FREETOWN (Reuters) – A former Sierra Leone defence minister and his deputy were arrested yesterday as part of a crackdown by President Julius Maada Bio’s administration on alleged graft by its predecessor, the country’s anti-corruption commissioner said.
Alfred Paolo Conteh, the defence minister under ex-President Ernest Koroma, and Sannah Marrah, his deputy at the ministry, were arrested on Friday in connection with several alleged military procurement irregularities, said Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) head Francis Kaifala.
“After the discussions, we decided to detain them both,” Kaifala told Reuters. “We are building up our case now and will have to charge them within 10 days in order to keep them in custody.”
Conteh’s lawyer did not respond to requests for comment, and Reuters was unable to contact a lawyer for Marrah.
Sierra Leone authorities also arrested Victor Foh, the vice president under Koroma, whom Bio succeeded in April, and Mansaray Minkailu, Koroma’s mines minister, in July on graft charges. The two are currently standing trial.
They both deny the charges, and their supporters say the accusations are a politically-motivated witch hunt by Bio.
Bio campaigned on promises to tackle graft and revive an economy devastated by a slump in commodity prices and the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa. The ACC says it has recovered about $1 million in misappropriated public funds in the last six months.