (left of center),
untangles the international web connecting the Odessa mafia,
various governments, and the combatants in the Balkans. |
|