Tag: Julius Maada Bio

  • Tinubu receives Sierra Leone’s President Bio

    Tinubu receives Sierra Leone’s President Bio

    President Bola Tinubu on Friday evening received President Julius Maada Bio of Sierra Leone at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Although details of the meeting were not disclosed, it was believed to have focused on regional peace, security, and economic integration within West Africa.

    President Bio, who currently chairs the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), succeeded President Tinubu in June.

    Friday’s talks came four months after Bio assumed the chairmanship of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government.

    Read Also: 2027: We’ll deliver 15m votes for Tinubu – Support group

    On his verified X handle, the Sierra Leonean leader said he arrived in Abuja to speak at Baze University’s 12th convocation and engage African business leaders.

    Bio’s visit marks his first official trip to Nigeria since assuming the ECOWAS chairmanship.

    Both leaders are expected to strengthen cooperation on democracy promotion, counterterrorism, and sustainable development across ECOWAS member states.

    (NAN)

  • Nigeria, Sierra Leone vow to strengthen ties

    Nigeria and Sierra Leone on Wednesday agreed to further strengthen ties between the two countries.

    President of Sierra Leone, Julius Maada Bio, spoke with State House correspondents after paying a courtesy visit to President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, he was in Nigeria to appreciate the support of Nigeria to Sierra Leone during its difficult times and its recently held election.

    He said “Nigeria and Sierra Leone are two sister countries that have enjoyed a great relationship spanning over several years and this relationship has been tasted severally.

    Read Also: Jonathan congratulates Sierra Leone’s new President

    “I came today to express our country’s gratitude to the Federal republic of Nigeria for standing by us during our time of need, when we had the civil war.

    “This is my first time in Nigeria after I was elected. I’m here on this courtesy call to renew our bond of friendship and to see how we can deepen this relationship which is mutually beneficial,” President Bio said.

    He said his discussion with President Buhari centered on health, security trade and movement of people within the two countries.

    He also said the two leaders were concerned about the Ebola issue in Democratic Republic of Congo and preventive measures are being taken to prevent the spread of the deadly disease.

  • Sierra Leone’s new president calls on rival not to challenge results

    Sierra Leone’s new president, Julius Bio has called on thw All People’s Congress (APC) candidate, Samura Kamarathe to drop a legal challenge against the result, and hinted he might offer him a role in government.

    Bio was declared winner late on Wednesday with 51.81 per cent of votes and was sworn in hours later, but Kamara,
    who polled 48.19 per cent, said the vote was marred by fraud and he would challenge the result.

    “I’ll very much encourage him to move away from that path and come,” Bio told Reuters in an interview.

    “He is a resource. He has the expertise and the experience. And I think we can put those to work in addition to
    all that we have to make sure that Sierra Leone is a better place.”

    Though he stopped short of saying so, Bio’s remarks suggested he sought to bring Kamara, a former foreign affairs
    minister, into his government in order to placate him.

    While he won the presidential poll, in a parliamentary election held at the same time, Bio’s Sierra Leone Peoples
    Party won only 47 of the 132 seats.

    Kamara’s APC got 67, a slim majority.

    Bio said: “There are certain institutional restraints that are not just going to let me do things the way I want
    to do them.

    “This is not a military government and I do acknowledge that and accept the limitations.”

    Bio briefly ruled Sierra Leone as head of a military junta in 1996.

    He declined to comment on accusations of abuses by that junta, which was accused of executing soldiers from the
    previous regime, saying he had addressed this in the past.

    Read Also: Opposition’s candidate, Julius Bio wins Sierra Leone’s presidential poll

    Interviewed later by Reuters, Kamara also sounded conciliatory, though he declined to say whether he would work
    with Bio, and insisted the litigation would go ahead.

    But he recalled when he had briefly worked with Bio, when the latter was head of the junta.

    “Julius Maada Bio and I have worked … together,” he said, adding: “I have a passion to serve Sierra Leone at
    any time.”

    The vote to replace Ernest Koroma, who could not run again for president due to term limits, was largely
    peaceful – a relief for a country of seven million people which suffered a civil war in the 1990s that was
    fueled by the diamond trade and notorious for its mutilations and drugged-up child soldiers.

    Bio will have to work fast to reverse years of economic decline. Just as Sierra Leone was booming in the early part
    of this decade, the world’s deadliest Ebola epidemic and a global slump in commodity prices, particularly for
    its main export, iron ore, torpedoed the economic recovery.

    Bio said he would seek to make Sierra Leone less reliant on natural resources, investing instead in “human
    capital” – in particular by introducing universal free primary education.

    “You ask a Sierra Leonean ‘what do we have?’, they talk about diamond, gold. They’ve never seen it, never
    benefited from it.

    “We have to, as a state, be responsible to make sure that those who can’t afford it at least can have the basic
    education,” he said.

    NAN

     

  • Sierra Leone candidate Kamara to challenge presidential runoff result

    Presidential candidate of the All People’s Congress (APC), Samura Kamara on Thursday threatened to challenge the outcome of the presidential runoff.

    Meanwhile, Kamara has refused to congratulate President-elect Julius Maada Bio.

    He stated that the National Electoral Commission failed to look into complaint made by the APC, regarding voting in the eastern part of the country, stronghold of the Sierra Leone People’s Party.

    He was speaking on the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation radio, where he called on supporters of the party to exercise patience and allow peace to rein.

    Read Also:  Kamara eyes Elephants’ upset

    The presidential runoff election was contested between Maada Bio of the SLPP and Samura Kamara of the APC.

    Maada emerged winner with 51.81 per cent of votes while Kamara secured 48.19 per cent.

    Julius Maada Bio has been sworn in as the president of the country and his inauguration would take place anytime soon.

    The APC was the ruling party before this election.

    NAN

  • Voters in Sierra Leone go to polls for presidential run-off

    Voters in Sierra Leone flocked to the polls on Saturday to elect new president in a hotly contested run-off vote between opposition leader Julius Maada Bio and ruling party candidate Samura Kamara.

    Bio, of the opposition Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) won a razor-thin victory in the first round of voting on March 7 with 43.3 per cent, while his rival Kamara received 42.7 per cent.

    Kamara, 67, the candidate of the ruling All People’s Congress (APC) promised continuity and economic recovery, while Bio pledged to end corruption and offer free education.

    A run-off election was set for March 31 as no candidate reached the 55 per cent of votes needed to win outright.

    Meanwhile, some 3.18 million Sierra Leoneans are eligible to vote.

    President Ernest Bai Koroma is leaving office after serving two five-year terms, the constitutional limit, but inundated with claims of corruption and mismanagement from the opposition.

    Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown was calm on Saturday, with few cars on the road and police outside polling stations to prevent any disruptions.

    “All we need is just peaceful elections and I hope in the name of God, everything is going to be calm and fine today so that we can go on with our normal activities,” Yainkain Kargbo, a trader and mother of four, said.

    According to her, the people of Sierra Leone are tired of waiting for the election to be over.

    Diamond-rich but poverty-stricken Sierra Leone was ravaged by years of brutal civil war in the 1990s, only to be hit hard by the deadly ebola virus in 2014.