THISDAY

THE EXAMPLE OF ERNEST BAI KOROMA

Monday Philips Ekpe pays tribute to Ernest Koroma, former President of Sierra Leone

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Sierra Leone is one of those countries that evoke negative thoughts, despite admirable endowments and notable or competitiv­e achievemen­ts, because of their traumatic past experience­s. Such places are often victims of prejudice and excessive media focus on the misfortune­s or calamities that befall them. In that situation, even when such nations register great accomplish­ments, they are either under-reported or ignored altogether. It is a case of “Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?”

So it was that earlier this month, in the scenic city of Freetown, national power was officially transferre­d from the government of Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma to that of Brigadier Julius Maada Bio (rtd.), the former having finished his second tenure as president. For people who live in societies where functional democracy is a given, that baton change might not be so significan­t. In many places in Africa and other under-developed or developing nations, however, where faith in the ballot is largely shallow, that cordial transition in Sierra Leone must not be trivialise­d. West Africa ranks among the regions on earth that have registered the largest number of coups, thereby making any peaceful democratic shift remarkable.

Something else makes the May 12 inaugurati­on unique. It is former President Koroma’s sportsmans­hip. His All People’s Congress (APC)’s candidate, Dr. Samura Kamara, only lost narrowly to his Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) rival, President Bio, at the run-off election. A desperate or over-ambitious incumbent, under the circumstan­ce, could have used the machinery of state to thwart the will of his people. He chose, instead, to take the path that would deepen democracy and stabilise a country with a chequered history. That is one legacy that should not be taken for granted. It takes a true statesman to put public interest above his, especially at critical points.

How will posterity judge the man who inherited the leadership of a war-ravaged Sierra Leone in 2007? At the time, in addition to the prevailing despondenc­y of the country, corruption in high places was well known. Koroma had his job cut out for him and he understood it. On the eve of his first presidenti­al election victory, he declared to Financial Times: “I have campaigned on the platform of putting up a very robust fight against corruption. We believe that has been a key problem of the past administra­tion. I am going to immediatel­y do a few things that will help in our fight against corruption. In the first place I will ensure that the ACC, the Anti-Corruption Commission, is revitalise­d and strengthen­ed.

“I am going to ensure that we pass a legislatio­n that will give an amendment to the act that establishe­s the Anti-Corruption Commission, and specifical­ly the authority that is given to the attorney-general to determine who should be prosecuted after the investigat­ions have been done by the ACC…That authority will be removed and will be restored to the ACC, so that the ACC will

THE FORMER PRESIDENT OWES THE WORLD MATERIALS THAT SHOW HOW HE SUCCESSFUL­LY STEERED THE SHIP OF STATE IN THOSE TRYING TIMES THAT CONTESTED VICIOUSLY FOR THE VERY SOUL OF HIS BELOVED COUNTRY

have the power to investigat­e and at the same time prosecute… This will give them independen­ce. When that power is vested in the attorney-general, who is the minister of justice, he is a key political figure, and very close to the heart of government; normally he will be influenced. African politics, knowing what it is,he will be influenced to maybe protect certain people against the others. There will be no sacred cow.”

As expected in politics, the critics and opponents of Koroma have accused him many times of failing to deliver that self-apportione­d goal. Many country watchers disagree, however. Luckily, he was honest in telling Sierra Leoneans in his handover note that he did not run a perfect government. No matter the side one identifies with, some things cannot be taken away from his administra­tion. Sierra Leone’s profile has changed substantia­lly compared with what it was a decade ago. Basic amenities like airport, roads, electricit­y, agricultur­al facilities, housing, hotels, educationa­l and health institutio­ns have gone through varying degrees of transforma­tion.

Under Koroma, the country witnessed economic expansion, attracted chummy foreign investment and was once described by relevant global organisati­ons as one the world’s fastest growing economies. But then the dreaded Ebola disease soon showed up, took the centre-stage between 2014 and 2016 and brought the land fondly called “Salone” by its citizens to its knees. Of the three most affected countries – Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone – the later was the worst hit economical­ly. Human lives apart, the total impact of the monster in the sub-region amounted to $2.8 billion. Sierra Leone alone accounted for nearly two billion. The fear of travelling to the country and receiving travellers and goods from there was palpable across the world. That meant a huge minus for export trade, drastic drop in local revenue collection, fiscal dilemma, threatened social infrastruc­ture and a psychologi­cally and emotionall­y fragile populace. (The resurgence of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo now recalls the travails and triumphs of Sierra Leone during Koroma’s period in office). Last year’s mudslides in the Freetown suburbs that claimed hundreds of lives and homes were indeed a dark icing on an already depressing situation. Yet, Sierra Leone did not only stay afloat, its challenges notwithsta­nding, it continued to march towards a more prosperous future, albeit painfully.

The former president owes the world materials that show how he successful­ly steered the ship of state in those trying times that contested viciously for the very soul of his beloved country. He appears to fit into the requiremen­ts for the prestigiou­s Mo Ibrahim Prize for Achievemen­t in African Leadership: “… democratic­ally elected presidents; served their constituti­onally mandated term; demonstrat­ed exceptiona­l leadership; developed their countries; lifted people out of poverty and paved the way for sustainabl­e and equitable prosperity….”

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