30.9 C
Sierra Leone
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Journalist Wants Fighting Corruption to be a Bottom-Top-Approach

HomeAYV NewsJournalist Wants Fighting Corruption to be a Bottom-Top-Approach

Journalist Wants Fighting Corruption to be a Bottom-Top-Approach

Date:

Related stories

EU funds Kambia district with $2.5M investment activities

The ceremony was witnessed by the Minister of Local...

60% of Kush supply chain disrupted nationwide

Talking to the audience during a discussion with the...

First Lady champions fight against Early Child Marriage

The Office of the First Lady of Sierra Leone...

AYV Miss University 2023/24: Meet The Contestants

April, 2024, these Queens will be contesting to win...

AYV Miss University 2023/2024: Meet Matilda Kamara, Contestant From IPAM

Born on February 1, 2001 in Moyamba, Matilda Kamara...

 

I see corruption as the number one enemy of Sierra Leone. It is like cancer that spreads like a wildfire in the dry season. It is time that all patriotic citizens declare war against this enemy which continues to eat deep into the fabric of the nation. 

This enemy has to be destroyed. If we fail to do that, then it will continue to destroy our society. To be able to destroy the enemy we have to be able to fight this particular war collectively. 

Individually, we can be helpful, but collectively, our actions would be more effective, and it would be easier to destroy the enemy. The war has to be fought on all levels such as the presidential level, the senior ministerial level, the junior ministerial level, senior official level, and the subordinates. 

It is a war that has to be fought with zest and all should cooperate and be ready to disclose whatever information we have to the designated authorities. It is a war in which the churches, the mosques, the schools, and the local organizations should get involved. If the war is fought as outlined, the enemy is sure to be destroyed, which will make all Sierra Leoneans live decent lives as is the case in the rest of the civilized world. 

Even in the civilised and developed nations in the world, corruption, though minimal, is a disease that continues to occupy top government policies which every stakeholder is determined to eradicate from their societies.

We all have seen how the enemy has influenced the minds of politicians, military and rebel leaders who ruled Sierra Leone. Their minds were completely taken over by the enemy that they became monsters and treated their fellow Sierra Leoneans like substandard human beings.

To be exact, Albert Margai was the Prime Minister when the economy started going from bad to worse because of corruption. People were dissatisfied with his leadership; they did not like where the country was heading. 

But now if we as Sierra Leoneans work together we can fight corruption and win the battle. First of all, Sierra Leone has a very bright future as long as we keep doing the right thing. President Koroma is doing a marvellous job. The problem is that people want all the changes to take place over night, and it does not work that way. 

There is no magic wand when it comes to government bureaucracy. To get things done takes a while. One positive way to stop corruption in this country is to give the people reasonable wages. The salary scale is terrible compared to the cost of living in Sierra Leone. 

Agreeably this government has made laudable efforts to increase minimum wages in both the public and private sectors but much still needs to be done to raise the people above poverty and corruption which many say are inseparable bedfellows. 

The health sector is also a corrupt place to look at. As we commence post Ebola recovery, the government should take an introspective look at the health sector to stamp out graft as it has over the years led to lose of lives. 

Some patients die because they do not have money to pay hospital bills, some doctors have private clinics and they mandate the patients to go to their clinics and they charged them huge amounts of money. Some doctors do their operations on patients at night in their private clinics.  

President Ernest Koroma and his APC government are in a tight fight against corruption and we as Sierra Leoneans should also help in the fight to eradicate corruption as we have done to fight against Ebola. 

President Koroma cannot fight corruption alone. As the government is a government of the people, for the people and by the people, we should all join hands to fight corruption and win the fight against this war which started in the sixties under the leadership of the SLPP’s Albert Margai.

That is why it is incumbent on us all in the country, from top to bottom, to assist in every little way we can the work of the Anti Corruption Commission ACC as mandated by government legislation to curb corrupt practices in Sierra Leone once and for all.

Latest stories

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once