In the same year as the tax was introduced by Cardew, two rebellions against British colonial rule broke out in the hinterlands of Sierra Leone. One was led by 61-year old
Temne chief
Bai Bureh, who led a mixed force of Tenme and
Loko rebels in open revolt in the northeast of the colony. Bureh was provoked to revolt by an
arrest warrant issued by the colonial government, which was intended to serve as a show of force to preemptively discourage any potential rebellion. In February 1898, Bureh initiated the revolt, launching attacks on British colonial officials and
Creole merchants with his rebels. Despite the ongoing rebellion, Bureh dispatched two peace overtures to the British in April and June of that year, aided by the mediation of
Limba chief
Almamy Suluku. Cardew rejected both offers, as Bureh would not agree to surrender unconditionally. Bureh quickly gained the support of several prominent African chiefs, including
Kissi chief
Kai Londo and Suluku, both of whom dispatched warriors and weaponry to Bureh's rebels, who were engaged in fighting against
Captain W. S. Sharpe, a
district commissioner who had previously been engaged in enforcing the tax with the
Sierra Leone Frontier Police. During the initial stages of the rebellion, Bureh's rebels were able to fight the British colonial forces to a standstill, with high casualties on both sides. The rebels also engaged in attacks on anyone suspected of collaborating with the British, murdering several including Creole trader
Johnny Taylor, who was hacked to death by rebel forces. Cardew responded to the rebellion by dispatching all the forces available to him to attack the rebels. However, after several months, the rebels still had not been defeated, which led him to order a
scorched earth policy in response, which stipulated that villages and farmlands in rebel-controlled territory would be burnt. This new policy severely impacted Bureh's war effort, sharply reducing the amount of provisions available to feed his rebels. Eventually, Cardew's scorched earth policy led to Bureh abandoning the rebellion, surrendering to the British colonial government on 11 November 1898; the rebellion had lasted for approximately nine months. Despite
British government officials recommending leniency to Bureh, Cardew had him (along with fellow rebels
Kpana Lewis and
Nyagua) sent into
exile in the
Gold Coast. Nine months after the rebellion, the colonial government convicted and executed ninety-six rebels which had been found guilty of
murder by
hanging. In 1905, Bureh was allowed by the British to return to Sierra Leone, where he reassumed his chieftaincy at the settlement of Kasseh. Bureh later gave an oral account of his experiences during the rebellion to
Rev. Allen Elba, who sent an account to Cardew, although historians have often ignored this material. ==Mende revolt==