12 June 2019

Exploring West Africa: Freetown, Sierra Leone (Part 6)

Exploring West Africa with Silversea's Silver Explorer, starting in Accra, Ghana on 10 April 2013 and ending in Dakkar, Senegal on 26 April 2013.
Life on the hills of Freetown

April 18th, 2013

Population of Sierra Leone (2015): 7 million
Population of Freetown, the capital city (2015): 1,056,000
Currency: 8,810 SLL (Sierra Leonean Leones) = US$1
Demonym (people from Sierra Leone are called): Sierra Leonean 
GDP per capita (PPP 2018) = US$ 1,608 (in Kuwait it’s $69,669)
HDI (2015): 0.420, ranked 179th (among the 10 lowest in the world).



Street art depicting slave trade of the colonial era.

Street art depicting slavers of the 20th century (i.e. consumer capitalism).

The air in Sierra Leone was heavy.  Our first stop was the Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary.  Founded in 1995 by Bala Amarasekaran and his wife Sharmila, and with the help of Jane Goodall, it’s a place where abused, orphaned and abandoned animals have been taken care of for more than two decades now.  Unfortunately baby chimpanzees are still stolen from their families in the wilderness and sold as pets.  Furthermore, their habitat is threatened by an increasing human population, deforestation, disease and hunting.  Many are kept in research laboratories around the world.

DNA sequencing shows that chimpanzees are the closest living relatives to the human lineage.
Fossil sites of chimpanzees have been found in Kenya, which means they coexisted with early humans in the East African Rift Valley during the Middle Pleistocene (781,000 to 126,000 years ago).  The chimpanzee line split from the last common ancestor of the human line around six million years ago (we’re still not sure what the hominin lineage looked like that long ago (1)).

Chimpanzees are capable of using tools: they modify sticks, rocks, shrubs and anything else they find in nature to extract honey and termites, to crack nuts open, to retrieve water, to kill small mammals, and for self-defense.

The human genome is very similar to the chimpanzee’s.  One of the major differences however is concerning the gene responsible for speech development, which has gone through rapid development in humans, but not so much in the chimpanzees.  Attempts have been made to teach chimps human sign language.  They are capable of memorizing signs, but not developing new sentences, unlike human children who form new sentences as soon as they learn new vocabulary.

Male chimpanzees are known to throw rocks at each other as a sign of aggression (3). This particular rock was not thrown at anyone, so all’s good.
Look at those fingers, how he’s grabbing the fistful of nuts. It’s amazing.

The few hours we were given to spend time with the chimpanzees of Tacugama, we observed them grooming, napping, using rocks as tools to break into fruits and nuts, vocalizing with each other, and sometimes towards us.  It was amazing to watch them just hanging out.  Some of their moves seemed so human.  Like when they’re trying to pick at a nut with their fingers from inside its shell, that’s exactly how I would do it.  I hope it won’t be too late by the time the masses realize how precious these creatures are, and how vital it is to preserve them in their natural habitat.  I would hate to see a future where chimpanzees are confined to sanctuaries and zoos.  Ideally there would be no zoos in existence.  All wild animals deserve to live freely in their own environment.

If you want to adopt a chimp at the Tacugama sanctuary, you can do that for US$80/year at (http://www.tacugama.com/adopt/).

Some of these billboards seemed out of place.

78% of the population are Muslim, 21% Christian. Religious violence is very rare in Sierra Leone. Even during the civil war people were never targeted because of their religion.

There’s a significant number of illegal fishing vessels around Sierra Leone. Illegal fishing goes unchecked, so the fish in the sea is reduced drastically, which doesn’t leave much for local communities who depend on seafood for survival.

Our second stop was Lady Deborah Berewa outpatient Hospital.  
I can’t imagine the challenges that Sierra Leone has faced with healthcare, especially after the civil war.  The civil war of 1991-2002 was brutal.  There were mass killings (50,000 people), rapes (more than 215,000), and one side was famous for hacking the limbs of civilians.  About a quarter of the soldiers serving for the armed forces were under the age of 18.  The children were often abducted from their families, and sometimes made to kill their own family members.  Most of the time they were drugged.  After the war they suffered from drug withdrawal, physical and mental wounds, and a lack of memory as to who they were or where they came from before the war.  Mental healthcare in Sierra Leone is almost non-existent.  All they have is the help of traditional healers.
Another unfortunate effect of an 11 year war is that children don’t get to vaccinate.  There is no data available, but a significant proportion of Sierra Leone’s disabled people are polio survivors (2). 

In Sierra Leone the life expectancy at birth is 48.2 years, infant mortality rate is 89 deaths/1,000 live births, and under-5 mortality rate is 140 deaths/1,000 births (4).


Autoclave.

If these walls could talk…

The First Lady of Sierra Leone (2007-2018), Sia Koroma, greeted us and gave a speech at the hospital.
Sierra Leone is known for its blood diamonds.  They were mined and sold to to advance the purposes of the civil war.  And before that, in the 1970s and 1980s, diamond trade only benefitted the corrupt.  To Sierra Leone diamonds are a resource curse.

Two thirds of the adult population of Sierra Leone are illiterate.

About 42% of the population are under the age of 15.

The last place we visited was to watch a football match between players who suffered the atrocities of the civil war.  A team of amputees played with a team of polio victims —and they played fiercely.  Nothing seemed to hold them back.  We were told that they take all their matches very seriously.  It was a memorable game to watch, certainly the most inspirational I have witnessed.  No matter what life puts you through, you take up the pieces you’re left with and make the best out of it, because you’re still here, and you’re still breathing.

This book, A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah, is a biography of a child soldier. I read it a few years ago, but it remains one of the best (or I should say one of the most emotionally agonizing) stories I’ve read out of Africa.

“I was still hesitant to let myself let go, because I still believed in the fragility of happiness.”
~Ishmael Beah, A Long Way Gone.

“One of the unsettling things about my journey, mentally, physically, and emotionally, was that I wasn’t sure when or where it was going to end.”
~Ishmael Beah, A Long Way Gone.

Celebrating new beginnings.

A Rolex store.

The Lovers Garden.

Life by the sea.
One of the better living conditions I’ve seen in Sierra Leone.

How do kittens survive wars?

The End


*All facts are from Wikipedia unless otherwise stated.


  1. “Human Evolution: 3.2 Evidence from the fossil record.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 22 May 2019, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_evolution#Evidence_from_the_fossil_record.
  2. Kühl, Hjalmar S., et al. “Chimpanzee Accumulative Stone Throwing.” Nature News, Nature Publishing Group, 29 Feb. 2016, www.nature.com/articles/srep22219.
  3. UNHCR. “Sierra Leone's Polio Disabled Battle Adversity.” Refworld, IRIN, 2 Sept. 2013, www.refworld.org/docid/5225bb374.html.
  4. “Lady Deborah Berewa Outpatient Hospital Lakka, SL.” GlobalGiving, Greatest Goal Ministries USA, www.globalgiving.org/projects/medical-clinic-healthcare-education-sierra-leone/.

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