Jawei Chiefdom is a chiefdom in Kailahun District of Sierra Leone with a population of 42,635.[1] Its largest town and headquarters is Daru.

Jawei Chiefdom
Coordinates: 7°59′30″N 10°50′00″W / 7.99167°N 10.83333°W / 7.99167; -10.83333
Country Sierra Leone
ProvinceEastern Province
DistrictKailahun District
CapitalDaru
Population
 (2004[1])
 • Total42,635
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)

Geography edit

Jawei Chiefdom is located on the southwestern edge of Kailahun District, bordering Dama Chiefdom and Gaura Chiefdom of Kenema District to the southwest. Jawei borders Jaluahun Chiefdom to the northwest, Mandu Chiefdom to the northeast, and Malema Chiefdom to the southeast. The Moa River transects the chiefdom.

Settlements edit

The other important town in Jawei Chiefdom is Benduma. Villages in Jawei dChiefdom include Bombohun, Nyedehun, Gbajorma, Tomboma, Folu, Giehun, Guma,Karlu, Karlu Kambama, Kutoma, Manowah, Mamabu, Bembeyeima, Pellie and Potoru, nyeama

Economy edit

The economy is primarily agricultural; however there is some mining. The primary export is palm oil.

Civil war edit

During the 1991-2002 civil war various villages in northern Jawei Chiefdom were occupied by the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) and National Patriotic Front of Liberia ((NPFL)) during their initial on-thrust in Spring 1991. The RUF got as far as Benduma, but did not attack Daru or the Moa Barracks across the river, where the Sierra Leone Army (SLA) was based. Guinean troops soon arrived in Daru to support the SLA. The Guineans attacked and drove the RUF out of Benduma, after which battle neither side stationed troops there.[2] In June 1991, RUF and NPFL attacked the Moa Barracks at Daru, but despite the gallantry of the NPFL commander, who was killed on the bridge over the Moa, the Guinean troops and the SLA turned back the assault.[3] Fighting continued in Jawei Chiefdom over the next two years with little change in territory. In December 1992, after an almost successful RUF attack on nearby Segbwema in Jaluahun Chiefdom, some of the Guinean troops were sent from the Moa Barracks to Segbwema.[4] At that same time local hunters, often members of secret hunting societies, began to form into auxiliary units to assist the SLA in Jawei Chiefdom.[5] Finally in May 1993, the SLA with the assistance of these "civilian" units were able to dislodge the RUF from their bases in northern Jawei.[5]

Nonetheless, RUF guerrilla warfare continued in the chiefdom and it was still considered unsafe during the February 1996 elections.[6] Shortly after the election, local chiefs were encouraged to send their young men to Kamajor society initiations after which they were formed into Civil Defence Forces (CDF) units. Prior to this the local hunters were under the command of their own chiefs, but this changed them into a state force. With this new status the Jawei CDF units began attacking RUF positions without SLA support.[7] By January 1997, some Jawei forces were fighting as far away as Upper Bambara Chiefdom.[8] By September 1997 the Jawei Kamajors had all of Jawei Chiefdom under their control and the guerrilla war there ceased.[9]

In March 1998, Nigerian ECOMOG forces arrived in Daru to support the Kamajors. But this had the effect of drawing combined RUF and Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) forces to attack Daru which they did several times during 1998 and early 1999.[10] The last such attack was on 7 July 1999, just two days before the ceasefire mandated in the Lomé Peace Accord.[11] But the fighting continued anyway with the Kamajors attacking RUF/AFRC positions at Daru Junction on 17 July, driving them out. But the RUF/AFRC recaptured Daru Junction a month later.[11]

In Spring 2000 with the arrival of UNAMSIL personnel disarmament started in Jawei Chiefdom, where a Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration Camp had been set up in November the previous year.[12] But it was interrupted in May by resistance to the northeast. The process was only restarted in late July.[13]

Recent history edit

A boundary dispute between Jawei and Malema Chiefdom, arising in 2004 out of the dislocations suffered during the civil war, was settled in 2007 at the direction of the president Bai Koroma.[14]

In September 2009 the chiefdom suffered serve and unusual flooding as the Moa River over flowed.[15] Chief Fadah Kallon said that it was the first such flood ever to hit the chiefdom.[16] The flood has been partially attributed to the chronic deforestation that occurs in Sierra Leone.[17]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Final Results 2004 Population and Housing Census" (pdf). Government of Sierra Leone. 2006. p. 6. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  2. ^ Smith, L. Alison; Gambette, Catherine; Longley, Thomas (10 March 2004). Conflict Mapping in Sierra Leone: Violations of Humanitarian Law from 1991 to 2002 (PDF). Freetown, Sierra Leone: No Peace Without Justice. pp. 253–294, page 255. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  3. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 261
  4. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 267
  5. ^ a b Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 268
  6. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 273
  7. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 274
  8. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 275
  9. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 276
  10. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 280
  11. ^ a b Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 281
  12. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 325
  13. ^ Smith, Gambette & Longley 2004, p. 285
  14. ^ Staff (23 September 2009). "ONS meet to settle boundary dispute in Kenema". Awoko Newspaper.
  15. ^ Staff (23 September 2009). "20 houses destroyed as Moa River overflows". Awoko Newspaper.
  16. ^ Moriba, Saffa (25 November 2009). "Jawei Flood Victims Receive Aid". Awoko Newspaper. Archived from the original on 27 December 2010.
  17. ^ Akiwumi, Fenda A. (2006). "Chapter 7: Conflict timber, conflict diamonds: parallels in the political ecology of 19th and 20th century resource exploitation in Sierra Leone". Africa's Development in the Twenty-First Century: Pertinent Socio-Economic and Development Issues. Aldershot, England: Ashgate. pp. 109–126. ISBN 978-0-7546-4478-1.