51st Independence Anniversary
Broadcast to the Nation
By His Excellency the President
Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma
April 27, 2012
Today
we are celebrating the 51st anniversary of our independence. This is
also the very first year of our journey into a future in which we have
collectively vowed to become an advanced economy and a donor nation.
This is the major aspiration for the coming decades that the people of
this country have affirmed during the Sierra Leone Conference on
Development and Transformation earlier this year. God has blessed us
with the resources to achieve this aspiration; from Lunsar in the North
to Tongo in the East; from the rutile mines in the South to the great
beaches in the West, this country can create the wealth to achieve this
goal. Nothing is beyond the reach of a resolute nation. And people of
this beautiful country have on many occasions shown great resolve to
change the course of their history. We resolved to establish a
democratic system in 1996, and against great odds, we did it. We have
resolved to become a prosperous nation, and together we will implement
this Agenda for Prosperity. This is an aspiration that is within our
collective capability to achieve; we are the sons and daughters of
achievers; we are the inheritors of a land dedicated to freedom and
enterprise; and I strongly believe that we will reclaim our greatness
and leading position as makers of history in the West Coast of Africa.
We are laying the foundations; and together we will continue along this chosen path of transformation.
The signs and achievements of this transformation are visible everywhere.
From
Wilkinson Road in Freetown to Tinkonko Road in Bo, from Kombema Road in
Kenema to Tekoh Road in Makeni, we are moving forward with constructing
first class roads. We are constructing streets in Kailahun, Moyamba,
Port Loko, Magburaka, Koidu and Freetown; we have built highways in
every region, and we are building more everywhere. We have finally
secured funding for the construction of the Kono-Matotoka Highway and we
are speeding up modalities to ensure that work commences.
Everywhere you go, you will witness the construction of offices and
workplaces for the men and women transforming this country; from the new
Ministry of Foreign Affairs Building and the Audit Service at Tower
Hill to the Business Plazas of Bo, Kenema and Makeni, this country is
transforming its infrastructure.
District and City Councils everywhere, from Bo to Bonthe, Kono to
Kambia, and Pujehun to Tonkolili, regardless of which party controls
them, are receiving billions of Leones to spend on priority programmes
in their localities. This is what we stand for: inclusive development,
visible development, and development that can be felt and utilized by
the common man and woman.
Our nation still faces enormous challenges. But from mining to
agriculture, more jobs are being created than at anytime in the
country’s history; many more women are going to school than at anytime
before in our country’s history; in the army, judiciary, and other
critical areas of administration, many more women are holding leadership
positions; and many more children, pregnant women and suckling mothers
have access to health facilities than at any time in the country’s
history.
We have put more resources into education; we have significantly
increased the salaries of lecturers and teachers; we are paying for
thousands more to take public examinations. We salute the many teachers
and lecturers who are still standing up for the cherished ideals of
their profession.
We salute the many doctors, nurses and other health professionals who
are true to their oaths to save lives. We applaud their patriotism,
their hard work and their dedication to service. The progress of this
nation also depends on your patriotism. This is the collective warrant
from the people to all frontline workers of the state; from the police
to the teacher to the health worker and traditional authorities; our
democracy warrants that you treat the common man and woman with respect
and dignity. The era of arrogance is over. The patriotic transformations
demand respect for every citizen.
The youths still face challenges, but the National Youth Commission
is starting to implement programmes to give work and training to
thousands of youths; the mining, agricultural and road construction
companies are providing employment opportunities for thousands of young
people. We also salute the large number of youths who are contributing
to the development of this country as traders, mobile phone operatives,
and bike riders. We salute the imams and the pastors ministering
salvation to the people of this country; we applaud the untiring efforts
of the market women, the fitters, the construction workers, the
tailors, engineers, doctors, drivers, the farmers, stone-breakers and
the sand-miners. Sierra Leone belongs to all of us, and together we must
march with patriotic zeal.
Later this year, we will hold national elections. We call on every
Sierra Leonean to stay law abiding, tolerant, and peaceful. That is the
only way we will stay the course of democracy, development and
transformation. The patriotic transformation demands that we repudiate
the men of violence amongst us; that men and women of good will in every
party and region stand up against the extremists and the arrogant
amongst us. This nation is on the move, and we must not be distracted.
Everywhere in the world, our country is being praised for its human
rights record. Since 2007, this country has not carried out any capital
punishment, and the life sentences of those on death row have been
commuted. This country has since 2007 not jailed any journalists; this
country has protected free expression on its radio stations, television
stations and newspapers; this country’s Human Rights Commission has been
given an A status by the United Nations; this country’s security forces
have been praised for their professionalism on peace-keeping missions;
this country has one of the lowest crime rates amongst countries that
have gone through war. This country has shown that with a dedicated
leadership and committed people, so much can be done within a very short
time. We must not allow these gains to be threatened and reversed by
the few extremists and men of violence in the country. This country is
God’s gift to the most tolerant people in the world; this country is the
inheritance of a freedom - loving people; and by God’s grace, this
country is reclaiming its blessings, and we shall fear no evil.
My Fellow Sierra Leoneans, everywhere in the world our country is
being lauded for its developmental strides. Our economy is set to grow
by over 35% this year, about the fastest in the world; our country has
been named as amongst the best ten reformers in the world. We are
attracting quality investors from all over the world; we have created
Agricultural Business Centres everywhere in the country; world class
plantations are being established in Kailahun, Pujehun, Port Loko and
Bombali; we have just re-opened the Marampa Iron Ore Mines that had been
closed for thirty years; the re-established railway line is now
transporting iron ore to the re-activated ports at Port Loko; Sierra
Rutile is increasing its exports; every day new jobs are advertised in
our newspapers; and the prospects for this country becoming an oil
producing nation are very great.
The world we live in is becoming more challenging than ever before.
Since 2007 the price per metric ton of rice and per barrel of oil in
the world has risen astronomically. Presently, international crisis in
the Sudans, the gulf and North Africa are further shooting up the
prices. Shipping costs to transport these commodities to our sub-region
have also increased remarkably. These international increases are not
of our making. But we have as a nation moved to ensure the prices do not
rise as fast as they are doing in the world markets. And we are doing
far more than countries in similar situations in the region. Prices of
rice and petrol are lower here than in many neighboring countries; and
we are continuing to reduce the impact of rising costs on our people by
creating thousands of jobs, providing free health care, buying more
buses, providing electricity, and paying examination fees for our
students.
My Fellow Sierra Leoneans, we acknowledge that development always
comes with its challenges. But we as a people must not allow these
challenges to serve as excuses to engage in violence and other
unpatriotic actions. We must act against those who are intent on
derailing the developmental strides of this nation. This country must
never again be put to shame by the actions of the violent. We, as a
nation are determined to assert our collective aspirations for security,
development and democracy, and nothing will ever distract us from these
patriotic goals.
We, as a people are becoming more determined to live up to the
promise of the historic achievements of our forbearers; we are now more
resolute to bring forth the wealth embedded in our land; we are more
resolved to assert our freedom, our unity and our sense of justice. We
have chosen to make this land better. We have chosen action over theory,
commitment over intention, and progress and development over
stagnation. With a zeal that never tires, we will stay united, we will
stay free, and we will be justified by our faith in the greatness of
this beautiful country.
God bless this land that we love. Congratulations on our 51st Independence Anniversary. God Bless Sierra Leone
Leonenet Web Site:
http://www.leonenet.net--
Amadu Massally
------Well, I will act as the spokesperson
for all those who vainly seek a forum in [SL] from which to make themselves
heard. ~ Thomas Sankara