Sierra Leone court orders arrest of opposition leader

Sierra Leone court orders arrest of opposition leader

Samura Kamara is accused of alleged involvement in a transaction in 2012.
Samura Kamara came second in the June 2023 presidential election and has rejected the results. / Photo: AFP

A Sierra Leone court has ordered the arrest of Samura Kamara, opposition leader and runner-up in last June's presidential election, on corruption charges.

The Court of Appeal "has ordered the immediate arrest of former All People's Congress Party (APC) presidential candidate Dr Samura M.W. Kamara" for his alleged involvement in a transaction that involved the sale of shares held by the Sierra Leone government in a mining company in 2012, the court said in a statement on Wednesday.

At the time of the alleged offence, Kamara was finance minister under the then president Ernest Bai Koroma.

Kamara's lawyer could not immediately be contacted for comment.

Poll rigging claims

Kamara came second in the June 2023 presidential election, won by Julius Maada Bio. The opposition leader rejected the result.

The APC claimed that the presidential, parliamentary and local elections had all been rigged, and decided to boycott the parliament and local councils.

The government and the APC finally reached a deal in October, with the APC agreeing to end its boycott in exchange for an end to politically motivated detentions and court cases.

After his election for a first term in 2018, President Bio launched a vigorous campaign against corruption, reputed to be endemic in the country and the squandering of public assets.

Officials implicated

Several senior members of the Koroma administration were implicated. The APC, the former ruling party, cried "witch-hunt".

Since December 2021, Kamara has been on trial for allegedly embezzling more than $2.5 million of public funds in a project to renovate the consulate in New York when he was foreign minister.

Last month, Freetown was the scene of clashes described by the government as an "attempted coup".

Armed attackers stormed a military armoury, two barracks, two prisons and two police stations during the early hours of November 26, clashing with security forces.

The fighting left 21 people dead - 18 members of the security forces and three assailants -- according to official figures. Since then, 80 people have been arrested.

Ex-president named suspect

Former president Koroma has been named as a suspect for the organisation of the November 26 events, police said on Tuesday. After that announcement he was confined to his home.

West Africa has been hit by a series of coups since 2020, with the militar y taking power in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Guinea.

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AFP