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  1. Major General Joseph Saidu Momoh, OOR, OBE (January 26, 1937 – August 3, 2003) was a Sierra Leonean politician and military officer who served as the second President of Sierra Leone from November 1985 to 29 April 1992. Momoh was a member of the Limba ethnic group and briefly began a career in civil service before joining the miliary in 1956.

  2. Contents. Joseph Saidu Momoh. head of state of Sierra Leone. Learn about this topic in these articles: role in Sierra Leone. In Sierra Leone: Independence. …the head of the army, Joseph Saidu Momoh, as his successor. Widespread corruption continued, and the economy further deteriorated. Read More.

  3. Summary. Joseph Saidu Momoh was born on January 26, 1937, at Binkolo in Bombali, but the Momoh family migrated to Freetown and then settled at rural Wilberforce in the early 1940s. Momoh attended the West African Methodist Collegiate School in Freetown between 1951 and 1955, when he earned the Cambridge school Certificate.

  4. Before entering politics, Joseph Saidu Momoh pursued a military career. He rose to the rank of Major-General and was head of the then-Sierra Leone Army. He resigned his commission to be elected president in 1985, in a presidential referendum in which he was the only candidate.

  5. Nov 19, 1999 · Former Sierra Leone president Joseph Saidu Momoh was freed by Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels in Makeni on Thursday, the West African peacekeeping force, ECOMOG, said. RUF leader Foday Sankoh said Momoh had been released to further the general call for forgiveness in the course of the ongoing peace process.

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  7. Sierra Leone: Momoh, Joseph Saidu. Regime, 1986-1992. Brigadier General Joseph Saidu Momoh, president Siaka Stevens’s hand-picked successor, was first perceived as the person who would rescue Sierra Leone from the jaws of authoritarian rule and instill transparency and accountability in government.

  8. Joseph Saidu Momoh (JS) was born in London, Camden – UK. Raised in Gambia, Guinea and later moved to Sierra Leone in 2003 after the death of his father. He pursued his secondary school education in Freetown and migrated to London to complete tertiary education.

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