Sierra Leone Mudslides: Journalist Issa Mansarray calls on community to go beyond donations

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Issa Mansarray. Photo: Courtesy of DART Center for Journalism & Trauma
MinnPost photo by Ibrahim Hirsi
A group of West African leaders meeting at Brooklyn Center’s Brookdale Library for a fundraiser event aimed at supporting victims of mudslides in Sierra Leone. Photro: Ibrahim Hirsi/MinnPost
Issa Mansarray. Photo: Courtesy of DART Center for Journalism & Trauma

After deadly mudslides swept through Sierra Leone earlier this month, numerous events were held throughout Twin Cities metro area — meetings that both raised money for relief efforts in the west African country and detailed how the disaster had impacted many of the estimated 8,000 members of the Sierra Leone community in Minnesota.

And yet, Issa Mansaray, a leader and journalist who’s well-known among the Sierra Leone community in Minnesota, skipped many of those meetings. Not because he wasn’t sympathetic, but because he thinks the community needs to start going beyond fundraisers. That also why, next month, he’s organizing a community gathering to push Sierra Leonean leaders to more effectively address some of the country’s recurring problems.

“We’re trying to bring the issue into the international spotlight,” said Mansaray, who runs the Brooklyn Center-based Africa Institute for International Reporting, which advocates for freedom of the press and provides media training for journalists. “The issues in Sierra Leone have been going on for many years, but certain things have never been addressed; this is why the solutions are not there.”

‘Having a genuine conversation’

In the morning of Aug. 14, a hilltop on the outskirts of Freetown, Sierra Leone’s capital, collapsed after a heavy downpour that overflowed the city, killing more than 600 people and leaving 3,000 more homeless.

Over the past three decades, Mansaray said, Freetown has become increasingly congested, as more and more people left villages and towns across the country for the city.  That’s meant more and more informal resettlements in and around mountain areas that have long been prone to mudslides.

Making matters worse, says Mansaray, was the country’s lack of emergency personnel or sophisticated weather monitoring system. “People were not able to save themselves,” he said. “They were washed away.”

And though it’s important to support the needy, he said, it’s equally important that leaders — home and abroad — come up with a plan to more effectively prevent such tragedies and mitigate their consequences in the future. All of which led Mansaray to create a forum to bring together African intellectuals and academics in Minnesota for talks about the recurring disasters in the region, and the roles Sierra Leonean leaders in Minnesota can play in address those issues.

Read more at MinnPost.

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