Twenty years after the tip of its lethal civil conflict, Sierra Leone is as soon as once more teetering on the precipice of battle.
On November 26, gunmen attacked a navy barracks and a jail within the capital, Freetown, killing no less than 20 individuals, together with 13 troopers, and main the authorities to declare a nationwide curfew. In an obvious try to downplay the severity of the risk going through the nation, the federal government initially mentioned the incident was only a “breach of security”. It now says it was a “failed coup attempt” which meant to “illegally subvert and overthrow a democratically elected government”.
This raises a lot concern in a area the place progress towards democracy appears to be offset by a wave of coups – 4 international locations in West Africa are actually below navy rulers who took energy via coups, and apparently haven’t any speedy plans of returning their international locations to civilian rule.
The armed assault on November 26 was the second “coup attempt” Sierra Leone witnessed within the 5 months because the contentious June 2023 presidential election wherein President Bio narrowly averted a run-off. In August 2023, the federal government had arrested a number of people, together with troopers and civilians, and accused them of planning to stage a coup.
It’s unclear whether or not the 2 “attempted coups” or earlier violent incidents, such because the antigovernment riots in Freetown in August 2022, which claimed over 25 lives, are in any approach linked. Both approach, the plain uptick in violence previously few months and years displays Sierra Leone’s persistent fragility after investing in peace and state-building tasks for 20 years.
Particularly because the 2023 elections, the state has been exhibiting indicators of deepening fragility. The primary opposition All Folks’s Congress (APC) social gathering’s boycott of the federal government (and their seats in parliament) on the grounds that the 2023 presidential elections had been “rigged” have stalled the traditional functioning of presidency and undermined President Julius Maada Bio’s legitimacy.
The 2 sides finally signed an “Agreement for National Unity” below which the APC agreed to take up their seats in parliament, but this didn’t absolutely resolve the scenario, notably as some within the APC continued to voice their dissatisfaction with the phrases of the deal.
This political deadlock, worsened by a biting price of residing disaster and declining residing requirements, possible helped create the house for dissidents to discover alternatives for unseating the federal government.
No organised political group has claimed accountability for or been linked to the assault on November 26, or the alleged coup plot in August, however each incidents occurred within the context of myriad unsettled political grievances associated to the June 2023 presidential election and had been born of the nation’s deeply polarised, partisan politics.
Regardless of having established sound authorized frameworks to assist inclusive democracy, the observe of politics in Sierra Leone is a winner-takes-all affair, and partisan affiliation has but to transcend the ethno-regional divisions that emerged within the political contest to exchange the British colonial administration following independence in 1961. Merely put, reasonably than representing platforms for the articulation of shared visions and insurance policies, the 2 main events – the governing Sierra Leone Folks’s Celebration (SLPP) and the opposition APC – largely characterize platforms for the political expression of shared ethnicity.
This division is regularly mirrored in election outcomes, the controversies surrounding inhabitants censuses, authorities appointment and civil servant recruitment, and promotion mechanisms. Though energy has been transferred twice (2007 and 2018) from one social gathering to a different, dropping an election in Sierra Leone just isn’t simply accepted as a part of a wholesome democratic competitors. It additionally represents dangers to jobs and livelihood, diminished entry to alternatives, and marginalisation of 1’s ethnic group in public life.
This explains why elections in Sierra Leone are fiercely contested. The current 2023 elections introduced this out extra poignantly, difficult notions that Sierra Leone is a pluralistic democracy. Neither the SLPP nor the APC may freely marketing campaign within the conventional heartlands of the opposite. For odd Sierra Leoneans involved about key problems with governance and repair supply as a foundation for political participation, supporting a political social gathering that’s not dominant amongst their kinsmen places them liable to being labelled as traitors.
President Bio’s new cupboard contains comparatively youthful politicians and technocrats from each areas. The inclusion of those younger technocrats, from ethnic teams that hail from each the north and the south of the nation, within the cupboard is probably going a choice taken in response to the controversy surrounding the president’s re-election. But this didn’t show ample to placate the political cabals on both facet. The appointments created an upset in Bio’s personal SLPP as senior grandees with deep connections to the social gathering’s assist base misplaced their cupboard jobs to comparatively unknown younger technocrats. Equally, the APC leaders don’t settle for the appointment of younger northerners to the cupboard as a transfer towards political inclusion; reasonably, they understand these appointments as manoeuvres by Bio to co-opt members of their assist base. Bio, thus, is confronted with the intense activity of sustaining elite stability, along with the common activity of governing and delivering companies for on a regular basis Sierra Leoneans.
The APC’s current determination to just accept the federal government’s legitimacy coupled with the information of the formation of a cross-party electoral reform committee alerts Sierra Leone is lastly on the trail in direction of political stability, but the “coup attempts” and “security breaches” skilled because the June election show that – with out deeper political reforms and social cohesion – safety threats stemming from persistent fragility and excessive political polarisation are prone to linger for some time longer.
The views expressed on this article are the creator’s personal and don’t essentially replicate Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.