Sierra Leone Presidential Election: Tear Gas Disperses Opposition and Violence Erupts in Freetown

2023-06-25 18:56:42

Sierra Leonean police announced on Sunday evening that they had used tear gas canisters to disperse opponents in Freetown, the day following the presidential election, which took place generally peacefully and whose vote count continues.

The main opponent of outgoing President Julius Maada Bio in this election, the opponent Samura Kamara, indicated on Twitter that bullets targeted the headquarters of his party in the capital.

Freetown Mayor Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr, also an APC official, posted photos on Twitter from inside the formation’s headquarters that show people protecting themselves by lying on the ground. “We are at APC headquarters under fire,” she wrote.

These demonstrators drew outside the headquarters of the APC “a crowd” of supporters who “began to cause disturbance to passers-by”, she explained in this press release.

“When the situation became unbearable, the police threw tear gas canisters at them to disperse the crowd which disturbed people on the public road,” she added.

revenge

About 3.4 million people were called upon to choose between 13 presidential candidates, a 2018 revenge-like ballot between Mr. Bio, a 59-year-old retired soldier who is seeking a second term, and Mr. Kamura , 72-year-old technocrat and leader of the APC.

Mr. Bio, candidate of the Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP), then won in the second round with 51.8% of the vote.

According to the electoral commission, the vote count continues.

Results are expected within 48 hours of the vote. No figure for participation was advanced Sunday followingnoon. During the last elections, it had turned between 76 and 87%.

To be elected in the first round, a candidate must receive 55% of the valid votes.

In addition to their president, Sierra Leoneans also voted on Saturday to elect their parliament and local councils, polls marked by delays in the start of voting.

“One of the best election days”

Several offices also closed late on Saturday, some at 11:30 p.m. (local and GMT), electoral commission chairman Mohamed Konneh said at a press conference on Sunday.

Sunday evening, the European Union electoral observation mission said it was “concerned” by the “current count”, calling for “complete transparency”. Same story on the side of the Carter Foundation, worried regarding “reports indicating a lack of transparency” during the count.

For the head of the electoral commission, Saturday was “one of the best election days” in Sierra Leone’s recent past “if not the best”.

The West African Network for Peacebuilding, another observer group, said on Saturday that the vote was “relatively peaceful”, echoing a similar finding from the electoral commission.

However, the commission said on Saturday that election officials were attacked by unknown persons in some areas. Mr. Bio’s party has accused “senior officials” of the APC of attacking its electoral representatives.

APC officials in turn claimed that violence took place in several polling centers on Saturday night in Freetown and its members attacked in rural areas.

A national security official, Abdulai Caulker, said he was unaware of such incidents.

The high cost of living is the common concern of a very large majority of Sierra Leoneans. Prices of staples like rice have skyrocketed. Inflation in March was 41.5% over one year in this West African country of eight million inhabitants.

Sierra Leone, one of the poorest countries on the planet, has been hard hit in recent years by Covid-19 and then the war in Ukraine.

The former British colony was already struggling to recover from a bloody civil war (1991-2002) and the Ebola epidemic (2014-2016).

Inflation and exasperation with the government sparked riots in August 2022 that left 27 civilians and six policemen dead.

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