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頂禮此六佛可得極特殊極殊勝的功德

分類:方便法門
2007/01/28 10:11



頂禮此六佛可得極特殊極殊勝的功德


南無寶光月殿妙尊音王如來
南無樹根花王如來
南無造王神通[火*僉]花如來
南無月殿清淨如來
南無善寂月音王如來
南無無數精進願首如來

摘錄自(佛說寶網經)


持六尊佛號名。可以在人間享受最極第一妙樂福。現世消災解難。同時也能成就佛法。真可謂兩全其美啊。下面是此六尊佛號。各自在經書中所記載的持佛號的功德。

寶光月殿妙尊音王如來 

族姓子及族姓女學菩薩乘。聞彼佛名不懷猶豫。信佛道眼斯可聞名。所生之處作轉輪王。若佛興世常與相見。睹無央數諸佛至真鹹供養之。淨修梵行獲致神通。進退獨步總持自在。得觀如來睹江河沙等平等正覺。棄捨生死超若干億。劫亦如江河沙。心常安靜未曾忽忘。恆志無上正真之道。無有塵埃不近眾塵。由得自在身如鉤鎖。住在一處具足四事。體如紫金以三十二大人相莊嚴其身。逮八部音聲喻梵天。棄捐八難常得閑靜。

若有篤信於佛道者。和合離別未曾述惕。正使往世犯諸罪釁。應在惡趣燒炙劫數。小遇頭痛眾殃消除。火不能災風不能中。國主王者不能加害。聞如來名未曾生盲。目不痛瞎不聾不啞。聞佛名故不僂不跛。諸龍鬼神及阿須倫餓鬼人與非人不能犯觸。諸魅暴鬼神龍地祇莫不愛樂。假使執持諸佛名者。功德如是不可稱計。

若能誦懷於人中尊所演經典。修淨致尊備諸佛行。臨壽終時其心不亂。尋能睹見億垓諸佛。聞所說法皆能受持。

樹根花王如來

若族姓子及族姓女。聞彼佛名不懷疑結信吾道眼。則於現世至德具足逮受五法。何謂為五。一曰盡除吾我所生之處常值佛世。二曰獲極尊勢轉輪聖王。三曰逮總持法執御經典誠信百千。四曰成三十二大人之相。至得佛道眾行備悉。五曰逮得五通無所蔽礙。是為五。復有五事逮得神通。何謂為五。一曰徹視見於十方粗細大小。學無學聲聞緣覺。上至世尊與眾超越。二曰耳能徹聽。聞萬億地獄餓鬼燒炙飢渴畜生之惱。天上世間安隱苦樂。或惡或好。十方諸佛所說經典。皆悉聞之。三曰身能飛行遍諸佛國。如日現水。雖現往來而無周旋。四曰能知一切眾生心念善惡好醜。有志無志有漏無漏。有心無心慕俗樂道。而悉知之。五曰自知宿命。並見眾生無數劫事古世所生。過去當來今現在事。靡所不通悉識念之。

造王神通[火*僉]花如來     (火*僉)字讀xian,意思是火貌

若族姓子及族姓女學菩薩乘。聞彼佛名不懷狐疑。篤信於道自所宣說。所生之處致演光明三昧正定。尋復隨逮十阿僧祇億百千垓諸三昧門入於六十不可計會億百千垓諸總持門。如海總持寶藏總持。然後不失諸定意法。臨壽終時目見十方各十億垓諸佛正覺。十方諸佛所說法者。皆能啟受不失道教。至成佛道越五百劫生死之難。住於斯學如是不久。尋即成無上正真之道為最正覺

月殿清淨如來
若族姓子及族姓女學菩薩乘。聞彼佛名信樂不疑。敬喜道眼之所頒宣。所生之處常當逮致寶幢三昧。觀見十方各十江沙諸佛國土。亦越若干百千億垓生死之難。立在初學疾逮無上正真之道為最正覺。若有女人聞彼佛名。不懷狐疑有信吾言。所生之處轉女人身得男子形。勸化無數百千眾生。令致無上正真之道。解其音響得不退轉疾成正覺。當為一切講說經典。令致三乘聲聞緣覺菩薩大道
 
善寂月音王如來

若族姓子及族姓女學菩薩乘。聞彼佛名心不懷疑。信我道眼之所解說。所生之處得普光三昧。臨壽終時。具足逮見億百千垓佛現住其前。十方各然。十方諸佛為說經典。聞則受持抱在心懷未曾忽忘。至成佛道。不可計會十倍功勳億百千垓。致不可計無崖底載諸三昧定。不中失定。至成佛道無所蔽礙。十方諸佛皆共建立。在於新學。越九十九億百千劫生死之難。菩薩疾近無上正真之道。不以劫數生死為礙。如自晃出天下大明。(九十九億百千劫是九百九十萬億劫,垓是數目字。古代以百兆數為垓)

無數精進願首如來

若善男子及善女人學菩薩乘。聞彼佛名不懷結網信吾道眼。世世所生未曾懈怠。不習貪慾不戀父母。不著妻子兄弟姊妹。不慕親屬中外種姓。不貪親友交識所知。世世所在身未曾離。三十二相莊嚴其體。少淫怒癡身無疾病。不多憂慮安隱無量。至成佛已。常逮得不可稱計億百千垓功勳之德。

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╭☆╯ ANGELE╭☆╯2009/01/28 23:52 引用

頂禮此六佛可得極特殊極殊勝的功德 ...《詳全文

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《首楞严经》资料站 - 《大佛顶首楞严经》经文、注解、开示、读诵mp3、视频rmvb



首楞严经资料站(slyj.org) 敬告


  鉴于以下两个原因,2010年9月起本站运行方式为:仅提供网站整体打包下载,不再以动态网页方式运行。

  原因一.本站2007年8月创建,至2010年8月,历经3年已基本完成《首楞严经》相关资料收集,并完成了繁体版经文的精确校对。此后,本站已无频繁更新的必要(因为本站重在收集古版资料,现代讲经等不是收录重点)。

  原因二.在原经原典已具备的条件下,教观并进、深入学修便是行者终生事业。频繁触网对于进阶学人也许不是好事,故对本站资料打包为单独的chm/rar。打包文件可随时携带于电脑、mp3等电子媒体,便于资料保存和长时熏修。

www.Slyj.Org打包内容

打包日期2011年12月30日,此次对网站中的难字注音释义进行了多处重要修订。
项目名 内容说明

SlyjOrg全站网页
rar打包文件

包括以下文件:
  全部网页HTML文档
  全部图片Jpeg文档、
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  包含本站收录的《楞严经》之7种古代注解、6种近现代注解、及《卍字续藏》52种注疏。不包括MP3/RM/WMV等大文件。

SlyjOrg重点栏目
chm打包文件

  此chm带"全文检索"和"书签"功能。

  "全文检索"可搜索chm内包含指定关键词的所有文章,便于针对特定经文搜索注解,有利于比较研读和贯通研习各个注解。
  "书签"可以方便返回到自己收藏的文章。

  chm版去掉了有较大争议的某一部注解,其他所有收录内容与rar完全相同。

   网站整体打包文件(rar):http://115.com/file/an4h8lgw

 
  网站整体打包文件(chm):http://115.com/file/c2bdce6v

  点击上面链接后,在打开网页的左下角会看到。根据你的接入商选择最快的一个下载链接即可。

  说明:

  1、可下载到本地任何文件夹。

浏览方式与直接上网一样,但并不需要连接互联网。

    chm下载即可直接察看阅读。如果下载来的chm看不到实际内容,处理办法为:用鼠标右键点击chm文件,选择菜单项“属性”,在“常规”页面中点击“解除锁定”按钮。之后便可正常打开。

    chm全文搜索技巧提示:搜索出来的结果可能排序较乱,此时点击文件列表上面的"标题",所有搜索结果便会按文件标题整齐排序。显示具体文章内容后,若文章较长,则不方便找到关键词,此时可在文章具体内容上面点击一次(以获得焦点),再按Ctrl+F,再输入一次关键词,就可看到文章内该关键词。

    rar解压缩之后,“点击这里开始!”即可浏览所有内容。

  2、若您觉得本站资料有保存的必要,请下载打包文件、保存到个人电脑!若需《楞严经咒》读诵MP3/RMVB/WMV、《大藏经》pdf等大文件,也可直接浏览压缩包,按照相关的提示下载保存。  


 

首楞严经资料站(slyj.org) 宗旨

宗旨综述

  《首楞严经》资料站(www.dfdsly.org 或 www.slyj.org),致力于收集有关《大佛顶首楞严经》(简称《首楞严经》、或《楞严经》)的经文、注音、注解、开示、读诵等相关资料,为广大道友读诵、研学、修习、弘扬《楞严经》提供尽可能多的方便。

  网站以提倡深入佛经原典、学修古来大德高僧之原本著作为建立网站和收录资料的重要原则。同时,本站以汇集来源可靠的相关资料为主要目标。

栏目设置(以下内容已包含在上述打包文件中)

  1、经文原文:

  以html版、Word版、Pdf版三种方式提供楞严经之经文原文。

  html版(网络浏览):目前站长提供的Html原文,已经初步与《乾隆大藏经》和《新修大正大藏经》校对过。并提供一个更细致精校后的《楞严经》原文电子版。

  Word版:Doc格式文件的提供,主要是为了方便电脑打印和离线阅读。

  Pdf版:Pdf版提供11部大藏经中收录的《楞严经》之原文扫描。其文字相对来说准确可靠。提供大家校对确认经文之用。(Pdf版需要安装AcroBat Reader阅读器)

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  文字关,是读诵经典的第一步。很多人听说过《楞严经》的殊胜功德之后,发愿要专心受持读诵,可惜很多人却遇到了这种尴尬:一翻开经文,立即感到一种巨大困难,根本读不下去。很多人在这个时候往往不知所措,最终导致信心受挫,或者放弃读诵。这是非常可惜的。

  初学者读诵《楞严经》感到困难的原因,最基本的一条是文字关难以通过。站长多年前也曾有如此经历。后来决心坚持读诵、并查阅各种古汉语词典,慢慢感受到了读经之殊胜利益,越来越喜欢读《楞严经》,乃至发愿终生受持。本站提供的《难字注音释义》,正是站长本人多年慢慢疏通本经难字的记录整理稿,愿提供给初学道友,帮助他们契入读经之法喜中。

  “难字疏通”栏目同时包括《楞严咒》的全文注音。

  3、《楞严经咒》读诵:

  《楞严经》读诵,目前提供2个MP3版本,1个MP3+视频版本。每版皆包括全经十卷。

  《楞严咒》读诵,目前提供4个声音教念版,4个flash版,3个唱诵版下载。

  "单章节"读诵:提供《四种清净明诲》、《念佛圆通章》、《耳根圆通章》等章节的念诵。 

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  同时提供《卍字续藏》收录之52种注疏(txt格式)的下载地址。

  5、近现代注解:

  收录近现代有关本经的注解。以收录现代大力倡导和弘扬的宣公上人之《浅释》为重点。也收录诸如太虚大师、圆瑛法师、海仁法师等几部近代注解。同时收录当代在提倡实修方面颇有影响力的元音老人、南怀瑾老师这两位大德居士之注解。

  6、单章精义:

  主要收录汇集《四种清净明诲》、《耳根圆通章》、《念佛圆通章》、《五十阴魔》的单章节注解。 为大家就重点章节深入学修提供方便。

  7、相关经论:

  提供与《楞严经》密切相关、亦同样精妙异常、能帮助行者契入无上佛法实修的几部经典,收录其原文与相关古今重要注解。目前已经收录了《圆觉经》、《法华经》 、《大乘起信论》三部经论。同时,收录了其修证境界在数百年来皆堪为后世仰止的高僧憨山大师之精要开示。

  在此特别推荐大家:若精力许可,不妨认真学修《大乘起信论》,以配合《楞严经》之深入!憨山大师在其《楞严通议》中曾说到:“论文昭然,以论堪经则一毛不爽,非是谬谈,智者请深观之!”;而且基本上可以说,古代大德高僧之任何楞严经注解,几乎没有不引用《大乘起信论》的。(若不信者,可点击这里,打开"《卍字续藏》52种注疏"之任何一部注解,按Ctrl+F,输入“起信”查看,便知!)

  8、持诵修习:

  主要收集单篇文章,包括:宣公上人"楞严"开示、楞严经咒雪谤、持诵学修体会、楞严综合文摘、倡议建议/本站消息、三宝图像精选等区。


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  愿以此功德 普及于一切 我等与众生 皆共成佛道

 

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普光帝珠網

普光者,乃取「普遍光明清淨熾盛如意寶印心無能勝大明王大隨求陀羅尼」之簡稱。經軌言:但聞持陀羅尼題名若一字二字乃至十字者得大利益。

帝珠網者,帝釋天以網張空而為莊嚴,網孔有摩尼寶珠。孔多珠亦多,珠珠各攝森羅萬象,而互攝互融。以帝珠比喻系列網站連結互融互攝重重無盡之意。

如何隨喜作大功德

http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/index1.htm

 

★普光居士出版之著作一覽

(1)七俱胝佛母准提王法要集(西元2006年10月由「中和法明寺」出版)--已無存書

(2)末法明燈:殊勝的準提陀羅尼(2007年4月由「彰化清明寺」出版)

(3)觀世音菩薩六字大明咒集要(2008年2月由「彰化清明寺」出版)

(4)利樂人生的藥師佛(2011年「佛陀教育基金會」出版)

(5)准提神咒持驗集(2011年6自費出版)

(6)東方淨光——藥師法門集要、藥師佛靈感錄(2011年7藥師佛本願推廣中心」出版)

(7)觀世音菩薩六字大明咒集要-2011年修訂版由薩迦法王賜序。2011年8月「彰化清明寺」出版)

 

★普光居士製作之網站一覽

如來部

站名:藥師琉璃光如來

成立時間:2004/6

改版:2009/05/04

網址:http://www.bgvpr.org/

站名:安樂道

成立時間:2005/4/14/

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/pure_land/

站名:諸佛名號功德海

成立時間:2007/05/19

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/buddha

站名:不動如來妙喜願海:Aksobhya-buddha

成立時間:2008/03/01

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Aksobhya

佛母部

站名:七俱胝佛母準提王

成立時間:2002/09

網址:http://www.cunde.org/

站名:佛母大孔雀明王

成立時間:2006/06/10

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Mahamayuri/

站名:懷攝人天作明母

成立時間:2008

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Kurukulle

 
菩薩部

站名:六字大明微妙心印

成立時間:2002/09

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/chenrezig

站名:大悲觀世音菩薩

成立時間:2005/08/17

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/avalokiteshvara/

站名:彌勒菩薩大慈尊

成立時間:2005/05

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/maitreya/

站名:大願地藏王菩薩

成立時間:2004/8

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/kshitigarbha/

站名:普賢行願威神力

成立時間:2004/09

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/bhadraya/

站名:金剛薩埵如意寶珠

成立時間:2006年2月

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Manjusri/

站名:虛空藏菩薩

成立時間:2006/04/12

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Akasagarbha/

站名:文殊菩薩妙吉祥

成立時間:2006/07/31

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Manjusri/

站名:多羅菩薩綠度母

成立時間:2006

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/taragreen/

 
金剛部

站名:大忿怒普巴金剛

成立時間:2008/09

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/vajrakilaya/

祖師部

站名:光明善導大師

發表時間:2006/10/04

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/sd/

 
經典部

站名:金剛般若到彼岸

成立時間:2005/7/17

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/vajracche/

法要部

站名:密宗初學安全守則

成立時間:2004/9

網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/safe

站名:萬惡淫為首

成立時間:2010/06

網址:http://www.bgvpr.org/retribution/

 
道場部

站名:清明寺全球資訊網

成立時間:2006

網址:http://www.chingming.org

站名:薩迦派中文官網

成立時間:2008

網址:http://www.hhtwcenter.org

普願

四生九有

同登華藏玄門

八難三途

共入毘盧性海

南無華嚴海會佛菩薩

普回向偈

願以此功德 消除宿現業
增長諸福慧 圓成勝善根

所有刀兵劫 及與饑饉等
悉皆盡滅除 國泰民康寧

出資贊助者 誦持流通者
現眷咸安樂 先亡獲超升

所求皆果遂 隨願生淨土
法界諸含識 同證無上道

願所有弘法功德,回向贊助、流通、見聞、隨喜者,及皆悉回向盡法界、虛空界一切眾生,依佛菩薩威德力、弘法功德力,普願消除一切罪障,福慧具足,常得安樂,無諸病苦。欲行惡法,皆悉不成。所修善業,皆速成就。關閉一切諸惡趣門,開示人天涅槃正路。家門清吉,身心安康,先亡祖妣,歷劫怨親,俱蒙佛慈,獲本妙心。兵戈永息,禮讓興行,人民安樂,天下太平。四恩總報,三有齊資,今生來世脫離一切外道天魔之纏縛,生生世世永離惡道,離一切苦得究竟樂,得遇佛菩薩、正法、清淨善知識,臨終無一切障礙而往生有緣之佛淨土,同證究竟圓滿之佛果。

訪客 Counter 人次

 

涅槃經曰:若有善男子善女人。

一聞大乘經。億百千劫不墮三塗八難。

於一恒河沙諸佛前種善根。得暫聞大乘經。

於二恒河沙諸佛前種善根。得聞大乘經。不生誹謗。

於三恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能歡喜禮拜。

於四恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能書寫流通。

於五恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能受持讀誦。

明知大乘經甚難得。


如何隨喜作大功德

http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/index1.htm

 

網站空間由穢跡金剛的家發心贊助提供
佛相

南無本師釋迦牟尼佛

南無本師釋迦牟尼佛天上天下無如佛
十方世界亦無比
世間所有我盡見
一切無有如佛者

請參看「釋迦佛小傳

 

 

南無阿彌陀佛

南無阿彌陀佛

阿彌陀佛身金色
相好光明無等倫
白毫宛轉五須彌
紺目澄清四大海
光中化佛無數億
化菩薩眾亦無邊
四十八願度眾生
九品咸令登彼岸

請參看「佛學講座撮要」之「阿彌陀佛四十八大願」。

及佛說阿彌陀經

 

南無觀世音菩薩

南無觀世音菩薩

觀世音菩薩身高八十萬億那由他由旬(一由旬有四十里),身紫金色,頂有肉髻,頂上天冠有一立化佛,眉間毫相具七寶之色,流出八萬四千種光明。臂如紅蓮華色,有八十億微妙光明為瓔珞。手掌作五百億雜蓮花色,手十指端指紋莊嚴美觀,有八萬四千畫,猶如印文,一一畫有八萬四千色,一一色有八萬四千光,其光柔軟,普照一切。以此寶手,接引眾生。

舉足時,足下有千輻輪相,自然化成五百億光明台;下足時,有金剛摩尼華,布散一切,莫不彌滿。

如此菩薩,但聞其名,獲福無量。若有眾生,受諸苦惱,一心稱念南無觀世音菩薩,觀音菩薩即時觀其音聲,尋聲救苦,故號為觀世音菩薩。
頌曰:
觀音菩薩妙難酬,
清淨莊嚴累劫修,
浩浩紅蓮安足下,
灣灣秋月鎖眉頭,
瓶中甘露常遍洒,
手內楊枝不計秋,
千處祈求千處應,
苦海常作度人舟。

浙江普陀山乃觀音菩薩道場,與九華、五台、峨眉,合稱四大名山。

 

南無大悲觀世音菩薩

千手千眼觀世音菩薩觀世音菩薩言:我有大悲心陀羅尼咒,今當欲說,為諸眾生得安樂故,除一切病故,得壽命故,得富饒故,滅除一切惡業重罪故,離障難故,增長一切白法諸功德故,成就一切諸善根故,遠離一切諸怖畏故,速能滿足一切諸希求故。

過去無量億劫,有佛出世,名千光王靜住如來,彼佛世尊憐念我故,及為一切諸眾生故,說此廣大圓滿無礙大悲心千手千眼觀世音菩薩陀羅尼,以金色手,摩我頂上,作如是言:善男子,汝當持此心咒,普為未來惡世一切眾生作大利樂。

我於是時,始住初地,一聞此咒故,超第八地,我時心歡喜故,即發誓言:若我當來堪能利益安樂一切眾生者,令我即時身生千手千眼具足。發是願已,應時身上千手千眼悉皆具足。(節錄自大悲心陀羅尼經)

悲華經中,觀世音菩薩言:願我行菩薩道時,若有眾生,受諸苦惱恐怖等事,無有救護,若能稱念我名字,是眾生等,若不得免斯苦惱者,我終不成正覺。

觀世音菩薩過去已成佛,名正法明如來,現在以菩薩身,在極樂世界,輔助阿彌陀佛教化眾生,將來阿彌陀佛涅槃後,正法滅盡已,觀世音即補上成佛,名普光功德山王如來。

 


南無大勢至菩薩

南無大勢至菩薩

大勢至菩薩身量大小,與觀世音菩薩無異。以智慧光,普照一切,令離三途,得無上力,是故名大勢至。勢者勢力,至是至極。

又菩薩投足處,震動大千及魔宮殿,故名大勢至,又名得大勢,以能成辦一切事故。今在極樂世界,與觀世音菩薩一同輔助阿彌陀佛弘化。觀世音菩薩在阿彌陀佛左面,大勢至菩薩在右面。未來普光功德山王如來涅槃後,正法滅已,大勢至菩薩成佛,名善住功德寶王如來。

此菩薩天冠有五百寶華,頂上肉髻有一寶瓶,盛諸光明,普現佛事。

大勢至菩薩言:我本因地,以念佛心,入無生忍,今於此界,攝念佛人,歸於淨土。

 

南無地藏王菩薩

南無地藏王菩薩南方世界湧香雲,
香雨花雲及花雨,
寶雨寶雲無數種,
為祥為瑞遍莊嚴,
天人問佛是何因,
佛言地藏菩薩至,
三世如來同讚嘆,
      十方菩薩共歸依,
南無地藏王菩薩我今宿植善因緣,
稱揚地藏真功德。

請參看「佛學講座撮要」之「地藏菩薩」。

 


南無文殊師利菩薩

南無文殊師利菩薩

 

 

 

 

 

文殊師利又稱妙德或妙吉祥。掌智慧,世稱大智文殊師利菩薩。文殊師利菩薩教一切過去、現在、未來諸菩薩發菩提心。菩提即覺,故又稱為三世覺母,是菩薩眾中上首,故又稱為法王子。

文殊左手持青蓮花,表心無所住之清淨般若智,右手持利劍,表能斷一切眾生煩惱,乘青獅,表以威猛之般若智,能降伏一切天魔外道,頭上五髻,表五智五佛,有時現童子相,表本源自性天真佛。稱念文殊師利菩薩名號,能滅四重罪。

山西省五台山(又名清涼山)乃文殊菩薩道場。

請參看「佛學講座撮要」之「文殊師利法王子」。

山西省五台山
殊像寺文殊菩薩像

 

 

南無普賢王菩薩

南無普賢王菩薩

普賢又稱遍吉,掌理德,與文殊之智德相對。文殊乘青獅侍釋迦佛之左,普賢乘六牙白象王侍於右。白象表清白梵行之相,六牙表六波羅蜜。乘此六波羅蜜為因,而到如來果地。若有人修法華三昧,普賢菩薩即現其前而守護之。

四川峨嵋山乃普賢菩薩之道場。古之寒山、拾得,即文殊,普賢也。

請參看「佛學講座撮要」之「普賢行願品」。

 

 

南無當來下生彌勒尊佛

南無當來下生彌勒尊佛

彌勒譯曰慈,是姓氏,因修慈心三昧而得此姓。名字阿逸多,譯曰無能勝,指彌勒菩薩以大慈度眾生,無人能超勝於他。

釋迦牟尼佛是賢劫第四尊佛,彌勒則是賢劫第五尊佛,現在兜率內院說法。在距今五十六億七千萬年後下生人間成佛,故稱當來下生彌勒尊佛。

彌勒菩薩從兜率下生人間後,觀世無常,立志出家學道,即於出家當日於龍華樹下成佛。成佛後有三會說法:第一會有九十六億人得阿羅漢果;第二會有九十四億人得阿羅漢果;第三會有九十二億人得阿羅漢果所度的都是曾於釋迦佛法中種善根者,是故彌勒佛常稱讚釋迦佛的功德。

請參看「佛學講座撮要」之「阿逸多菩薩」。

 

如閣下須要列印,務請在列印後小心保存,以表對佛菩薩像的尊重。

下載圖片須時,請耐心等候。

史公響應公益分享部落格 - Yahoo!奇摩部落格

記錄寶貝史公生活點滴。推廣並分享佛法&社會慈善公益! 稱名:史公為代表 血統17吋(波音達犬)別名是英國指示獵犬.隨主人信仰佛教(史公還有皈依喔)

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分類:  寶篋印&楞嚴法

2011/06/24 03:10

唐天竺沙門般剌密帝譯  烏萇國沙門彌伽釋迦譯語  正議大夫同中書門

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2011/06/24 03:09

 『阿難!一切眾生食甘故生,食毒故死,是諸眾生求三摩地,當斷世間五

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2011/05/02 00:32

終南山觀音古洞105歲普光老和尚誦楞嚴神咒http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjI5OTQ4MTg0.

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2011/04/29 14:37

此手印圖為網路上法友分享 僅供參考 倘若能尋得專修此法門法師或正確手

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2011/04/29 00:14

楞嚴咒的功德 附咒圖請自印.楞嚴經~阿難。是佛頂光聚。悉怛多般怛羅。

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2011/04/12 10:11

《一切如來心秘密全身舍利寶篋印陀羅尼經》簡易懺悔法本此文章內容為網

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2010/11/21 22:49

虛雲老和尚楞嚴經開示 (轉貼) ★ 楞嚴一經,由阿難發起,作我們的模範。

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2010/10/25 21:42

從《楞嚴經》中談持咒修行的次第及要訣 -古梵音暨楞嚴學推廣講師,果

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2008/07/24 19:38

弟子是位女士,在深圳工作,在深圳這樣一個物質至尚,慾望橫流的地方,

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2008/01/12 02:52

    首楞嚴經講義簡要科判兼目錄表圓瑛法師 233 KB 43 KB

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  •   尊貴的 貝諾法王 開示 ----發心護法的重要
      佛法快要滅亡的時候,誰能夠護持,這樣的功德是不可思議的。
      積聚資糧有很多很多種的方法,但是其中護持佛法,能夠使佛法宏揚,能夠增廣,能夠讓佛法長久駐世,這樣的護持是最大的意義,也是最大的功德。
      一個燈裡面的油快要沒有,快要消失的時候,那一個人來加一點油,這個燈,這個光明可以維持下去,具有殊勝的功德,佛法還沒有滅亡,還在持續中。大家能夠努力護持,這是非常非常殊勝的功德,也非常非常的重要。

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  • 晉美彭措法王的遺教
  • 即使有一天我已不在人世,我期望我的弟子們能夠堅定不移地修持並弘揚佛法,力爭將佛法的智慧之炬一代代地傳下去,這就是對我最好的紀念與報恩。
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    前面分析了五蘊當中的色蘊,接下來觀察受、想、行、識四蘊,從而抉擇出它們也是無有自性的空性。

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    普光帝珠網
    普光帝珠網

    普光者,乃取「普遍光明清淨熾盛如意寶印心無能勝大明王大隨求陀羅尼」之簡稱。經軌言:但聞持陀羅尼題名若一字二字乃至十字者得大利益。

    帝珠網者,帝釋天以網張空而為莊嚴,網孔有摩尼寶珠。孔多珠亦多,珠珠各攝森羅萬象,而互攝互融。以帝珠比喻系列網站連結互融互攝重重無盡之意。

    如何隨喜作大功德

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    ★普光居士出版之著作一覽

    (1)七俱胝佛母准提王法要集(西元2006年10月由「中和法明寺」出版)--已無存書

    (2)末法明燈:殊勝的準提陀羅尼(2007年4月由「彰化清明寺」出版)

    (3)觀世音菩薩六字大明咒集要(2008年2月由「彰化清明寺」出版)

    (4)利樂人生的藥師佛(2011年「佛陀教育基金會」出版)

    (5)准提神咒持驗集(2011年6自費出版)

    (6)東方淨光——藥師法門集要、藥師佛靈感錄(2011年7藥師佛本願推廣中心」出版)

    (7)觀世音菩薩六字大明咒集要-2011年修訂版由薩迦法王賜序。2011年8月「彰化清明寺」出版)

     

    ★普光居士製作之網站一覽

    如來部

    站名:藥師琉璃光如來

    成立時間:2004/6

    改版:2009/05/04

    網址:http://www.bgvpr.org/

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    成立時間:2005/4/14/

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/pure_land/

    站名:諸佛名號功德海

    成立時間:2007/05/19

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    站名:不動如來妙喜願海:Aksobhya-buddha

    成立時間:2008/03/01

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Aksobhya

    佛母部

    站名:七俱胝佛母準提王

    成立時間:2002/09

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    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Mahamayuri/

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    成立時間:2008

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Kurukulle

     
    菩薩部

    站名:六字大明微妙心印

    成立時間:2002/09

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/chenrezig

    站名:大悲觀世音菩薩

    成立時間:2005/08/17

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/avalokiteshvara/

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    成立時間:2005/05

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    站名:大願地藏王菩薩

    成立時間:2004/8

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    站名:金剛薩埵如意寶珠

    成立時間:2006年2月

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Manjusri/

    站名:虛空藏菩薩

    成立時間:2006/04/12

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Akasagarbha/

    站名:文殊菩薩妙吉祥

    成立時間:2006/07/31

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/Manjusri/

    站名:多羅菩薩綠度母

    成立時間:2006

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    金剛部

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    成立時間:2008/09

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/vajrakilaya/

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    站名:光明善導大師

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    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/sd/

     
    經典部

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    成立時間:2005/7/17

    網址:http://www.ucchusma.net/samanta/vajracche/

    法要部

    站名:密宗初學安全守則

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    站名:清明寺全球資訊網

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    成立時間:2008

    網址:http://www.hhtwcenter.org

    普願

    四生九有

    同登華藏玄門

    八難三途

    共入毘盧性海

    南無華嚴海會佛菩薩

    普回向偈

    願以此功德 消除宿現業
    增長諸福慧 圓成勝善根

    所有刀兵劫 及與饑饉等
    悉皆盡滅除 國泰民康寧

    出資贊助者 誦持流通者
    現眷咸安樂 先亡獲超升

    所求皆果遂 隨願生淨土
    法界諸含識 同證無上道

    願所有弘法功德,回向贊助、流通、見聞、隨喜者,及皆悉回向盡法界、虛空界一切眾生,依佛菩薩威德力、弘法功德力,普願消除一切罪障,福慧具足,常得安樂,無諸病苦。欲行惡法,皆悉不成。所修善業,皆速成就。關閉一切諸惡趣門,開示人天涅槃正路。家門清吉,身心安康,先亡祖妣,歷劫怨親,俱蒙佛慈,獲本妙心。兵戈永息,禮讓興行,人民安樂,天下太平。四恩總報,三有齊資,今生來世脫離一切外道天魔之纏縛,生生世世永離惡道,離一切苦得究竟樂,得遇佛菩薩、正法、清淨善知識,臨終無一切障礙而往生有緣之佛淨土,同證究竟圓滿之佛果。

    訪客 Counter 人次

     

    涅槃經曰:若有善男子善女人。

    一聞大乘經。億百千劫不墮三塗八難。

    於一恒河沙諸佛前種善根。得暫聞大乘經。

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    於三恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能歡喜禮拜。

    於四恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能書寫流通。

    於五恒河沙諸佛前種善根。能受持讀誦。

    明知大乘經甚難得。


    如何隨喜作大功德

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    2011年2月6日 星期日

    Sierra Leone

    Sierra Leone
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Republic of Sierra Leone
    Sierra Leone

    Flag Coat of Arms
    Motto: "Unity, Freedom, Justice"
    Anthem: High We Exalt Thee, Realm of the Free

    Capital
    (and largest city) Freetown
    8°29.067′N 13°14.067′W
    Official language(s) English
    National language Krio (de facto) spoken by 95% of the population[1][2]
    Demonym Sierra Leonean
    Government Constitutional republic
    - President Ernest Bai Koroma (APC)
    - Vice President Alhaji Samuel Sam-Sumana (APC)
    - Speaker of Parliament Abel Nathaniel Bankole Stronge (APC)
    - Chief Justice Umu Hawa Tejan Jalloh
    Independence
    - from the United Kingdom 27 April 1961
    - Republic declared 19 April 1971
    Area
    - Total 71,740 km2 (119th)
    27,699 sq mi
    - Water (%) 1.1
    Population
    - July 2009 estimate 6,440,053[2]
    - Density 79.4/km2 (114th1)
    205.6/sq mi
    GDP (PPP) 2009 estimate
    - Total $4.585 billion[3]
    - Per capita $759[3]
    GDP (nominal) 2009 estimate
    - Total $1.877 billion[3]
    - Per capita $311[3]
    Gini (2003) 62.9 (high)
    HDI (2007) 0.365 ( low) (180th)
    Currency Leone (SLL)
    Time zone GMT (UTC+0)
    Drives on the right
    ISO 3166 code SL
    Internet TLD .sl
    Calling code 232
    1 Rank based on 2007 figures.
    Sierra Leone (i /siːˌɛrə liːˈoʊn/; Krio: Sa Lone), officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country in west Africa. It is bordered by Guinea to the north and east, Liberia to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west and southwest. Sierra Leone covers a total area of 71,740 km2 (27,699 sq mi)[4] and has a population estimated at 6.5 million. It is a former British Colony and now a constitutional republic comprising three provinces and the Western Area; which are further divided into fourteen districts.
    The country has a tropical climate, with a diverse environment ranging from savannah to rainforests.[5] Freetown is the capital, largest city and economic center. The other major cities are Bo, Kenema, Koidu Town and Makeni.[4]
    Sierra Leone is rich in mineral resources, possessing some of the rarest and most valuable mineral types in the world, many of which are found in significant quantities. The country has relied on mining, especially diamonds, for its economic base; it is among the Top 10 diamond producing nations in the world, and mineral exports remain the main foreign currency earner. Sierra Leone is also among the largest producers of titanium and bauxite, and a major producer of gold. The country has one of the world's largest deposits of rutile. Despite this natural wealth, the vast majority of its people live in poverty.
    Early inhabitants of Sierra Leone included the Sherbro, Temne and Limba, and Tyra[disambiguation needed] peoples, and later the Mende,[6] who knew the country as Romarong, and the Kono who settled in the east of the country.[7] In 1462, it was visited by the Portuguese explorer Pedro da Cintra, who dubbed it Serra de Leão, meaning "Lion Mountains".[8][9] Sierra Leone later became an important centre of the transatlantic trade in slaves until 1792 when Freetown was founded by the Sierra Leone Company as a home for formerly enslaved African Americans.[10] In 1808, Freetown became a British Crown Colony, and in 1896, the interior of the country became a British Protectorate;[7] in 1961, the two combined and gained independence.
    The Sierra Leone Civil War[11] began in 1991 and resolved in 2000 after the struggling Nigerian-led United Nations troops were heavily reinforced by a British force spearheaded by 1st Bn The Parachute Regiment, supported by other elements of the Parachute Regt, SAS, and Royal Navy and Royal Air Force Operation Palliser. The arrival of this force, code-named Operation Palliser, resulted in the defeat of rebel forces and restored the civilian government elected in 1998 to Freetown. Since then, almost 72,500 former combatants have been disarmed[12] and the country has reestablished a functioning democracy.[2] The current president of Sierra Leone is Ernest Bai Koroma, who was sworn in on 17 September 2007.
    The Special Court for Sierra Leone was set up in 2002 to deal with war crimes and crimes against humanity committed since 1996.[13] Sierra Leone is the twelfth-lowest-ranked country on the Human Development Index and eighth-lowest on the Human Poverty Index, suffering from endemic corruption[14] and suppression of the press.[15]
    Contents [hide]
    1 History
    1.1 Early history
    1.2 Slavery
    1.3 Freedom from enslavement
    1.4 Colonial era
    1.5 An independent nation led by Sir Milton Margai
    1.6 Albert Margai Administration
    1.7 Three Military Coups, 1967-1968
    1.8 Stevens government and one party state
    1.9 Momoh administration
    1.10 Multi-party constitution and Revolutionary United Front rebellion
    1.11 NPRC Junta
    1.12 Return of democracy and civil war
    2 Geography and climate
    2.1 Climate
    2.2 Environment
    3 Government and politics
    4 Foreign relations
    5 Provinces and districts
    5.1 Major cities
    6 Economy
    6.1 Currency
    7 Demographics
    8 Religion
    9 Ethnic groups
    10 Education
    11 Health
    12 Military
    13 Law enforcement
    14 Media
    15 Music
    16 Transportation
    16.1 Air
    16.1.1 Prohibition from E.U. air operations
    16.2 Water
    16.3 Highways
    17 Sports
    17.1 Football
    17.2 Cricket
    17.3 Basketball
    18 See also
    19 Notes
    20 Book references
    20.1 Primary sources
    20.2 Secondary sources
    20.3 Further reading
    21 External links
    [edit]History

    Main article: History of Sierra Leone
    [edit]Early history


    Fragments of prehistoric pottery from Kamabai Rock Shelter
    Archaeological finds show that Sierra Leone has been inhabited continuously for at least 2,500 years,[16] populated by successive movements from other parts of Africa.[17] The use of iron was introduced to Sierra Leone by the 9th century, and by AD 1000 agriculture was being practiced by coastal tribes.[18] Sierra Leone's dense tropical rainforest largely protected it from the influence of any precolonial African empires[19] and from further Islamic influence of the Songhai Empire, the Islamic faith however became common in the 18th century.[20]
    European contacts with Sierra Leone were among the first in West Africa. In 1462, Portuguese explorer Pedro da Cintra mapped the hills surrounding what is now Freetown Harbour, naming shaped formation Serra de Leão (Portuguese for Lion Mountains).[9] The Italian rendering of this geographic formation is Sierra Leone, which became the country's name.
    [edit]Slavery
    Soon after Portuguese traders arrived at the harbour and by 1495 a fort that acted as a trading post had been built.[21] The Portuguese were joined by the Dutch and French; all of them using Sierra Leone as a trading point for slaves.[22] In 1562, the English joined the trade in human beings when Sir John Hawkins shipped 300 enslaved people, acquired 'by the sword and partly by other means', to the new colonies in America.[23]


    An 1835 illustration of liberated Africans arriving in Sierra Leone.
    [edit]Freedom from enslavement
    In 1787, a plan was established to settle some of London's "Black Poor" in Sierra Leone in what was called the "Province of Freedom". A number of "Black Poor" arrived off the coast of Sierra Leone on 15 May 1787, accompanied by some English tradesmen. This was organized by the St. George's Bay Company, composed of British philanthropists who preferred it as a solution to continuing to financially support them in London. Many of the "black poor" were African Americans, who had been promised their freedom for joining the British Army during the American Revolution, but also included other African and Asian inhabitants of London.
    Disease and hostility from the indigenous people nearly eliminated the first group of colonists. Through intervention by Thomas Peters, the Sierra Leone Company was established to relocate another group of formerly enslaved Africans, this time nearly 1,200 Black Nova Scotians, most of whom had escaped enslavement in the United States. Given the most barren land in Nova Scotia, many had died from the harsh winters there. They established a settlement at Freetown in 1792 led by Peters. It was joined by other groups of freed Africans and became the first African-American haven for formerly enslaved Africans.


    The colony of Freetown in 1856.
    Though the English abolitionist Granville Sharp originally planned Sierra Leone as a utopian community, the directors of the Sierra Leone Company refused to allow the settlers to take freehold of the land. Knowing how Highland Clearances benefited Scottish landlords but not tenants, the settlers revolted in 1799. The revolt was only put down by the arrival of over 500 Jamaican Maroons, who also arrived via Nova Scotia.
    Thousands of formerly enslaved Africans were returned to or liberated in Freetown. Most chose to remain in Sierra Leone. These returned Africans were from many areas of Africa, but principally the west coast. They joined the previous settlers and together became known as Creole or Krio people.
    Cut off from their homes and traditions, they assimilated some aspects of British styles of inhabitants and built a flourishing trade of flowers and beads on the West African coast. The lingua franca of the colony was Krio, a creole language rooted in 18th century African American English, which quickly spread across the region as a common language of trade and Christian mission. In the 1790s, blacks voted for the first time in elections, as did women.[24]
    After the collapse of the Sierra Leone Company, the newly-formed African Institution met in 1807 to achieve more success by focusing on bettering the local economy, but it was constantly split between those British who meant to inspire local entrepreneurs and those with interest in the Macauley & Babington Company which held the (English) monopoly on Sierra Leone trade.[25]
    [edit]Colonial era


    Bai Bureh, leader of the 1898 rebellion against British rule
    In the early 20th century, Freetown served as the residence of the British governor who also ruled the Gold Coast (now Ghana) and the Gambia settlements. Sierra Leone also served as the educational centre of British West Africa. Fourah Bay College, established in 1827, rapidly became a magnet for English-speaking Africans on the West Coast. For more than a century, it was the only European-style university in western Sub-Saharan Africa.
    During Sierra Leone's colonial history, indigenous people mounted several unsuccessful revolts against British rule and Krio domination. The most notable was the Hut Tax war of 1898. Its first leader was Bai Bureh, a Temne chief who refused to recognize the British-imposed tax on "huts" (dwellings). The tax was generally regarded by the native chiefs as an attack on their sovereignty. After the British issued a warrant to arrest Bai Bureh alleging that he had refused to pay taxes, Bai Bureh declared war on British in Northern Sierra Leone, with the full support of several prominent native chiefs, including the powerful Kissi chief Kai Londo and the Limba chief Almamy Suluku. Both chiefs sent warriors and weapons to aid Bai Bureh.
    Bureh's fighters had the advantage over the vastly more powerful British for several months of the war. Hundreds of British troops and hundreds of Bureh's fighters were killed.[26] Bai Bureh was finally captured on 11 November 1898 and sent into exile in the Gold Coast (now Ghana), while 96 of his comrades were hanged by the British.
    The defeat of the natives in the Hut Tax war ended large scale organised resistance to colonialism; however resistance continued throughout the colonial period in the form of intermittent rioting and chaotic labour disturbances. Riots in 1955 and 1956 involved "many tens of thousands" of natives in the protectorate.[27]
    One notable event in 1935 was the granting of a monopoly on mineral mining to the Sierra Leone Selection Trust run by De Beers, which was scheduled to last 98 years.
    [edit]An independent nation led by Sir Milton Margai
    In 1924, Sierra Leone was divided into a Colony and a Protectorate, with separate and different political systems constitutionally defined for each. Antagonism between the two entities escalated to a heated debate in 1947, when proposals were introduced to provide for a single political system for both the Colony and the Protectorate. Most of the proposals came from the Protectorate. The Creoles, lead by Isaac Wallace-Johnson, naturally opposed the proposals, whose effect would have been to diminish their political power. It was due to the astute politics of Sir Milton Margai, who was the son of a creole man by the name of Tu-borku Metzeger he was raised up by his step father an ethnic Mende and the leading Protectorate politician, that the educated Protectorate elite was won over to join forces with the paramount chiefs in the face of Creole intransigence. Later, Sir Milton [whose real family name was Tu Borku Metzeger] used the same skills to win over opposition leaders and moderate Creole elements for the achievement of independence.


    Sir Milton Margai led Sierra Leone to Independence in 1961 and was Prime Minister from 1961 to 1964.
    In November 1951, Sir Milton Margai oversaw the drafting of a new constitution, which united the separate Colonial and Protectorate legislatures and—-most importantly—-provided a framework for decolonization.[28] In 1953, Sierra Leone was granted local ministerial powers, and Sir Milton Margai, was elected Chief Minister of Sierra Leone.[28] The new constitution ensured Sierra Leone a parliamentary system within the Commonwealth of Nations.[28] In May 1957, Sierra Leone held its first parliamentary election. The SLPP, which was then the most popular political party in the colony of Sierra Leone, won the majority of the seats in Parliament. Margai was also re-elected as Chief Minister by a landslide.
    Margai led the Sierra Leonean delegation at the constitutional conferences that were held with British Colonial Secretary Iain Macleod in London in 1960. All members of the Sierra Leonean delegation were prominent and well-respected politicians including Sir Milton's younger brother Sir Albert Margai, John Kareefa Smart, Lamina Sankoh, Kande Bureh, Sir Banja-Tejan Sie, Ella Koblo Gulama, Amadu Wurie, Mohamed Sanusi Mustapha and Eustace Henry Taylor Cummings. Two notable absentees from the delegation were Siaka Stevens, the leader of the opposition APC, and the veteran Creole politician Isaac Wallce-Johnson who were placed under house arrest in Freetown, charged with disrupting the Independence movement.[29]
    On 27 April 1961, Milton Margai led Sierra Leone to independence from the United Kingdom.[28] Thousands of Sierra Leoneans across the nation took to the streets to celebrate their independence. The nation held its first general elections on 27 May 1962, and Margai was elected Sierra Leone's first Prime Minister by a landslide.[28] Milton Margai's political party, the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP), won by large margins in the nation's first general election under universal adult suffrage in May 1962.
    An important aspect of Sir Milton's character was his self-effacement. He was neither corrupt nor did he make a lavish display of his power or status. Sir Milton's government was based on the rule of law and the notion of separation of powers, with multiparty political institutions and fairly viable representative structures. Milton Margai used his conservative ideology to lead Sierra Leone without much strife. He appointed government officials with a clear eye to satisfy various ethnic groups. Sir Milton successfully built coalitions from in the 1950s to attain independence without bloodshed. With his genteel nature, Sir Milton Margai employed a brokerage style of politics by sharing political power between political groups and the paramamount chiefs in the provinces.
    Upon Margai's death on 28 April 1964, an internal crises within members of the Sierra Leone People's party irrupted as who to succeed Margai as Prime Minister. The parliament of Sierra Leone held an emergency session to elect a new prime minister, the person must be a member of the rulling SLPP party. One of the two leading candidates to succeed Margai as Prime minister was Sir Albert Margai, Sierra Leone's Finance minister and also the younger brother of Sir Milton Margai. The other was Dr.John Karefa-Smart, Sierra Leone's Foreign minister and a close ally of Sir Milton. Sir Albert Margai was elected by a majority vote in Parliament to be the new leader of the SLPP and the next prime minister of Sierra Leone. Sir Albert Margai's leadership was briefly challenged by Sierra Leone's Foreign Minister John Karefa-Smart, an ethnic Sherbro, who questioned Sir Albert's succession to the SLPP leadership position. Kareefa-Smart received little support in Parliament in his attempt to have Margai stripped of the SLPP leadership.
    [edit]Albert Margai Administration
    Sir Albert was sworn in as Sierra Leone's second Prime Minister the same day his brother died at a ceremony held at the Sierra Leone's parliament in Freetown. Soon after Margai was sworn in as Prime Minister, he immediately dismissed Karefa-Smart and several other senior government officials who had served under his elder brother Sir Milton's government, as he viewed them as traitors and a threat to his administration. Sir Albert appointed the Creole politician Cyril B. Rogers-Wright to replace Karefa-Smart.
    Unlike his late brother Milton, Sir Albert was opposed to the colonial legacy of allowing the country's Paramount Chiefs executive powers and he was seen as a threat to the existence of the ruling houses across the country. This made him unpopular with the powerful paramount chiefs, most of whom were founding members of the SLPP. To strengthen support for his reform agenda for the party and the country the new Prime Minister brought into the executive of the SLPP and his government younger, western-educated, and more radicallised members of the party including Salia Jusu Sheriff (PhD). The party was thus divided with the traditionalist and more powerful old guard against the new and younger leaders. As Prime Minister Sir Albert Margai opposed Creole domination of the civil service and many ethnic Creoles lost their positions in the civil service as a result. Sir Albert Margai was highly criticized during his tenure as prime minister. He was accused of corruption and of a policy of affirmative action in favor of the Mende ethnic group. During Albert Margai's administration, The Mende increased their influence both in the civil service and the army. Most of the top military and government positions were held by Mendes. Sir Albert also tried to establish a one-party state but with very little support in Parliament, even among his fellow SLPP members and was also met by fierce resistance from the main opposition the All People's Congress (APC), which had become suddenly more popular than the rulling SLPP and ultimately abandoned the idea.


    APC political rally in Kabala, Koinadugu District outside the home of supporters of the rival SLPP in 1967.
    Under Albert Margai's government, Sierra Leone enjoyed freedom of speech and freedom of the press. Sir Albert tolerated criticism of his government, even by his political opponent. Not a single journalist or politician was killed during his term in office. Sir Albert tolerated criticism or written a libel claim against his government. Under Albert Margai, all Sierra Leoneans had equal access to free and fair trial .Sir Albert had the opportunity to perpetuate himself in power, but he elected not to do so even when the opportunities presented themselves. He had the police and the army on his side and nothing could have prevented him from achieving his ambition to hold on to power, but he chose not to and called for a free and fair elections.
    [edit]Three Military Coups, 1967-1968
    After the closely contested general election in March 1967, Sierra Leone Governor General Sir Henry Josiah Lightfoot Boston declared the new prime minister to be Siaka Stevens, an ethnic Limba, the candidate of the All People's Congress (APC) and the mayor of Freetown. Stevens had defeated the incumbent prime minister, Sir Albert Margai, by a narrow margin. Stevens won the majority of the vote in the north of the country and in the western area, including in Freetown. Albert Margai on the other side, won the vast majority of the vote in south-eastern Sierra Leone. Sir Albert conceded defeat and handed power to Siaka Stevens. Stevens was sworn in as Sierra Leone's third prime minister on 17 May 1967 in Freetown. Mere hours after he took office, soldiers stormed the State House and abducted Stevens at gunpoint. The coup was led by Brigadier General David Lansana, an ethnic Mende and the commander of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces. Brigadier David Lansana was a prominent supporter of Albert Margai, who had appointed him to the top command in 1964. Brigadier Lansana declared a state of emergency and imposed martial law. He insisted that the determination of the winner of the election should await the election of the tribal representatives in Parliament, mostly from Mende chiefdoms in South-Eastern Sierra Leone.
    On 23 March 1968, however, a group of senior army officers led by Brigadier Andrew Juxon-Smith, an ethnic Creole, in turn seized control of the government, arrested Lansana and suspended the constitution. Martial law was maintained. The group constituted itself as the National Reformation Council (NRC) with Brigadier Andrew Juxon-Smith as its chairman. In April 1968, the NRC was in turn overthrown by a third group of senior army, who called themselves the Anti-Corruption Revolutionary Movement (ACRM), led by Brigadier General John Amadu Bangura, an ethnic Limba. The ACRM imprisoned Brigadier Andrew Juxon-Smith and other senior NRC members and restored the constitution. In Bragadier Bangura's first speech, he urged Sierra Leoneans to stay calm and appealed to the military to respect the constitution and stay out of politics. Bangura invited Stevens to the state house and reinstated him as prime minister in a special ceremony. Brigadier Bangura was accused of tribalism in favor of Siaka Stevens.
    [edit]Stevens government and one party state


    Siaka Stevens, Prime Minister of Sierra Leone from 1967-1971 and President of Sierra Leone from 1971-1985
    Stevens assumed power again in 1968 with a great deal of promise and ambition. Much trust was placed upon him as he championed multi-party politics. Upon taking power from the military, however, he drove the SLPP from competitive politics in general elections using violence and intimidation. To gain support of the military, Stevens retained the popular John Amadu Bangura as the head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces.
    After the return to civilian rule, by-elections were held (beginning in autumn 1968) and an all-APC cabinet was appointed. Calm was not completely restored. In November 1968, Stevens declared a state of emergency after disturbance in the provinces.
    Stevens had campaigned on a platform of socialist principles. However, when he became Prime Minister he abandoned his pre-election promises and employed an authoritarian model of governance.[30]
    Many senior officers in the Sierra Leone military were disappointed but none could confront Stevens. Brigadier General Bangura, who had reinstated Stevens as Prime Minister, was widely considered the only person who could put the brakes on Stevens. Bangura was a magnetic and popular figure among Sierra Leoneans. The army was devoted to him and this made him potentially dangerous to Steven's new agenda in the shifting political climate of Sierra Leone. In January 1970, Bangura was arrested and charged with conspiracy and plotting to commit a coup against the Stevens government. He was convicted and sentenced to death by execution. On 29 March 1970, Bangura was hanged at the Kissy Road in central Freetown. In March 1971, a group of senior military officials attempted an unsuccessful military coup. The coup leaders were convicted and executed, including several senior officers in the army and some senior government officials.
    On 19 April 1971, parliament declared Sierra Leone a republic, with Siaka Stevens as president and Sorie Ibrahim Koroma as Vice President. Under the APC regimes headed by Stevens, the Limba, Stevens' own ethnic group and the Creoles, enjoyed strong influence in the government and civil service. Another major ethnic group, the Temne joined the Mende in opposition to the APC government. But after Stevens appointed an ethnic Temne, Sorie Ibrahim Koroma as vice-president, the Temne appeared to have emerged as an influential group in the APC government. Guinean troops requested by Stevens to support his government were in the country from 1971 to 1973. In May 1973, general elections were held throughout the country, but the main opposition, the SLPP, boycotted the 1973 general election, alleging widespread intimidation and procedural obstruction.
    In 1973, president Stevens and president William Tolbert of Liberia signed a treaty forming the Mano River Union to facilitate trade between Sierra Leone and Liberia, with Guinea joining in 1980 under president Sekou Toure. In 1975, Sierra Leone joined the Economic Community of West African States (commonly known as ECOWAS).
    An alleged plot to overthrow president Stevens failed in 1974 and its leaders were executed. In March 1976, Stevens was elected without opposition for a second five-year term as president. On 19 July 1975, 14 senior army and government officials including Brigadier David Lansana, former cabinet minister Mohamed Sorie Forna, Brigadier General Ibrahim Bash Taqi and Lieutenant Habib Lansana Kamara were executed after being convicted for allegedly attempting a coup to topple president Stevens' government.
    In early 1977, a major anti-government demonstration by students and youth occurred throughout the country against the APC government and deteriorating economic conditions. Police and the army put down the demonstration.
    In the national parliamentary election of May 1977, the APC won 74 seats and the main opposition, the SLPP, won 15. The SLPP condemned the election, alleged widespread vote-rigging and voter intimidation. In 1978, the APC dominant parliament approved a new constitution making the country a one-party state. The 1978 referendum made the APC the only legal political party in Sierra Leone. This move lead to another major demonstration in many parts of the country but again it was put down by the army and the police.
    Stevens is generally criticised for dictatorial methods and government corruption, but reduced ethnic polarisation in government by incorporating members of various ethnic groups into his all-dominating APC government.
    [edit]Momoh administration
    Siaka Stevens retired in November, 1985 after being in power for 18 years, but continued to be chairman of the APC. The APC named a new presidential candidate to succeed Stevens at their last delegate conference held in Freetown in November 1985. He was Major General Joseph Saidu Momoh, the commander of the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces and Stevens' own choice to succeed him. As head of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces, Major General Momoh was very loyal to Stevens who had appointed him to the position. Like Stevens, Momoh was also a member of the minority Limba ethnic group. Joseph Saidu Momoh was elected President in a one-party parliament as the only contesting candidate. Momoh was sworn in as Sierra Leone's second president in Freetown on 28 November 1985 with Francis Minah (an ethnic Mende) as Vice president. A one party parliamentary elections between APC members were held in May, 1986.
    President Momoh's strong links with the army and his verbal attacks on corruption earned him much needed initial support among Sierra Leoneans. With the lack of new faces in the new APC cabinet under president Momoh and the return of many of the old faces from Stevens government, criticisms soon arose that Momoh was simply perpetuating the rule of Stevens. The next couple of years under the Momoh administration were characterised by corruption, which Momoh defused by sacking several senior cabinet ministers. To formalise his war against corruption, President Momoh announced a "Code of Conduct for Political Leaders and Public Servants."
    After an alleged attempt to overthrow President Momoh in March 1987, more than 60 senior government officials were arrested, including Vice-President Francis Minah, who was removed from office, convicted for plotting the coup, and executed by hanging in 1989 along with 5 others.
    [edit]Multi-party constitution and Revolutionary United Front rebellion
    See also: Sierra Leone Civil War
    In October 1990, due to mounting pressure from both within and outside the country for political and economic reform, president Momoh set up a constitutional review commission to review the 1978 one-party constitution. Based on the commission's recommendations a constitution re-establishing a multi-party system was approved by the exclusive APC Parliament by a 60% majority vote, becoming effective on 1 October 1991. By November 1991, political opposition became active once again in Sierra Leone. In late November 1991, president Momoh proposed a multi-party presidential and parliamentary elections to be held in the country in October 1992.
    There was great suspicion that president Momoh was not serious about his promise of political reform, as APC rule continued to be increasingly marked by abuses of power. The APC was also alleged to have been hoarding arms and planning a violent campaign against the opposition parties ahead of multi-party general elections scheduled for late 1992. Several senior government officials in the APC administration like Dr. Salia Jusu Sheriff, Dr. Abass Bundu, J.B. Dauda and Dr. Sama Banya resigned from the APC government respectively to resuscitate the previously disbanded SLPP. While other senior government officials like Thaimu Bangura, Edward Kargbo and Desmond Luke resigned from the APC and formed their own respective political parties to challenge the ruling APC.
    Civil war broke out, mainly due to government corruption and mismanagement of diamond resources and abuse of power by various governments since independence from Britain (Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Report). The brutal civil war going on in neighbouring Liberia played an undeniable role in the outbreak of fighting in Sierra Leone. Charles Taylor—then leader of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia—reportedly helped form the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) under the command of former Sierra Leonean army corporal Foday Saybana Sankoh, an ethnic Temne from Tonkolili District in Northern Sierra Leone. Sankoh was a British trained former army corporal who had also undergone guerrilla training in Libya. Taylor’s aim was for the RUF to attack the bases of Nigerian dominated peacekeeping troops in Freetown who were opposed to his rebel movement in Liberia.In 2003 Foday Sankoh was indicted by the Special Court for Sierra Leone for war crimes and crimes against humanity and died under UN custody before the trials could be concluded. Charles Taylor, who is a former president of Liberia, is currently in the Hague at the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), where he faces charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for crimes allegedly committed by Sankoh's RUF in Sierra Leone.
    The RUF, led by Sankoh and backed by Taylor, launched its first attack in villages in Kailahun District in Eastern Sierra Leone from Liberia on 23 March 1991. The government of Sierra Leone, overwhelmed by a crumbling economy and corruption, as well as a demoralised army, was unable to put up significant resistance against the incursion of the RUF. Within a month of entering Sierra Leone from Liberia, the RUF controlled much of Eastern Sierra Leone, including the cash crop production areas of Kailahun and the government diamond mines in Kono District. Forced recruitment of child soldiers was also an early feature of the rebel strategy.
    [edit]NPRC Junta
    On 29 April 1992, a group comprising a colonel and seven junior officers in the Sierra Leonean army, apparently frustrated by the government's failure to deal with the rebels and to pay salaries, launched a military coup which sent president Momoh into exile in Guinea.[31] The officers were Colonel Yahya Kanu, an ethnic Temne; the ethnic Mendes Captain Solomon A. J. Musa; Captain Julius Maada Bio, and Lieutenant Sahr Sandy; ethnic Konos Captain Samuel Komba Kambo and Captain Komba Mondeh; the Creole Captain Valentine E. M. Strasser; and the ethnic Kissi Second Lieutenant Tom Nyuma. Sandy was said to have insisted to his colleagues on the second day of the action that theirs would no longer be a revolt over pay but a revolution to overthrow the APC and the system of one-party politics. Sandy was the only soldier killed during the coup, allegedly by his adoptive uncle, APC member Colonel S.I.M. Turay. Turay was declared wanted for the murder of Sandy by the NPRC junta, but managed to escape to Guinea, where he joined the exiled president. Colonel Yahya Kanu was the very popular commander of the fearless Tiger Battalion which was at the forefront in the war against the RUF under president Momoh. The officers established the National Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC). Kanu was not formally declared head of the new junta. In an interview with the BBC Focus on Africa program, he even refused to acknowledge that the revolt was a coup by his men, yet he was seen as the de facto leader of the NPRC.
    Later, however, Kanu was arrested and imprisoned by his junior officers, who accused him of trying to negotiate a compromise with the toppled APC administration. Kanu's arrest divided the army into two rival groups, namely, his Tiger Battalion and Tom Nyuma's Cobra Battalion and their respective supporters. On April 29, 1992, Valentine Strasser took over as leader and chairman of the NPRC and Head of State of Sierra Leone. Strasser became the youngest Head of State in the world, just three days after his 27th birthday. 25 year-old S.A.J. Musa, a close friend of Strasser and an officer in Kanu's feared Tiger Battalion, was named Vice-Chairman of the NPRC. Many Sierra Leoneans nationwide rushed into the streets to celebrate the NPRC's takeover from the 23-year dictatorial APC regime, which they perceived as corrupt. The NPRC junta immediately suspended the 1991 Constitution, declared a state of emergency, banned all political parties, limited freedom of speech and freedom of the press, and enacted a rule-by-decree policy, in which soldiers were granted unlimited powers of administrative detention without charge or trial, and challenges against such detentions in court were precluded. The NPRC Junta maintained relations with ECOWAS and strengthened support for Sierra Leone-based ECOMOG troops fighting in Liberia. In his first speech as head of state, Strasser reassured the world of meeting his country's obligations to her creditors, and making a commitment to the IMF and the World Bank to accelerate the economic reform process started by Momoh's government in 1989 aimed at stabilizing the severely crippled economy. Shortly after that, Strasser negotiated a Structural Adjustment Program (SAP) with these two institutions. The junta formed the Supreme Council of State (SCS), made up of only members NPRC—the six surviving leaders mentioned above—chaired by Strasser himself. They also appointed an advisory council of retired senior civil servants and academics, chaired by a retired UN administrator Ahmad Tejan Kabbah. These men were all regarded as untainted by the 23 years of alleged APC mismanagement, corruption and abuse of power.
    In December 1992, an alleged coup attempt against the NPRC administration of Strasser, aimed at freeing the detained Colonel Yayah Kanu, was foiled. Sgt. Lamin Bangura (an ethnic Temne) and some junior army officers of the Tiger Battalion were identified as being behind the alleged plot. It led to the execution of seventeen Sierra Leone soldiers, including Sgt. Bangura and Yayah Kanu, and some senior members of the overthrown APC government who had been in detention at the Pa Demba Road prison. These included the notorious Inspector General of Police James Bambay Kamara, key former APC ministers, senior party members and thugs. By mid 1993 Captain Strasser announced a plan to hand over the government to civilian rule by 1996. Dr. James Jonah, who was by then Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations, was appointed by the NPRC Junta as the chairman of the new Interim National Electoral Commission (INEC), which was in charge of the demarcation of electoral boundaries and voter registration. In 1994 the NPRC junta proposed a change in the age restriction in the 1991 Sierra Leone constitution which stated only Sierra Leoneans over the age of 40 are eligible for the presidency, thus excluding Strasser and others in the NPRC.
    The NPRC proved to be nearly as ineffectual as the Momoh-led APC government in repelling the RUF. More and more of the country fell to RUF fighters, and by 1995 they held much of the diamond-rich Eastern Province and were at the edge of Freetown. In response, the NPRC hired several hundred mercenaries from the private firm Executive Outcomes (see www.petercusters.nl/file/60). Within a month they had driven RUF fighters back to enclaves along Sierra Leone’s borders, and cleared the RUF from the Kono diamond producing areas of Sierra Leone. However, Captains Tom Nyuma (Secretary of State East) and Komba Mondeh (Secretary of State Defence), who were regarded outside Freetown as the only "fighters" in the NPRC who dared to lead the troops to attack RUF strongholds in the East and South, were widely credited with these successes against the RUF. During this time corruption had erupted within the senior ranks of both the NPRC and the military, and the junta had become divided between SAJ Musa, on the one side, against Nyuma and Mondeh, on the other. SAJ Musa had become very popular in Freetown for fighting grafts and enforcing strict discipline in the public service and his last-Saturday-of-the-month city cleaning exercises. Nyuma, nicknamed "The Ranger", was seen across the country as the daredevil of the NPRC and the "protector of the East." There was great suspicion among the SCS members that SAJ Musa was planning a coup to topple his friend Strasser, whom he accused of being subservient to the wishes of Nyuma and Mondeh. On 5 Jul 1995, under pressure from Nyuma, Captain Strasser dismissed SAJ Musa as deputy chairman of the NPRC and appointed an ally of Tom Nyuma, the Secretary of State for Information and Broadcasting Captain Julius Maada Bio, to the position. Musa was arrested by soldiers led by Nyuma's men, and was briefly placed under house arrest in Freetown before being sent on to exile in the UK. Senior NPRC members, including Bio (who by now had promoted himself to Brigadier), Nyuma and Mondeh (both promoted to Colonel), were becoming increasingly unhappy with (still-Captain) Strasser's handling of the preparation for the pending elections, the peace negotiation with the RUF, and the transition to democratic civilian rule.
    In January 1996, after nearly four years in power, Captain V.E.M. Strasser was ousted in a bloodless "palace" coup led by his NPRC deputy Brigadier General Julius Maada Bio with the support of several senior NPRC members including both Tom Nyuma and Komba Mondeh. Bio claimed that Strasser was attempting to unilaterally amend the age restriction in the constitution in order to perpetuate his hold on power.
    [edit]Return of democracy and civil war
    Bio reinstated the Constitution and called for general elections. In the second round of presidential elections in early 1996, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, an ethnic Mandingo and the candidate of the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP), won 59% of the vote, over John Karefa-Smart, an ethnic Sherbro and the candidate of the United National People's Party (UNPP) who won 41%. Bio fulfilled his promise of a return to civilian rule, and handed power to Kabbah. President Tejan Kabbah's SLPP party also won a majority of the seats in Parliament.
    For years Sierra Leonean soldiers in the lower ranks were not paid a good salary and they were denied privileges and benefits. Soldiers were killed in action and no provision was made for their families. Major Johnny Paul Koroma, an army officer who hailed from the Limba ethnic group, was allegedly involved in an attempt to overthrow the government of president Kabbah. He was arrested, tried, convicted, and imprisoned at Freetown's Pademba Road Prison. On May 25, 1997, a group of seventeen junior army officers, loyal to Major Koroma, formed the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) led by Corporal Tamba Gborie and Sergent Alex Tamba Brima, both ethnic Kono. They launched a military coup which sent President Kabbah into exile in Guinea.[32]
    Corporal Tamba Gborie quickly went to the SLBS FM 99.9 headquarters in Freetown to announce the coup and to alert all soldiers to report for guard duty. The AFRC released Koroma from prison and installed him as their chairman and Head of State, with Corporal Tamba Gborie as deputy in command of the AFRC. Koroma suspended the constitution, banned demonstrations, shut down all private radio stations in the country and invited the RUF to join the new junta government, with its leader Foday Sankoh as the Vice-Chairman of the new AFRC-RUF coalition junta government. Within days, Freetown was overwhelmed by the presence of the RUF combatants who came to the city in their thousands. The Kamajors, a group of traditional fighters mostly from the Mende ethnic group under the command of deputy Defense Minister Samuel Hinga Norman, remained loyal to President Kabbah. The Kamajors defended Bo, the country's second largest city, from the Junta and continue their attack against the AFRC and RUF in south-eastern Sierra Leone
    After 10 months in office, the junta was ousted by the Nigeria-led ECOMOG forces, and the democratically elected government of president Kabbah was reinstated in March 1998. Hundreds of civilians who had been accused of helping the AFRC government were illegally detained. Courts-martial were held for soldiers accused of assisting the AFRC government. Twenty-four of these were found guilty and were executed without appeal in October 1998. On January 6, 1999, AFRC made another unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government, killing an estimated 3,000 people, raping women and girls, abducting and subsequently conscripting children, amputating limbs, and destroying much of the property in and around Freetown.
    In October, the United Nations agreed to send peacekeepers to help restore order and disarm the rebels. The first of the 6,000-member force began arriving in December, and the UN Security Council voted in February 2000 to increase the force to 11,000, and later to 13,000. But in May, when nearly all Nigerian forces had left and UN forces were trying to disarm the RUF in eastern Sierra Leone, Sankoh's forces clashed with the UN troops, and some 500 peacekeepers were taken hostage as the peace accord effectively collapsed. The hostage crisis resulted in more fighting between the RUF and the government as UN troops launched Operation Khukri to end the seize. The Operation was successful with Indian and British Special Forces being the main contingents.
    The situation in the country deteriorated to such an extent that British troops were deployed in Operation Palliser, originally simply to evacuate foreign nationals. However, the British exceeded their original mandate, and took full military action to finally defeat the rebels and restore order. The British were the catalyst for the ceasefire that ended the civil war. Elements of the British Army, together with administrators and politicians, remain in Sierra Leone to this day, helping train the armed forces, improve the infrastructure of the country and administer financial and material aid. Tony Blair, the Prime Minister of Britain at the time of the British intervention, is regarded as a hero by the people of Sierra Leone, many of whom are keen for more British involvement. Sierra Leoneans have been described as "The Worlds Most Resilient People".
    Between 1991 and 2001, about 50,000 people were killed in Sierra Leone's civil war. Hundreds of thousands of people were forced from their homes, and many became refugees in Guinea and Liberia. In 2001, UN forces moved into rebel-held areas and began to disarm rebel soldiers. By January 2002, the war was declared over. In May, Kabbah was reelected president. By 2004, the disarmament process was complete. Also in 2004, a UN-backed war crimes court began holding trials of senior leaders from both sides of the war. In December 2005, UN peacekeeping forces pulled out of Sierra Leone.
    In August 2007, Sierra Leone held presidential and parliamentary elections. However, no presidential candidate won the 50% plus one votes majority stipulated in the constitution on the first round of voting. A runoff election was held in September 2007, and Ernest Bai Koroma, the candidate of the APC and ethnically a half Limba and half Temne from the north was elected president.
    By 2007, there had been an increase in the number of drug cartels, many from Colombia, using Sierra Leone as a base to ship drugs on to Europe.[24] It was feared that this might lead to increased corruption and violence and turn the country, like neighbouring Guinea-Bissau, into a narco state. However, the new government of president Koroma quickly amended the laws against drug trafficking in the country, updating the existing legislation from those inherited at independence in 1961, to address the international concerns, increasing punishment for offenders both in terms of higher, if not prohibitive, fines, lengthier prison terms and provision for possible extradition of offenders wanted elsewhere, including to the United States.
    [edit]Geography and climate

    Main article: Geography of Sierra Leone


    Satellite image of Sierra Leone, generated from raster graphics data supplied by The Map Library


    The road from Kenema to Kailahun District.
    Sierra Leone is located on the west coast of Africa, lying mostly between latitudes 7° and 10°N (a small area is south of 7°), and longitudes 10° and 14°W.
    The country is bordered by Guinea to the north and northeast, Liberia to the south and southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west.[33]
    Sierra Leone has a total area of 71,740 km2 (27,699 sq mi), divided into a land area of 71,620 km2 (27,653 sq mi) and water of 120 km2 (46 sq mi).[2] The country has four distinct geographical regions. In eastern Sierra Leone the plateau is interspersed with high mountains, where Mount Bintumani reaches 1,948 m (6,391 ft), the highest point in the country. The upper part of the drainage basin of the Moa River is located in the south of this region.
    The centre of the country is a region of lowland plains, containing forests, bush and farmland,[33] that occupies about 43% of Sierra Leone's land area. The northern section of this has been categorised by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Guinean forest-savanna mosaic ecoregion, while the south is rain-forested plains and farmland. In the west Sierra Leone has some 400 km (249 mi) of Atlantic coastline, giving it both bountiful marine resources and attractive tourist potential. The coast has areas of low-lying Guinean mangroves swamp. The national capital Freetown sits on a coastal peninsula, situated next to the Sierra Leone Harbor, the world's third largest natural harbour.
    [edit]Climate
    Main article: Climate of Sierra Leone
    The climate is tropical, with two seasons determining the agricultural cycle: the rainy season from May to November, and a dry season from December to May, which includes harmattan, when cool, dry winds blow in off the Sahara Desert and the night-time temperature can be as low as 16 °C (60.8 °F). The average temperature is 26 °C (78.8 °F) and varies from around 26 °C (78.8 °F) to 36 °C (96.8 °F) during the year.[34][35]
    [edit]Environment
    Logging, mining, slash and burn, and deforestation for land conversion - such as cattle grazing - have dramatically diminished forested land in Sierra Leone since the 1980s. Correspondingly the habitat for the African Wild Dog, Lycaon pictus, has been decreased, such that this canid is deemed to have been extirpated in Sierra Leone.[36]
    Until 2002, Sierra Leone lacked a forest management system due to the civil war that caused tens of thousands of deaths. Deforestation rates have increased 7.3% since the end of the civil war.[37] On paper, 55 protected areas covered 4.5% of Sierra Leone as of 2003. The country has 2,090 known species of higher plants, 147 mammals, 626 birds, 67 reptiles, 35 amphibians, and 99 fish species.[37]
    The Environmental Justice Foundation has documented how the number of illegal fishing vessels in Sierra Leone's waters has multiplied in recent years. The amount of illegal fishing has significantly depleted fish stocks, depriving local fishing communities of an important resource for survival. The situation is particularly serious as fishing provides the only source of income for many communities in a country still recovering from over a decade of civil war.[38]
    In June 2005, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and Bird Life International agreed to support a conservation-sustainable development project in the Gola Forest in southeastern Sierra Leone,[39] an important surviving fragment of rainforest in Sierra Leone.
    [edit]Government and politics

    Main article: Politics of Sierra Leone
    Sierra Leone is a constitutional republic with a directly elected president and a unicameral legislature. The current system of government in Sierra Leone, established under the 1991 Constitution, is modelled on the following structure of government: the Legislature, the Executive and the Judiciary.[40]
    Within the confines of the 1991 Constitution, supreme legislative powers are vested in Parliament, which is the law making body of the nation. Supreme executive authority rests in the president and members of his cabinet and judicial power with the judiciary of which the Chief Justice is head.


    Ernest Bai Koroma, current president of Sierra Leone
    The president is the head of state, the head of government and the commander-in-chief of the Sierra Leone Armed Forces and the Sierra Leone Police. The president appoints and heads a cabinet of ministers, which must be approved by the Parliament. The president is elected by popular vote to a maximum of two five-year terms. The president is the highest and most influential position within the government of Sierra Leone.
    To be elected president of Sierra Leone, a candidate must gain at least 55% of the vote. If no candidate gets 55%, there is to be a second-round runoff between the top two candidates.
    The current president of Sierra Leone is Ernest Bai Koroma, who was sworn in on 17 September 2007, shortly after being declared the winner of a tense run-off election over the incumbent Vice president, Solomon Berewa of the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP).[41]
    Next to the president is the Vice president, who is the second-highest ranking government official in the executive branch of the Sierra Leone Government. As designated by the Sierra Leone Constitution, the vice president is to become the new president of Sierra Leone upon the death, resignation, or removal of the president by parliament and to assume the Presidency temporarily while the president is otherwise temporarily unable to fulfill his or her duties. The vice president is elected jointly with the president as his or her running mate. Sierra Leone's current vice president is Samuel Sam-Sumana, sworn in on 17 September 2007.
    The Parliament of Sierra Leone is unicameral, with 124 seats. Each of the country's fourteen districts is represented in parliament. 112 members are elected concurrently with the presidential elections; the other 12 seats are filled by paramount chiefs from each of the country's 12 administrative districts.
    The current parliament in the August 2007 Parliamentary elections is made up of three political parties. The most recent parliamentary elections were held on 11 August 2007. The All People's Congress (APC), won 59 of 112 parliamentary seats; the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) won 43; and the People's Movement for Democratic Change (PMDC) won 10. To be qualified as Member of Parliament, the person must be a citizen of Sierra Leone, must be at least 21 years old, must be able to speak, read and write the English language with a degree of proficiency to enable him to actively take part in proceedings in Parliament; and must not have any criminal conviction.[40]


    The Sierra Leone Supreme Court in the capital Freetown, the highest and most powerful court in the country
    Since independence in 1961, Sierra Leone's politics has been dominated by two major political parties, the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP), and the ruling All People's Congress (APC), although other minor political parties have also existed but with no significant supports.
    The judicial power of Sierra Leone is vested in the judiciary, headed by the Chief Justice and comprising the Sierra Leone Supreme Court, which is the highest court in the country and its ruling therefore cannot be appealed; High Court of Justice; the Court of Appeal; the magistrate courts; and traditional courts in rural villages. The president appoints and parliament approves Justices for the three courts. The Judiciary have jurisdiction in all civil and criminal matters throughout the country. The current Sierra Leone's Chief Justice is Umu Hawa Tejan Jalloh, who was appointed by President Ernest Bai Koroma and took office on 25 January 2008 upon her confirmation by parliament. She is the first woman in the history of Sierra Leone to hold such position.[42]
    [edit]Foreign relations

    Main article: Foreign relations of Sierra Leone


    Embassy of Sierra Leone in Washington, D.C.
    The Sierra Leone Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Relations, headed by Minister of Foreign Affairs Zainab Hawa Bangura is responsible for foreign policy of Sierra Leone. Sierra Leone has diplomatic relations that include China, Libya, Iran, and Cuba. Sierra Leone has good relations with the West, including the United States and has maintained historical ties with the United Kingdom and other former British colonies through membership of the Commonwealth of Nations.[43] The United Kingdom has played a major role in providing aid to the former colony, together with administrative help and military training since intervening to end the Civil War in 2000.
    Former President Siaka Stevens' government had sought closer relations with other West African countries under the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) a policy continued by the current. Sierra Leone, along with Liberia and Guinea form the Mano River Union (MRU) primarily designed to implement development projects and promote regional economic integration between the three countries.[44]
    Sierra Leone is also a member of the United Nations and its specialized agencies, the African Union, the African Development Bank (AFDB), the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM).[45] Sierra Leone is also a member of the International Criminal Court with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the US military (as covered under Article 98).
    [edit]Provinces and districts

    Main articles: Provinces of Sierra Leone, Districts of Sierra Leone, and Chiefdoms of Sierra Leone


    The 12 districts and 2 areas of Sierra Leone.
    The Republic of Sierra Leone is composed of three provinces: the Northern Province, Southern Province and the Eastern Province and one other region called the Western Area. The provinces are further divided into 12 districts, and the districts are further divided into chiefdoms, except for the Western Area.
    District Capital Area km2 Province Population (2004 census)[46] Population (2008 estimates)
    Bombali District Makeni 7,985 Northern Province 408,390 424,100[47]
    Koinadugu District Kabala 12,121 265,758
    Port Loko District Port Loko 5,719 455,746 483,752[48]
    Tonkolili District Magburaka 7,003 347,197 370,425[49]
    Kambia District Kambia 3,108 270,462 299,725[50]
    Kenema District Kenema 6,053 Eastern Province 497,948 522,656[51]
    Kono District Koidu Town 5,641 335,401
    Kailahun District Kailahun 3,859 358,190 389,253[52]
    Bo District Bo 5,473.6[53] Southern Province 463,668 527,131[54]
    Bonthe District Mattru Jong 3,468 129,947 137,155[55]
    Pujehun District Gandorhun 4,105 228,392 262,073[56]
    Moyamba District Moyamba 6,902 260,910
    Western Area Urban District Freetown 3,568 Western Area 1,272,873 1,473,873
    Western Area Rural District Freetown 4,175 174,249 205,400
    [edit]Major cities


    Freetown (population 1,070,200)[57] The capital, largest city and economic center of Sierra Leone.


    Koidu Town (population 111,800) Sierra Leone's fourth largest city and a major center for diamond trade. The city is located in Kono District, the richest diamond producing District in Sierra Leone
    City 2004 census[46] Current population estimate
    Freetown 772,873 1,070,200[57]
    Bo 149,957 215,474.[58]
    Kenema 128,402 164,125.[59]
    Koidu Town 80,025 111,800[60]
    Makeni 82,840 105,900[60]
    The populations quoted above for the five largest cities are estimates from the sources cited. Different sources give different estimates. Some claim that Magburaka should be included in the above list, but one source estimates the population at only 14,915,[61] whilst another puts it as high as 85,313.[62]
    [edit]Economy


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    Diamond miners in Kono District.
    Main article: Economy of Sierra Leone
    Sierra Leone is slowly emerging from a protracted civil war and is showing signs of a successful transition. Investor and consumer confidence continue to rise, adding impetus to the country’s economic recovery. There is greater freedom of movement and the successful re-habitation and resettlement of residential areas.
    Rich in minerals, Sierra Leone has relied on mining, especially diamonds, for its economic base. The country is among the top 10 diamond producing nations in the world. Mineral exports remain the main foreign currency earner. Sierra Leone is a major producer of gem-quality diamonds. Though rich in diamonds, it has historically struggled to manage their exploitation and export.
    Annual production of Sierra Leone's diamond estimates range between $250–300 million US$. Some of that is smuggled, where it is possibly used for money laundering or financing illicit activities. Formal exports have dramatically improved since the civil war with efforts to improve the management of them having some success. In October 2000, a UN-approved certification system for exporting diamonds from the country was put in place and led to a dramatic increase in legal exports. In 2001, the government created a mining community development fund, which returns a portion of diamond export taxes to diamond mining communities. The fund was created to raise local communities' stake in the legal diamond trade.
    Sierra Leone is perhaps best known for its blood diamonds that were mined and sold to De Beers and other diamond conglomerates during the civil war, in order to buy the weapons that fueled the atrocities of the civil war.[citation needed] In the 1970s and early 1980s, economic growth rate slowed because of a decline in the mining sector and increasing corruption among government officials.
    By the 1990s economic activity was declining and economic infrastructure had become seriously degraded. Over the next decade much of the formal economy was destroyed in the country’s civil war. Since the end of hostilities in January 2002, massive infusions of outside assistance have helped Sierra Leone begin to recover. Much of the recovery will depend on the success of the government's efforts to limit corruption by officials, which many feel was the chief cause for the civil war. A key indicator of success will be the effectiveness of government management of its diamond sector.
    Sierra Leone has one of the world's largest deposits of rutile, a titanium ore used as paint pigment and welding rod coatings. Sierra Rutile Limited, owned by a consortium of United States and European investors, began commercial mining operations near the city of Bonthe, in the Southern Province, in early 1979. It was then the largest non-petroleum US investment in West Africa. The export of 88,000 tons realized $75 million in export earnings in 1990. In 1990, the company and the government made a new agreement on the terms of the company's concession in Sierra Leone. Rutile and bauxite mining operations were suspended when rebels invaded the mining sites in 1995, but exports resumed in 2005.
    About two-thirds of the population engages in subsistence agriculture, which accounts for 52.5% of national income. The government is trying to increase food and cash crop production and upgrade small farmer skills. The government works with several foreign donors to operate integrated rural development and agricultural projects.
    Despite its successes and development, the Sierra Leone economy still faces significant challenges. There is high unemployment, particularly among the youth and ex-combatants. Authorities have been slow to implement reforms in the civil service, and the pace of the privatisation programme is also slacking and donors have urged its advancement.
    [edit]Currency
    Sierra Leone’s currency is the leone. The central bank of the country is the Bank of Sierra Leone which is located in the capital, Freetown.
    Sierra Leone operates a floating exchange rate system, and foreign currencies can be exchanged at any of the commercial banks, recognised foreign exchange bureaux and most hotels.
    Credit card use is limited in Sierra Leone, though they may be used at some hotels and restaurants. There are a few internationally linked automated teller machines that accept Visa cards in Freetown operated by ProCredit Bank.
    [edit]Demographics

    Main article: Demographics of Sierra Leone


    A Mende woman in the village of Jojoima in Kailahun District
    The 2009 UN estimate of Sierra Leone's population is 6.4 million. Freetown, with an estimated population of 1,070,200, is the capital, largest city, and the hub of the economy, commercial, educational and cultural center of the country. Bo is the second city with an estimated population of up to 269,000 (149,957 in the 2004 census). Other cities with an estimated population over 100,000 are Kenema, Koidu Town, and Makeni.


    Sierra Leonean children in Koindu, Kailahun District playing next to a school damaged during the Sierra Leone Civil War
    Although English is the official language[63] spoken at schools, government administration, and by the media, Krio (language derived from English and several African languages and native to the Sierra Leone Krio people) is the most widely spoken language in virtually all parts of Sierra Leone. The Krio language is spoken by 97%[2] of the country's population and unites all the different ethnic groups, especially in their trade and interaction with each other.[1] In December 2002, Sierra Leone’s President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah named Bengali as an "official language" in recognition of the work of 5,300 troops from Bangladesh in the peace-keeping force.[64][65]
    According to the World Refugee Survey 2008, published by the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, Sierra Leone had a population of 8,700 refugees and asylum seekers at the end of 2007. Nearly 20,000 Liberian refugees voluntarily returned to Liberia over the course of 2007. Of the refugees remaining in Sierra Leone, nearly all were Liberian.[66]
    The life expectancy of Sierra Leone is 41 years.[67]
    [edit]Religion

    Further information: Islam in Sierra Leone, Roman Catholicism in Sierra Leone, and Hinduism in Sierra Leone
    Sierra Leone religious sects
    Religion Percent
    Islam

    60%
    Christianity

    10%
    African indigenous

    30%
    Followers of Islam are estimated to comprise 60% of Sierra Leone's population according to the Inter-Religious Council (IRC)[68] or 71.3% (4,059,000) according to the Pew Research Center estimate.[69] Muslims predominate in all of the country's three provinces and plus the Western Area, though formerly they were concentrated in the north, with the south being mainly Christian. According to the CIA Factbook, followers of Christianity comprise about 10% of the total population.[70] Others follow African indigenous religion, though many inhabitants combine traditional beliefs with one of the newer faiths.[71][72] There are small numbers of adherents to other faiths such as Bahāʾī, Hinduism, and Judaism.[73]
    The Sierra Leone constitution provides freedom of religion and the government generally protects this right and does not tolerate its abuse. Unlike many other African countries, the religious diversity of Sierra Leone has seldom led to conflict.
    [edit]Ethnic groups

    Ethnic groups of Sierra Leone
    Mende
    Temne
    Limba
    Kono
    Mandingo
    Krio
    Fula
    Kuranko
    Sherbro
    Susu
    Loko
    Kissi
    Yalunka
    Vai
    The Sierra Leone government officially recognizes fourteen ethnic groups,[74] each with its own language and custom. Unlike most African nations, Sierra Leone has no serious ethnic divisions and no serious religious divisions. People often married across tribal and religious boundaries.
    The two largest and most dominant are the Mende and Temne, each comprises 30% of the population[75] (about 1,888,000 members each). The Mende predominate in the South-Eastern Provinces; the Temne likewise predominate in the Northern Province. Sierra Leone's national politics centres on the competition between the north, dominated by the Temne and the south-east dominated by the Mende.
    The third largest ethnic group are the Limba at (8.5%) of the population and they are a close ally of the Temne. The Limba are primarily found in Northern Sierra Leone, particularly in Bombali District and they are descendants of one of the earliest inhabitants of the country. Sierra Leone's first president Siaka Stevens and the country's second president Joseph Saidu Momoh are ethnic Limba.
    The fourth largest ethnic group are the Kono people at around (7.6%) of the population and they are primarily found in Kono District in Eastern Sierra Leone. The Kono are primarily diamond miners and farmers.
    After the Kono, are the Mandingo (also known as Mandinka) at (7.4%) (they are the descendants of the Mandinka traders from Guinea who immigrated to Sierra Leone between 1840 to about 1898). The Mandinka predominantly found in the east and the northern part of the country, and they are the largest inhabitant of the large towns, most notably Kabal and Falaba in Koinadugu District in the north and Yengema, Kono District in the east of the country. Historically, the Mandinka intense rivals have been the Temne and Limba. Sierra Leone's third president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah is an ethnic Mandingo.
    After the Mandinka, are the Fula at (6%) (descendants of 17th- and 18th-century Fulani settlers from the Fouta Djalon region of Guinea) they live primarily in the north and the Western Area of Sierra Leone. Some notable ethnic Fula include the country current chief justice Umu Hawa Tejan Jalloh
    Behind the Fula, are the Creole (at 5%) (descendants of freed West Indians slaves from the West Indies and freed African American slaves from the United States which landed in Freetown between 1787 and about 1885) are primarily found in the capital city of Freetown and its surrounding Western Area. Creole culture is unlike that of all other ethnic groups in Sierra Leone, and it is typical of Western culture and ideals. Former Sierrer Leone's Head of State Valentine Strasser is an ethnic Creole.
    Much smaller ethnic groups are the Kuranko, in the north; the Loko in the north, with the Susu and Yalunka in the far north in Kambia District around the border with Guinea. The Kissi and the much smaller group of Vai are further inland in Kailahun District in the East next to the border with Liberia. On the coast in Bonthe District in the south are the Sherbro.
    In the past, Sierra Leoneans were noted for their educational achievements, trading activity, entrepreneurial skills, and arts and crafts work, particularly wood carving. Many are part of larger ethnic networks extending into several countries, which link West African states in the area. But the level of education and infrastructure has declined sharply over the last 30 years.[76]
    List of Sierra Leoneans
    [edit]Education



    Second grade class in Koidu Town.
    Main article: Education in Sierra Leone
    Education in Sierra Leone is legally required for all children for six years at primary level (Class P1-P6) and three years in junior secondary education,[77] but a shortage of schools and teachers has made implementation impossible.[78] Two thirds of the adult population of the country are illiterate.[79] The Sierra Leone Civil War resulted in the destruction of 1,270 primary schools and in 2001 67 percent of all school-age children were out of school.[78] The situation has improved considerably since then with primary school enrolment doubling between 2001 and 2005 and the reconstruction of many schools since the end of the war.[80] Students at primary schools are usually 6 to 12 years old, and in secondary schools 13 to 18. Primary education is free and compulsory in government-sponsored public schools.
    The country has two universities: Fourah Bay College, founded in 1827 (the oldest university in West Africa),[81] and Njala University, primarily located in Bo District. Njala University was established as the Njala Agricultural Experimental Station in 1910 and became a university in 2005.[82] Teacher training colleges and religious seminaries are found in many parts of the country.
    [edit]Health

    Main article: Healthcare in Sierra Leone


    The Kailahun Government Hospital at its reopening in 2004. It is the main hospital that serves Kailahun District.
    Health care is provided by the government and others. Since April 2010, the government has instituted the Free Health Care Initiative which commits to free services for pregnant and lactating women and children under 5. This policy has been supported by increased aid from the United Kingdom and is recognised as a progressive move that other African countries may follow.[83] The country has a very high infant mortality and a very low life expectancy. The maternal death rates are also the highest in the world, at 2,000 deaths per 100,000 live births. The country suffers from epidemic outbreaks of diseases including yellow fever, cholera, lassa fever and meningitis.[84] The prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the population is 1.6 percent, higher than the world average of 1 percent but lower than the average of 6.1 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa.[85]
    [edit]Military

    Main article: Military of Sierra Leone
    The Military of Sierra Leone, officially the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF), are the unified armed forces of Sierra Leone responsible for the territorial security of Sierra Leone's border and defending the national interests of Sierra Leone within the framework of its international obligations. The armed forces were formed after independence in 1961, on the basis of elements of the former British Royal West African Frontier Force present in the country. The Sierra Leone Armed Forces currently consist of around 15,500 personnel, comprising the largest Sierra Leone Army,[86] the Sierra Leone Navy and the Sierra Leone Air Wing.[87] The president of Sierra Leone is the Commander in Chief of the military, with the Minister of Defence responsible for defence policy and the formulation of the armed forces. The current Sierra Leone Defense Minister is Ret. Major Alfred Paolo Conteh. The Military of Sierra Leone also has a Chief of the Defence Staff who is a uniformed military official responsible for the administration and the operational control of the Sierra Leone military.[88] Brigadier General Alfred Nelson-Williams who was appointed by president Koroma succeeded the retired Major General Edward Sam M’boma on 12 September 2008 as the Chief of Defense Staff of the Military.[89]
    Before Sierra Leone gained independence in 1961 the military was known as the Royal Sierra Leone Military Force. The military seized control in 1968, bringing the National Reformation Council into power. On 19 April 1971, when Sierra Leone became a republic, the Royal Sierra Leone Military Forces were renamed the Republic of Sierra Leone Military Force (RSLMF).[90] The RSLMF remained a single service organization until 1979, when the Sierra Leone Navy was established. It then remained largely unchanged for 16 years until in 1995 when Defence Headquarters was established and the Sierra Leone Air Wing formed. This gave the need for the RSLMF to be renamed the Armed Forces of the Republic of Sierra Leone (AFRSL).
    [edit]Law enforcement

    Law enforcement in Sierra Leone is primarily the responsibility of the Sierra Leone Police (SLP). Sierra Leone Police was established by the British colony back in 1894 and is one of the oldest police forces in West Africa. The key mission of the Sierra Leone Police include to prevent crime, to protect life and property, to detect and prosecute offenders, to maintain public order, to ensure safety and security, to enhance access to justice. The Sierra Leone Police is headed by the Inspector General of Police, the professional head of the Sierra Leone Police force and is appointed by the President of Sierra Leone. Each one of Sierra Leone's 14 districts is headed by a District Police commissioner who is the professional head of their respective district. The Districts Police Commissioners report directly to the Inspector General of Police at the Sierra Leone Police headquarters in Freetown. The current Inspector General of Police is Brima Acha Kamara who was appointed to the position by former president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah.
    [edit]Media

    Main article: Media in Sierra Leone


    Radio listener in Kailahun
    Media in Sierra Leone began with the introduction of the first printing press in Africa at the start of the nineteenth century. A strong journalistic tradition developed with the creation of a number of newspapers. In the 1860s, the country became a journalist hub for Africa, with professionals travelling to the country from across the continent. At the end of the nineteenth century, the industry went into decline, and when radio was introduced in the 1930s, it became the primary communication media in the country. The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Service (SLBS) was created by the government in 1934 making it the earliest English language radio broadcaster service in West Africa. The service began broadcasting television in 1963, with coverage extended to all the districts in the country in 1978.
    Print media is not widely read in Sierra Leone, especially outside Freetown, partially due to the low levels of literacy in the country.[91] In 2007 there were 15 daily newspapers in the country, as well as those published weekly.[92] Among newspaper readership, young people are likely to read newspapers weekly and older people daily. The majority of newspapers are privately run and are often critical of the government. The standard of print journalism tends to be low due to lack of training, and people trust the information published in newspapers less than that found on the radio.[91]


    Isata Mahoi shown editing radio programmes in Talking Drum studio Freetown, she is also an actress in Sierra Leone radio soap opera Atunda Ayenda
    Radio is the most-popular and most-trusted media in Sierra Leone, with 85% of people having access to a radio and 72% of people in the country listening to the radio daily.[91] These levels do vary between areas of the country, with the Western Area having the highest levels and Kailahun the lowest. Stations mainly consist of local commercial stations with a limited broadcast range, combined with a few stations with national coverage. The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNIOSIL) runs one of the most popular stations in the country, broadcasting programs in a range of languages. Content includes news of UN activities and human rights information, as well as music and news. The UN missions will withdraw in 2008 and the UN Radio's future is uncertain. There is also a government station run by the SLBS that transmits on FM and short-wave. FM relays of BBC World Service, Radio France Internationale and Voice of America are also broadcast.
    Outside the capital Freetown television is not watched by a great many people. There are two national, free terrestrial television stations in Sierra Leone, one run by the government SLBS and the other a private station, ABC Television-Africa (ABC). In 2007, a pay-per-view service was also introduced by GTV as part of a pan-African television service in addition to the nine year old sub-saharan Digital satellite television service (DStv) originating from Multichoice Africa in South Africa. Internet access in Sierra Leone has been sparse but is on the increase, especially since the introduction of wireless services across the country. There are nine internet service providers (ISPs) operating in the country. Freetown has a city wide wireless network and internet cafes and other businesses offering internet access. Problems experienced with access to the Internet include an intermittent electricity supply and a slow connection speed in the country outside Freetown.
    The Sierra Leone constitution guarantees freedom of speech, and freedom of the press; however, the government maintains strong control of media, and at times restricts these rights in practice. Some subjects are seen as taboo by society and members of the political elite; imprisonment and violence have been used by the political establishment against journalists.[93][94] Under legislation enacted in 1980, all newspapers must register with the Ministry of Information and pay sizeable registration fees. The Criminal Libel Law, including Seditious Libel Law of 1965, is used to control what is published in the media.[95] In 2006, President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah committed to reforming the laws governing the press and media to create a freer system for journalists to work in,[95] but in 2007, Sierra Leone was ranked as having the 121st least-free press in the world, with the press less-free, in comparison to other countries, than in 2006.[96]
    [edit]Music

    Main article: Music of Sierra Leone
    see also:Palm-wine music, Gumbe, Afropop
    [edit]Transportation

    Main article: Transport in Sierra Leone
    There are a number of systems of transport in Sierra Leone, which has a road, air and water infrastructure, including a network of highways and several airports.
    [edit]Air

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