In advance of the nation’s scheduled general elections in June 2023, the West African Elders’ Forum (WAEF) has sent a pre-election fact-finding team to Sierra Leone under the direction of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
This information may be found in a statement made on Wednesday in Abuja by Wealth Ominabo, Communications Officer for the Goodluck Jonathan Foundation (GJF), which is hosting WAEF.
Ominabo claimed that the fact-finding team also included former Gambian vice president Fatoumata Tambajang and former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan.
In order to increase public confidence and trust in the election process, he stated that the team would be interacting with important political figures and other key stakeholders in Sierra Leone.
“The two-day mission in support of inclusive and peaceful general elections is billed to begin on Wednesday. (April 12)
“Members of the missions will hold consultations with the country’s political actors and stakeholders, including the civil society and the Diplomatic Corps, the Electoral Management Bodies and Agencies.
“This is in a bid to ascertain the level of preparedness towards conducting free, fair and credible elections,’’ he said.
Ominabo said that the mission to Sierra Leone lead by Obasanjo was in line with the Forum’s objective of promoting preventive diplomacy as a means of reducing electoral-related tension and violence in Africa.
He said that WAEF was founded in 2020 to promote peace, democracy and good governance, had carried out preventive diplomacy missions to many countries including Gambia and Nigeria.
“Beyond its engagements in Sierra Leone, WAEF is scheduled to carry out a similar mission to Liberia, two nations that hold general elections in 2023,” Ominabo said.
He recalled that after Nigeria’s Feb. 25, Presidential and National Assembly elections, WAEF deployed a team of former Presidents to hold consultations with some of the presidential candidates and other key stakeholders in the country.
He said that the team was talking to the stakeholders on message of peace in order to ensure that there was no post-election violence in the country.
Sierra Leone’s 2023 elections will be the country’s sixth democratic election and the fifth since the end of the civil war in 2002.