This is Sierra Leone

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03/06/2026

🚨 #ππ‘π„π€πŠπˆππ†: ππŽπ‹πˆπ‚π„ 𝐒𝐄𝐑𝐕𝐄 πŽπ…π…πˆπ‚πˆπ€π‹ πˆππ•πˆπ“π€π“πˆπŽπ π“πŽ π‹πŽπŠπŽ π–πŽπŒπ€π 𝐀𝐒 πƒπŽπŒπ„π’π“πˆπ‚ π•πˆπŽπ‹π„ππ‚π„ πˆππ•π„π’π“πˆπ†π€π“πˆπŽπ πˆππ“π„ππ’πˆπ…πˆπ„π’.

Reports reaching this platform indicate that Loko Man, accompanied by two police officers, visited the residence of Loko Woman earlier today to deliver an official police invitation in connection with an alleged domestic violence matter.

According to sources, the invitation forms part of an ongoing investigation into claims of domestic violence. The officers’ presence was reportedly to ensure the formal and lawful delivery of the invitation in accordance with established legal procedures.

The latest development comes amid growing public interest in the dispute involving the two individuals, a matter that has sparked widespread debate and intense discussion across social media platforms in recent days.

Authorities have yet to release detailed information regarding the specific allegations under investigation. However, sources indicate that inquiries remain active as investigators work to establish the facts surrounding the case.

Members of the public are being urged to allow law enforcement agencies and the judicial process to operate independently and professionally, while avoiding speculation, misinformation, or commentary that could interfere with ongoing investigations.


Further updates will be provided as more information becomes available.

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03/06/2026


𝐓𝐇𝐄 π’π“πŽπ‘π˜ πŽπ… π‹πŽπŠπŽπŒπ€π 𝐀𝐍𝐃 π‹πŽπŠπŽπ–πŽπŒπ€π PART 2

A tale filled with allegations, betrayal, deception, hidden truths, and questions about trust, loyalty, and manhood.

Two sides. Different claims. Conflicting narratives.

Who is telling the truth? Who is at fault? And who deserves your sympathy?

You be the judge. Share your verdict in the comment section.
Warning ⚠️: some adult language.



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02/06/2026


𝐓𝐇𝐄 π’π“πŽπ‘π˜ πŽπ… π‹πŽπŠπŽπŒπ€π 𝐀𝐍𝐃 π‹πŽπŠπŽπ–πŽπŒπ€π

A tale filled with allegations, betrayal, deception, hidden truths, and questions about trust, loyalty, and manhood.

Two sides. Different claims. Conflicting narratives.

Who is telling the truth? Who is at fault? And who deserves your sympathy?

You be the judge. Share your verdict in the comment section.



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01/06/2026

πŸ† Policeman of the Year!

This is the kind of policing that inspires trust, respect, and admiration. We need more dedicated officers like thisβ€”professionals who serve their communities with integrity, compassion, and commitment.

What are your thoughts? Do we need more officers like him? Share your views in the comments below.



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Cc: Cyril Harold Smith.

31/05/2026

Edwinah you get problem oooh. Comot beyen this woman.

First Lady Fatima Maada Bio the mammy you get mail.

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24/05/2026
24/05/2026


π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„ π‡πˆπ†π‡ π‚πŽπŒπŒπˆπ’π’πˆπŽπ π„π—ππŽπ’π„π’ 𝐀𝐍𝐃 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐏𝐒 𝐁𝐔𝐒𝐓 π“π‘π€π…π…πˆπ‚πŠπˆππ† π‘πˆππ† 𝐈𝐍 𝐓𝐇𝐄 π†π€πŒππˆπ€
Uncovering of Suspected Sierra Leonean-Linked Trafficking Network in The Gambia (May 2026)
In mid-May 2026, the Sierra Leone High Commission in The Gambia uncovered and disrupted a suspected human trafficking network operating in the country.16
Key Details
β€’ Perpetrators: The network primarily involved Sierra Leonean nationals trafficking fellow Sierra Leoneans (and possibly others) into The Gambia. It was allegedly linked to fraudulent recruitment schemes associated with QNET (a multi-level marketing company often misused in pyramid-style scams).37
β€’ Modus Operandi: Victims, including dozens of young women, men, and some children, were lured from Sierra Leone with false promises of visas and jobs in the US, Canada, or Australia. They paid between US$1,000 and US$1,500 each (or equivalent in Leones, sometimes selling family assets). Instead, they were transported by road to Banjul and abandoned or held in compounds under exploitative conditions.39
β€’ Discovery: Following a tip-off, High Commissioner Martha Consilia Kanagbo and her team visited a compound in Busumbala (near Banjul). They found victims who had been deceived and provided immediate humanitarian assistance (food, shelter, and support for family reunification).41
Response and Outcome
β€’ The High Commission reported the matter to Gambian police and immigration authorities in Tanji.β€’ This led to the arrest of suspected ring leaders.16
β€’ A smaller related case in May 2025 involved a group of nine Sierra Leoneans (four women, two men, three children) deceived by an individual named Alhaji Kamara and abandoned in Banjul.39
This incident highlights the regional nature of West African trafficking networks using deceptive job/visa schemes, often tied to pyramid recruitment. It was handled through diplomatic channels and local law enforcement rather than a large-scale police raid. No major updates on convictions have been widely reported as of late May 2026.
For official details, refer to Gambian NAATIP, Sierra Leone High Commission statements, or local media like The Standard (Gambia). This fits broader patterns of cross-border fraud and exploitation in the region.

Cc: standard.gm , Mahawa Alieu.



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24/05/2026



π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„ π‡πˆπ†π‡ π‚πŽπŒπŒπˆπ’π’πˆπŽπ π„π—ππŽπ’π„π’ 𝐀𝐍𝐃 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐏𝐒 𝐁𝐔𝐒𝐓 π“π‘π€π…π…πˆπ‚πŠπˆππ† π‘πˆππ† 𝐈𝐍 𝐓𝐇𝐄 π†π€πŒππˆπ€
Uncovering of Suspected Sierra Leonean-Linked Trafficking Network in The Gambia (May 2026)
In mid-May 2026, the Sierra Leone High Commission in The Gambia uncovered and disrupted a suspected human trafficking network operating in the country.16
Key Details
β€’ Perpetrators: The network primarily involved Sierra Leonean nationals trafficking fellow Sierra Leoneans (and possibly others) into The Gambia. It was allegedly linked to fraudulent recruitment schemes associated with QNET (a multi-level marketing company often misused in pyramid-style scams).37
β€’ Modus Operandi: Victims, including dozens of young women, men, and some children, were lured from Sierra Leone with false promises of visas and jobs in the US, Canada, or Australia. They paid between US$1,000 and US$1,500 each (or equivalent in Leones, sometimes selling family assets). Instead, they were transported by road to Banjul and abandoned or held in compounds under exploitative conditions.39
β€’ Discovery: Following a tip-off, High Commissioner Martha Consilia Kanagbo and her team visited a compound in Busumbala (near Banjul). They found victims who had been deceived and provided immediate humanitarian assistance (food, shelter, and support for family reunification).41
Response and Outcome
β€’ The High Commission reported the matter to Gambian police and immigration authorities in Tanji.β€’ This led to the arrest of suspected ring leaders.16
β€’ A smaller related case in May 2025 involved a group of nine Sierra Leoneans (four women, two men, three children) deceived by an individual named Alhaji Kamara and abandoned in Banjul.39
This incident highlights the regional nature of West African trafficking networks using deceptive job/visa schemes, often tied to pyramid recruitment. It was handled through diplomatic channels and local law enforcement rather than a large-scale police raid. No major updates on convictions have been widely reported as of late May 2026.
For official details, refer to Gambian NAATIP, Sierra Leone High Commission statements, or local media like The Standard (Gambia). This fits broader patterns of cross-border fraud and exploitation in the region.

Cc: standard.gm



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19/05/2026


@𝐍𝐀𝐒𝐒𝐀𝐑 π€π˜πŽπ”π π’ππ„π€πŠπ’ π“πŽ π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„π€ππ’ π€ππŽπ”π“ 𝐓𝐇𝐄 ππ‘πŽπ‚π„π’π’ πŽπ… π€π‚ππ”πˆπ‘πˆππ† π‚πˆπ“πˆπ™π„ππ’π‡πˆπ 𝐀𝐍𝐃 π„π—ππ‹π€πˆππ’ 𝐓𝐇𝐄 π‘π„π€π’πŽππ’ ππ„π‡πˆππƒ π‡πˆπ’ πƒπ„π‚πˆπ’πˆπŽπ ππŽπ“ π“πŽ ππ„π‚πŽπŒπ„ 𝐀 π‚πˆπ“πˆπ™π„π πŽπ… π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„.

Leone.

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 π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„β€™π’ ππ‘π„π’πˆπƒπ„ππ“, π‰π”π‹πˆπ”π’ πŒπ€π€πƒπ€ 𝐁𝐈𝐎, 𝐇𝐀𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐋𝐋𝐄𝐃 π…πŽπ‘ ππŽπ‹πƒ, π‘π„π’πˆπ‹πˆπ„ππ“ 𝐀𝐍𝐃 π‘π„π…πŽπ‘πŒ-πƒπ‘πˆπ•π„π π‹π„π€πƒπ„π‘π’π‡πˆπ π€π‚π‘πŽπ’π’ π€π…π‘πˆπ‚π€ 𝐃...
17/05/2026


π’πˆπ„π‘π‘π€ π‹π„πŽππ„β€™π’ ππ‘π„π’πˆπƒπ„ππ“, π‰π”π‹πˆπ”π’ πŒπ€π€πƒπ€ 𝐁𝐈𝐎, 𝐇𝐀𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐋𝐋𝐄𝐃 π…πŽπ‘ ππŽπ‹πƒ, π‘π„π’πˆπ‹πˆπ„ππ“ 𝐀𝐍𝐃 π‘π„π…πŽπ‘πŒ-πƒπ‘πˆπ•π„π π‹π„π€πƒπ„π‘π’π‡πˆπ π€π‚π‘πŽπ’π’ π€π…π‘πˆπ‚π€ πƒπ”π‘πˆππ† 𝐓𝐇𝐄 πŽπ—π…πŽπ‘πƒ π€π…π‘πˆπ‚π€ π‚πŽππ…π„π‘π„ππ‚π„ πŸπŸŽπŸπŸ” 𝐀𝐓 𝐓𝐇𝐄 π”ππˆπ•π„π‘π’πˆπ“π˜ πŽπ… πŽπ—π…πŽπ‘πƒ 𝐈𝐍 𝐄𝐍𝐆𝐋𝐀𝐍𝐃.

Sierra Leone President Calls for Resilient African Leadership at Oxford Africa Conference

Oxford, England β€” May 17, 2026 β€” Sierra Leone’s President, Julius Maada Bio, has urged African leaders to embrace resilient, reform-driven governance as the continent confronts mounting political, economic, climate and technological challenges.

Speaking at the Oxford Africa Conference 2026 at the University of Oxford, Bio said Africa’s future would depend on building strong institutions capable of withstanding global shocks and sustaining long-term progress.

Delivering the keynote address under the conference theme, β€œAnchoring Africa: Grounded, Game-Changing Leadership in the Age of Disruption,” Bio argued that Africa must move beyond rhetoric and focus on durable systems of governance.

β€œI spoke last year about African agency,” he told delegates. β€œThis year, we must ask something harder: Can what we define endure? Can it survive shocks and disruption?”

Addressing academics, policymakers, students and members of the African diaspora, Bio described Africa’s crises as interconnected, warning that climate shocks, food insecurity, economic instability and insecurity often reinforce one another.

β€œA drought does not stay a drought. It becomes a food crisis. A food crisis becomes a revenue crisis. A revenue crisis becomes a security crisis,” he said.

Bio, who also serves as Chairman of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, reflected on Sierra Leone’s recovery from civil war, the Ebola epidemic and economic hardship, presenting the country as an example of institutional resilience and gradual reform.

He highlighted his government’s Free Quality Education Programme and the Feed Salone agricultural initiative as key policies aimed at improving educational access and strengthening domestic food production.

β€œThese are not perfect outcomes. But they are meaningful ones,” Bio said. β€œThey show that when policy is sustained and aligned with national priorities, progress becomes tangible.”

On regional stability, Bio warned that military coups and unconstitutional transfers of power in West Africa reflected deeper governance failures and declining public confidence in democratic systems.

β€œDemocracy goes far beyond elections,” he said. β€œTo be meaningful, democracy must work in substance.”

He also called for stronger regional cooperation, warning that instability in one country inevitably affects neighboring states through migration, arms trafficking and economic disruption.

Turning to Africa’s growing youth population, Bio said governments must adapt quickly to meet the expectations of younger generations.

β€œAfrica is the world’s youngest continent,” he said. β€œIf politics does not adapt to demographic reality, frustration will outrun reform.”

The Sierra Leonean leader further urged African nations to play a greater role in shaping global Artificial Intelligence governance, warning that the continent risks becoming dependent on technologies developed elsewhere without adequate African input.

β€œWe need a pan-African AI governance framework,” he said.

On climate change, Bio described the crisis as a global injustice, noting that Africa contributes the least to global emissions while suffering disproportionately from climate-related impacts.

In closing, he encouraged young Africans and diaspora communities to remain engaged in the continent’s development.

β€œThe diaspora is not outside Africa’s story,” Bio said. β€œThe diaspora is one of Africa’s most powerful assets.”

Bio concluded by saying Africa is already shaping its own future, but sustaining progress would require institutional strength, political stability and bold reform.

β€œWhat remains is leadership steady enough to hold the ground where stability is needed, and bold enough to change it where reform is overdue,” he said.



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