Liberia’s former interim President Dr. Amos Sawyer is heading a 55-member ECOWAS Observation Mission in neighbouring Sierra Leone. An ECOWAS press release said over the weekend.
An ECOWAS Mission of 15 Long-Term Observers (LTOs) is already in Sierra Leone for the country’s March 7 presidential, parliamentary and local council elections.
The team is part of a larger 55-member ECOWAS Observation Mission led by Prof. Amos Sawyer, who will be arriving along with the Short-term observers.
According to the press release, the regional observers will be deployed across Sierra Leone’s 16 administrative districts for the elections being contested by 16 presidential candidates, including two women, and more than 700 contenders for the 144-seat unicameral parliament.
One hundred and thirty-two of the lawmakers will be elected directly complemented by 12 slots for Paramount Chief Members of Parliament.
The constitution provides that a presidential candidate must obtain at least 55% of the votes for an outright win otherwise the two frontrunners will square up in a run-off vote within two weeks after the declaration of the results of the first round.
The ECOWAS Mission, which includes legal, elections, constitutional, gender, civil society and media experts, and secretariat staff of the ECOWAS Network of Electoral Commissions (ECONEC) are deployed by the ECOWAS Commission in line with the regional protocol on democracy and good governance, which mandates ECOWAS to support member States holding elections.
The Mission is supported by a Technical team from the ECOWAS Commission.
ECOWAS, after contributing to end the 11-year civil war in Sierra Leone has continued to support the consolidation of peace and democracy in the country, which has remained on the bottom of the Human Development Index with some 70% of its estimated seven million population under the poverty line.
This is happening in spite of Sierra Leone being blessed with abundant mineral resources including diamond, bauxite, titanium and gold.
This is the fourth multi-party election in Sierra Leone since the end of its civil war in 2002, but the first time that authorities in the country would be entirely responsible for the electoral process following the departure of the UN Mission in 2014.
ECONEC conducted a Needs Assessment Mission to Sierra Leone in July 2017 led Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, President of its governing board and Chair of the National Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) Nigeria.
This was followed by an advocacy that resulted in the pledge of some logistic support to Sierra Leone by Nigeria.
ECOWAS has also carried out a pre-election fact-finding Mission to Sierra Leone which involved consultations with various stakeholders to ensure peaceful, credible and successful elections for the consolidation of peace and democracy in the country and the region.