Demo-Crazy in Sierra Leone Parliament: "DEMOCRACY BY FORCE"!
Culled From cocorioko
Demo-Crazy in
Parliament
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Demo-Crazy
in Parliament
The attempt to elect a Speaker – second in line for the presidency – and
Deputy Speaker during the First Session of the Fifth Parliament of the Second
Republic on Tuesday April 24 and Wednesday April 25 can best be described by
William Butler Yeat’s poem, The Second Comingpopularized
in part by novelist, Albert Chinua Achebe:
“Turning and turning in the widening gyre * The falcon cannot hear
the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere * The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, * While the worst are full of passionate intensity”.
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere * The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, * While the worst are full of passionate intensity”.
Lost in the jungle after the bloody food fight in and around Parliament
is the fact that the outgoing All Peoples Congress (APC) wanted change. The
incoming Sierra Leone Peoples Party (SLPP), the oldest continuously running
political party in West Africa, wanted change. The newly begotten National
Grand Coalition (NGC) advocated for change. And the Coalition for Change (C4C)
wanted, what else? Change, of course. So they all came together in Parliament
to carry out the will of the electorate for change. But according to Ghanaian
novelist, Ayi Kwei Armah, Sierra Leoneans and the rest of the world soon
realized that “The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born”.
REV. ALFRED SAM-FORAY
At issue was whether sixteen parliamentarians of the All Peoples
Congress should be sworn-in and take part in the First Session of Parliament.
Earlier on an interim court injunction had been issued against the APC MPs on
behalf of the SLPP. These members were subsequently asked to leave the well of
Parliament. They refused stating that no ruling on whether they were
disqualified to be in Parliament had been issued. A fracas ensued and suddenly
there was an appearance of militarized security forces with riot batons to keep
order – or perhaps one might argue, to intimidate members of Parliament? And
who ordered all these security forces into the hallowed halls of Parliament
anyway? It is believed that in the absence of the outgoing and prospective APC
candidate for Speaker of Parliament, the onus fell on the obviously young and
largely inexperienced bureaucrat, the Clerk of Parliament, the Hon. Paran Umar
Tarawally, to call in the riot police with the usual “orders from
above”. I do not expect that such orders come from God Almighty. God
is presently too busy trying to keep President Donald Trump of the United
States from wiping Syria off the map for using chemical weapons against its own
citizens. Whoever gave these orders must have confused Abraham Lincoln’s “government
of the people, by the people and for the people” with government by brute
force. Certainly the Clerk of Parliament whose job is to ensure that members
thereof have all the amenities, tools and personal safety necessary for the
smooth running of the House appeared to be well over his head to carry out his
orders from above. According to management expert, Professor Laurence J. Peter,
people keep getting promoted until they reach their level of incompetence. This
is known in organizational management as the Peter Principle. Mr. Tarawally
besides being unable to keep order and serenity in the House, was reportedly
extraordinarily arrogant and outright impolite to Opposition MP’s ordering some
to sit down and be quiet even when it was their turn to speak. He seemed quite
oblivious of the fact that according to Section 73(1) of the Constitution, the
President himself is a Member of Parliament.
Also lost in the jungle warfare masquerading as parliamentary democracy
were the reasons Parliament was meeting in the first place. Sections 79(1) and
80(1) of the 1991 Constitution of Sierra Leone stipulates that at the first
seating of Parliament following a Dissolution, Parliament shall elect a Speaker
and Deputy Speaker, respectively. And following a General Election, the first
order of Parliament, of course, is to legalize itself by swearing in its
members. But the Constitution does not require a member to be sworn in before
voting for the Speaker or Deputy Speaker. According to Section 83,
“…a member may, before taking an oath, take part in the election of
a Speaker”.
So there was absolutely no constitutional mandate to throw the
petitioned APC MP’s out of Parliament. It was uncivil and unnecessary vexation
of the spirit. In any case, before getting to these noble missions, MP’s and
supporters of the two senior political parties, the APC and SLPP known in other
circles as Alusine and Alhasan (twins of different mothers) decided to resort
to some form of blood sacrifice in full view of the hallowed burial places of
Sir Milton Margai, Father of the nation, and Siaka Probyn Stevens, father of
the Republic. Then they proceeded to possibly violate the very Constitution
they were been sworn-in to preserve and to protect. Section 79(2) of the
Constitution says,
The
Speaker shall be elected by a resolution in favour of which there are cast the
votes of not less than two-thirds of the Members of Parliament.(Emphasis are mine).
Accordingly, in order to elect the Speaker and Deputy Speaker, a quorum
consisting of two-thirds of ALL 144 MP’s including twelve Paramount Chief
Members of Parliament needed to be present to vote for the resolution. If my
numbers are correct, then there should have been, according to Section 79(2) of
the Constitution, a minimum of ninety-five (95) members, two-thirds of the
entire membership – not two-thirds of members present at the time – would have
been required to form a quorum for the purpose of electing the Speaker and
Deputy Speaker. But on the day in question only seventy-six (76) members were
present. And in full view of the whole world, the Constitution was subverted
and the Speaker and Deputy Speaker were elected with far less than the required
quorum. What bothers me most is that the only cabinet member presently
approved, Attorney-General & Minister of Justice, Charles Francis Margai,
who suffered so much under APC unconstitutionality is now the very person
overseeing this blatant violation of the national constitution under his father
and uncle’s “party of lawyers”, the SLPP. In protest the entire parliamentary
delegation of the National Grand Coalition (NGC) including Hon.Foday Mario
Kamara (Const.057), Hon. Bai Sama Kamara (060) Hon. Abdul Titus Kamara (061),
and Hon. Kandeh Kolleh Yumkella (062), Leader of the NGC, abstained from voting.
And I will resist the temptation to ask why 75 percent of the NGC delegation
from four different constituencies of Kambia are all surnamed Kamara, or why
His Excellency the President, Minister of Finance and the Honorable Attorney
General & Minister of Justice are all ancestrally from Bonthe District.
Probably just a happenstance of birth or parentage. Members of the Coalition
for Change voted in concert with the ruling SLPP to elect the Speaker and
Deputy Speaker. As a result, the NGC parliamentarians became either the pariah
or the conscience of Parliament, depending on where one stood on the
constitutional provision for parliamentary quorum electing the Speaker and
Deputy Speaker.
Throughout this unnecessarily long and tedious election process both APC
and SLPP behaved badly – very badly. There was extreme rudeness at SLPP
Headquarters such as the well-documented insult and assault on the mother of
now Member of Parliament from Kambia, Hon. Kandeh Kolleh Yumkella. There were
several reports of stabbings and fracases between APC and SLPP members in the
Western Area leading to loss of life. There was the attack on then presidential
candidate and now His Excellency the President Julius Maada Bio in Kamalu,
Karene District, the home of then APC presidential candidate, Samura Kamara.
Mr. Bio is said to have escaped only by resorting to his former military
ingenuity, the sort of things legends are built on. Then there was the most
famous, (or infamous) stabbing death of one Daddy George, a supporter of former
SLPP flagbearer aspirant and former SLPP Chairman, John Oponjo Benjamin. The
alleged culprit was said to be a ward of President Bio. All of the above
misbehavior, violence and assault on individual liberties were done with
impunity. Not much disciplinary actions were taken by the leaders of either the
APC or SLPP. It is as though none of the leaders of these chronically
ill-mannered supporters of these two ancient political parties ever heard of Bo
Government Secondary School, where I am told, Manner Maketh Man.
Both the APC and SLPP cheated, stole votes, stuffed missing and
re-appeared ballot boxes, and possibly hacked into the database of the National
Electoral Commission to change votes many of which came in different from what
was posted at the poling stations. Their actions were documented and reported
to international elections observers and nothing of consequence was done about
it. Now that William Yeats “ceremony of innocence is drowned” and things appear
to have fallen apart in Parliament suddenly the conscience of the international
community is awakened. Since then a high level delegation from ECOWAS-UNOWAS
has visited Sierra Leone with the aim of returning things to normalcy in
Parliament. And as a result, all sixty-eight APC MPs have returned to Parliament.
In my opinion, the honorable Clerk of Parliament, should relinquish his office
for the unnecessary vexation of our national spirit.
At no time in my nearly seven decades as a natural born citizen of this
great country have I seen the extreme tribalism and regionalism as was
practised by both APC and SLPP in the past elections. The results
were obvious. People in Kono voted for native son and deposed Vice President,
Samuel Sam-Sumana. The South-East voted 95 percent for Brig. (Retd.) Julius
Maada Bio of Bonthe District. Nearly 70 percent of Kambia District and a
significant number of other Northerners voted for native son, Kandeh Kolleh
Yumkela. The rest of the North voted for their other native son, Samura Kamara
of the APC.
Now the elections are over and done with. The President, Vice President,
members of Parliament and local government officials are either in their
respective offices or waiting to take office. We can only hope that those who
lost will have the courage to work with the victors to carry the burden of the
extreme poverty and deprivation known as Sierra Leone to better and more
prosperous days ahead. We also hope that those who won realize with humility
that less than sixty percent of the adult population of this country voted for
them. That no one party or individual, no matter how talented or capable is
able to move this country from a beggar nation to a more prosperous one. To do
this end, we must at least attempt to practise real democracy – not the madness
the world saw in Parliament on April 25 that can best be called Demo-Crazy. We
must learn to listen to one another, work together and live together as
brothers and sisters That blessing and peace may
descend on us all. As the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. of
blessed memory observed, either we live together as brothers and sisters or
perish together as fools. This is the best we can do after fifty-seven years of
under-development and under-achievement as a nation and as a people.
To our brothers and sisters of the All Peoples Congress, there is a
difference between uncivil rebellion and civil disobedience as practiced by
Mahatma Gandhi of India and Martin Luther King, Jr. of the United States. Both
also paid the ultimate price for what they believed in. To our brothers and
sisters of the Sierra Leone Peoples Party, there is a difference between
democracy – majority rule – and tyranny of the majority. Revenge politics in a
country less than the population of London or New York City is a very, very bad
idea. To our brothers and sisters of the Coalition for Change and the National
Grand Coalition, the reason your people sent you to Parliament was to provide a
real democratic alternative to the two senior and often disharmonious political
parties. Whenever and wherever “The best lack all conviction, while the worst
are full of passionate intensity” as Yeats describes it, the inevitable outcome
is chaos as we saw in Parliament last week much to our collective national
disgrace. You have to stand up for what is right no matter what the cost and
speak for the voiceless. And finally to both APC and SLPP this country does not
belong to either one of you. It belongs to all of us, the people of Sierra
Leone. The time to redeem yourselves for the jangling discords you have both
sown through the tribal and Regional politics you have supervised for the last
57 years of national existence is now.
NATIONAL
CLEANING DAY: As the Republicans said after the
2016 national elections in America, “Happy days are here again”. According to a
recent proclamation by His Excellency President Julius Maada Bio, Saturday May
5, 2018 and every last Saturday of the month thereafter shall be national cleaning
day. In the absence of a seating Parliament, presidential proclamations are the
law of the land. I have no problems with this per se. It has been
said that cleanliness is next to Godliness, although God never said that. In
the Bible, holiness, not cleanliness, is next to Godliness. My problem with
presidential proclamations is that as King Nebuchadnezzar, King Darius, King
Xerxes, King Herold and much later President Abraham Lincoln, whose
Emancipation Proclamation essentially abolished slavery in America, all found
out, Executive Proclamations are irreversible even when somebody has to die in
the process. Americans went to a bloody civil war, John the Baptist was
beheaded, Prophet Daniel was thrown into the lions’ den, and three young Hebrew
men were thrown into a fiery furnace because no one – not even the King – dared
reverse his own proclamation. I was talking to my internet service provider
from Bo. She was crying on the phone suffering from severe stomach pain all
night. She could not go to the hospital, she said, until after national
cleaning at noon. Reminds me of the Scribes and Pharisees in Jesus’ time who
would not permit their animals to be rescued on the Sabbath because, according
to them, God said “Honor the Sabbath Day and keep it holy”. So if people or
animals decided to die during the Sabbath, tough. Speaking of internet service,
I have not been able to get one for almost a week because some hopeless
nincompoop apparently still angry about the outcome of the elections decided to
set fire or otherwise destroy cables of the Sierra Leone Telecommunications
Company (SierraTel) at Jui and Aberdeen, I am told. So if I were to
advise the President I would tell him to declare a National Cleanliness Day – every day of the year –
like they do in Rwanda and America. That will be the day when Sierra Leoneans
will not urinate on the streets, throw garbage in their neighbor’s yard or in
the gutters and streets at night. I lived in the United States for 45 years and
I never heard of national cleaning day in America. If we don’t throw garbage on
the streets and verandas we won’t need six hours a month for national cleaning
in the first place. I advised President Bio – then Brig-Gen. Bio during the
days of the NPRC – that rather than complain about garbage in Sierra Leone, we
should convert it into energy. Guatemala City in Central America converts its
garbage into natural gas used for cooking. Germany imports garbage from Italy
and elsewhere to burn and convert heat and mechanical energies thereof into
electricity. But I am not a politician, neither do I advise governments for a
living. So that is as far as I go. GOD BLESS THE REPUBLIC OF SIERRA LEONE.
Rev. Alfred Munda SamForay
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