Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T08:57:02.110Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘A Game of Pain’: youth marginalisation and the gangs of Freetown

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2022

Kieran Mitton*
Affiliation:
Department of War Studies, King's College London, London, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Within two decades, Sierra Leone's ‘cliques’ have transformed from peripheral social clubs to warring Crips, Bloods, and Black street gangs at the heart of criminal and political violence. Nevertheless, they remain severely under-studied, with scholarship on Sierra Leonean youth marginality heavily focused on ex-combatants. Drawing on extended fieldwork with Freetown's cliques as they played the ‘game’ – the daily hustle to survive and resist the ‘system’ – this article offers two main contributions. First, it addresses the knowledge gap by charting the origins, evolution and contemporary organisation of these new urban players. Second, it argues that although this history reveals continuity in perennial forms of youth marginalisation, it also shows that the game itself has changed. Cycles of escalating violence and growth are hardwired into this new game. Exacerbated by a political system that sustains and exploits them, cliques present a far greater challenge to everyday peace than has hitherto been recognised.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

INTRODUCTION

Hey boy, down here you do what the system forces you to do, if you really want to survive. (Gaz D'Paper Poet 2020)

Those who created the system don't shake hands with us

They believe our hands are filthy

Even though they are the reason why we can't afford soap. (Kamara (aka Mozes Rozes) Reference Kamara2019)

The marginalisation of Sierra Leone's youth is a central theme in an extensive literature exploring the causes, conduct and consequences of the country's 1991–2002 civil war. Peacebuilding scholarship and policymaking has been dominated by an emphasis on youth empowerment and the urgency of meeting the needs of ex-combatants, seen as necessary to avert another ‘youth crisis’ and avoid reproducing the conditions that gave rise to war (Mitton Reference Mitton2013: 322; Enria Reference Enria2018: 2). It is then no small irony that this focus has left the growth of Sierra Leone's street gangs, comprising a younger generation not involved in the war, largely overlooked.Footnote 1 As ex-combatants have aged and diminished as a perceived security threat, rising gang violence has put this neglect into stark relief. Known as ‘cliques’, within 20 years – a lifetime for many gang members – they have grown from a loose collection of teenage social groups to become a nationwide patchwork of ‘teams’ that have coalesced under the broad umbrella of three main gangs: Bloods, or Members of Blood (MOB);Footnote 2 Crips and So-So Black (hereafter Black). They have adopted and adapted US-inspired gang culture, with membership signified by wearing the red, blue or black muffler (bandana). Each claims to govern defined territory and recounts a history of ‘beefs’ (conflict) with rivals. They have established hierarchies with ‘soldiers’ – the rank-and-file – led by a CO, followed by a Five Star General (or 5-0) who is often the de facto day-to-day leader.Footnote 3 Feared for their involvement in robbery, they have also played a direct role in electoral violence and have permeated Sierra Leone's schools and correctional centres. They have gone from being a fringe law and order issue of the police to a central concern of the Office of National Security (ONS Int.).

What drove this rapid transformation, and what are its implications? There is surprisingly little existing research from which to draw answers. At the time of writing, only a few studies speak directly to the cliques. Among these, Abdullah's (Reference Abdullah2020) article, based on an unpublished 2017 report, represents by far the most extensive. Observing the pronounced absence of relevant scholarship, Abdullah draws on interviews with gangsters in Bo, Freetown and Kenema to provide an invaluable overview and historical contextualisation of the ‘game’. Other studies include Bangura's (Reference Bangura2016) unpublished security brief for the ONS and De Bruijne's blog posts (Reference De Bruijne2019a, Reference De Bruijne2019b) on clique organisation and interaction with political elites. Less directly, based on fieldwork up until 2009 and focused on ex-combatants, Utas provides valuable insights on the organisation of post-war militias ‘as seen through the lens of U.S. gangs’, highlighting continuities in street-youth organisation over time (Utas Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 186). Research on Sierra Leone's post-war music scene by Tucker (Reference Tucker2013) and Lahai (Reference Lahai, Clark and Koster2014) also offers useful detail on the interaction of hip-hop and rap with emergent gang culture. Taken together, these contributions represent the sum total of scholarship to date on Sierra Leone's cliques; they inform this article throughout, but in their scarcity, demonstrate the need for further in-depth study.

Beyond Sierra Leone, this research complements recent work on marginal African urban youth that emphasises the importance of local context and the dangers of uncritically importing framings developed in very different (often North American) milieux (see Abdullah Reference Abdullah2020: 42; Divon & Owore Reference Divon and Owor2021: 83). Recognising the fluidity and diversity of actors in urban Africa, and that rigid terminology is inimical to context-sensitivity (Fraser & Hagedorn Reference Fraser and Hagedorn2018), it defines gangs broadly as ‘alienated groups socialized by the streets’ (Hagedorn Reference Hagedorn2008: 31). This brings out instructive contrasts between cliques and better documented cases. For example, similar to gangs in South Africa (Jensen Reference Jensen2008), Sierra Leone's cliques draw from US-inspired street culture, yet they are only in their first generation of development, their violence is comparatively lower in intensity, and there are no pronounced racial inequalities or a lucrative narcotics trade that may help explain their growth. As such, this study diversifies our understanding of the early development of street gangs in marginal urban African spaces and sheds light on the critical roles that alienation, insecurity and status play in shaping them.

Using Freetown as a case study, this article draws primarily on 180 in-depth interviews conducted across the city in February–April 2018 with ‘teams’ reppin (representing) the three major gangs – Bloods, Crips and Black – as well as loosely aligned cliques and other relevant actors, such as community members and the Sierra Leone Police (SLP).Footnote 4 These unstructured individual and group discussions followed time hanging-out with gangs in their hoods and recreational spots. Cliques varied from small fluid groups of 20 or so teenagers to large teams of well over 200 members led by those in their late 20s and early 30s. Many had female members but males comprised the substantial majority.Footnote 5 Access to gangs was facilitated by existing street-contacts and the expert assistance of Mohammed S. Kamara, a youth worker and documentary filmmaker who grew up on Freetown's streets.

Discussion is divided into three main sections. The first introduces Freetown's cliques as the new generation of urban rebels. It briefly summarises preceding youth sodalities before charting cliques’ evolution from informal social clubs to street gangs. It details the emergence of competing clique identities and territories, exploring how authorities have responded and the role cliques have played in elections. The following section shows how cliques represent continuity as the latest expression of, and response to, longstanding forms of marginalisation – the social, political and economic exclusion of urban youth. Nevertheless, it corroborates Abdullah's (Reference Abdullah2020) finding that cliques have developed in ways that are markedly distinct from their predecessors, going further by showing how these differences embody vicious cycles of escalating growth and violence that may further institutionalise Freetown's gang scene and pose a significant threat to peace and security. Finally, the article concludes with a brief reflection on potential solutions to this challenge, as proposed by gangsters themselves.

STREET GANGS IN SIERRA LEONE: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE

Sierra Leone's post-independence history has been shaped by a pronounced north-south political divide, broadly corresponding to a Temne-Mende ethnic divide and the two main parties (Kandeh Reference Kandeh1992), yet associations of marginalised youth have often been markedly varied in composition.Footnote 6 Contemporary cliques, like wartime rebels preceding them, emphasise this pluralism as an intentional challenge to the divisive practices of elites. Nevertheless, like their pre-war antecedents of the 1970s and 1980s, they are also vulnerable to politicisation by incorporation into patronage networks through which elites dictate access to resources and opportunities along political lines (Boersch-Supan Reference Boersch-Supan2013; Enria Reference Enria2015).

Street-based associations of ‘marginals’ have been a perennial source of violent resistance against the ‘system’ – the structural inequalities that keep them poor and marginalised – as well as a source of violence for the system, regularly mobilised by political patrons to intimidate rivals. Due to this violence and their survival by illicit means, they have been stigmatised as lawless and idle in a way that obscures the complicity of elites and the reality that survival on the streets is relentless work, requiring endless resourcefulness. Street groups can be understood as performing three main functions for marginal youth; as an expression of resistance against their marginality; as a means of mitigating the daily insecurity of marginality; and as a potential way out of marginality, for example by accessing patronage networks.

Nineteenth-century British colonial rule rendered many rural Sierra Leonean youths ‘neither citizen nor subject’, forcing those without influential connections to seek a living in illicit economies and urban centres (Fanthorpe Reference Fanthorpe2001: 372). This embedded a bifurcated social world – what Abdullah refers to as the ‘colonial duality’ – dividing the mainstream from the marginalised, the ‘respectable’ from the ‘dregs of society’ (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2002: 21). Youths surviving on the streets became the feared archetypes of social deviance. They are described as ‘gangs’ in early 20th-century reports on crime in Freetown's seafront slums (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2002: 22) and appear in Graham Greene's (Reference Greene1948) ‘Heart of the Matter’ as dangerous ‘wharf rats’ armed with razors and broken bottles. This supposed dangerous potential of Freetown's youth permeated colonial efforts to delegitimise radical social movements as support for decolonisation gathered momentum (Spitzer & Denzer Reference Spitzer and Denzer1973). Fear of the spread of Marxism combined with colonial notions that a politically engaged urban poor represented a threat to order and civilisation itself. Ensuring law and order thus became synonymous with maintaining the political marginalisation of urban youth.

Post-independence, rarray boy subculture, comprising marginal youth engaged in petty crime, played a central role in the socio-spatial organisation of the street (Utas Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 173). Their social life revolved around the potes – hangouts where youth would drink, smoke and gamble together – and the odelays – alternative secret societies for those excluded from mainstream societies and dancehalls due to class and ethnic divides (King Reference King, Knörr and Kohl2016: 59). In this regard rarray subculture expressed resistance to an exclusionary system (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2002: 23) and provided marginals with a sense of belonging and security that was otherwise out of reach (Utas Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 174). Following independence in 1961, they were drawn into the power-struggle between the two main political parties, the Sierra Leone People's Party (SLPP) and the All People's Congress (APC). Street youth were mobilised in a way that highlighted and compounded their marginalisation, sought for their violent labour rather than as a constituency and incorporated into youth wings that were ‘always peripheral to where real power was located’ (Abdullah Reference Abdullah1998: 207). Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, they became a primary tool for both political suppression and resistance in what Rosen describes as the ‘fusion of politics and street violence’ (Rosen Reference Rosen2005: 78; Harris Reference Harris2013: 69–70).

Economic recession in the late 1980s exposed the degree to which wealth was concentrated in the hands of a ruling elite, leaving Sierra Leone's youth desperate and politically frustrated (Richards Reference Richards1996; Bangura Reference Bangura1997: 134). Emerging US rap culture became a fixture in informal social clubs across Freetown, resonating through its message of resistance to the system and the poverty of the ghetto. Student radicals increasingly socialised in the potes, drawn by shared opposition to the system (Harris Reference Harris2013: 69–70), whilst rural youth unable to subsist on farming or alluvial mining sought a living in urban areas, some forming groups resembling street gangs (Peters Reference Peters2011: 53). A 1989 study estimated Freetown was home to 10,000 street children, including gangs led by ‘Bras’ who provided younger members (‘Greens’ and ‘Ballheads’) with food and ‘shelter from the outside world’, acting as a ‘self-chosen ‘family’’ (PEA 1989: 7). It articulated contemporary concerns over urbanisation: ‘In the rapidly growing towns street life has its own rules and regulations. There is too little space, too little food, too little shelter needed to be shared by too many. The fight for daily survival imposes its regime: the stronger ones win, the feeble ones are crushed’ (PEA 1989: 8).

Civil war broke out in 1991. Much has been written about the recruitment of marginalised youth into the ranks of the rebel Revolutionary United Front (RUF) – who vowed to destroy the ‘rotten system’ – and how their grievances and hopelessness fomented conflict and shaped its brutality (Richards Reference Richards1996; Mitton Reference Mitton2015). For many, the war was a continuation of the ‘game’ – the struggle within and against the system – and some combatants wore gangster attire and quoted Tupac Shakur (Prestholdt Reference Prestholdt2009; Utas Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 179; Nuxoll Reference Nuxoll2015). After war ended in 2002, peacebuilding efforts were dominated by fears of ex-combatant remobilisation; averting another ‘youth crisis’ became the ‘master narrative’ of policy (Fanthorpe & Maconachie Reference Fanthorpe and Maconachie2010: 256; Boersch-Supan Reference Boersch-Supan2013: 25). Warnings that little had substantively changed for Sierra Leone's youth took on fresh urgency during elections in 2007, when ex-combatant ‘taskforces’ mobilised by rival parties clashed violently (Christensen & Utas Reference Christensen and Utas2008). Many ex-combatants had sought these opportunities but became disillusioned by the ‘betrayal’ of politicians as their violent labour failed to bring promised returns (Enria Reference Enria2015: 640). By the 2012 elections, some vowed they would leave the ‘game’ rather than risk being ‘used’ again; others found little demand for their violence and repackaged their services as the capacity to ‘silence violence’ for those willing to pay for peace (Mitton Reference Mitton2013; Utas & Christensen Reference Utas and Christensen2016). By 2018 elections, most ex-combatants had aged-out of what was considered a young man's game. But strikingly, a new generation of marginal youth came to play a central role in the fusion of politics and street violence: the cliques.

Despite only recently receiving attention, the cliques have been present in Sierra Leone since the early 2000s. The following sections chart their historical evolution in Freetown over three phases: a formative phase (2000–2007); a coalescing phase (2008–2015); and an ongoing institutionalising phase (2016–2021).

Cliques: the new players in town (2000–2007)

Multiple independent cliques sprung up across Sierra Leone in the early 2000s. A common origin was the formation of post-war social clubs by school students and street youth. Freetown's musicscape was experiencing a hip-hop renaissance (Lahai Reference Lahai, Clark and Koster2014: 212) and the focus of the early cliques, as with their antecedents in the 1980s and 1990s, was recreational enjoyment of music, dance competitions, drink and marijuana. Throughout fieldwork, founding ‘OG’ members referred nostalgically to these years as an idealised time when the game was purely about ‘bluffing’ – showing off clothes and style – and had yet to be tainted by violence and reckless disregard for ‘real’ gangster values by newer members:

When the game started it was about bluffing. Have a bigger life. Get the money, go to the club, buy drinks, buy fine jeans, a fine crib. It changed because of jealousness. … The violence started in 2006 and 2007. The killing was too much, between gangsters, colour to colour. Red against Black. Young guys attacked each other with cutlasses. … The fighting was all about the colour.’ (Bronx 105 CO, Int.)

In the early years, cliques adapted the style of US gangs found in movies and rap music, making it their own through local artists and twists on names. Identities were fluid, with the nascent Crips including both black and blue colours. They freely mingled and attended each other's shows, though significant tensions already existed between youth of the east and west, reflecting historical divides that cast the east end as a poorer and more dangerous part of Freetown.

In 2007, with public attention fixed on ex-combatants during the first major post-war elections, clique violence increased. Until this point confrontations were predominantly interpersonal; altercations in nightclubs and fights over women. Clique membership was a rare source of pride and respect on the streets that many were willing to defend at all costs. Feuds were settled with broken bottles, knives and machetes, often resulting in disfigurement, fatalities and prison sentences. As cliques grew and began to cohere, individual pride became ever more corporate, associated with support for a specific team, colour and hood. Accordingly, inter-clique conflict in 2007 increasingly took on the dynamics of football rivalries, with opposing supporters fighting for the reputation of their team. The link with football was often literal; cliques supporting rival teams clashed regularly when attending matches across the city (KKK Gangster A Int.).

Killing for colour (2008–2015)

By 2008, Freetown's increasingly polarised cliques were coalescing around three overarching gang identities, resulting in a clear territorial dominance of Bloods in the west end (West Coast), Crips in the centre (or Cent Coast), and Black in the east end (or East Coast/Hood). The red-wearing MOB and blue- and black-wearing Cent Coast Crips (CCC) were the first to consolidate. According to founding members of the east end's So-So Black, their sense of insecurity was increased by the consolidation of Bloods, particularly when travelling west to events at the national stadium, which fell within Blood-affiliated Black Street Family territory (KKK Gangster A Int.). In response, in 2008 several east end cliques in Kossoh Town formed So-So Black (or simply Black), adopting the black muffler and formally creating the East Hood as a kind of federation for collective security.Footnote 7 These developments added momentum to a cycle of insecurity by further polarising gang identities, increasing the risks of violence whenever Black gangsters ventured west en masse. Such confrontations were headline-grabbing, taking place in central and western Freetown where the elites and ‘mainstream’ lived (KKK Gangster B Int.). For isolated cliques in areas dominated by rivals, simply travelling outside of their immediate territory risked attack. For marginal urban youth not yet affiliated to a gang, joining to seek protection became a logical step.

A second key development came through the music scene as emerging Sierra Leonean musicians engaged in well-publicised ‘beefs’. Most prominent was that between self-declared ‘King of Freetown’ Kao Denero and his ‘Black Leo’ fanbase, and US diaspora-based LAJ, supported by the ‘Red Flag Movement’ (RFM). Their rivalry, perhaps intended to generate publicity by mirroring US East vs. West Coast rap beefs, gained widespread attention in 2010 following their on-stage tussle for the microphone as Freetown played host to global star Akon. Subsequent clashes between fans were described as a ‘national security’ concern by local press and the first time music rivalries had ‘reached the level of gangs’ (Bah Reference Bah2010; Tucker Reference Tucker2013: 17–18). Though distinct from cliques, Black Leo and RFM did play upon the ‘black versus red’ animosity and, as Tucker (Reference Tucker2013: 13) notes, clique members began to use fan-rallies as opportunities to settle scores. This mimicked contemporaneous developments in Jamaica's dancehall scene, where warring fans of Mavado and Vybz Kartel, split between the ‘Gully’ Kingston neighbourhood and an area of Portmore known as ‘Gaza’, fought at concerts, schools and prisons (Petridis Reference Petridis2010). In Freetown, where dancehall enjoyed great popularity, the assignations of Gully and Gaza began to intersect gang identities; cliques in lower seaside slums were Gully (signified by additional green colours), and those higher up were Gaza (signified by yellow) (Give-a-damn Gaza 5-0 Int.).Footnote 8

Ahead of 2012 elections senior politicians attempted gang mediation, ostensibly as part of a ‘Say No to Violence’ campaign. President Koroma brought LAJ and Kao Denero together to end their public feud (Tucker Reference Tucker2013: 53), while several ministers brought rival clique leaders together to agree peace. However, in an often-repeated phrase, gang members explained ‘the peace was not real’ as agreements failed to address long-standing vendettas: ‘The peace is always temporary. It won't last. Within a month, shit will happen. They [gangsters] always remember what happened. They will always look for revenge. “You killed my brother, so I will kill you” – that's why the fighting always continues’ (So-So Pink CO Int.). This caused the rift between Crips and Black during failed peace efforts led by Musa Tarawally, then Minister of Internal Affairs: ‘They brought everyone together to make peace. But the Black decided to beat a man up from the Red. So then there was beef between the Red and Blue against the Black. There are so many Black who said ‘the MOB killed our guys, too many, so we want revenge’ (CCC 5-0 Int.). The Blood CO subject to this attack: ‘The Black called their guys and they started beating me, hitting me with bottles, throwing stones. They scarred my face. There was no peace. Blue had peace with us, but the Black didn't want peace’ (Bronx 105 CO Int.).

For Black members, their rejection of politician's overtures was also due to frustration that they offered no long-term solutions to marginality: ‘Anytime they go to President Ernest Koroma and they say “help me get rid of these boys that are causing trouble,” they give out some money. But we don't receive it, so we fight again. It causes more trouble. We need jobs, not money’ (KKK Gangster C Int.). Rather than being ‘real’, it was widely believed the peace deals were an attempt to politically co-opt street-youth during campaigning (Tucker Reference Tucker2013: 53–4). This was a factor that became conspicuous in the lead-up to the 2018 elections.

Playing politics (2016–2021)

As Sierra Leone's 2014 Ebola crisis receded, clique violence in the form of turf-wars and night-time robberies returned to the front pages. In 2016, Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Joseph Fitzgerald Kamara, publicly branded clique activity ‘domestic terrorism’, lamenting that ‘it appears as if every two weeks somebody is murdered in Freetown’ (Awoko 2016). Minister of Internal Affairs, Rtd Major Alfred Palo Conteh, made headlines the following year by endorsing the death penalty for ‘current inhuman acts by these lawless gangs’ (Awoko 2017). Under pressure to address rising clique violence and ensure peaceful elections, the police adopted a zero-tolerance approach in step with the hard-line rhetoric of ministers, arresting gang members for minor offences such as loitering and offering rewards for information leading to the arrest of leaders (Bangura Reference Bangura2016: 25; PoliticoSL 2016).

If this was the stick, a carrot was offered in further payments to ‘silence violence’, continuing the practice identified by Utas & Christensen (Reference Utas and Christensen2016) during 2012 elections. Sheik, a ‘Street Ambassador’ who had positioned himself as the key intermediary between gangs and the government, regularly distributed money to COs at a central police station, reportedly on the President's behalf. Widely understood as an attempt to shore-up political support from the streets, gangsters were happy to take the cash and, for the duration of campaigning, leave aside their beefs. In the run-up, cliques were approached by various candidates with offers of cash, food and drink in exchange for support (see also De Bruijne Reference De Bruijne2019b). A senior police officer recounted detaining busloads of gangsters about to embark for a provincial capital to engage in ‘election business’, much to the consternation of their political sponsors (SLP officer B Int.). This mobilisation came under the spotlight in January 2018 when gangsters fought in the centre of Freetown during an APC rally, leading to a fatal stabbing. According to those involved, Bloods had accused Sheik of withholding cashFootnote 9 received from the President to disburse among the gangs. The dispute turned violent and Sheik took refuge in his office, where Black gangsters found machetes and turned them on the Bloods. Fifty-five clique members were arrested, alongside Sheik. A gang leader opined that Sheik's arrest was political theatre and his paymasters would ensure his release: ‘For now they will jail him, use him to blame him, but they will let him out again’ (Bronx 105 CO Int.). Shortly after, Sheik's bail of Le1,000,000 (roughly US$130) was paid (Sierra Express 2018). An informant inside the criminal justice system claimed the money came from the ruling party; another of those bailed, a close friend of the individual killed, believed it came directly from the President (Give-a-damn Gaza Gangster A Int.). A police officer commented: ‘There is no punishment for violence if you have protection from a politician’ (SLP officer B Int.).

Following the ballot, gangsters involved in election business displayed frustration with politicians and the ‘system’, closely echoing sentiments expressed by previous generations of ex-combatants who gained little from the politics game. For those who backed the losing side, such as an MOB Four-Star General who – to the amusement of his peers – had tattooed APC initials on to his arms, the elections were a chastening experience. However, most gangsters had not pinned hopes on the outcome delivering jobs or powerful connections, opting instead to exploit opportunities for immediate tangible returns, such as cash.

By 2021, cliques had reached an advanced stage of institutionalisation – the process of becoming embedded major players in the life of their communities (Hagedorn Reference Hagedorn2008: 10). This was exemplified by their claimed roles as ‘governors’. Although initially resistant, many communities had come to an accommodation with cliques as they had grown, recognising that clique leaders could help control younger members and provide protection from outside gangs (Community nurse Int.). One CO explained: ‘At first our community didn't trust us, they were afraid of us. But now we are powerful and the community asks us to provide security to them’ (MOB CO A Int.). Another CO of a large MOB hood claimed to have struck a deal with local police; he kept his members and local youth in line, preventing theft and fighting in the area, and in return police looked the other way as he ran his jamba (marijuana) business (Bronx 105 CO Int.). This development underlined just how far the cliques had evolved; no longer peripheral social clubs, they had played a role in national politics and were now shaping the local contours of order and (in)security in their communities.

NEW PLAYERS, OLD GAME?

If Freetown's cliques are the new players on the streets, then in many respects the game they are playing is an old one. Just as rarray boys looked to the odelays and ex-combatants drew on their wartime networks, gangsters have used the cliques as a means to survive, if not escape, everyday insecurity. Like their predecessors, their members are drawn primarily from the poorest urban youth, who find in the cliques protection, a sense of belonging, and a way to become ‘somebody’ (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2017: 5). Just like rarray boys, students and youth from privileged families are also drawn to the cliques, but unlike their poorer peers, they tend to avoid the riskier aspects of street-life: ‘They like to pose. They will buy things for us, but they'll never go and fight like us. They join so that people are afraid of them. So that people won't try to take their money. It keeps them safe’ (KKK CO Int.).Footnote 10

The cliques have been forged by the same context of insecurity that spawned rarray boys, that fuelled RUF recruitment, and that was a continued source of frustration among ex-combatants in the early post-war years. They are likewise an expression of resistance and protest against the system. As such, the adaptation of US gang culture should not be mistaken as an importation of foreign violence or street culture.Footnote 11 Rap lyrics from US cities speak to young people in Freetown due to common points of reference around violence and everyday insecurity (Utas Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 182), but Freetown's gang scene, and the conditions it reflects, is fundamentally local (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2017: 9). As a Black gangster explained: ‘We looked at the movies in America. We copied from there. But now the thing that we have is ours’ (KKK Gangster A Int.).

During fieldwork, gang members were engaged in a range of licit and illicit activities. In the west an isolated but large group of Black gangsters practised enter shack (stealing from unlocked homes) and bulldozing – where those in land disputes pay gangsters to occupy land, intimidate tenants, and destroy structures (Give-a-damn Gaza CO Int.). Near the national stadium Black Street Family (Blood) gangsters were casual labourers and operated a car wash. Further east, an MOB CO was a jamba dealer with a trade spanning the entire Western Area. In the east end, members of KKK (Black) made money from manual labour and seeking donations from passing poda podas (minibus taxis), officially voluntary but close to a form of taxation. They disdained a nearby Blood clique's night-time cranking (robbery) of kekes (motorised tricycle taxis). This latter group also operated a protection racket in their community; local fishermen paid them to protect their stores, understanding to do otherwise would be risky (MOB CO A Int.). All of these were subsistence activities and far from lucrative. As Utas (Reference Utas, Hazen and Rodgers2014: 183) notes, Freetown's urban economy is not ‘“fists full of gold” but bare survival’, and gangsters understand their violence as a consequence, not a cause, of insecurity: ‘The violence is because anywhere there is an angry man, there is a hungry man. If we don't have skills how do you think we will get money?’ (KKK 5-0 Int.). For some older members, crime had become their only means of supporting families. While many gangsters explicitly distanced themselves from robbery, those involved justified it as a last resort forced by the lack of legal alternatives: ‘If I had a job I would focus on that, but there are no jobs for the youths. So whenever we see someone walking with money, we have to do what we need to do’ (MOB Gangster A Int.).

Given their similar profiles and activities, it is unsurprising cliques are often conflated with rarray boys and ex-combatants. However, while the conditions that produced street gangs suggest continuity in the marginalisation of urban youth, this latest expression of that marginalisation represents significant change. Cliques are not extensions of, nor significantly interconnected with, ex-combatant networks. There are few ex-combatant members among their number, with most too young to recall the war. An OG explained: ‘There were no ex-combatants involved with us when we started. It was [school] students. Gangsters and ex-combatants didn't mix’ (Bronx 105 CO Int.). When it comes to rarray culture, the comparison is considered an insult. A Crips CO explained: ‘It's the rarray boys who like to steal and thieve. But we are reppin the real game. We are the real gangsters’ (CCC CO Int.). This statement illustrates a widely shared understanding of unwritten rules of the game; to be an authentic gangster not only requires formal initiation into a clique, but also demonstration of fearlessness, loyalty to the colour (or ‘flag’), and love for the hood. To cliques, rarray boys are aimless and individualistic, preying on their own neighbourhoods. By contrast, cliques consider themselves protectors of their communities; those involved in theft and robbery frame these actions as necessities of survival and typically only target outside communities.

Several attributes further distinguish Freetown's cliques: they contest physical territories in defined hoods; they have defined colour-signifiers of gang membership, whereby wearing the wrong colour in a neighbourhood can get you killed; and they have formalised hierarchies of command and membership processes. As Abdullah notes, such rigid, militaristic hierarchy is ‘unthinkable’ in rarray culture (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2017: 23). These differences suggest cliques are not only new players; they are playing with new rules. In their words, ‘the game has changed’. The following section argues that escalating cycles of insecurity are hardwired into the rules of this new game, giving it internal momentum that has perpetuated cliques’ rapid evolution and suggesting that, if continuing on their current trajectory, cliques could pose an altogether more serious challenge.

THE VICIOUS CYCLES OF THE ‘GAME OF PAIN’

In the absence of a lucrative narcotics market, seen as intensifying criminal turf-wars in cities around the world, the polarising dynamics of intergang rivalry are a primary driver of clique-violence in Freetown.Footnote 12 One gangster observed: ‘Money is not everything. For us here love is everything’ (KKK Gangster B Int.). In the early years, this love took the form of socialising in an environment which generally brought marginal youths together in shared appreciation of music and street culture. However, as different cliques cohered and rivalries between Bloods and Black, and between east and west Freetown, became more pronounced, that love was increasingly invested in a particular colour and hood, whereby loyalty to one meant animosity to another. This polarisation hardwired violent beefing into the game, with clique members viewing themselves as soldiers in a street war. As intergang violence tends to provoke reprisals, this created a vicious cycle that has changed the game:

Now the game is a fight. You can go to a hood and the small boys, the young ones, they don't even know where the gang came from. They don't know the history. They are the first to harm you. It's a beef game for the young ones. They don't know what ‘gangster’ means. All they know about is the fight. It's a game of pain. If you die, you die. (Bronx 105 CO Int.)

A second cycle has developed from the way social status and gang promotions are tied to demonstrations of loyalty, fearlessness and strength. Enria (Reference Enria2015: 639) shows how marginal Freetown youth use ‘love’ to denote relations of reciprocity, particularly those sought with political ‘big men’ to whom their violence signals loyalty. Within cliques, beefing with rivals likewise acts as a signal to peers, demonstrating love, loyalty, fearlessness and strength. It is a primary way for gangsters to accumulate what can be termed ‘street capital’ (Sandberg Reference Sandberg2008: 161): ‘When you get mind to go and beef, that's how you get promoted. When you get mind to fight you have to hurt somebody, you can't let anyone resist you. That's when you are the leader. And you must have fame, a reputation’ (KKK Gangster C Int.). To make it to the top typically requires serving prison-time; it was widely claimed by members that to make 5-0 and CO required stabbing rivals, even killing. These qualifications are inked on the bodies of office holders; a 5-0 proudly explained his tattoo of 20 teardrops: ‘Each tear is for killing someone or for stabbing them’ (Stay Black 5-0 Int.). This means of acquiring street capital provides incentives for those at the bottom of the ladder, the youngest and newest members, to commit violence that is often at odds with the wishes of elders.

Where poverty and marginalisation are felt as acute daily humiliations, gangs offer members a route to status and self-esteem that otherwise seem inaccessible. Similar to how wartime groups became conduits of individual shame and pride (Keen Reference Keen2005; Mitton Reference Mitton2015), gangsters’ self-esteem and status are tied to the collective pride of the clique, which must be defended above all else. Accordingly, intergang violence is less about markets or territory than about tit-for-tat defending of honour of the self or group: ‘We're fighting just for the colour. Everybody has his own team. I'll do it for my flag. It's an oath. There is no other reason, not for money, not for women’ (MOB Gangster A Int.).

Polarisation manifests in the territoriality of gangs; cliques have made Freetown spaces ‘no go zones’ to their rivals (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2020: 48). Those entering enemy territory risk their lives, as do civilians inadvertently wearing gang colours. This insecurity feeds clique recruitment in a third vicious cycle: the more gangs grow, the greater the incentives for young people to join for protection. A senior MOB gangster recounted being a ‘nice Krio schoolboy’ attacked by Black gangsters for wearing red in the East Hood; he subsequently joined the Bloods seeking protection and revenge (MOB Gangster B Int.). Ironically, he then experienced greater insecurity across Freetown. Gangsters feel unable to traverse the city safely unless in large numbers: ‘I want to go to the west end peacefully. I want to go to Lumley Beach. But if I go, a west end boy sees me – an east end boy – they are going to stab me. … The boys in Black cannot go anywhere in the west end’ (KKK Gangster A Int.). For those who try leaving the gang, shaking their association proves difficult:

The other gangs will never believe that you left the gang. Because when you're a gangster you're a gangster for life. If you go somewhere they know you – you are Black and they are an enemy – they will harm you. If you are famous, even though you say you're not a gangster they will know you. They will look at your tattoo – ‘104’ – they will see that tattoo and go for you properly. (KKK 5-0 Int.)

The growth of Freetown's gangs has severely limited the mobility of many urban youth, leaving members feeling trapped while creating strong incentives for non-members to join. Incentives are strongest for the most vulnerable in communities, as illustrated by a group of more than 20 homeless teenage girls in Susan's Bay. Most had arrived from provincial towns and villages, fleeing abusive or broken domestic relationships, and were engaged in prostitution to survive. They decided to join the local Bloods to prevent daily harassment by that gang. This strategy had worked, but they were now being violently targeted by rival Black gangsters (MOB female members Int.).

These cycles have been exacerbated by policing and criminal justice responses. The more cliques are targeted by zero-tolerance policing, the more they consolidate and grow. Rather than deterring gangsters from gang life, arrests and incarceration boost their street capital and chances of promotion. Furthermore, incarceration acts as an accelerant of gang growth. Interviews with clique members in correctional centres underlined how prisons act as gang incubators and networking hubs. Inmates reported that prisoners were increasingly segregated by gang allegiances (Give-a-damn Gaza CO Int.; MOB CO B Int.). As in many cities around the world (Lessing Reference Lessing2017), young people entering prisons for a range of offences were liable to join a gang.Footnote 13 Some sought physical security during their time inside; for others, joining gave access to new networks that could prove advantageous when returning to the streets. Bringing together gangsters from across Sierra Leone, thanks to inter-regional transfers due to overcrowding, prisons also helped spread cliques nationwide (Black Gangster A Int.).

To date only low levels of clique violence affect Sierra Leone's prisons, but street-rivalries do play out in prison yards. In January 2020, Yayo – a Black OG – was moved blocks within Pademba Road prison after fighting with Skull, an MOB rival with whom he had a long-standing beef (Skull Int.; Yayo Int.). A more severe incident occurred in April 2020, when Pademba made international headlines as at least 30 prisoners and one correctional officer were killed in what was officially labelled a riot (SLCS 2020). Rumours connected events to the presence of Palo Conteh, the former Minister of Internal Affairs who once declared war on cliques and was now awaiting trial in Pademba on treason and gun-possession charges. In videos widely circulated on social media, soldiers and prison officers interrogated Skull and Emperor, a Blood gangster, over their alleged involvement. Shown tied-up and bloodied, Emperor died from his injuries weeks later. An official briefing claimed ‘rival prison gangs clashed, attacking one another’ and this ‘may have caused the number of casualties to rise’ in a prison built for 324 inmates but housing well over 1300 (The Sierra Leone Telegraph 2020). Given the deployment of soldiers using live rounds and the politicised nature of this incident, these findings are contested. For gangsters they are an attempt by elites to scapegoat cliques. Nevertheless, the incident underscores that cliques have become dominant in prison life.

Cliques have also rapidly spread in schools. On the streets of Freetown, gang graffiti that is meaningless to older generations is instantly understood by schoolchildren, among whom Sierra Leonean rap is popular. A police officer remarked: ‘They can sing all the local rap songs, but not a single verse of the national anthem’ (SLP officer B Int.). But the influence is more direct; cliques have established younger teams of schoolchildren who can graduate to full gang membership based on good ‘performance’ (Abdullah Reference Abdullah2020: 41). This presents an extra challenge for parents seeking to keep their children away from cliques, particularly as joining these teams makes some students feel safer (SLP officer B Int.). This trend suggests the new game in town has potential to increasingly draw in younger members, connecting them to incentives for violence as they seek membership and promotion, and rendering schools hubs of gang recruitment.

Finally, Sierra Leone's political system is a catalyst for gang growth and institutionalisation. It has demonstrated its capacity to fuse street violence with party politics, imbuing electoral violence (and non-violence) with socio-economic value whilst simultaneously deepening cliques’ sense of marginalisation. As gangsters sought profit from ‘election business’ they also became frustrated about being used, receiving short-term payments rather than long-term assistance in the form of jobs and education. Emperor recalled being paid to cause trouble in 2007 elections, complaining: ‘The honourables used us. Give us money, we will waste it. But give us jobs and we can change’ (Emperor Int.). The story was much the same in 2018, with frustrations compounded by the perceived duplicity of politicians publicly condemning cliques for violence they had privately sponsored. One gangster stated: ‘We are suffering here, but they use and dump us. They abuse us and accuse us’ (KKK Gangster C Int.). Another added: ‘During the elections people will come to us. But after the elections they don't even want to know about us. They say that we're smoking weed, that we're useless and senseless. That's the philosophy of the politicians’ (KKK Gangster B Int.).

Where cliques have departed from the experiences of ex-combatants is in seeking immediate payment from political sponsors rather than investing hope in promises of future employment. As De Bruijne (Reference De Bruijne2019a) argues, this contrasts with ex-combatants who typically built up ‘debt’ of long-term service that was rarely paid by their patrons (see Enria Reference Enria2015; Utas & Christensen Reference Utas and Christensen2016). This may reflect the broad reluctance of elites to build closer relationships with gangs, limiting cliques’ access to patronage networks and debt-building opportunities.Footnote 14 During both 2012 and 2018 elections, pressure on parties to ‘say no to violence’ made such public associations politically costly. For cliques, it also reflects their determination not to be used and a more realistic understanding of what could be obtained from politicians, even if jobs were preferable. As his members made placards for a rally in 2018, a Blood CO in Moa Wharf, East Freetown, said: ‘The APC paid us in small money and this rum to go rally, to go and cause trouble. After the election we won't get anything. This money won't last long, but a job would last’ (MOB CO A Int.).

Despite involvement in elections, cliques generally considered themselves politically unaligned, with many claiming the nature of this new game, in which loyalty to the gang is paramount, precludes their deeper politicisation. Indeed, though it is commonly assumed gang colours align with party support (such as Bloods supporting the red APC), there was no such straightforward relationship in 2018. Receiving payment from a political patron rarely bore relation to the sympathies of gangsters, and members of the same clique often professed support for rival candidates without fear of censorship or reprisal. Demonstrating agency and resistance to the ‘system’, gangsters seized opportunities for immediate gains of cash and goods but frequently subverted the process. Many took payments from both sides, and in a twist on ‘watermelon politics’ (Utas Reference Utas2007), wore their gang colours – their true loyalty – under the shirts they were paid to wear (MOB Gangster C Int.).

Whether cliques will continue to sell their violent labour to patrons, but not their long-term allegiance, remains unclear. Their rapid growth and nationwide membership of thousands makes them significant players on the street that political parties may be unwilling or unable to ignore. Based on their current trajectory, cliques may accumulate political capital as self-proclaimed ‘governors’ of their hoods, rather than just as muscle-for-hire. While claims of governorship are often overstated and vary across neighbourhoods, such an eventuality raises the prospect that patrons may seek to co-opt cliques to sway voters in their communities. Gang leaders may look to leverage this influence to secure greater concessions than immediate pecuniary rewards, unable to pass on such opportunities amidst the daily struggle to survive. Such politicisation would surely intensify intergang rivalries, injecting them with the zero-sum logic of political party competition.

CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS: CHANGING THE GAME

This article has argued that the conditions that shaped Freetown's youth gangs of the past – poverty, exclusion and insecurity – are the same driving youth into cliques today, yet the ‘game of pain’ they play is significantly different. The logics of intergang rivalry, territoriality and social hierarchies have created escalating cycles of violent growth surpassing those of rarray boys and ex-combatants. These cycles are accelerated by their interaction with the criminal justice system, schools, and the political system, placing cliques on a trajectory towards deeper institutionalisation. Recognising this challenge is the first step towards addressing it. Consideration of next steps is the focus of ongoing collaborative work,Footnote 15 but several key points can be made here.

First, clique leaders themselves possess the knowledge and authority to help ‘change the game’; they are also among the most determined to end vicious cycles of gang-related insecurity.Footnote 16 Like their predecessors, clique members seek ways out of marginality; the oldest among this first generation have an eye on the next: ‘We don't want our children to join gangs. I know that no good comes from being in this gang. I always tell them that it's dangerous. I tell them “Don't follow me!”’ (MOB Gangster A Int.). A CO commented: ‘We are the ones who need to stop this, because the younger ones who are coming up are doing the same thing’ (KKK CO Int.). Nevertheless, he lamented that so long as the conditions that led him to gang-life remained in place, appeals to the next generation would have little effect. This strikes at the heart of the challenge: Sierra Leone no more has a ‘gang problem’ than it ever had a ‘youth problem’. The problem, in the parlance of gangsters, is the ‘system’.

The system represents the social, economic and political structures that have maintained an inequitable status quo and marginalised Freetown's youth for decades. As such, responses to cliques should not focus exclusively on them or their communities, but on these wider conditions. In this regard, piecemeal cash donations and short-term programmes are inadequate: ‘They [the government] don't provide us with options for us and our family, to help us find a way out, so that we don't have to become gangsters. If you give us 100 million [Leones], it does not solve our problems. Give us one million dollars and it will not solve the problem’ (KKK Gangster B Int.). Another commented: ‘This flag we are fighting for would make no sense if there are jobs. Of all the problems, the only problem that has created this flag is joblessness’ (KKK CO. Int.). East Hood gangsters cited a timber yard on the outskirts of Freetown that employed Bloods, Crips and Black-affiliated youths as an example of how gangsters quickly put aside ‘beefs’ given the opportunity to earn. A 5-0 in the west of Freetown made a similar argument: ‘We need some big employment. Some factories. If we had that there wouldn't be no trouble, no drama, and no clique’ (Give-a-damn Gaza 5-0 Int.).

Clearly, poverty and unemployment alone cannot explain the growth of cliques and their violence; the majority of young Sierra Leoneans contend with these conditions but do not join gangs. Yet this article has shown that such conditions deepen incentives to join gangs for the most marginalised – those on the fringes of poor communities who lack social status, education, or a roof over their heads, and who find in cliques a sense of family, security and respect.

The economic transformation gang members seek, as ex-combatants discovered after the war, may be an unrealistic prospect in the short term. Nevertheless, their eagerness to find a ‘way out’ denotes a constructive energy that can be directed towards reforming gangs as pro-social organisations, an approach that has precedence in other contexts (see Brotherton & Barrios Reference Brotherton and Barrios2004; Hagedorn Reference Hagedorn2017; Brotherton & Gude Reference Brotherton and Gude2020). Some have already undertaken initiatives. During the Covid-19 outbreak, cliques in the East Hood organised a local awareness-raising programme, handing out masks to residents and disseminating information on sanitation precautions. Whilst this could be interpreted as an attempt to deepen the local legitimacy of the gang, the CO framed it as an attempt to demonstrate the productive potential of the clique to both residents and gangsters themselves. This potential is recognised in an internal report by the SLP's Freetown East Region, which recommends assisting gangs in transitioning to ‘Community Development Associations’ (SLP 2020). Such efforts must contend with the vulnerability of youth associations to co-option by patronage networks (Boersch-Supan Reference Boersch-Supan2013; Datzberger Reference Datzberger2015) and avoid reproducing the very marginalising dynamics that created gangs. This points towards the need for change in a political system that has tended to exploit cliques rather than offer viable routes for their transformation. Practical steps in many other areas that could ameliorate cycles of clique violence – such as policing and criminal justice reforms – cannot succeed without political will to not only enact them, but to ensure politics does not subsequently undermine them. It is clique members themselves who argue that a truly inclusive system, which offers marginal youths equal opportunities for education and employment without political conditions, would remove the raison d'etre of the ‘game of pain’.

Footnotes

I am indebted to Mohamed S. Kamara for invaluable research assistance in Freetown and Hazel Chandler and all at WAYout for their support. I am grateful to Ibrahim Abdullah, Kars de Bruijne, and two anonymous reviewers for insights and feedback, and to Alistair Roe and the International Security Advisory Team, the Sierra Leone Police, and Prison Watch Sierra Leone for facilitating interviews.

1. Verweijen (Reference Verweijen2019) observes a similar neglect of gangs and urban violence by international analysts and practitioners in the DRC due to an exclusionary focus on conflict actors.

2. Alternatively referred to as ‘Money Over Bitches’.

3. Other typical ranks include Four Star General, Three Star General and Beef Kings (responsible for leading the fight on the streets). There is significant variation across teams; other positions include Godfather, Chair and Secretary.

4. Informant names have been anonymised. I also draw upon 320 nationwide interviews conducted during a 2018–21 British Academy study with Ibrahim Abdullah exploring cliques nationally and comparatively.

5. Female gangsters are the focus of current research.

6. In keeping with the national pattern, religious differences are not a source of division in cliques.

7. Abdullah (Reference Abdullah2017: 16) notes this was also intended to quell inter-Black clique conflict.

8. De Bruijne (Reference De Bruijne2019a) notes this carries class-connotations, contrasting perceived relative privilege of upper versus lower-positioned communities.

9. Reportedly US$7800 (SLP officer C Int.).

10. A senior police official recounted being pressured to release a government minister's son who had been arrested for gangsterism (SLP officer D Int.).

11. Defined as ‘values, dispositions, practices and styles’ that shape everyday life amongst sections of the urban poor, Ilan (Reference Ilan2015: 8–9) notes street culture has both ‘specific historic roots’ and shares global characteristics ‘born out of the more ubiquitous effects of exclusion’.

12. A small cocaine market exists, served by Kartels (independent merchants), but gangsters deem it high-risk and unprofitable compared with selling cheap drugs affordable to street youths (Give-a-damn Gaza CO Int.).

13. Similar dynamics were observed during my fieldwork with gangs in Cape Town and Rio de Janeiro in 2017–2018.

14. The SLPP appeared disinclined to mobilise gangs, relying more on ex-military networks and a ‘Soja Squad’ sporting green mufflers.

15. Forthcoming with Ibrahim Abdullah.

16. For example, former gang leader Gazbee founded an organisation to help gangsters having transformed his own life through creative writing (Inveen Reference Inveen2020).

References

REFERENCES

Abdullah, I. 1998. ‘Bush path to destruction: the origin and character of the Revolutionary United Front/Sierra Leone’, Journal of Modern African Studies 36, 2: 203–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abdullah, I. 2002. ‘Youth culture and rebellion: understanding Sierra Leone's wasted decade’, Critical Arts 16, 2: 1937.Google Scholar
Abdullah, I. 2017. ‘Marginal citizens or outlaws? Youth street gangs, globalization and violence’, Unpublished report for Open Society Initiative for West Africa. Freetown: OSIWA.Google Scholar
Abdullah, I. 2020. ‘Marginal citizens or outlaws? Youth street gangs, globalisation, and violence in contemporary Sierra Leone’, Africa Development 45, 3: 3352.Google Scholar
Awoko. 2016. ‘‘Cliques are domestic terrorists’- JFK.’ <https://awokonewspaper.com/sierra-leone-news-cliques-are-domestic-terrorists-jfk/>..>Google Scholar
Awoko. 2017. ‘I believe in the death penalty – Palo Conteh.’ <http://awokonewspaper.com/sierra-leone-news-i-believe-in-the-death-penalty-palo-conteh>..>Google Scholar
Bah, A.M. 2010. ‘Violence in the Sierra Leone music industry … how it started.’ <https://sierraexpressmedia.com/?p=17719&cpage=1>..>Google Scholar
Bangura, Y. 1997. ‘Understanding the political cultural dynamics of the Sierra Leone War: a critique of Paul Richard's “Fighting for the Rain Forest”’, Africa Development 22, 3: 117–48.Google Scholar
Bangura, I. 2016. ‘An assessment of the youth situation and emerging crimes in Sierra Leone’, Unpublished report for the Office of National Security. Freetown: ONS.Google Scholar
Boersch-Supan, J. 2013. ‘The generational contract influx: intergenerational tensions in post-conflict Sierra Leone’, Journal of Modern African Studies 50, 1: 2551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brotherton, D. & Barrios, L. 2004. The Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation: street politics and the transformation of a New York City gang. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brotherton, D.C. & Gude, R. 2020. ‘Social control and the gang: lessons from the legalization of street gangs in Ecuador’, Critical Criminology. <https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-020-09505-5>.CrossRef.>Google Scholar
Christensen, M.M. & Utas, M. 2008. ‘Mercenaries of democracy: the ‘politricks’ of remobilized combatants in the 2007 general elections, Sierra Leone’, African Affairs 107, 429: 515–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Datzberger, S. 2015. ‘Peace building and the depoliticisation of civil society: Sierra Leone 2002–13’, Third World Quarterly 36, 8: 1592–609.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Bruijne, K. 2019 b. ‘The making of a market.’ <http://matsutas.com/big-men/the-making-of-a-market-politicizing-gangs-in-sierra-leone-by-kars-de-bruijne/>..>Google Scholar
Divon, S. & Owor, A. 2021. ‘Aguu: from Acholi post war street youth and children to ‘criminal gangs’ in modern day Gulu City, Uganda’, Journal of Human Security 16, 2: 8296.Google Scholar
Enria, L. 2015. ‘Love and betrayal: the political economy of youth violence in post-war Sierra Leone’, Journal of Modern African Studies 53, 4: 637–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enria, L. 2018. The Politics of Work in a Post-Conflict State: youth, labour & violence in Sierra Leone. Oxford: James Currey.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fanthorpe, R. 2001. ‘Neither citizen not subject? ‘Lumpen’ agency and the legacy of native administration in Sierra Leone’, African Affairs 100, 400: 363–86.Google Scholar
Fanthorpe, R. & Maconachie, R. 2010. ‘Beyond the ‘crisis of youth’? Mining, farming, and civil society in post-war Sierra Leone’, African Affairs 109, 435: 251–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fraser, A. & Hagedorn, J.M. 2018. ‘Gangs and a global sociological imagination’, Theoretical Criminology 22, 1: 4262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaz D'Paper Poet. 2020. Gaz D'paper Poet Autobiography, unpublished manuscript. Freetown, Sierra Leone.Google Scholar
Greene, G. 1948. The Heart of the Matter. London: William Heinemann.Google Scholar
Hagedorn, J.M. 2008. A World of Gangs: armed young men and gangsta culture. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Hagedorn, J.M. 2017. ‘Gangs, schools, and social change: an institutional analysis’, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 673, 1: 190208.Google Scholar
Harris, D. 2013. Sierra Leone: A Political History. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Ilan, J. 2015. Understanding Street Culture: poverty, crime, youth and cool. London: Palgrave.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inveen, C. 2020. ‘Sierra Leone gangster leaves streets for life of poetry’, Reuters. <https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-leone-poetry/sierra-leone-gangster-leaves-streets-for-life-of-poetry-idUKKBN20D0XH>..>Google Scholar
Jensen, S. 2008. Gangs, Politics and Dignity in Cape Town. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Kamara, M. (aka Mozes Rozes). 2019. ‘The System’, in Street Rhymes (poems from the streets book 2). Freetown: WAYout Worldwide Arts for Youth.Google Scholar
Kandeh, J. 1992. ‘Politicization of ethnic identities in Sierra Leone’, African Studies Review 35, 1: 8199.Google Scholar
Keen, D. 2005. Conflict and Collusion in Sierra Leone. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
King, N. 2016. ‘Freetown's Yoruba-modelled secret societies as transnational and transethnic mechanisms for social integration’, in Knörr, J. & Kohl, C., eds. The Upper Guinea Coast in Global Perspective. Oxford: Berghahn, 5873.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lahai, J.I. 2014. ‘The musicscapes of a country in transition: cultural identity, youth agency, the emergent hip hop culture, and the quest for socio-political change in Sierra Leone’, in Clark, K.M. & Koster, M.M., eds. Hip Hop and Social Change in Africa. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 198225.Google Scholar
Lessing, B. 2017. ‘Counterproductive punishment: how prison gangs undermine state authority’, Rationality and Society 29, 3: 257–97.Google Scholar
Mitton, K. 2013. ‘Where is the war? Explaining peace in Sierra Leone’, International Peacekeeping 20, 3: 321–37.Google Scholar
Mitton, K. 2015. Rebels in a Rotten State: understanding atrocity in the Sierra Leone civil war. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Nuxoll, C. 2015. ‘‘We listened to it because of the message’: juvenile RUF combatants and the role of music in the Sierra Leone civil war’, Music and Politics 9, 1.Google Scholar
PEA. 1989. Bras, Greens and Ballheads: interviews with Freetown “street boys”. Freetown: People's Educational Association of Sierra Leone.Google Scholar
Peters, K. 2011. War and the Crisis of Youth in Sierra Leone. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petridis, A. 2010. ‘Jamaica split by dancehall feud.’ <https://www.theguardian.com/music/2010/apr/11/rappers-feud-divides-jamaica>, accessed 12.8.2020.,+accessed+12.8.2020.>Google Scholar
PoliticoSL. 2016. ‘Sierra Leone offers cash reward for intel on gangs.’ <https://politicosl.com/articles/sierra-leone-offers-cash-reward-intel-gangs>..>Google Scholar
Prestholdt, J. 2009. ‘The afterlives of 2Pac: imagery and alienation in Sierra Leone and beyond’, Journal of African Cultural Studies 21, 2: 197218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, P. 1996. Fighting for the Rainforest: war, youth and resources in Sierra Leone. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Rosen, D. M. 2005. Armies of the Young: Child Soldiers in War and Terrorism. New Brunswick, London: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Sandberg, S. 2008. ‘Street capital: ethnicity and violence on the streets of Oslo’, Theoretical Criminology 12, 2: 153–71.Google Scholar
Sierra Express Media. 2018. 56 Clique Boys Granted Bail.’ 25.2.2018. <https://sierraexpressmedia.com/?p=83480>..>Google Scholar
Sierra Leone Correctional Service (SLCS). 2020. ‘Briefings from the Sierra Leone correctional service on the incidence of 29th April, 2020.’ <https://slcs.sl/2020/07/08/briefings-from-the-sierra-leone-correctional-service-on-the-incidence-of-29th-april-2020/>..>Google Scholar
SLP. 2020. Clique activities within Freetown, East Region. Unpublished report. Freetown: Sierra Leone Police.Google Scholar
Spitzer, L. & Denzer, L. 1973. ‘I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson and the West African Youth League. Part II: the Sierra Leone period, 1938–1945’, International Journal of African Historical Studies 6, 4: 565601.Google Scholar
The Sierra Leone Telegraph. 2020. ‘Freetown Correctional Centre publishes report into Pademba Road prison riot.’ 8.7.2020. <https://www.thesierraleonetelegraph.com/freetown-correctional-centre-publishes-report-into-pademba-road-prison-riot/>..>Google Scholar
Tucker, B. 2013. ‘Musical violence. gangsta rap and politics in Sierra Leone’, Current African Issues 52: 163.Google Scholar
Utas, M. 2007. ‘Watermelon politics in Sierra Leone: hope amidst vote buying and remobilized militias’, African Renaissance 4, 3: 62–6.Google Scholar
Utas, M. 2014. ‘“Playing the game”: gang–militia logics in war-torn Sierra Leone’, in Hazen, J. & Rodgers, D., eds. Global Gangs: street violence across the world. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 171–92.Google Scholar
Utas, M. & Christensen, M.M. 2016. ‘The gift of violence: ex-militias and ambiguous debt relations during post-war elections in Sierra Leone’, African Conflict and Peacebuilding Review 6, 2: 23–4.Google Scholar
Verweijen, J. 2019. Violent Cities, Violent Society: analyzing urban violence in the eastern Congo. Nairobi: Rift Valley Institute, 55–6.Google Scholar
Bronx 105 CO, Central Freetown, 13.02.2018.Google Scholar
Black Gangster A, Port Loko Correctional Centre, Port Loko District, 20.1.2020.Google Scholar
CCC CO, Crips, Central Freetown, 15.2.2018.Google Scholar
CCC 5-0, Crips, Central Freetown, 15.2.2018.Google Scholar
Community nurse, Susan’s Bay, Central Freetown, 22.2.2018.Google Scholar
Emperor, MOB, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 10.1.2020.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza CO, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 11.1.2020.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza 5-0, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 1.3.2018.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza Gangster A, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 1.3.2018.Google Scholar
MOB CO A, Moa Wharf, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
MOB CO B, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 15.1.2020.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster A, Government Wharf, Central Freetown, 6.3.2018.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster B, Mafanta Correctional Centre, Magburaka, Tonkolili District, 20.1.2020.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster C, Moa Wharf, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
MOB female members, Susan’s Bay, 12.6.2019.Google Scholar
KKK CO, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 22.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK 5-0, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster A, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster B, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster C, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster D, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
ONS, senior officer, ONS headquarters, Freetown, 14.1. 2020.Google Scholar
Skull, MOB gangster, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 10.1.2020.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer A, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 11.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer B, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 10.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer C, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 10.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP officer D, Freetown, 20.2.2018.Google Scholar
Stay Black 5-0, Susan’s Bay, Central Freetown, 13.2.2018.Google Scholar
So-So Pink CO, Government Wharf, Central Freetown, 6.3.2018.Google Scholar
Yayo, Give-a-damn Gaza gangster, Black, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 15.1.2020.Google Scholar
Bronx 105 CO, Central Freetown, 13.02.2018.Google Scholar
Black Gangster A, Port Loko Correctional Centre, Port Loko District, 20.1.2020.Google Scholar
CCC CO, Crips, Central Freetown, 15.2.2018.Google Scholar
CCC 5-0, Crips, Central Freetown, 15.2.2018.Google Scholar
Community nurse, Susan’s Bay, Central Freetown, 22.2.2018.Google Scholar
Emperor, MOB, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 10.1.2020.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza CO, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 11.1.2020.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza 5-0, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 1.3.2018.Google Scholar
Give-a-damn Gaza Gangster A, Black, Battalion, West Freetown, 1.3.2018.Google Scholar
MOB CO A, Moa Wharf, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
MOB CO B, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 15.1.2020.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster A, Government Wharf, Central Freetown, 6.3.2018.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster B, Mafanta Correctional Centre, Magburaka, Tonkolili District, 20.1.2020.Google Scholar
MOB Gangster C, Moa Wharf, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
MOB female members, Susan’s Bay, 12.6.2019.Google Scholar
KKK CO, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 22.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK 5-0, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster A, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster B, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster C, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
KKK Gangster D, Black, Kossohtown, East Freetown, 27.2.2018.Google Scholar
ONS, senior officer, ONS headquarters, Freetown, 14.1. 2020.Google Scholar
Skull, MOB gangster, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 10.1.2020.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer A, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 11.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer B, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 10.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP senior officer C, SLP headquarters, Freetown, 10.6.2019.Google Scholar
SLP officer D, Freetown, 20.2.2018.Google Scholar
Stay Black 5-0, Susan’s Bay, Central Freetown, 13.2.2018.Google Scholar
So-So Pink CO, Government Wharf, Central Freetown, 6.3.2018.Google Scholar
Yayo, Give-a-damn Gaza gangster, Black, Pademba Road Correctional Centre, Freetown, 15.1.2020.Google Scholar