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Article: Quagmire in west Africa: Nigerian peacekeeping in Sierra Leone (1997-1998)
- Article from:
- International Journal
- Article date:
- July 1, 1999
- Author:
CopyrightCopyright Canadian Institute of International Affairs Summer 1999. Provided by ProQuest LLC. (Hide copyright information)
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FOLLOWING A LONG PERIOD OF MILITARY RULE, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah was elected president of Sierra Leone on 17 March 1996. Little more than one year later, on 25 May 1997, he and his democratically elected government were overthrown in a bloody coup led by dissident military officers and rebels from Sierra Leone's long-standing insurgency. In March 1998, a peacekeeping force under Nigerian leadership, with considerable help from a British/South African mercenary firm and a local paramilitary (the Kamajor), entered Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, and restored Kabbah and his government. The motives for Nigerian intervention were twofold: there was a natural desire for regional security; but ...