Jusu-Sheriff was the daughter of Gladys and
Salia Jusu-Sheriff. Her four siblings were Salia (Jnr), Nalinie, Nadia and Sheku. when the
Sierra Leone Civil War started. She and fellow lawyer
Isha Dyfan and
Patricia Kabbah worked with groups like the Mano River Women's Peace Network to ensure that wider international community were aware of the abuses that were taking place in Sierra Leone. She was the executive secretary of Sierra Leone's
Truth and Reconciliation Commission which was created in 1999 under Bishop
Joseph Christian Humper. The commission was modelled after the one seen in South Africa although this one was a poor relative. One million dollars had been set aside in 2002, but the cost then was put at nine million. The United Nations appealed for someone to find the missing cash. Her father died in
London in 2009 and he was buried in Sierra Leone after a state funeral. Her mother survived him and she became a trustee for refugee work in Islington. She is on the board of
Femmes Africa Solidarité. ==References==