An iron ore firm once listed in the London stock-market is
being sued in a multimillion pound lawsuit over evictions and alleged violent
treatment of workers and villagers living near one of its mines in Sierra
Leone. African Minerals Limited is accused of complicity in false imprisonment,
assault and battery, trespass and theft of the claimants’ property. It is also
allegedly implicated in a fatal shooting of a 24-year-old by police during a
protest over pay and conditions. A London law firm will put the case on behalf
of 142 claimants before a judge at the high court in London on Monday in a bid
to get compensation for the injuries sustained in two incidents in 2010 and
2012.
According to court filings, a number of villages were taken
over and hundreds of families relocated with minimal consultation in a move to
allow the company to expand its operations. The majority of the claimants are
small scale or subsistence farmers and traders, many of whom had already
sustained brutal treatment during the civil war.
Kadiatu Koroma, 25, one of the lead claimants being put
forward by Leigh Day, has said that she was beaten, raped and miscarried as a
result of violence in the village in 2010.
“I remember seeing big AML trucks coming to work on our
farms. They didn’t speak to anyone. We had already planted our produce and we
gathered as a community and started grumbling. We were saying, how can these
people come and work in our farms without saying something to us. We all wanted
to stop AML from destroying our farmland so I was guilty just because I lived
in the village.”
She said the villagers told the mining company they were
trespassing on their lands and set up a roadblock to stop them destroying their
farms and their livelihoods. Police then arrived and opened fire against the
community. In written evidence gathered by Leigh Day, she said there were three
AML men with the police, including its community relations officer, Yallan
Atkins Koroma. She says she was grabbed by the police and flogged with a stick
and then bundled into a truck half naked after her shirt was torn off her. She
says they were then taken to an AML camp where people were flogged and beaten
up. Kadiatu was two months pregnant at the time and lost her baby.
Two years later, it is alleged excessive force was again
used against defenceless victims, when police tried to quash a protest staged
by workers over low wages and unfair treatment. In the attempt to impose law
and order, a 24-year-old woman was shot dead while eight were wounded after
police used live ammunition. t is claimed that the 142 claimants “suffered at
the hands of the defendants, the defendants services and/or agents and the
Sierra Leonean police force, who, at all material times, were acting in concert
with the defendants and/or as their servants or agents.” In the aftermath of
the clash, Sierra Leone’s human rights commission conducted an investigation,
with its report describing the incident as a “war zone”. According to Human
Rights Watch, hundreds of families were evicted from their land to make way for
the mine near Bumbuna with minimal consultation with villagers.
Sierra Leone has one of the largest deposits of iron ore in
Africa and AML was once one of the country’s largest employers with almost
7,000 staff supplying the raw material for China’s production of steel.
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