Sierra Leonean parliamentary election, 1982

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sierra Leone

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Sierra Leone



Other countries · Atlas
 Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

Parliamentary elections were held in Sierra Leone on 1 May 1982. They were the first elections since the country had become a single-party state under the 1978 constitution, with the All People's Congress being the sole legal party.

Contents

[edit] Background

Following an amendment to the constitution in 1981, prior to the election, primaries were held to choose up to three candidates (all selected by the APC) to stand in each of the 85 constituencies.[1] As a result, elections in 66 of the 85 constituencies were contested (13 of the 19 seats left uncontested were held by cabinet ministers).[1]

The elections were marred by violence in which up to 50 people died.[2] The APC used the army to crush opposition SLPP supporters in what became known as the "Ndogboyosoi [bush devil] war".[3]

In addition to the 85 elected seats, the parliament consisted of 12 paramount chiefs elected through tribal councils and 7 MPs appointed by the president, Siaka Stevens.

[edit] Results

Party Seats
All People's Congress 85
Indirectly elected paramount chiefs 12
Presidential appointees 7
Total 104

[edit] Aftermath

The results in 13 constituencies were cancelled due to "serious irregularities".[1] By-elections took place on June 4.

40 sitting MPs and two ministers lost their seats, whilst a woman was elected to parliament in a constituency seat for the first time.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Sierra Leone Inter-Parliamentary Union
  2. ^ Sierra Leone Voids Some Election Returns New York Times, 3 May 1982
  3. ^ Introduction: the struggle for power and peace in Sierra Leone Conciliation Resources