“We can no longer attribute the President’s
decisions to sheer ignorance”
Kelfala M. Kallon
15 December 2011
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My initial reactions to President
Koroma’s economic policies, which I
summarized in an article titled "APC
KohKhnomimics" in December 2007, was
that the economic missteps of his
government were borne out of ignorance
of modern economic principles, and an
adherence to economic fetishism that
held that the first law of economics
(that "there is no such thing as a free
lunch") was actually wrong. |
Because the President has competent economists (at
least on paper) on his team, I concluded then that
the only rational explanation for his government’s
early economic irrationality, had to do with a
belief by the President that scarcity, indeed does
not exist, and therefore one can waste resources
without any real impact on the real sector of the
economy.
Moreover, like most Sierra Leoneans and members of
the International Community, all of whom the
President apparently duped, I also partially
believed the lies we were fed by the APC propaganda
machine (which is very good) that President Koroma
actually meant well for the country.
I therefore expected that after a few months of
apprenticeship on the job, President Koroma would
translate his good intentions into measurable
improvements in the quality of life of the average
Sierra Leonean.
With this mindset, it appeared quite reasonable to
explain the initial missteps of the Koroma
government - such as the Income Electrix fiasco, to
have been borne out of his inexperience on the job.
However, the persistence of these missteps
throughout his tenure, especially the NASSIT Ferry
boondoggle and the lucrative government contracts
that have been miraculously landing in the laps of
the President’s siblings, who had no prior
entrepreneurial experience, clearly suggest that the
"apprenticing" hypothesis is no longer tenable.
Simply put, we can no longer attribute the
President’s decisions to sheer ignorance of how to
best run a progressive state.
With the help of literature on the economics of
dictatorships, I am now convinced that to President
Koroma - like the man he promised to emulate,
President Stevens, economic growth and the
prosperity of the average Sierra Leonean are at odds
with his political and economic interests.
According to the economics of dictatorship,
dictators and would-be dictators need a poor and
desperate population because they are most
susceptible to being bought with handouts. Hence,
dictators and would-be dictators see extreme poverty
and economic deprivation among their people as being
synonymous with their political interests.
Therefore, encouraging, aiding, and abetting
economic inefficiency through corruption and misuse
of state resources, are indispensable weapons in a
dictator’s and would-be dictator’s arsenal for
impoverishing his people.
While the economic deprivation of the general
populace promotes dependence on the leader’s gifts,
corruption among his relatives and friends, serves
as one of the safest ways of generating the
resources to pay-off people into acquiescence with
the dictator’s or would-be dictator’s objectives.
In this regard, I believe that President Koroma
meant every word when he proudly promised to take
the country back to the patrimonial state of
Presidents Stevens and Momoh. And as most Sierra
Leoneans are painfully aware, this was an era when
all state institutions were loyal to only the
leader, not to the state.
Consequently, political entrepreneurship,
corruption, and the use of state resources to make
the average Sierra Leonean believe that his or her
economic destiny was tied with those of the APC
leadership, were perfected into a science during
that period.
As a result, a forced penury was imposed on the
people in order to bind them to the APC leadership.
With this model of leadership copied by President
Koroma, it is not by accident or the effects of
“Global” that Sierra Leoneans are immensely poorer
today than they were, when he took over the reins of
government a little over four years ago.
On the contrary, I am now convinced that our current
miseries are the result of a calculated political
arithmetic, which was hatched and perfected in the
highest echelons of the APC government, to make
Sierra Leoneans so poor that we become dependent on
the President’s handouts for survival.
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Consequently, robust economic growth,
which the last SLPP government
delivered, has been sacrificed by the
Koroma government in this political
calculation - in much the same way as
President Stevens confessed in his
biography, 'What Life Has Taught Me'
that he had sacrificed the economy for
political expediency, and hoped that his
successors would reverse that order.
(Apparently, President Koroma did not
read that part of Sheki’s book.) |
Given my new perspective on the Koroma presidency, I
am not as surprised as many Sierra Leoneans
obviously are, that his Vice President brazenly
confirmed what The New People Online newspaper has
been reporting all along, that: 'he is knee deep in
corruption'.
It would be however insincere for anyone to set the
Vice President as an exception to the (APC) rule,
because any Sierra Leonean who lived through Stevens
and Momoh vintages of the APC, know the APC - both
as a party and government, to be synonymous with
corruption.
It now appears that our development partners, who
did not really have a good read on the APC character
prior to September 17, 2007, are now beginning to
realize what we have known all along.
For example, in a December 1, 2009 US Embassy cable,
Mr. Glenn Fedzer, then Deputy Chief of Mission,
summed up the APC character as one in which "the
money in your pocket and your standing in the APC
hierarchy ultimately determine whether or not you
have carte blanche to profit hugely and blatantly
from your government position."
As such, he concluded, "despite claims of commitment
to good governance principles," the APC were
"increasingly showing a deeper commitment" to
"corruption and greed at the highest levels.”
And with respect to the Vice President particularly,
in that same US cable, Mr. Fedzer noted that the
Vice President is "known for corruption" and "for
abusing his position and taking bribes."
However, he continued; the Vice President "remains
in place because [President] Koroma believes he
needs Sam Sumana to win the Kono vote."
Thus, the Aljazeera exposé merely confirmed the very
astute observations of The New People Online and the
American diplomat. It also demonstrates that this
historical APC commitment to corruption and greed
goes as far as the presidency.
This is evidenced, firstly, by the fact that in
spite of the public ban on timber exports, that this
President had imposed, the President’s Office itself
saw it fit to secretly lift the ban - just as Vice
President Sam Sumana had predicted in his meeting
with Aljazeera’s undercover reporters.
It is also interesting that one of the interlocutors
in the Timbergate saga - Alex Mansaray - formerly of
Somerset, New Jersey, was a key financier of the
APC’s election effort in 2007. Hence, he should be
very well known to President Koroma.
That he has now reportedly become an interlocutor
between the Vice President and scrupulous
businessmen - allegedly charging 2,000 US dollars as
'tell-ado', suggests that what happened in the Vice
President’s Office might be an "Operation Pay
Yourself" that the APC have put in place for people
who "invested" in their 2007 election campaign to
recoup their "investments".
It could also be a slick APC attempt to raise funds
for the President’s vote-buying-induced gift giving,
while at the same time providing him with plausible
deniability. Therefore, setting up such a scheme in
the Vice President’s office so that he becomes the
fall guy, should it come to light - should not
surprise anyone.
Thirdly, the whole thing could have been set up as
an inside APC intrigue to oust the Vice President,
without incurring the wrath of Kono voters,
especially after the Musa Tarawalli approach of
shooting it out with the Vice President’s Kono
supporters, had failed to dislodge the latter.
However, regardless of which of these explanations
one accepts, the fact remains that, although he
appears to be guilty as sin, the Vice President is
not the lone wolf in this Timbergate scheme. This
conclusion is laid bare in another US Embassy cable
(July 8, 2008) titled "Corrupt Ministry of Defense
Deal Threatens SL Aid."

Defence minister - Palo Conteh |
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That cable revealed a corrupt deal that
the Minister of Defense - Palo Conteh
brokered with Armyland Inc., in
collaboration with his then Chief of
Defense Staff, Major-General
Nelson-Williams, and his assistant -
Brigadier Komba Mondeh, that would have
had Armyland Inc. supply "the Ministry
of Defense with 10 years of ammunition,
paid for on a per unit (i.e. each bullet
bought individually) basis, at a cost to
the government of USD 8.3 million
dollars." |
This unusual deal of buying ammunition by the
bullet, instead of wholesale as any sensible
government would, would have resulted "in over USD
2,000,000 in profits to be shared among the brokers,
identified as Armyland Inc., and the Ministry of
Defense (MOD) representatives," the US cable noted.
It is amazing that President Koroma is reported in
the US cable to have approved this corrupt deal,
without any input from his National Security
Council. This definitely inspires two unflattering
conclusions about the President:
1) that he has a poor sense of judgment and
therefore has no business being President; and/or
2) that his government uses such deals in order to
raise resources for his re-election bid.
His legendary gift-giving, since he became
President, provides ample support for a hypothesis
that the resources used in these political bribery
schemes, might have come from such schemes as Palo
Conteh’s corrupt deal.
What is most significant about this unusual deal, is
the fact that it was only cancelled because the
British High Commissioner threatened to pull the
plug on the erstwhile London Consultative Group
Meeting (which was dear to the President) if the
deal went through.
This clearly reveals the level of callousness of
this government and the extent to which they would
go to line their pockets - even at the risk of
sacrificing the security interests of the country.
One would have thought that if the war taught us
only one lesson, it would have been that the
corruption of our armed forces for whatever reason
can lead to very serious national security
consequences.
In that regard, President Koroma’s approval of his
Defense Minister’s scheme (assuming that it actually
originated at Cockerill and not State House), should
disabuse anyone of the baseless APC propaganda that
the President truly cares about the country.
Finally, when Lord John Maynard Keynes, the most
influential economist of the 20th century was
accused of changing his mind frequently, he
reportedly responded that when reason and facts
convince him that he is wrong, he changes his mind
unapologetically.
Similarly, I have realized that I made a mistake
when I concluded that President Koroma’s irrational
economic policies were the product of economic
fetishism. I have since learned that the President’s
decisions are borne out of an intention to run
Sierra Leone into the ground, his claim to the
contrary notwithstanding, in order to bind voters to
his handouts.
Because I misread his true intentions and therefore
misinterpreted the causes of the economic
irrationality of his policies, I therefore publicly
apologize to the President - His Excellency Dr.
Ernest Bai Koroma.
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