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According to a Cocorioko Newspaper article, Rev. Leeroy Wilfred Kabs Kanu was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone.His father is the late Pa Lamina Kanu of the Loko people from Gbendembu, Sierra Leone and his mother, the late Mammie Yaebu Kanu, also a Loko from the same Chiefdom, was a stay at home mom who raised seven children. [8]
This is a List of newspapers in Sierra Leone.. Dozens of newspapers are published in Sierra Leone with 15 daily newspapers operational. Most of the newspapers are privately run and are mostly distributed around the capital of Freetown due to the low levels of literacy within the small western African nation.
Cocoricó is a Brazilian children's puppet television series on TV Cultura that premiered on April 10, 1996. [1] The character Júlio was originally derived from a Christmas special that aired in 1989 called "Banho de Aventura" (Adventure Bath) on the program Rá-Tim-Bum.
Radio listener in rural Kailahun. Mass media in Sierra Leone began when the first modern printing press in Africa arrived at the start of the 19th century. In the 1860s the country became a journalist hub for Africa with professional travelling to the country from across the continent.
Isaac Theophilus Akunna Wallace-Johnson (1894 – 10 May 1965) was a Sierra Leonean, British West African workers' leader, journalist, activist and politician.. Born into a poor Creole family in British Sierra Leone, he emerged as a natural leader in school.
Alhaji Ahmad Tejan Kabbah (16 February 1932 – 13 March 2014) was a Sierra Leonean politician who served twice as the 3rd President of Sierra Leone, from 1996 to 1997 and again from 1998 to 2007. [1]
Sheka Tarawalie is a Sierra Leonean journalist, writer and author who, until March 2016, was Sierra Leone's Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs, a position he got in January 2013 in the new cabinet of President Ernest Bai Koroma's second term.
The Limba people are an ethnic group in Sierra Leone.They represent 12.4% of the total population, making them the third largest ethnic group in Sierra Leone. [1] [2] The Limba are based in the north of the country across seven provinces, but are predominantly found in the Northern Province of Sierra Leone.