Sierra Leone leader Ernest Bai Koroma has sacked his
vice-president, he announced, in a bid to turn the page on a political crisis
that raised fears over the country’s stability.
Samuel Sam-Sumana’s dismissal comes almost two weeks after he
was expelled from the governing All People’s Congress (APC) and went into
hiding, claiming he was in danger and asking the United States to grant him
asylum.
“I have taken note of the decision of the APC,” Koroma said
in a statement read out intermittently on state radio overnight Tuesday to
Wednesday.
“The public will recall, and I have also taken note of the
fact that… Alhaji Samuel Sam-Sumana sought asylum from a foreign embassy,
demonstrating a willingness to abandon his duties and office as vice president
of our beloved republic.”
Koroma said he was relieving Sam-Sumana “of the duties and
from the office of vice president of Sierra Leone with immediate effect”.
The president said he was in talks with his party to
“shortly” find a replacement for Sam-Sumana, his running mate in his successful
2007 and 2012 presidential campaigns.
The APC announced on March 6 it had kicked out Sam-Sumana
for fomenting violence in his home district of Kono, deceit, fraud and
threatening key party officials.
He was accused of lying about being a Muslim, inventing a
university degree from the US, attempting to start up a breakaway party and
keeping “over 100 groups of thugs to unleash violence against party people in
the Kono district”.
Witnesses described how heavily-armed men entered his
hilltop home in Freetown while he was away on Saturday and disarmed his
security guards, leaving with bundles of files.
He denied all charges and fled into hiding, claiming he
feared for his life and applying to the US Embassy in Freetown for asylum,
according to his aides.
The government has repeatedly dismissed claims that the vice
president is in any danger, claiming his fears for his life were “ludicrous”.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Drop your comments