Tuesday, April 19, 2016

THE SIERRA LEONE MILITARY: CONTRIBUTION TO WOLRD WAR 2: (Part 2)


Below is an extract (and interesting narrative) from  "REFLECTIONS ON SIERRA LEONE BY A FORMER POLICE OFFICER" - Ezekiel Alfred Coker, MR, JP, BEM.
It's from his new book which he 'subtitled': "The History of the Waining of a Progerssive West African Country".

Following from the historical snipets produced by Gary Schulze, and the comments proferred regarding Affricans (Sierra Leone soldiers) in World War 2, this piece found in Chapter 11 "Sierra Leone and the Second World War", under the section "The Sierra Leone Millitary" is indeed informative and educating.
I also found interesting and educating his rellections of the post 1967 (post Army coup of Bragadier David Lansana / post NRC Andrew Juxon-Smith's 1968 overthrow; some inner facts that have not been clearly elucidated till heather to ( but you will have to read the later and more from the book.
Well done Pa Ezekiel Alfred Coker even at 90 years old now!!!

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Note: President Siaka Stevens' initiative for peaceful coexistence following the frequent coups and attempted coups was to make the Head of the Army and the Head of the Police not only Ministers of State but also Members of Parliament. 😉Philosophy? "Le we ull eng aaid"!!



Friday, April 15, 2016

SIERRA LEONE- MILITARY CONTRIBUTION IN THE WORLD WARS


THE SIERRA LEONE BATTALION OF THE WEST AFRICAN FRONTIER FORCE IN FREETOWN GETTING READY TO INVADE CAMEROUN IN 1914

{{Courtesy: Voices of Sierra Leone. (www. VOSL.net Facebook Post) 15/04/2016}}

Sierra Leonean troops from a number of different British units served in the campaign against the German colony of The Cameroons. The West African Regiment was the first unit to be deployed. The Sierra Leonean companies left Freetown in early September 1914 and took part in the capture of the port of Duala in 27 September .They were soon supported by two companies of the Sierra Leone Battalion of the West African Frontier Force, and the remaining two companies of this unit were also deployed in January 1915.

The Sierra Leone Battalion was involved in heavy fighting whilst attempting to capture a German position called Herman’s Farm. The first attack was made on 3 February 1915 and it was initially successful, only to be driven back by a sustained German counter offensive. The unit lost seven men and 47 were wounded, including Pte Monde Yeraia who was awarded a Distinguished Conduct Medal for his attempt to save his wounded officer, Lieutenant Parker ..

The attack was renewed on 4 March without success, and the Battalion’s commanding officer Lt Col George P. Newstead was killed in the retreat . The Sierra Leone battery of the Royal Garrison Artillery and a company of Royal Engineers drawn from the colony also served with distinction throughout the campaign.

In 1917 large body of men was recruited in Sierra Leone to work as labourers for the Inland Water Transport Service to support operations in Mesopotamia which is present day Iraq.  They were engaged as crews for river steamers, drivers of motor launches, and as labourers for dock construction and loading and unloading. Some of the men were even employed in manning the Fly Class river gun boats on the Euphrates. They did not return to Sierra Leone until January 1919

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Second World War

African Participants

Johnny Smythe

Their own stories:

Johnny Smythe


Johnny Smythe was born on 30th June 1915, in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone in West Africa. When Britain declared war on Germany in 1939, Johnny volunteered to help in the war effort and joined the RAF. He was one of only four, out of a batch of ninety men, to complete his training as a Navigator Officer. After spending another year studying to become a navigator, he was posted to a bomber squadron.

"We knew what lay ahead of us. Every day we counted the number that returned. We also knew that there was a good chance that we would not return. We met with our first serious trouble during an operation over Mainz in Germany. The plane had several times been pelted by flak and it was in a bad state. Although we lost one of our engines, we still managed to limp back home."

"On one occasion we were flying back over England when a German fighter began to dog us. I saw it first and yelled to the rear gunner, 'Frank, open up!' It was quite scary because we were flying so low that, had the plane been actually shot down, we wouldn't have had time to bail out! The noise caused by the two aircraft brought our anti-aircraft fire from the ground, which fended off the German fighter, and we were able to land safely. Another lucky escape!"

Johnny Smythe was promoted to Flying Officer. But on his 28th mission, on the night of 18th November 1943, his luck ran out:

"We were flying at 16,000 ft when the fighters came out of nowhere. They raked the fuselage and there were flames everywhere. Then the searchlights caught us. I was hit by shrapnel. Pieces came from underneath, piercing my abdomen, going through my side. Another came through my seat and into my groin. I heard the pilot ordering us to bail out. We had some rough ones before but this seemed to be the end."

Johnny parachuted to the ground and hid in a barn:

"Men in uniform came into the barn where I was hiding behind some straw. Then they opened up, raking the place with automatic fire. I decided to give in. The Germans couldn't believe their eyes. I'm sure that's what saved me from being shot immediately. To see a black man – and an officer at that – was more than they could come to terms with. They just stood there gazing."

In Stalag Luft One, a prisoner-of-war camp for officers in Pomerania, Smythe helped on the escape committee, but couldn't break out himself: 

"I don't think a six-foot-five black man would've got very far in Pomerania, somehow."

The Russians freed Johnny in 1945, and a Russian Army Officer embraced him and gave him vodka:

"I was fĂȘted because I was black. They took me to a town near the camp and I watched as they looted. A pretty German woman was crying because they had taken all her valuables. I wanted to help her but the Russians wouldn't listen. I had hated the Germans and wanted to kill them all, but something changed inside me when I saw her tears and the hopelessness on her face."



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A  SOLDIER FROM SIERRA LEONE   GET BEHIND A MODERN-ANTI TANK RIFLE IN BURMA DURING WORLD WAR11

EXCERPTS OF HOW IT WAS REPORTED IN  THE BRITISH PRESS

Here we see a rather young Sierra Leone recruit with the British Army in Burma. I believe he photograph was taken in 1943. The captioin read, "Kipling glorifued the African native as 'fuzzy-wuzzy, a damned good fighting man'. He was good when he only had a spear to fight with. He's really something when he gets behind a modern anti-tank rifle, as Sergeant Peter Levy is here. A native of Sierra Leone, Sgt. Levy is a member of the West African Force now in India, preparing to tangle with the Japs in Burma. These West African fighting men are experts in jungle warfare, many of them helped toss the Italians out of Ehiopia." I'm not sure how old Sgt. Levy is, but he seems rather young.

Facebook post 16/04/16

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More World War 11 African patisipatory history provided by Gary Schulze (Facebook post 18/04/2016


Not all of the West African pilots who fought with the R.A.F. in WWII were as fortunate as Johnny Smythe. Some of them were captured by the Germans and kept in prisoner-of-war camps run by the Luftwaffe until the war ended. These pictures came from the logbook ( provided to the inmates by the Red Cross) of a Ghanaian airman named Kojo Aboah.  The camp, called Marlag und Malag Nord, housed Sierra Leoneans, Ghanaians, Nigerians, Gambians, and Liberians as well as British airmen. Here are some photos from his logbook.


A group of West African soldiers including Sierra Leoneans.




    The prison camp

    A German prison guard, drawing by an African prisoner.
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Actually, these African Prisoners were with the R.A.F. fighting the Nazis in Europe. I remember there were two men who fought in the Burma Campaign in Freetown wandering the streets in the early 60s. One was called Bundu and blew an army bugle at passers-by. The other ex-soldier wore his military uniform with an Australian-type hat. He would march down the street, then stop and snap to attention saluting, spin around and then repeat the movements over and over again. These poor fellows had lost their minds probably because of the Japanese brutality they had witnessed in Burma. Veterans of the Burma Campaign, both Europeans and Africans, received the Burma Star shown below.

Gary Schulze 
I returned to S.L. in 1965 and spent a year and a half as Personnel Director for Sherbro Minerals (Sierra Rutile today). We had a guy we hired from Freetown who had retired from the Prison Service to guard the entrance to the plant-site. He was a veteran of the jungle war in Burma where he boasted of lopping off Japanese soldiers heads while they patrolled through the bush.  At Pademba Road Central Prison he was the first face prisoners would see when they arrived at the big steel door. He was called "jahana ma gate" in Mende. I was told it meant "Keeper of the Gate To Hell."


John Leigh's comment. 
Thanks, Gary. My late cousin, William Leigh, who died in Monrovia following the Sergent Doe coup that ousted Tubman. William Leigh was one of the 18 recruits from Freetown - all Creoles - into the RAF.  He fought in the Battle of Britain and was never shot down or captured. Upon demobilization, he was recruited as a cadet police officer, trained at the London Metro Police and at Scotland Yard and subsequently post to the SLP.  He later became the first SL Commissioner of Police. The first set of SL Permanent Secretaries in the 1950s were all veterans of UK Defences Forces of World War II.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

DEATH CUTS DOWN A PROGRESSIVE HUMBLE MAN!!

THROUGH DEATH WE SHALL ALL BE EXTINGUISHED!! Ben Joe Foday [1943-2016 (72) ] has passed away!

    Cardiff Counselor Ben Joe Foday


SAD, SAD, NEWS: Just reach me this morning. BEN JOE FODAY HAS PASSED AWAY! RIP!

Ben Foday (or Joe ) as he is known in our family circle, was one of the children brought up by my mother and father since when we were about 4/5 years old in Freetown Sierra Leone. We grew up together and went to the same primary school in Freetown until my father was transferred to Kenema. He was regarded as one of the family and have always kept in touch whenever possible especially when he learns of events within our family. Sadly enough, I have never met his family since being in Uk. Being in Wales and busy in politics as he was this never materialised but we did keep in touch from time to time. I regard Joe as my brother and so do my siblings too.
I extend my deepest condolences to Margaret his wife and children and other family members May his soul Rest in Peace!

CLICK LINKS for tributes:


        Ben Joe Foday (1943 - 2016)














Saturday, April 09, 2016

SIERRA LEONE LOSSES AN HONOURABLE MAN: Hon. Justice George Galaga King! (RIP)


Statement by Registrar Binta Mansaray on the Death of Justice George Gelaga King

        Hon.Justice George Galaga King
Statement by Registrar Binta Mansaray on the Death of Justice George Gelaga King thumbnail

April 6, 2016 

I am saddened to have to report the death of Hon. Justice George Gelaga King, who passed away yesterday in London after several months of  illness. 

Today the President of the Residual Special Court, Hon. Justice Philip Waki, conveyed on behalf of the Hon. Judges, the Oversight Committee, the principals and staff of the Court, our deepest sympathy to his family, his friends, and to the people of Sierra Leone. 

“Justice King was among the first group of Judges to be appointed as a Judge of  Appeal for the Special Court for Sierra Leone, and subsequently to the Roster of Judges of the Residual Special Court”, Justice Waki said. “In both appointments, he served with selfless dedication and exceptional distinction”.

Prosecutor Brenda J. Hollis said that Justice King’s passing “is a loss to the Residual Special Court and to international criminal justice. We are deeply saddened by his death.” 

Principal Defender Ibrahim Yillah noted that “Justice King was a strong advocate for the establishment of a Defence Office in 2003, the first of its kind at the time in any international tribunal. He will be sadly missed”.

Justice King was elected by his colleagues three times as Presiding Judge of the Appeals Chamber, a post which conferred on him the Presidency of the Special Court. 

Although Justice King shares credit for the Special Court’s landmark jurisprudence upholding convictions for the use of child soldiers, for attacks on UN peacekeepers, and for forced marriage as a crime against humanity, we also remember him for his dedication to the Special Court as an institution. In October 2003 he turned the first shovelful of earth to break ground for the new courthouse, and in December 2013 he delivered the address at State House which closed the Court.

We have lost an irreplaceable friend and colleague. May his soul rest in eternal peace.

Stay with Sierra Express Media, for your trusted place in news!

- See more at: http://www.sierraexpressmedia.com/?p=77898#.dpuf

Monday, April 04, 2016

'FOURAHBAY COLLEGE': The Discussion - 2

What Nigeria gained from Fourah Bay [College]

                         By 

       Dr Christopher KOLADE

{Courtesy: The News. Nigeria.com April 2 2016}


Dr Christopher Kolade was born in Erin -Oke, Osun State, Nigeria in 1932. After his secondary school education at Government College, Ibadan, he studied at Fourah Bay College, Freetown, Sierra Leone.

He is a veteran broadcaster and sometime Director–General of the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation. He was Chief Executive and Chairman of Cadbury Nigeria Plc and formerly the Nigerian High Commissioner to The United Kingdom. He currently teaches Corporate Governance and Human Resources Management at Lagos Business School (LBS), and Leadership and Conflict Management at School of Media and Communication (SMC).

In this interview with Ademola Adegbamigbe, David Odey (Idowu Ogunleye snapped the photos), Dr Kolade spoke on his days at Fourah Bay College, its contributions in producing the first crop of Nigerian intelligentsia and what the Nigerian education sector can borrow from the institution

Fourah Bay College, Freetown

Fourah Bay College, Freetown

You attended Foray Bay College in Sierra Leone. How will you describe your experience there?

I went to Freetown in 1951. What I know about Sierra Leone actually has to do with Fourah Bay College.

Why did you go to Fourah Bay? What attracted you to the institution?

I had the experience of seeing and listening to mainly senior clergy men, bishops, people like that, who had had their university education in Fourah Bay, because my late father was a priest.
So I was impressed with the kind of people that they were, people like Bishop Awosika, Bishop Odutola. I read the history of other people whom I did not even meet and these were people who had taken leadership positions in Nigeria, in education particularly and also in the church, one or two of them, in administration – politics. So I felt that if these people who were given leadership in Nigeria went to that place, it could not be a bad place.

So I went to Freetown in 1951 and in my four years there, I was able to confirm that Fourah Bay was just a place where they developed not just your academic ability but also your person as an individual. They made sure you had an opportunity to take part in activities that showed that God was supreme and that it was a good thing to follow what the Bible tells you. So they developed both your academic ability and your life personality. In those four years, I learnt a lot that I can say built many of the things that I have done since then. So it was a totally positive experience for which I will continue to be grateful.

Christopher Kolade

Christopher Kolade

Kindly name some of your school mates then?

There was Alex Ajayi who became Principal of Fiditi Grammer School at some point. Who else will I mention? Most of them have passed on now. Also the late Banwo who became Principal in a school at Ikorodu. We are talking about 60 something years now, so it is not easy to remember those people. All the people who went to school with me came back and took leadership positions in their own area of jurisdiction, it was a natural thing to do.

We want you to tell us how that country contributed to the first set of Nigerian intelligentsia

A: Yes you see, when you talk about higher education in West Africa, that was the place that we naturally went. Fourah Bay College was founded on 18 February 1827. That is a long time before we started setting up universities in other parts of West Africa. That was where people got their tertiary education at the time and it was natural that people that went and did that, came back and because they were the ones that had the university education, they naturally went into leadership. That is why the first crop of Nigerian leaders, whether in church, education, civil service, that is where they came from.

Sierra Leone is marking its 55th independence anniversary on 27 April. What is your message to that country?

My message is: Thank you for what you did for me, because to live in a place for four years, which is not your own country, it means that some people cared for you, some people made themselves available to help you when you went to a foreign land to study. So, my first message is: Thank you for what you did for me. It is many years ago now and I’am still reaping the benefits.

My other message is that like every other country in our region, Fourah Bay College continues to be a place from where people should derive wisdom, knowledge and competence for what they do because Fourah Bay College has now become the University of Sierra Leone. Really it still remains a place to which people can go for the knowledge they need. So I would urge them to continue because things change, situations change, and when things change, those who are managing situations need also to change. And for me, our tertiary educational institutions must continue to be custodians of our values and our principles. Fourah Bay has done that for about 190 years now. So they should continue to do same.

How did you feel when war ravaged that country in the early 90’s

Quite clearly, I felt very bad about it. I felt that you know, it is one of the ways in which the human society can lose track of itself. This happens when elements that don’t have the kind of foresights that the future must remain as positive as the past and present. The future is where our children are coming into and because of the responsibility we have as parents, and the love we have for children, it is our duty to help those children to have a good life when the future comes. So when some elements in the society do things that put that future in jeopardy, it is really a serious matter because that means that they are taking what God has given them now and they are making it deteriorate so that it would be inferior in future. That is a betrayal of God himself. So I felt very bad about that situation and I was glad when Nigeria decided to step in and help them bring the situation back to normal.

Ajayi Crowther

Ajayi Crowther

When last did you visit the place?

2014.

 What was your impression of what you saw on ground, compared to when you were a student there?

You see the thing is that, first of all, I only spent a couple of days, so I didn’t have time to go all over the place. But secondly, I give myself good advice in these matters because if you haven’t been to a place before, 20, 30 years and you come to the place, you can only have a superficial impression of the place unless you go and live there for a protacted period. Then you can now compare what people are like now, what they were like before. The time I went there, I didn’t even have time to visit as many places as I would have liked but obviously like any other country, they are making progress, they have also suffered from civil war, suffered from bad politics and so on. But they are still standing on their feet which means they have recovered.

We also find out that many people bear Yoruba names in Sierra Leone. For example I was reading Nnamdi Azikiwe’s My Odyssey, where he mentioned one of his contemporaries as Herbert Bankole Bright of Sierra Leone. There are other people like Professor Eldred Durosimi Jones, an academic and literary critic; Balogun Koroma, a transport minister of that country…

Ok. We have to go into history on this one. You remember there was a period when there was something called the slave trade. And the people from Europe came to West Africa and our own people, the leaders of the time, sold their people to these Europeans as slaves. So a lot of people especially from the Yoruba of Nigeria which is the closest to the outside world, a lot of people were moved out of these country as slaves, they went to Britain, they went to America, they went all over the place as slaves.

But of course they still bore their own names. Then the slave trade was abolished. If you remember William Wilberforce and other people fought to free many slaves. They chose Sierra Leone as a place to settle these people. Then you then had Yoruba people who had gone to Europe or America as slaves, they had been freed and brought back. Those who freed them, instead of bringing them all the way back home decided, look, they have some unusual kind of experiences, so lets settle them so that they can have a life that is cosy. The belief then was that because if they brought them back to the place from where they were sold as slaves there would be trouble. So they settled them in Sierra Leone. That’s why many of the names you have in Sierra Leone are Yoruba because the people there were originally Yoruba.

Particularly Ajayi Crowther who led an evangelising mission to the Niger…

You see, that’s the history. In fact because those people were brought to Sierra Leone, and settled there, they were more advanced in what we call western culture and so on and so forth than anybody in Nigeria. When the Europeans decided that they were going to bring Christianity, they decided that a person like Ajayi Crowther who had been a slave, had been freed, not only free but has become a clergy man, you know, even a bishop, it would be better to start the mission here by bringing such people. That is how it happened.

Fourah Bay College was founded on 18 February 1827. That is a long time before we started setting up universities in other parts of West Africa. That was where people got their tertiary education at the time and it was natural that people that went and did that, came back and because they were the ones that had the university education, they naturally went into leadership. That is why the first crop of Nigerian leaders, whether in church, education, civil service, that is where they came from.

Some people claimed Sir Darnley Alexander, a past Chief Justice of Nigeria was born in Sierra Leone. However, others said he was from the West Indies…

It is possible that he was born in Sierra Leone. You see, I think one of the things we need to understand is that at certain times we need to understand movements between West Africa, Europe, America and even the West Indies. Movement was on the behest of those who had the means and authority at the time. So you would find that a lot of people in Sierra Leone whose claim of history belongs to the West Indies than any other part of the world because they served their slavery, some of them in West Indies, some of those slaves were also in the West Indies.

So there is a common history to those places, so you will find that even today many so called African Americans, the black Americans can trace their roots not only to West Africa. There is a population today that has a very rich history. I don’t know about Danley Alexander’s history particularly but I would not be surprised if his ancestors were born there.

What happened to us in Fourah Bay was that attention was directed towards that training in character. You were made to understand that it doesn’t matter how clever you are, what degrees you have, what position you occupy, character is key. So that is something that all education institutions should bear in mind. What happens is that people, human beings would emerge at the end of the system as what? They emerge only as professors, engineers but with no attention to character, they cannot be looked upon as whole. So that’s my take on that

 

 What did you learn in Fourah Bay that you can recommend to the Nigerian education sector?

As I told you few minutes ago, in Fourah Bay, because of the Christian connection of setting the place up, the development of people in line with the teachings of Christ was a strong element in what happened. What we found was that a lot of people who went to Foray Bay to study whatever ended up becoming priests or in the case of somebody like me who did not become a priest, but at least we ended up following those teachings in our normal life.

Christopher Kolade

Christopher Kolade

Now what that tells me is that you need to remember that to produce a rounded person, somebody who is not just an academic or not just an engineer, you have to include training in character. What happened to us in Fourah Bay was that attention was directed towards that training in character. You were made to understand that it doesn’t matter how clever you are, what degrees you have, what position you occupy, character is key.

So that is something that all education institutions should bear in mind. What happens is that people, human beings would emerge at the end of the system as what? They emerge only as professors, engineers but with no attention to character, they cannot be looked upon as whole. So that’s my take on that.


See:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Kolade#Career


'FOURAHBAY COLLEGE'- The Discussion - 1

What Sierra Leoneans did not know about Fourah Bay College.
                         By
Anthony K. Kamara (Sr), Winnipeg Canada.
{Courtesy: The Patriotic Vanguard 
 16 November 2015}

Fourah Bay College, West Africa’s oldest University, located on Mount Aureol is not just an institution on a hill top, but sub-Saharan Africa’s first University Institution founded some 188 years ago in Freetown, thanks to the benefaction of the Church Missionary Society (CMS) whose philanthropic initiative saw the emergence of the first University Institution that placed Black Africa in the educational map of the world.

The institution acquired such fame because the quality of her graduates serving at home and abroad, and the professors who sacrificed so much and gave their very best, that even before her affiliation to the University of Durham in England in 1876, Fourah Bay College had been likened to the Academia of Athens in Ancient Greece where some of the greatest western cultural and intellectual writers in history lived in this period. Hence Fourah Bay College was aptly described as "The Athens of West Africa". Her students out of pride variously labelled themselves always as "Athenians of West Africa" and "Fourabites". Present day students still very proud of these designations.

By the 1840s and the early 1850s, there was a great profusion in the literary output of the College particularly in the field of linguistics with the arrival of Rev Sigismund Wilhelm Koelle a German and another German Rev Charles A. Reichardt in 1852.

With these two men at the College, Fourah Bay College, a.k.a, the Athens of West Africa, was for the third time labelled internationally as "the literary and linguistic workshop of West Africa". So many compliments were heaped upon this new born University College in Freetown that out of honor and in appreciation for the good work of the CMS Missionaries and the quality of her graduates. By 1945 after her relocation to Mount Aureol, her students again became "Aureolites" after the hill which came to be her permanent home. No University all around the world is known to have such a number of accolades for academic excellence. It is no wonder that Fourah Bay College is so internationally complimented much to the envy of younger and upcoming new ones in West Africa.

Fourah Bay College is a member of the Association of both African Universities (AAU) made up of over 347 Universities spanning from North to South and West to East of the Africa region, as well as the Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) with a global membership of some 500 universities . Tom Gardner a Ph.D candidate at Oxford University recently described Fourah Bay College as the “Oxford of West Africa” by virtue of being the “First” in Black Africa which opened her doors indiscriminately to all English speaking West Africans as was Oxford University in the United Kingdom, the oldest University in the English speaking world ; Fourah Bay College products became Sierra Leone’s early Ambassadors serving as teachers, missionaries and medical doctors , Lawyers whose performance abroad magnetized West Africans to come to Freetown for higher education; furthermore an American academic Dr Daniel Paracka of the University of Kennesaw in Georgia also likened Fourah Bay College to “the Harvard of West Africa” , America’s first University in Massachussetts. All this plethora of honours made the “Athens of West Africa” the envy of other universities at home and abroad.

Three British Universities, Cambridge, London and Durham were considered as parent Universities for Fourah Bay College. In the end Fourah Bay College was affiliated to Durham University which found the greatest favour with the CMS largely because of her strong theological foundations. Writers on West African history have also likened Fourah Bay College to the Sankore University of Timbuktu in ancient Mali, Africa’s oldest Islamic theological University which was pillaged and sacked by the marauding and poverty stricken Moroccans during their invasion of the Songhay Empire of Gao in 1591.

So much has been done in these 188 years of her existence in spite of challenges along the way. When the College started in 1827 with only six students , five of them Sierra Leonean with only one foreigner, the Slave boy who became the first student to print his name in the College’s admission register and became the first Bishop of the Niger Delta, Samuel Adjai Crowther. The citizens of Freetown and indeed West Africa were in a celebratory mood on that Friday of February 18, 1827 as the institution formally took off in Clinetown in the East end of Freetown.

There is no educational institution in this Sierra Leone today where there are no ‘Athenians of West Africa’ helping out with the work of imparting knowledge including the new Universities.

For instance when the former Njala Training College unexpectedly got upgraded to University status in 1964 the new Institution as one would expect, was not just ready for the new task, in terms of teaching personnel and the right kind of students, Sir Albert Margai the Prime Minister at the time had to turn to Dr Davidson Nicol to lend a hand to the new College, and this led to a professor of Chemistry at FBC Dr Sahr Matturi being released to become the first Principal; in addition, Fourah Bay College also gave NUC Dr. Daniel Chaytor who became Deputy Vice Chancellor. Besides many of FBC’s Honours Graduates in English, went to teach at NUC and are still helping out to this day. Scholars like Late Dr Abdul Karim Turay, Late Dr Harry Turay (Geography) and subsequently became Principal / Vice Chancellor , Prof. Bob Kandeh Geography etc. In the 1970s, almost all of the lecturers in the Department of English were from FBC including Dr Matthew Sangova, and Dr(Mrs) Theresa Sangova, Late Ernest Cole and Mike Johnny, Hons English graduates etc taught in the Department of English Dr Wusu Sannoh, former Mayor of the city of Bo and FBC Honors Chemistry graduate also lectured at Njala. One can see that Njala owed so much to FBC to this day.

Fourah Bay College as a proud member of the ACU for over 60 years has a moral responsibility to assist our new, struggling Colleges in their areas of need. The ability and willingness to help younger institutions is what makes “the Athens of West Africa”, the leader to this day and will remain in that Leadership role at all times, because to be the Leader carries with it many responsibilities which fortunately FBC has not been oblivious of, but rather has been executing over the decades. For any African University to gain recognition on the global stage, must first and foremost try to acquire Associate membership at the regional level of AAU before ever considering membership of Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) which currently includes a global membership of some 500 Universities scattered in all continents. With an internationally trained team of academics from diverse backgrounds, the College runs courses of study that are internationally marketable and in great demand beyond our borders.

Fourah Bay College has also provided two Principals at the MMCET: first was the Late Solade Adams, first Sierra Leonean since 1965, and later succeeded by U. S. A. Kargbo. Also First vice Principal of the College Late J .T. Harding, the author of “Primary Mathematics for Sierra Leone Schools”

In the fields of politics, “The Athens of West Africa” has given Sierra Leone two political leaders as Heads of State and Government, with Sir Milton Margai from the Clinetown campus being not only the first and Founder of the SLPP but also the first Protectorate Graduate from FBC. Next current President Ernest Koroma is second product of the Athens of West Africa (of Mount Aureol breed) to lead this country. He did not found any political party, but inherited Siaka Stevens’ APC and is the current leader of the A.P.C . The Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) was founded by Sir Milton Margai in 1951 and to this day two other FBC products have led the party, including John O Benjamin, and current leader PC Somano Kapen. In all a total of five FBC products have become leaders of political parties in Sierra Leone including Late Thaimu Bangura of the P.D.P. (Sorbeh) and Amadu Jalloh’s party from Koinadugu.

In this present government, the present House Speaker S.B.B Dumbuya is of Athenian breed of the early 1970s from Mount Aureol. One of the Presidents’ advisers Ambassador Dauda Kamara was the first student leader in 1968 to cause a political earthquake in FBC students’ politics when for the very first time in the history of the College, contested and won the presidential elections of 1968 with nearly 90% of the votes cast, thereby becoming the first Provincial student leader ever to accomplish such a feat on the Hill above Freetown. Since then the history of students’ politics on Mount Aureol has never been the same except for the brief interruption in 1969 when a Gambian Marcel Tomasi was elected president.
In the Diplomatic field, current A.P.C Secretary-General Ambassador Osman Yansaneh is still officially Ambassador to Ghana, Ambassador Ibrahim Sorie in Brussels, and Ambassador. Bockarie Stevens in Washington to name a few.

In municipal administrations, so far most Mayors of municipalities in Sierra Leone are FBC products including the current Mayor of the Makeni Municipality Mrs Sunkari Kabba Kamara who is also the first woman mayor not only of the Sierra Leone hinterland but also from Northern Sierra Leone, the former Mayor of Bo, Dr. Wusu Sannoh; in Freetown, almost all Mayors have been Fourah Bay College educated. Lest we forget, the first Mayor of Makeni was the Late Sylvanus F. Koroma, father of current President Ernest Koroma, himself a Fourabite since 1947 at the former Teacher Training Department at Mount Aureol where he studied for the Teachers’ Certificate (TC). He was one of the early students at Mount Aureol after the relocation of FBC to the Hill in 1945 after her six years of exile at Mabang. The country’s Public Service is dominated by FBC graduates as are corporate organizations.

Today the country’s best Lawyers are FBC trained including Dr. Abdulai O Conteh, Professor Henry Joko Smart, Prof. Tuboku Metzeger, Dr Bu Buakei Jabbi, the Late Terrence Terry, Kabba Koroma, Justice Abdulai Charm to name a few.
In the media world Fourah Bay College can boast of having produced some of the best journalists this nation can be proud of today. In the history of journalism in Sierra Leone, we may ignore those of the old school as journalism was not yet a discipline at Fourah Bay College, but today Mount Aureol can boast of her products of Mass Communications and these are simply the best among Sierra Leonean print media and include Umaro Fofana the BBC stringer, Late Lansana Fofana, Sylvia Blyden of Awareness Times Newspaper, Philip Neville of the Standard Times, Gibril Koroma of the Patriotic Vanguard online newspaper, Pastor Kabbs Kanu of Cocorioko on Line newspaper, Sorie Fofana of the Global Times etc.

With such exemplary service in the field of education in West Africa in nearly 200 years of existence Fourah Bay College has done all that is expected of her to the full satisfaction of her benefactors, the Church Missionary Society (CMS). To these philanthropic missionaries, the descendants of this famous West African University will ever remain indebted.

Finally the good news for Sierra Leoneans and in particular, all descendants of the “Athenians of West Africa”, is the arrival in Freetown of the new edition of the latest Fourah Bay College history, “From Clinetown to Mount Aureol, Fourah Bay College 1827-present”. The book is available in two locations: The EPP Bookshop at Mount Aureol and the Sierra Leone Diocesan Bookshop at 3 Gloucester Street Freetown. This edition includes all Fourah Bay College political leaders and their photos, including Sir Milton Margai, President and APC Leader Ernest Koroma, John Oponjo Benjamin former SLPP leader and current Leader PC Somano Kapen of Mambolo.

The book also includes Fourah Bay College principals and their photos like Rev Edward Jones, Dr. Davidson Nicol, Rev Harry Sawyerr, Professor Eldred Durosimi Jones, Professor Victor Strasser King, Professor Aiah Gbakima, Professor Jonas Redwood Sawyerr and Professor Sahr Gbamanja. The last chapter includes the full list of all Fourah Bay College Principals since 1827. This is a publication no one can afford to miss.

Saturday, April 02, 2016

THE POPULATION POLICY OF SIERRA LEONE



Sierra Leone had NO Population Policy until 1983 when Dr Siaka Stevens APC government established a National Population Commission to give teeth and understanding of the size and all anticidents of population requirements. (See article below).

Today, Sierra Leone's population stands at 7.25 million people (recorded on counting days in December 2015), thanks to Dr Ernest Bai Koroma's APC government carrying through what his leader Dr Siaka Stevens started. Government now has a base to implement all necessary policies in which reference to the size of the population is to be directed.

Why do we need a Population Policy? Read the ILO National 
Population Policy for Development, Progress and Welfare (G.N. 82 - 02/04/1993) published in the Sierra Leone Gazette Vol.124, No15, pp73-81 (see below).
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BBC Media Action Sierra Leone writes...:
"Provisional results of the 2015 Census have just been released. The population of #SierraLeone grew from about 5 million in 2004 to just over 7 million in 2015, a 40% rise in 10 years. 

Here is the regional population breakdown for 2015: North (2,502,805), South (1,438,572), West (1,493,252), and East (1,641,012). Men comprise 49.1% and women 50.9%. "

"What does this mean for the country and for you? Let’s hear your view."


Sierra Leone population policy--status report.

Author: 
John G
Source: 
Popleone. 1984 Jul; 1(1):2-4.
Abstract: 

Sierra Leone has no national population policy; however, the government is promoting numerous programs which impact on population problems, and in 1983 the government established a National Population Commission. A number of government health programs seek to reduce mortality and morbidity, particularly for mothers and children. Government programs provide 1) maternal and child health (MCH) care, primary health care, and immunization services; 2) training for traditional birth attendants, community health nurses, and paramedical personnel; 3) child spacing and fertility advisory services at some government MCH centers; and 4) construction of health centers. In addition, the government supports the inclusion of UN Fund for Population Activities' Fertility Advisory Services in the programs of several MCH centers, and, with assistance from the US Agency for International Development, is planning to make family planning services available at 120 MCH centers. The government is also supportive of the activities of the Planned Parenthood Association of Sierra Leone. Abortion is legal only in cases where the life of the mother is in jeopardy. Sierra Leone has no specific policies aimed at population redistribution; however, government agricultural development programs to equalize economic conditions in rural and urban areas should help reduce migration to urban centers. The National Population Commission is charged with the tasks of 1) formulating a national population policy, 2) promoting family planning, and 3) coordinating and promoting population activities in reference to development policies and program. The commission members represent a broad spectrum of the community, and the commission is composed of a working committee and a secretariat. A number of task forces are currently developing recommendations in the areas of fertility, mortality, morbidity, migration, labor, population law, women in development, policy and the environment, and population information dissemination.
Language: 
English
Year: 
1984
Region / Country: 
Africa Western |  ...

See more at: http://www.popline.org/node/573841#.dpuf
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Comparative census figures 1901 to 2015).

{Courtesy: ONLINE SALINE FORUM-Facebook Post-05/04/16)

Population of Sierra Leone (census):

Year.       Population 

1901.      1,024,178

1911.      1,400,132

1921.       1,540,554

1931.       1,768,480

1948.       1,858,275

1963.       2,180,355

1974.       2,735,159

1985.       3,515,812

2004.       4,976,871

2015.       7,075,641 (p)

Regional distribution of population of Sierra Leone as percentage (%) of national population:

Region    % (in 1963)
East.      25.0
South.    24.9
North.    41.2
West.      9.0

Region  % (in 1974)
East.      28.4
South.    21.8
North.    38.3
West.     11.6

Region  % (in 1985)
East.      27.3
South.    21.1
North.    35.8
West.     15.8

Region  % (in 2004)
East.      23.9
South.    22.0
North.    35.1
West.     19.0

Region  % (in 2015; provisional)
East.      23.2
South.   18.3
North.    35.4
West.     23.2