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We the members of the Association of Sierra Leonean Journalists in Exile
Incorporated (Australia Branch) are calling on President Tejan Kabbah and his
SLPP government for the immediate and unconditional release of our colleague
journalist, Paul Kamara, who was recently charged with allegedly libelling the
President and then sent for a “four-year” jail term to Pademba Road Prisons. The
reason we learnt for his incarceration was that Paul, the proprietor and editor
of For di People newspaper, had dug up and published some “hidden” records of
the President’s past.
We trust that Paul Kamara was carrying out his duties as an investigative
journalist but, in a country where journalists operate under strict supervision
of draconian laws, Paul Kamara’s quest for the truth has now turned against him.
Instead of a hero, he is now a villain in the sight of the law.
In addition to demanding Paul’s immediate release, we also ask that the
diabolical and suppressive 1965 Public Order Act, which is the government’s
cudgel for press torture, be abolished immediately.
The SLPP government and its predecessors have been continually using this Act to
subdue those outspoken journalists whom they termed as recalcitrant journalists.
Such a law can and will never be in the interest of Sierra Leone and Sierra
Leoneans in this era of recovery from the aftermath of a brutal war brought on
innocent people through the avarice and selfishness of our politicians.
We further call for the complete separation of the three arms of government –
the executive, the legislature and the judiciary. The “fusion” of these arms of
government in our country has ever been an element of judicial misplacement,
with magistrates and judges playing to the tune of the high powers in their
adjudication exercise so that they can continue to retain their positions. As a
result, those poor people not connected to “the high places” are often the anvil
against which the hammer of the law constantly falls. Every honest and patriotic
Sierra Leonean today would admit that the courts only jail people the government
wants to get out of the way and leave the government’s lackeys to go free,
irrespective of the magnitude of their crimes.
Such tendencies are no demonstration of the democratic spirit we think Sierra
Leone should have at this time for which so many people, for ten years, lost
their arms and limbs and many their lives. But it just seems as if the same
short-sightedness and self-indulgence of our politicians that prolonged the war
are back in full force. They know that their helicopters are always on the ready
to fly them out at the faintest sounds of gunfire.
Sierra Leone, with its abundance of mineral wealth, needs to be moving forward
by now. This aspiration cannot be achieved if the government continues to be
corrupt and indolent; if the government continues to silence those journalists
and other Sierra Leoneans who, out of undiluted patriotism, mortgage their neck
to speak out the truth.
We are quite aware that through the continuous trickery and inglorious
manipulation by politicians, the press in Sierra Leone still remains divided,
but the country at this time cannot remain to have all journalists singing the
praises of the President and his cohort, or the banditry against the nation will
go on forever.
We therefore once more ask the SLPP government to release Paul Kamara with no
conditions attached so that he would be able to carry out his noble duty of an
outspoken journalist. It is Paul Kamara today; who next will it be tomorrow?
Signed on behalf of ASALJIE INC. (Australia) by:
Edison Yongai……………….
Edmondson Sonny Cole……………………
Abdul Rahaman Jalloh………………………..
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