UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Military



USIS Washington File

18 May 2000

Sierra Leonean Ambassador Calls Jackson Mission Positive

(Ambassador Leigh speaks at Freedom Forum) (480)
By Jim Fisher-Thompson
Washington File Correspondent
Washington -- A special diplomatic mission to West Africa led by the
Reverend Jesse Jackson is a step in the right direction toward
resolving conflict in Sierra Leone, that country's ambassador to the
United States, John Leigh, said May 17.
Speaking at a luncheon sponsored by the Freedom Forum just hours
before Jackson and his party left for the continent, Leigh said, "I
believe Reverend Jackson is going to make a positive contribution
towards the resolution of the Sierra Leone crisis."
Jackson, special envoy of the president and the secretary of state for
the promotion of democracy in Africa, was asked by President Clinton
to seek the release of about 500 U.N. peacekeepers taken hostage last
week by members of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Liberian
President Charles Taylor has since attained the release of about 157
of them and it is hoped with the subsequent arrest of RUF leader Foday
Sankoh by Sierra Leonean police that more releases will follow.
Jackson, accompanied by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs Howard Jeter, former special U.S. envoy for Liberia,
will first stop in Abuja, Nigeria, where the two will confer with top
government officials about a regional response to the Sierra Leonean
crisis. Through May 22, additional stops are planned for Monrovia,
Freetown, Bamako, and Conakry.
Criticizing the diversion of world attention and resources away from
Sierra Leone because of other crises like Kosovo, Leigh said he was
pleased to see the attention the U.S. government is giving his nation.
"The U.S. is doing diplomacy there by sending Reverend Jackson, who is
speaking to all the parties," he said.
The U.S. government can also further peace in Sierra Leone, he said,
by "supporting a return of ECOMOG back into Sierra Leone and working
with the British and strengthening U.N peacekeeping forces" there.
Another important thing the United States can do, Leigh said, is "to
leash [President] Charles Taylor [of Liberia] ... and bring him under
control." Taylor, Leigh said, has influence over RUF and its diamond
resources, which the diplomat said are fueling the current fighting.
He stressed that the conflict is not really a civil war at all, but
rather "is about diamonds and nothing else."
Leigh said Jackson must emphasize to Taylor that exploiting Sierra
Leone's diamonds is "totally against the world order."
As for RUF, Leigh agreed with South African journalist Allister
Sparks, who told luncheon guests that "this is not a political
movement at all," and the "good news" is that RUF's leader Foday
Sankoh was arrested earlier in the day in Freetown.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list