Sierra Leone president sacks deputy for seeking asylum in U.S. embassy

Sierra Leone's incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma waves to supporters after voting in the capital Freetown

Sierra Leone’s incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma (C) waves to supporters after voting in the capital Freetown November 17, 2012.

(Reuters) – Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma has sacked Vice President Samuel Sam-Sumana for seeking asylum in a foreign embassy, a statement from the president’s office said on Wednesday.

Sam-Sumana had requested asylum at the United States embassy in Freetown after soldiers surrounded his residence on Saturday following his expulsion from the ruling party last week.

His sacking could stoke political tensions in one of the three West African countries hardest-hit by the worst outbreak on record of the Ebola virus that has killed over 3,600 people in Sierra Leone.

Following an investigation by Koroma’s All People’s Congress (APC) party, Sam-Sumana was accused of creating his own rival political movement and fomenting violence in his home region of Kono, in diamond-rich eastern Sierra Leone.

Sam-Sumana who was not immediately available for comment, has rejected calls to resign and denied the accusations against him, which also included charges of lying about his academic credentials and his Muslim faith.

His expulsion from the party has stirred confusion as Sierra Leone’s 1991 constitution only allows the dismissal of the vice president with the vote of two-thirds of parliament, but it does require the office holder to belong to a political party.

Source