Jamil Sahid Mohamed Khalil

Jamil Sahid Mohamed Khalil (born 1936 in Freetown, Sierra Leone) was a Lebanese-Sierra Leonean businessman and diamond tycoon who made millions of dollars in the diamond trade, fisheries, tourism and an airline. He was exiled from Sierra Leone amidst accusations of a coup plot in 1987 before returning to Freetown few years later and fleeing the country again after the Freetown invasion in 1999.

Jamil Sahid Mohamed Khalil built his vast fortune exporting diamonds to Antwerp during the 1970s and 1980s.[1] He was arguably the most successful Lebanese trader in West Africa.[2] As a result of his activities, he became one of the richest and most powerful men in Africa. However, along with, then-President Siaka Stevens, he is widely accused to have played a major role in the destruction of the Sierra Leonean economy, leaving a legacy of poverty in his wake.

Jamil Sahid Mohamed Khalil was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone to a Sierra Leonean father of Lebanese descent.[1][3] Emigrants from Lebanon had begun flocking to West Africa in the late 1890s, where they were welcomed by British colonial authorities who saw them as a tool with which to break the hold of the increasingly nationalist-conscious local merchant class on trade with the interior in places such as the Crown Colony of Freetown.

Over time, a combination of governmental favour and their own hard work, resulted in the Lebanese achieving dominance not only of the commerce in manufactured goods, but also control of the trade in natural resource commodities like the fable alluvial diamonds of Sierra Leone. The Lebanese in West Africa have become the region's "market-dominant minority," to borrow a term popularised by Yale Law School professor Amy Chua in her study of free market democracy and global instability, World on Fire. As Chua herself observed, "the extent of Lebanese market dominance in Sierra Leone – historically and at present – is astounding."

The Lebanese trading community was a leftover import from Sierra Leone's British Colonial era.[2]

Association with Siaka Stevens

Jamil found a kindred spirit in President Siaka Stevens who was equally keen to exploit Sierra Leone's gold and diamonds resource for personal gain. In Sierra Leone's post-colonial era, Siaka Stevens association with Jamil Sahid Mohamed Khalil would have a dramatic effect on government policy. Both of them would, for a time, count themselves among Africa's wealthiest men.[4]

The alliance of Stevens and Jamil was one of convenience. Stevens had access but as a head of state he was prohibited from engaging in commerce.

And so Jamil became a beneficiary of the kleptocracy established by President Siaka Stevens.[2] His stewardship of the president's personal finances made him the second most powerful man in Sierra Leone.[2] Together they plunged the economy of the fledgling nation in to a state of economic chaos. Jamil encouraged Stevens to ally himself with the Lebanese merchant community who controlled a portion of the official diamond trade and also ran the majority of the unofficial diamond trade.[2] Stevens supported illegal diamond smuggling so much so that on 3 November 1969, $3.4 million worth of the Sierra Leonean government's monthly production of diamonds vanished, allegedly at the order of Stevens and Jamil.[5]

The president granted Jamil's National Trading Company a monopoly to import more than eighty-seven commodities.[2] And Steven's turned a blind eye as Jamil become the foremost smuggler of the country's rare gems and minerals, raking in over $300 million.[4] Jamil was christened the "Diamond King".[4]

By 1971 the President had put an end to the De Beers monopoly[6] at the request of Jamil, who had already managed to acquire 12% of the concession. By 1984 Jamil bought the remaining shares from De Beers. That marked the first time De Beers ever lost a monopoly in Africa.

Tommy Taylor-Morgan, the Minister of Finance, warned that Sierra Leone was losing in excess of US$160 million of diamond income annually to diamond smuggling.[5] Corruption and smuggling reached such a level that official diamond production dropped significantly.

In 1985 national currency, the Leone was devalue by nearly 60 per cent and foreign exchange became scarce.[4] Between 1968 and 1985 Stevens and Jamil successfully depleted the finances of Sierra Leone until they had rendered one of the world's biggest producers of diamonds and gold the poorest country on earth.[2]

In a profile of Jamil, C. Magbaily Fyle in his book "Historical Dictionary of Sierra Leone," writes that "By the end of the 1970s, Jamil was influencing government and ministerial appointments, and he was dreaded, feared or admired, depending on the perceptions of the viewer."

In December 1987 Stevens was in London recovering from a stroke. He was to later learn that Jamil had not kept his side of the bargain in all the years they have been associated. In fact the house Stevens was living in, in West London was supposed to have been bought for him by Jamil Said. It turned out this was not the case. It was reported that he told Stevens, he had not put his name [Stevens] on the house to protect him. Stevens reminded him that this was two years after he had resigned from office. Stevens was reported to have confided in his grandson living with him at the house as follows: "that man has used me". "God go pay him"

The Palestine Liberation Organization connections

So great was Jamil's influence that he managed to persuade Stevens's handpicked successor, President Joseph Saidu Momoh, to invite Yasir Arafat for a state visit, at the behest of his personal friend, King Hussein of Jordan. The purpose of Arafat's visit was to secure a deal with Momoh to run a Palestinian paramilitary training camp on one of the islands off Sierra Leone's coast. Arafat offered Momoh $8 million but Momoh eventually caved to Western pressure and officially said no.[2] Instead he permitted Jamil to keep a so-called 500 strong "personal security force" which included Palestinian exiles...[2]

Sierra Leone Civil War 1991–2001

In 1991 Jamil Sahid and his cohort Samih Ossaily are said by some to have organised Sierra Leone's Lebanese diamond traders for the purpose of trafficking the blood diamonds acquired from the mines occupied in Sierra Leone.However, no prosecution was ever intended or any accusations confirmed against Jamil, neither by a Sierra Leonean court, nor by the U.N. Special Tribunal for Sierra Leone.

Second exile

Jamil fled from Sierra Leone during the 1999 invasion of Freetown by the RUF rebels. One of his sons was a victim of the atrocities committed by the rebels and was shot dead, in Jamil's presence, when the rebels attacked his house in Freetown. The son was said to have taken the bullet for his father. His old friend, Lebanese Speaker, Nabih Berri arranged for him to escape to Lebanon on a diplomatic passport. By now Berri's Amal Movement was a full Hezbollah partner in Lebanon's legislature.[2]

Jamil died of a stroke in Lebanon.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 All Africa – subscription required
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Strategic Interests by J. Peter Pham, PhD, World Defense Review, 10 August 2006
  3. Ernest Koroma Cannot be a Suitable Replacement for the Visionary SLPP Leadership by Alpha Saidu Bangura, The New People Online, 4 September 2007
  4. 1 2 3 4 A Tale of Two Villages: Of health and drugs, water and life, by Jonathan Blundell, New Internationalist No.152, October 1985;.;
  5. 1 2 Mineral Resources, Their Use and Their Impact on the Conflict and the Country, The New Citizen, 16 March 2007
  6. Cry Freetown – History of Sierra Leone before 1990 by Sorious Samura

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.