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A vision for the future of Sierra Leone

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    On Tuesday, January 16, 1996,
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    I walked into the office of the president
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    as head of state
    of the Republic of Sierra Leone.
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    I had not been elected.
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    Four years earlier,
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    I was one of 30 heavily armed
    military officers,
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    all in our 20s,
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    who had driven from the war front
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    into the capital city, Freetown.
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    We had only one objective:
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    to overthrow a corrupt, repressive
    and single-party dictatorship
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    that had kept itself in power
    for over 25 years.
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    But in the end, it wasn't a violent coup.
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    After we fired a few shots
    and seized the radio station,
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    hundreds of thousands of citizens
    jumped onto the streets
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    to welcome us as liberators.
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    If you are thinking this seems
    like a movie script, I'm with you.
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    I was part of the ruling
    military government,
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    and I served in several roles.
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    Our goal was always to return the country
    to democratic civilian rule.
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    But after four years,
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    those multiparty democratic elections
    had still not happened.
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    Citizens were beginning
    to lose faith in our promise.
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    But you know what?
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    I like to keep my promises.
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    Some of my comrades and I
    staged another military coup,
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    and this time, against our own
    head of state and commander.
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    Again, it was a bloodless coup.
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    That is how I became the new
    military head of state
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    on January 16, 1996.
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    I was still only 31 years old.
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    Of course, power was sweet.
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    I felt invulnerable.
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    I had thousands of heavily armed men
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    and aircraft at my command.
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    I was heavily protected,
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    and I lived in luxury.
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    But my obligations to my nation
    were always superior.
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    Millions of fellow citizens
    were either displaced
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    or fleeing the violence
    and pillage of war.
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    So I engaged in a series
    of diplomatic activities
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    right across the subregion
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    and convinced the reclusive rebel leader
    to initiate peace talks
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    for the very first time.
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    I also called a national
    consultative conference
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    of civil society organizations
    and stakeholders
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    to advise on the best way forward.
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    In both cases, I shared with them
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    what I believed in then and now:
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    that Sierra Leone is bigger
    than all of us,
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    and that Sierra Leone must be a secure,
    peaceful and just society
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    where every person can thrive
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    and contribute to national development.
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    And so, I initiated peace talks
    with the rebels.
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    I organized the first multiparty
    democratic elections in nearly 30 years.
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    (Applause)
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    I handed over power
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    to the newly elected president,
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    I retired from the army,
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    and I left my country
    for the United States of America
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    to study --
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    all in three months.
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    (Applause)
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    In many a long walk,
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    I wondered how we could
    get it right again as a nation.
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    More than 20 years later,
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    in April 2018,
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    with a few more wrinkles and grey hair,
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    I was again head of state.
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    But guess what?
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    This time I have been
    democratically elected.
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    (Applause)
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    At the polling stations last year,
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    my three-year-old daughter,
    Amina, was in my arm.
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    She insisted on holding on to
    my ballot paper with me.
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    She was intent and focused.
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    At that moment,
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    with my ballot papers in both our hands,
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    I fully understood the one priority for me
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    if I was elected president
    of the Republic of Sierra Leone;
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    that is: How could I make
    the lives of Amina
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    and millions of other young girls and boys
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    better in our country?
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    See, I believe that leadership is about
    creating possibilities that everyone,
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    especially the young people,
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    can believe in,
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    own,
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    work to actualize,
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    and which they can
    actively fight to protect.
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    The pathway to power and leadership
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    can be littered with impediments,
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    but more often, with funny questions
    that may seemingly defy answers:
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    How does one take on the unique challenges
    of a country like Sierra Leone?
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    We had mined mineral resources
    for over a hundred years,
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    but we still are poor.
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    We had collected foreign aid
    for 58 years, but we are still poor.
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    The secret to economic development
    is in nature's best resource:
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    skilled, healthy
    and productive human beings.
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    The secret to changing our country
    lay in enhancing and supporting
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    the limitless potential
    of the next generation
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    and challenging them
    to change our country.
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    Human capital development
    was the key to national development
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    in Sierra Leone.
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    As a candidate,
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    I met with and listened to
    many young men and women
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    right across the country
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    and in the diaspora
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    that were feeling disconnected
    from political leadership
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    and cared little about
    the future of our country.
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    How could we engage them
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    and make them believe that the answers
    to transforming our nation
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    was right in their hands?
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    Immediately after becoming president,
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    I appointed some of Sierra Leone's
    brightest young people as leaders,
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    with responsibility to realize
    our shared vision
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    of transforming Sierra Leone.
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    I am grateful many of them said yes.
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    Let me give you a few examples.
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    Corruption had been endemic
    in governance, institutions
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    and in public life in Sierra Leone,
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    undermining public trust
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    and the country's
    international reputation.
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    I appointed a young attorney
    as Commissioner
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    for the Anti-Corruption Commission.
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    In less than a year,
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    he had a hundred percent conviction rate
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    and recovered over
    1.5 million dollars of stolen money.
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    That is seed money for building
    the country's first-ever
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    national medical diagnostic
    center in Sierra Leone.
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    (Applause)
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    The Millennium Challenge Corporation
    recently gave us a green scorecard
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    for the Control of Corruption indicator,
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    and multilateral development partners
    that had left Sierra Leone
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    are now beginning to return.
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    We are determined to break
    a culture of corruption
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    and the culture of impunity
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    that is associated with corruption.
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    Before I became president,
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    I met a skinny, dreadlocked
    MIT/Harvard-trained inventor
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    in London.
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    Over coffee, I challenged him
    to think and plan along with me
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    how innovation could help
    to drive national development
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    in the areas of governance,
    revenue mobilization, health care,
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    education, delivering public services
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    and supporting private sector growth.
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    How could Sierra Leone participate
    in the digital economy
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    and become an innovation hub?
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    Guess what?
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    He left his cozy job at IBM,
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    and he now leads a team
    of young men and women
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    within the newly established Directorate
    of Science, Technology and Innovation
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    in my own office.
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    (Applause)
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    That young man is right in here.
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    I challenged another
    young Sierra Leonean woman
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    to set up and lead the new Ministry
    of Planning and Economic Development.
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    She consulted widely with Sierra Leoneans
    and produced, in record time,
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    the medium-term national development plan,
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    titled, "Education For Development."
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    We now have our national development needs
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    in easily understandable clusters,
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    and we can now plan our budgets,
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    align development partner contributions
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    and measure our own progress.
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    But the story of my government's
    flagship program
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    is even more daring,
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    if I can call it that.
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    Today, three out of five adults
    in Sierra Leone cannot read or write.
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    Thousands of children
    were not able to go to school
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    or had dropped out of school
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    because their parents could just
    not afford the $20 school fees per year.
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    Women and girls, who constitute
    51 percent of our population,
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    were not given equal opportunity
    to be educated.
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    So the obvious answer is to put in place
    free, quality education
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    for every Sierra Leonean child,
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    regardless of gender,
    ability or ethnicity.
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    (Applause)
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    Great idea you've clapped for.
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    Right?
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    But the only problem is we had
    no money to start the program.
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    (Laughter)
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    Absolutely nothing.
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    Development partners wanted to see data
    before associating with my vision.
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    Of course, political opponents
    laughed at me.
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    But I campaigned that a nation
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    that invests in human capital development
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    through free, quality education,
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    affordable and high-quality
    health care services
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    and food security
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    will accelerate its national
    development program.
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    I argued that for Sierra Leone
    to produce a highly skilled,
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    innovative and productive workforce
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    fit for the 21st century global economy,
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    we needed to invest heavily in human
    capital development in Sierra Leone.
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    But we had no money,
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    because the previous government
    had virtually emptied the coffers.
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    We clamped down on corruption,
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    closed up the loopholes
    for fraud and waste,
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    and we watched the money build up.
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    We successfully launched
    a free, quality education program
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    in August last year,
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    four years, four months later.
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    Today, two million children
    are going to school.
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    (Applause)
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    Twenty-one percent of the national budget
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    supports free, quality education.
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    In close collaboration and in partnership
    with development partners,
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    we have now provided teaching
    and learning materials,
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    safe spaces for girls,
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    and started implementing
    school feeding programs
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    across the entire country.
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    We have even paid backlogs
    of salaries for teachers.
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    Any girl admitted to university
    to study science, technology,
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    engineering, mathematics
    and other related disciplines
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    receives a full scholarship
    in Sierra Leone today.
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    (Applause)
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    And here is why this matters:
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    in a few years, we will have
    a healthier, better educated
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    and highly skilled young population
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    that will lead and drive the country's
    national development.
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    They will be well-equipped to deploy
    science, technology and innovation.
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    Then we'll attract investment
    in diversified areas of our economy,
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    from tourism to fisheries
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    and from renewable energy
    to manufacturing.
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    That is my biggest bet.
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    In my mind, this is what
    leadership is all about --
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    a mission to listen with empathy
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    to the creators of ideas,
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    the hopes and aspirations
    of a younger generation,
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    who are just looking
    for a chance to be better
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    and to make our country better.
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    It is about letting them know
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    that their dreams matter.
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    It is about standing with them
    and asking, "Why not?"
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    when they ask seemingly
    impossible questions.
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    It is about exploring, making
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    and owning a shared vision.
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    The most audacious
    and nation-changing events
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    or policies or even personal choices
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    happen when we ask, "Why not?"
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    then make bold choices and ensure
    those bold choices happen.
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    I wake up every day believing
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    that our country should no longer be
    defined by the stigma of the past.
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    The future offers hope
    and opportunity for all.
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    It matters to me that young men and women
    right across the country
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    can imagine for themselves
    that they, too, can be and are
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    part of the story of our nation.
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    I want to challenge them to build a nation
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    where three-year-olds
    like my daughter, Yie Amie,
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    can grow up in good governance,
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    quality education,
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    health care
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    and good infrastructure.
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    I want our children
    to become young men and women
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    who can continue nourishing
    the trees that will grow
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    from the seeds that we are planting today.
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    Now can someone tell me
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    why we should not dare imagine
    that future in Sierra Leone?
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A vision for the future of Sierra Leone
Speaker:
Julius Maada Bio
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
16:13

English subtitles

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