“Witness to Truth” Project –
Sierra Leone
On the Road with CDHR in the Northern Region
Monday 29 August 2005
6.45
a. m. - Makeni, Bombali District
It’s
the height of the torrential rainy season here in
I didn’t sleep well. The conditions were hardly conducive. We arrived in Makeni from Freetown shortly before midnight, just as a fresh rainstorm was breaking. The rattle of rain on my tin roof ensured that although I was exhausted, I couldn’t rest. Allied to that, I was persistently pestered by the buzz of mosquitoes, eager to bite. My room had neither a mosquito net nor a sheet on the bed, so I had to lie under a makeshift canopy consisting of a hand-towel and two t-shirts. I awoke half an hour ago to find several tell-tale “bite bumps” on my arms and legs. Some of the mosquitoes have clearly enjoyed a feast at the expense of my discomfort; and I’m sure they’ll be on the lookout for more tonight.
Still,
these nuisances are commonplace for a trip into Sierra Leone’s
outlying Provinces, particularly the long-neglected Northern Region. You leave behind the few modern conveniences
that make twenty-first century work possible in Freetown – conveniences such as laptop computers, internet connections, mobile phone
coverage and functioning banks. You also
leave behind, for the most part, the essential amenities that we so often take
for granted elsewhere in the world – amenities such as running water, an
electricity supply and paved roads. This
morning I’ll be washing out of a bucket of ominously cloudy, stagnant
water. I only hope I’m able to see well
enough in the unlit bathroom to be able to distinguish my toothpaste from my
tube of anti-fungal hand‑cream.
10.45
a. m. - Kamakwie, Bombali District
Almost
four hours since my bucket bath, I’ve just stepped out of a
Toyota 4‑Runner into the sun-soaked surroundings of Kamakwie. It’s little more than a village, and lies in
one of the outer Northern extremities of the Bombali District. We took about two‑and-a-half hours to drive
here along uneven, muddy rural roads, dotted with the puddles of last night’s
rain. On a couple of occasions we
plunged into deep swampy hollows and had to engage extra gears to get out,
kicking up showers of dirt and spattering our clothes. Upon passing through the more remote
communities, children ran out to greet our vehicle, clapping and waving. Those that spotted me cried out “Oporto!Oporto!”
– meaning “White man! White man!” in the local Temne language. I waved back, half grinning, half grimacing.
Kamakwie
cannot have seen many foreign visitors in recent years, let alone foreign
visitors coming to attend video screenings. Its local “barray” – the community building that acts as a courtroom, a
town hall and a general gathering place – is a rudimentary, open-sided
structure about the size of a basketball court. No walls, no windows, no doors, no electrical fittings. The local chiefs and elders are sitting at
two wooden tables before a row of about ten benches. They are dressed resplendently as always,
forming a collage of myriad colours and fabrics with their flowing gowns and
decorate caps. Most of them are old, old
men; many are missing teeth as they smile to welcome us. When we arrived they were adjudicating over a
land dispute between two families from a nearby village. Now an announcement has been made that a
“film about the TRC report” is about to be shown here. The indigent parties shuffle off with their
grievances while expectant crowds begin to gather.
11.30
a. m. - Kamakwie, Bombali District
The
barray is full and the community meeting gets underway. My host for the week, Gibril Massie Bah
(“Massie”), opens the proceedings by inviting an Imam and a Pastor to lead,
respectively, Muslim and Christian prayers. Heads are bowed as the crowd mumbles in worship – first Al-Fatiyah and
then the Lord’s Prayer. I join in both.
Massie
is a former teacher and has an excellent knack of communicating with the crowd
in simple, measured terms. He largely
uses the Krio language that is spoken across the country as a lingua franca, but occasionally he
bursts into Temne or Limba, the two most popular tribal languages of the
North. None of these is his mother
tongue – he is Fullah by ethnicity.
Massie
gives a bit of background to the “Witness to Truth” project, which his
organisation – the Centre for Democracy and Human Rights, or CDHR – is
responsible for implementing throughout the Northern Region. He introduces himself as the Director of CDHR
and his colleague Osman Koroma as the CDHR Human Rights Officer. He tells the crowd about WITNESS, “an
important human rights organisation based in America that has been a long‑time friend of Sierra Leone”. He announces that I am here on behalf of
WITNESS, having worked for more than two years in the “national process” of the
Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).
The
purpose of our delegation in Kamakwie, Massie explains, is to educate the
community about the content of the recently-published TRC report. To do this, we’ll be screening the video
“Witness to Truth”, which WITNESS has made as a vivid summary of what happened
during the war and how the TRC process seeks to prevent a recurrence. We’ll also be presenting some of the
“highlights” of the TRC report and, after the screening, answering questions
from the audience.
Massie
assures me that this mode of presentation is a tried and trusted formula that
will become very familiar to me as the week progresses. In Kamakwie, it seems to work well and is met
with nods of approval from the hundreds of villagers who have now gathered.
In
addition to the core CDHR team, we also have a formidable secret weapon for our
series of public education activities across the North. It comes in the shape of Reverend Usman J.
Fornah, a Pastor of the Wesleyan Churchand the former TRC Regional Co-ordinator for the Northern Province.
Reverend
Fornah is one of those people who seems to have friends everywhere we go. He’s a bundle of joviality and an astute mind
to boot. On activities related to the
TRC anywhere in the North – whether research, public education or advocacy –
his effectiveness is unparalleled. CDHR’s decision to use him as a consultant on the “Witness to Truth”
project has proven to be inspired.
Indeed,
nowhere is Reverend’s personal impact more keenly felt than here in
Kamakwie. As he informed us on the way
here, he was the local Pastor in the community for five years earlier in his
career. Thus when he addresses the
people to talk about the recommendations made in the TRC report - why they are
so important for our country to move forward, why they provide the best hope
for improved human rights protection and sustainable development in our
communities – his words resonate with his “congregation”. Massie and Osman also make strong
presentations, first about the TRC findings, then about the importance of
realising human rights at the grassroots level. As the generator is cranked into action and the VCD player rolls, the
first few frames of “Witness to Truth” are studied carefully with a hushed
anticipation.
2.00 p.m.
– Rogboreh, Bombali
District
We’ve
now finished our community meeting in Kamakwie, packed up the video equipment
and started our journey back to Makeni. The film was really well received, albeit that most of those who
responded at the end found its content to be “sorry”, “pitiful” and
“painful”. During the poignant song that
ends the film, I noticed that many audience members turned to their neighbours
to share a solemn glance or a few words of consolation.
We
received questions from the crowd on a broad range of topics. Two men asked consecutively about the
difference between the TRC and the Special Court,
which remains a constant source of confusion. A lively debate also ensued about the Government’s response to the TRC
recommendations, which Massie described as “unfortunate”, as it “does not do
justice to the TRC report”. One elderly
gentleman asked about the likelihood of any reparations payments actually
making it to Kamakwie, as he was looking after several orphaned and injured
children and had never received assistance. We assured him that reparations payments were possible, provided that we
don’t give up on our tireless efforts to see the recommendations become
reality.
However,
by far the most interesting question to my mind came from a lady near the back
of the crowd, wrapped in a “lappa” (a single sheet of fabric) with a matching
headscarf. “According to the video, one
of the causes of the war was that almost everybody engages in corruption and
dishonesty towards their fellow Sierra Leoneans,” she pointed out in Krio. “Do you agree with me that these practices
are so common that they have become diseases in our bones, part of what makes
us Sierra Leoneans? Don’t you see that we
have always behaved in this way towards one another and that we’re likely to
experience war again?” How do you answer
a question like that?
The
meeting ended with a series of handshakes and a warm round of applause for the
CDHR team. The community clearly
appreciated having been included in the “Witness to Truth” project and being
given the opportunity to watch the film. As we drove out through the village, I observed groups of elders, women
and children huddling together, apparently deep in reflection.
Now,
barely half an hour along the road, we’ve stopped in the middle of a small
cluster of houses, which I’m told is the village of Rogboreh. The Paramount Chief, the most important man
in the Sanda Tendaren Chiefdom, lives here and has invited us into his yard to
partake in a meal. So here we are –
Massie, Osman, Reverend, our two drivers and I – sitting on small wooden stools
in a circle around a single, huge tray of rice. A lady decants a steaming pot full of sauce and fish onto the rice and
we all dig in together with our spoons, scooping up mixtures of green‑stained
rice, flesh and bones. It’s my first and last meal of the day, and it’s most
welcome.
Tuesday 30 August 2005
6.00
p. m. - Makeni, Bombali District
We’ve
spent today attending a conference in Makeni, centred on the theme that seems
to be flavour of the month – CORRUPTION! The reality is that most workshops of this nature are actually talking
shops and this one was little different. Delegates attended from all over the Northern Region and there were some
conspicuous visitors from
Freetown too – including Val Collier, the Head of the Anti-Corruption Commission. The anti-corruption message was drummed home
by speakers of different affiliations, but I am convinced that most of them are
just as embroiled in and inclined towards corrupt practices as the politicians
they criticised and the delegates they tried to prevail upon. Corruption in Sierra Leone is a way of life – and it manifests itself in too many forms to mention.
The
main purpose of our attendance was to present the TRC recommendations on
fighting corruption, along with a variety of other key recommendations from the
report. We used the platform as an
opportunity to showcase the TRC report to all‑comers and to make a rousing case
for strong and immediate calls to Government to implement the recommendations. The discussion on the TRC report was one of
the most animated of the day – people listened intently to the content of the
recommendations and asked pertinent questions about how best to pursue
implementation in the face of Government intransigence. The Anti-Corruption Tsar himself, Val
Collier, stated that by generating unity and momentum among civil society, we
will eventually force the hand of the Government into taking action. Collier has proved himself to be a potent
ally.
Now
we’re on the road again, this time headed for the neighbouring District of Port
Loko. We’ve encountered a serious
mechanical problem (as opposed to just a standard mechanical problem of the
variety that every car has in Sierra Leone)
with one of our cars, so we’re reduced to a single vehicle, the Toyota 4-Runner. Eager to preserve our
presentation team at full strength, we’re heading on without our driver, Abdul,
and giving driving responsibilities to Reverend Fornah. I take the front passenger seat, while Massie
and Osman squeeze in the back together with a 21-inch television set that is
taking up over half of the seating space.
We
face a drive of about two hours in treacherous conditions to reach
Port Loko Township,
the District Headquarters. We have a
Pastor rather than a professional driver at the wheel. Accordingly, to use a popular Krio
expression, we’ll be approaching our journey “small small”.
10.00 p.m.
– Port Loko, Port Loko
District
What
a relief to arrive safely at Bangura’s Guest House, seemingly about the only
hostelry worthy of the name in the whole of Port Loko. We took one stop along the way at Rogbere
Junction, where we did our best to scrape together a meal from among the
intriguing variety of “street foods” on offer. I plumped for a thin white bread roll stuffed with plantains, fish balls
and peppercorns – a few of which, upon closer inspection, turned out to be dead
insects. Delicious. The others took hard‑boiled eggs from a
cardboard box at the side of the junction, sold by a girl who could not have
been more than eight years old. We all
bought cold drinks from a pushy male vendor who had his hands through the
windows of our vehicle before we’d even pulled to a halt. Having paid him, he still kept asking me for
more money, right up to the point of our departure. It struck me that there weren’t many places
to lodge in Rogbere Junction, so he and the others – overwhelmingly children –
would probably have to sleep out in the open.
This
thought re-enters my head as I write now, because yet again it is raining
heavily outside. We’re listening to
Radio UNAMSIL, the UN’s public information radio station that can be received
in most parts of the country. We’ve just
heard an interview with
Sierra
Leone’s
Attorney-General, Frederick Carew, who was talking about the various pressing
legal issues facing him today. The
hottest topic was the beating to death of a local newspaper editor by some
henchmen apparently hired by a Parliamentarian from the ruling SLPP party. Carew claimed that he had set up a coroner’s
inquest into the death, rather than a murder inquiry, because he did not wish
to prejudge any criminality in the matter. This explanation met with audible gasps and expressions of
dissatisfaction from those with whom I’m listening. Carew only talked briefly about the
Government’s “White Paper” response to the TRC report. He was curt and elusive on the substance of
the paper – perhaps indicating that he is not really familiar with the content
of the TRC recommendations. Nevertheless, he did concede that the issue of the TRC report is
certainly not closed yet and hinted that the Government might revisit the
recommendations in due course. Even such
a glimmer of hope is enough to send us to bed with cautious optimism.
Wednesday 31 August 2005
6.00
a. m. - Port Loko, Port Loko District
Another
early start, another bucket bath, another long drive ahead. Today we are planning to hold two community
meetings in this District, both of them following the same format as Monday’s
session in Kamakwie. We’ll return here
for the second meeting in the afternoon, but first we’ll go to Lungi-Mahera,
right on the coast of the northern headland. We’ve collected another team member – CDHR’s District Field Officer John
Kargbo – who is now squeezed into an implausibly tight space with Massie, Osman
and the television set in the back seat.
Reverend,
who awoke less than ten minutes ago and emerged from his room groaning like a
bear with a sore head, will be driving in zig-zags to avoid the many hazardous
lakes of water on the road. I’m still
tired from last night, as Reverend’s loud snoring from next door woke me up on
several occasions. At one point I was so
disorientated by the heady heat and the pitch-blackness of the room that I had
not the faintest idea where I was. Now
it’s almost light, but we’re off even further into unchartered territory.
9.30
a. m. – Lungi - Mahera, Port Loko District
This
town is something of an anomaly. It
hosts Sierra Leone’s
only international airport, yet it is as detached and parochial as any
community I have encountered anywhere in the country. We’ve branched off the main road by quite
some distance, following a brown mud-track for about four miles to reach the
barray building. There is nobody
around, bar a solitary old man in a beige suit and cap who is obviously somewhat
drunk.
Before
starting our meeting, we have to pay our respects to the resident Paramount
Chief. Massie tells me that this Chief
is one of President Kabbah’s staunchest and most loyal supporters, which is again
something of an anomaly considering the general opposition to the SLPP in the
North. As we walk into the Chief’s
parlour, an enormous framed portrait of “Pa Kabbah” stares down at me. The Chief emerges from behind a plastic veil
and, propping himself up on a walking stick, extends his hand in greeting.
After
a brief discussion, during which the Chief declares his support for the TRC
recommendations, we sign the Chiefdom visitors’ book for posterity. The Chief explains that he cannot attend the
screening in person because he is still recovering from a recent illness. He promises to send all his Section Chiefs in
his place and assures us that his Chiefdom representative is already at the
barray helping to arrange the meeting. We didn’t see him as we passed, we tell the Chief, but we will go back
and check. It turns out that the
Chiefdom representative, a reputable member of the traditional authorities, was
at the barray all along. Somewhat
alarmingly, he is the early-morning drunkard in the beige suit and cap.
12.00 noon
– Lungi - Mahera, Port
Loko District
This
morning’s meeting was far less vibrant than Monday’s session in Kamakwie. The townspeople seemed less informed, less
engaged even. They watched the video
with almost blank, expressionless faces, only occasionally “tutting” in
disapproval or sighing in resignation. Massie, Osman and Reverend were unanimous that the Lungi‑Mahera crowd
was the least receptive of any they had reached on their community
sensitisation tours.
One
possible explanation for such an “unmoved” reaction to the film is that the
people of Lungi-Mahera were largely unaffected and untouched by the war
itself. Due to the importance of the
international airport in their backyard, they were well protected by the
national Army and multi-national peacekeepers for the duration of the
conflict. They were not attacked in
their homes and subjected to the ghastly range of abuses depicted in “Witness
to Truth”, nor were they displaced, abducted, enslaved or forced to fight. Perhaps they see the war as something that
happened to “someone else”; perhaps they don’t relate their own plight to the
vast destruction and human tragedy of the conflict. Impossible as these may seem, they are the
kinds of justifications offered by one human rights activist with whom I raise
the issue in a telephone conversation after the meeting. There is not, he suggests, much sense of
“solidarity” among Sierra Leoneans, even when it comes to their suffering and
breaches of their fundamental rights. “Why do you think it takes so much international assistance to achieve
anything better for our country?” he asks. “We Sierra Leoneans only care about ourselves, not for the nation or the
common good.”
3.00
p. m. - Port Loko, Port Loko District
I’ve thought a lot about my friend’s comments on the drive back to Port
Loko Town from Lungi-Mahera. I’ve come to the
conclusion that I disagree with him. Yes, it’s true that many Sierra Leoneans are selfish and have no urge to
strive for the advancement of their nation – one need look no further than many
of the current generation of leaders for good examples of this malaise. But there are exceptions to this sad state of
affairs; there are outstanding Sierra Leoneans who care about more than
themselves. The reason I know this is
that I have the privilege of working with some of them in my daily advocacy
efforts with WITNESS. I am constantly
impressed and inspired by the commitment of some of my colleagues in Sierra
Leone civil society – colleagues like Massie, Osman, Reverend and John Kargbo,
with whom I’m travelling today. They
struggle against the majority and in the face of considerable adversity to
stimulate social change in their country. They seek to empower the vulnerable, voiceless citizens around them and to
give genuine meaning to human rights. It
is the very least I can do to give every ounce of my energy in support of their
mission.
As
if to back up my conclusion, we’ve come across a quite remarkable place in the
middle of a field in Port Loko Town. The signboard proclaims proudly: “Human
Rights House”. Inside, I find all four
walls covered in bookshelves, neatly stacked with human rights treaties,
textbooks, journals and special publications. There are collections of drawings by war-affected children from the
Former Yugoslavia; policy papers on the setting up of truth commissions, in Sierra Leone and elsewhere; and magazines issued by local community-based
organisations. I am pleasantly surprised
when I notice on a shelf at the front of the room, in pride of place, a copy of
the full, four-volume printed TRC report.
We
are about to hold our second community meeting of the day here, in the
conference room of Human Rights House. The crowd looks promising, both in terms of size and composition. CDHR has conducted a really clever and well‑organised
public information campaign to generate interest in this screening of “Witness
to Truth”. Some of the audience members
have already introduced themselves to me as civil society activists – and they
seem to have a good grasp of the human rights issues that underpin the TRC
recommendations.
5.30
p. m. - Port Loko, Port Loko District
The
reaction and the level of discussion among the audience in Port Loko has been
the best of any screening of “Witness to Truth” I’ve attended so far. For about an hour after the film had
concluded, a packed conference room remained in place to ask questions and
debate some of the more controversial issues. A very resonant question came from a youth in a football shirt at the extreme
right of the crowd. He asked: “Having
put so much money and resources into this truth and reconciliation process, all
the way up to the production of the TRC report, what efforts is the
international community making to ensure that its investment will not go to
waste?” In responding, Massie pointed
out that Sierra
Leone has a reliable partner in WITNESS, which has kept the TRC process alive whilst
others have taken their eyes off the ball. He also expressed his belief that international donors will insist on
implementation of the TRC recommendations as a pre-condition for further
funding. It is not so much a question of
political will, I added, as a question of the rule of law: after all, the
Government has a strict legal obligation to implement the recommendations and
it ignores such a requirement at its peril.
9.00
p. m. –
KambiaTown,
Kambia District
It’s
been a hard day’s night and we’ve all been working incessantly since the start
of the week. By the time I’m writing
this, Massie and Osman are probably already asleep. We’re occupying all four of the available
rooms at the Red Cross Guest House in
Kambia Township,
which we reached well after dark having driven another couple of hours. I’m covered in red dust from the roads, but
I’m too tired even to lift the bucket for a wash. I’ll crawl under my mosquito net and conk out
in just a few minutes from now, confident of a good night’s rest. Not even Reverend’s snoring can keep me awake
tonight!
Thursday 1 September 2005
8.00
a. m. -Kambia Town,
Kambia District
We’re
ready to embark on another double-header of community meetings, but before we
do, we’re indulging in a local speciality. It’s a large helping of “yebe”, a kind of thick broth that contains
peppers and meat stock, stewed fish and succulent slices of boiled
cassava. It might be considered a little
heavy compared to my standard morning fare of bread and spreadable cheese, but
when four hungry men are on the road they will take whatever opportunity they
get to eat heartily! It takes us no more
than twenty minutes to polish off most of the pot – without doubt my favourite
meal of the week. We leave a generous
individual portion for Bobby, the boy at the Guest House who provided candles,
buckets of water and house-sandals for us last night.
Our
first port of call today is within Kambia Township – just a ten-minute drive from here. We’re holding a session at the local Government primary school, which
has a large assembly hall. A two-day
workshop is being staged there by Action Aid, with a focus on local civil
society empowerment. CDHR has negotiated
a two-hour slot in today’s programme for the screening and discussion of
“Witness to Truth”. As such we are
guaranteed a hand-picked audience of civil society representatives from all
over the Kambia District – allowing us to cover even the most remote areas in a
single meeting. It’s another great
opportunity to reach out to the grassroots.
10.00
a. m. -KambiaTown,
Kambia District
The
hall of the KDEC Primary School is positively bustling with people as Massie takes the platform to introduce
the CDHR / WITNESS programme. On our
arrival here we were welcomed by several esteemed representatives of the
District Council, of which the Chairman, Mr. Yillah, was a TRC statement-taker
a few years ago. There appears to be a
good deal of affection for the TRC in this part of the country – catalysed I am
told by a very successful round of public hearings in Kambia Town in 2003. We are not quite preaching to the converted,
but there is certainly a sense that talking about the TRC report will strike a
chord with the scores of Kambians present.
Today
our VCD player has finally given up on us. It seems that endless hours of “gallops” over potholes and mud-humps
have taken their toll on the disc‑playing mechanism. Osman has attempted for the last half an hour
to get it working, but without success, so we’re reverting to our back-up plan
of the WITNESS VHS player and a sound amplifier provided by a local video
centre. We’ve lost some of the sound
quality from previous screenings, but there is still ample capacity to cover
the whole hall. Particularly when, for
the first time I can remember, there are no chattering children around to cause
disturbance.
1.00
p. m. -Kambia Town,
Kambia District
The
screening has been another great success, particularly in terms of audience
participation. There was a high
proportion of literate persons present, many of whom eagerly took up Massie’s
offer to fill out evaluation forms recording their responses to the video. In addition, at the end of the event, an
enthusiastic young man called Umarr Kamara from an organisation called United
for the Protection of Human Rights (UPHR) took me to one side. He expressed his willingness to be involved
in any way possible in the drive to implement the TRC recommendations,
particularly by holding further screenings of the WITNESS video in communities
around Kambia. It was a heartening
discussion, which again reminded me of the impact and the importance of human
rights work at the grassroots. We’ll be
taking Umarr up on his offer.
2.00
p. m. - Rokupr, Kambia District
We’re
now sitting on the dock of the bay in Kambia’s second town, Rokupr, just a
short drive away, waiting for the hall to be prepared for our final screening
of the week. As we watch the swirling
waters of the Manngeh River from our parked vehicle, Reverend asks me whether I could swim across to the
other side. I say yes, confident that I
could easily manage the stretch of barely a hundred yards of water. My answer gives rise to startled noises from
each of the others in the car – according to Reverend, there is no Sierra
Leonean who could swim that far. “He
would definitely drown,” adds Osman. My
further revelation that I learnt to swim at school is subjected to intense
scrutiny. We end up having a lengthy
discussion about the comparisons between the British and Sierra Leonean
education systems.
3.00
p. m. - Rokupr, Kambia District
When
we initially saw our venue in Rokupr, the Rice Research Centre run by the
Ministry of Agriculture, sitting empty and apparently deserted, we had some skepticism
about the likely size of the audience. A
few minutes ago, however, Sulaiman, CDHR’s Field Officer in the Kambia
District, showed up with a large crowd to allay our doubts. Apparently he has spent the past hour riding
through the community on the back of a motorcycle, announcing the screening of
the WITNESS video in Temne language over a megaphone. The town’s dignitaries, including its Chief
and several councillors, have arrived in conspicuous four-wheel-drive
jeeps. A stream of young children is
filtering into the compound, all with trays on their heads, ready to sell their
petty wares to hungry or thirsty participants. Some young men from the area have set up about fifteen rows of long,
wooden benches in front of the podium. Already, there’s hardly a free seat in the house.
As
on a few previous occasions, Massie invites me to address the crowd as part of
the opening statements. I keep my
comments (all in Krio) short and to the point, congratulating CDHR on its
marvellous service to the people of the Northern Province, thanking the
audience for attending and explaining why the WITNESS video is such an
effective medium through which to share the key messages of the TRC
report. I finish with a challenge to the
people: question every public official who comes to your community, including
Government Ministers, about the progress made towards implementing the TRC
recommendations. Only in that way will
we manage to convince those in power that the TRC’s work is understood and
valued by all Sierra Leoneans, even in the most outlying areas.
My
brief statement is met with thunderous applause. A bespectacled man in a baseball cap even
rises to his feet to clap more loudly. The Chief grabs me by the arm and proceeds to tell me that I’ve really
made the community happy – “we’ve never had a white man come here and talk to
us in our own language,” he exclaims. And how do you see the TRC recommendations, I ask. “We’re right behind you!” he replies
emphatically.
6.00
p. m. - Rokupr, Kambia District
We’ve
just packed away the last of the equipment into the vehicle and we’re sitting
in the evening shade sipping on Vimto (a purple soft drink) from old-fashioned
glass bottles. Massie made the toast –
To the fifteenth and final CDHR screening under the “Witness to Truth”
project! Reverend, Osman and I clinked
our bottles to Massie’s and enjoyed a gulp of (almost) cold, (almost) fresh,
(almost) fizzy drink.
We’ve
definitely ended the screenings tour on a high note in Rokupr. Apart from the heartfelt bursts of applause
during our introductory statements, there were numerous displays of emotion
throughout the video and some heated discussions afterwards. A young lady whose husband has been held by
the Government in “safe custody” detention for several years made an
impassioned case not only for his release (as per the TRC recommendations), but
also for a set of measures to be put in place for his smooth reintegration into
society. Not everyone in the room agreed
with her point, but when Reverend explained the injustice of the “safe custody”
system, there appeared to be general approval.
A
youth – indeed, the same youth who just sold us our Vimto – argued strongly
that young people should not be held responsible for their deeds as members of
the fighting factions, because most of them were forced or duped into
fighting. Osman answered that the TRC
report broadly agrees with him, repeating the finding on the exploitation of marginalised
youths. An older member of the audience
stated that whilst that may be true, it should not excuse the youths of the
horrendous acts they committed of their own free will.
Massie
closed the community meeting with a promise to return in the near future and
help the people to further understand the content of the TRC report. He was deservedly cheered off the stage. Even then, he diligently applied himself to
the task of completing and documenting the distribution of copies of the
WITNESS video. Part of the reason I’ve
bought him this soft drink is to encourage him to sit down and rest for a
while. Ultimately, though, he and I
share the view that a human rights activist’s work in Sierra Leone is never done.
10.00 p.m.
– Makeni, Bombali
District
Back
where I started at Amza’s Guest House in Makeni, reflecting by candlelight on a
vast array of experiences packed into a single week. It is never easy to venture into the rural
areas of Sierra
Leone with such a demanding workload, but it is always worth the effort. There are few things in life more rewarding
than helping to change someone’s perspective on life, helping to reassure
someone that his or her opinion matters, or helping to empower someone with knowledge
and understanding. Working with WITNESS
and CDHR in the Northern Region entails all those rewards, as we begin to
achieve a groundswell of support for the TRC recommendations at a local level.
The
“Witness to Truth” video could hardly be more resonant for grassroots advocacy
purposes. It speaks to Sierra Leoneans
in their own language and depicts events that have happened in their
midst. Our week on the road has given us
renewed focus and renewed zeal for our higher-level advocacy efforts in the
months ahead. We’ll make our representations
to Government officials in Freetown
knowing that we have a mandate to speak on behalf of the people in the
communities we’ve visited. We all hope
that by the next time we return to those communities, we’ll be bringing them
good news about the implementation of the TRC recommendations.
For
now, though, I’ve got to get some rest and prepare myself for tomorrow’s
workshop on the TRC report in Magburaka, followed by a couple of local radio
appearances over the weekend. A night
with the mosquitoes and a bucket bath in the morning will surely see me
right. Goodnight.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Gavin
Simpson
“Witness
to Truth”
Project
Sierra Leone
Recent Comments