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Subject:
From:
Beran jeng <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 16 Aug 2001 12:45:59 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Sierra Leoneans stone Strasser


Valentine Strasser finds himself the target of public anger

The Sierra Leone Government is urging people to stop jeering and throwing
stones at former military leader Valentine Strasser.
A government statement said Captain Strasser had been embarrassed by people
throwing stones at him and booing him when he ventured out on the streets of
the capital, Freetown.

"It is a great concern to the nation," the statement said.

Captain Strasser became Africa's youngest head of state when he seized power
in 1992 aged 25, but was overthrown in a bloodless coup four years later.

Peace deal

He was flown to London in handcuffs and went on to study law at Warwick
University as part of a United Nations-brokered peace deal.

However, he didn't complete his course and was refused re-entry to the UK
last year.

Sierra Leoneans had hoped Strasser's coup might end a war that broke out in
1991, but his regime failed to either defeat or reach a deal with the
rebels.

His reaction to an attempted coup by former army officers in December 1992
led to international condemnation.

Nine suspected coup plotters and 17 other prisoners were executed.

Amnesty International has demanded that he stand trial for alleged murder
and torture.

After Strasser's downfall, multiparty elections saw Ahmad Tejan Kabbah
become president.

He was ousted a year later by a coalition of army officers and rebels of the
Revolutionary United Front, only to return in the following year after
military intervention by Nigeria.

Rebels have now begun disarming under UN supervision following a ceasefire
last November.


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