Sierra Leone’s police chief said on Tuesday that ex-president Ernest Bai Koroma was a “suspect” in the
organization of the November 26 events, described by the government as an “attempted coup”.
Mr. Koroma, who led Sierra Leone from 2007 to 2018, was questioned for the fourth time on Tuesday by
police in Freetown.
The government had announced on Saturday that he had been placed under a regime akin to house
arrest.
According to the Sierra Leonean authorities, some of Mr. Koroma’s former guards are suspected of
involvement in the unrest of November 26.
They have published a new list of 54 wanted persons, including ex-president Koroma’s daughter, in
connection with these events.
According to the Minister of Information, the security forces also recovered 29 of the 47 assault rifles
and five of the seven rocket launchers belonging to the suspected coup plotters.
In the early hours of November 26, men had attacked a military armory, two barracks, two prisons, and
two police stations.
The fighting left 21 people dead, 18 members of the security services, and three assailants, according to
the Minister of Information.
Eighty people were arrested in connection with these events, most of them soldiers, according to the
authorities.
A curfew, introduced by the authorities from 21:00 to 06:00 (local and GMT), was extended on Monday
from 00:00 to 06:00, due to the “improved security situation”, according to the government.