Millions of people lined up to vote in Sierra Leone in the first election since United Nations peacekeeping efforts ended two years ago, ready to choose the first new president since the country’s brutal civil war in 2002 and close a grim chapter in the country’s history.
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“The real significance of this election is in its conduct and not really in its outcome,”
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The election is a bookend to a violent era that turned Sierra Leone, a hilly, palm-fringed country roughly the size of South Carolina on the southern coast of West Africa, into an indelible symbol of human brutality.
The war began in 1991, when a band of rebels led by a retired soldier and journalist named Foday Sankoh attacked from a jungle hideout in western Liberia. Trained in Libya’s insurgent camps and backed by the Liberian warlord Charles G. Taylor, Mr. Sankoh’s Revolutionary United Front unleashed a tide of death and misery that would leave hundreds of thousands of people homeless, maimed, raped or dead.
The war’s signature atrocity — the amputation of hands, feet and ears — arose in part as a bloody answer to a campaign slogan in the 1996 election, when Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, who was elected president that year and is to retire after this election, told his supporters that the future was in their hands.
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But many of the problems that led to the war persist. The vast gulf between the richest citizens — who control political power, and the country’s diamonds and other resources — and the poor masses remains larger than ever. Efforts to tackle endemic corruption have foundered as entrenched political elites have thwarted attempts to loosen their grip on the country’s purse strings.
Most troubling of all is the country’s huge generation gap. Unemployment among young people — more than half of Sierra Leone’s population is under the age of 35 — stands at 80 percent.
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