Under the 1991
Constitution of Sierra Leone, capital crimes included aggravated robbery, treason, mutiny, and murder. While the nation's final executions were carried out by
firing squad,
hanging was also a legal method of execution that was apparently more commonly applied for civilian crimes than the firing squad. Two men, Baimba Moi Foray and his bodyguard, Foday Kamara, were sentenced to death by hanging in October 2016 after being convicted of the June 2015 murder of popular Freetown radio DJ Sydney Buckle. After their sentences were handed down,
Alfred Paolo Conteh, Sierra Leone's Minister of Internal Affairs at the time, publicly ordered prison staff to clean the
gallows at the
Freetown Central Prison, believing that publicly advocating for the death penalty would result in a reduction in criminal activity, particularly from gangs, as he communicated in a radio statement: "I have given instructions to the prison officers to clean and ready the tools and machines used to kill people, as reckless killing is on the increase. We have lost a lot of people through reckless killing and ended wasting resources feeding such prisoners for several years. This is unacceptable. . . . It's in the bible, an eye for an eye. Our local people say kill a dog in front of another to know that death is real." Sierra Leone's last executions took place on 19 October 1998, at the height of the
Sierra Leone Civil War. Thirty-four military officers had participated in an attempted
coup d'état on May 25, 1997, and were subsequently convicted of treason, which carried the death penalty. The officers were sentenced one week prior to the executions taking place; ten of the officers had their death sentences commuted to life, while the other 24, including one female sergeant, were executed by
firing squad after then-President
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah refused requests from human rights groups, such as the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, to commute their death sentences. Later, the executions were found to have violated several international human rights treaties and covenants, including the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, as well as the
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights. ==Recent developments==