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with new Afrobeat album, veteran musician
Bockarie asks for better Sierra Leone
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[November 20, 2020]
By Cooper Inveen
FREETOWN (Reuters)
- Sierra Leonean musician and activist Emmerson
Bockarie is no stranger to controversy, having
received death threats from all ends of the
country's political spectrum over two decades
and three successive governments. |
Bockarie is back in his home
country after a four-year stay in Nigeria with a
new release amid heightened political friction
over accusations of corruption, tribalism and
partisanship between Sierra Leone's two main
political parties.
The album "9 Lives", released in August, tackled
the same societal ills that have made him a
target of both ruling and opposition party
supporters.
Singing in the local krio pidgin, in a track
called "Kokonat" (Coconut Head) Bockarie sings:
"Regardless of who's in power there'll be no
change because they know we've made a strong
decision to be blindly partisan."
"Because of their fighting that has no
expiration date and above all makes no sense the
country is in reverse mood," he sings.
Over a pulsating Afrobeat rhythm, Bockarie
drives home the message that although power may
shift hands, living conditions will remain the
same for the poor so long as Sierra Leoneans
continue to elect corrupt and incompetent
officials.
"We have been crying for 59 years," Bockarie
told Reuters. "We deserve better. Whatever is
happening between the political parties, it's
not our concern...All we are asking for is a
better Sierra Leone."
While the current government of President Julius
Maada Bio touts a policy of zero tolerance
towards corruption, the Afrobeat singer says
Sierra Leone continues to face the same problems
like tribalism and partisanship that led to it
into a civil war from 1991 to 2002.
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|
The country's two largest
political parties, the Sierra Leone People's
Party (SLPP) and the All People's Congress (APC),
have alternately ruled since independence from
Britain in 1961.
Bockarie began making his political brand of
Afropop in 2002. His 2007 album is often
credited for helping turn that year's
presidential election in favor of the
then-opposition APC.
But by the time the SLPP regained power in 2018,
Bockarie was living in Nigeria after having
received death threats from APC supporters.
Sierra Leone's anti-corruption body summoned
former president Koroma for questioning in
October over allegations of graft while in
office, but had to postpone after a crowd of
demonstrators barred investigators from entering
his property.
"We're taking the same paths over and over,"
Bockarie said "We're not asking for the world.
We're just asking for basic, basic amenities
like pipe-borne water."
(Reporting by Cooper Inveen; Editing by Bate
Felix and Angus MacSwan)
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