H.E. Rev. Dr. Lilian Sally Addo, Global President IYNUNSCR 2250, Salutes Resilience as the Country Marks Independence
By Lawrence Odoom
As Sierra Leone commemorates its 65th Independence Anniversary, the emerald hills of Freetown and Bo echo not with lamentation, but with jubilation, a resounding testimony to a country that stared into the abyss of civil conflict and emerged, phoenix-like, with renewed resolve.
The savage civil war of the 1990s was more than a military confrontation; it was a national crucible. It lacerated the social fabric, displaced generations, and etched trauma into the collective psyche. Yet, in the aftermath of desolation, Sierra Leone refused capitulation. Brick by brick, dialogue by dialogue, and reconciliation by reconciliation, the nation reconstructed what war had obliterated. Hospitals were resurrected, schools reopened, and democracy though bruised was resuscitated with tenacity and grit.
What now defines Sierra Leone is not the specter of conflict, but the splendor of her recovery. A country once stigmatized by “blood diamonds” now trades in the nobler currency of peace, culture, and human capital. She has extended fraternal hands to ECOWAS, the African Union, and the global community, transforming healing into diplomacy and hospitality into policy.
Marking the milestone, H.E. Rev. Dr. Lilian Sally Addo, Global President of IYNUNSCR 2250, hailed the country’s odyssey as an exemplar of resilience:
“Sierra Leone’s journey from the devastation of war to the dignity of reconstruction is a masterclass in national endurance. The war shall not be bound to repeat itself, for a new generation has been awakened to the sanctity of peace and security.”

Dr. Addo, a formidable advocate for youth empowerment and Pan-African unity, reaffirmed IYNUNSCR 2250’s commitment to mentoring Sierra Leone’s youth, the vanguards of tomorrow. Through leadership incubation, civic education, and peace advocacy, the network is embedding peace not merely as governance policy, but as a generational ethos.
“We stand ready to mentor, to teach, and to inscribe in every young Sierra Leonean the essence of peace and security. When youth grasp that peace is prosperity, war becomes anachronism. That is the inheritance we must guarantee.”
In a clarion call to government and continental stakeholders, Dr. Addo urged deliberate investment in peace-building institutions.
“We appeal to the Government of Sierra Leone and leaders across Africa to open the doors of collaboration. Resource the movements sowing seeds of unity, dialogue, and security in our schools, communities, and frontiers. Only then can we confine the horrors of yesterday to history, and never allow them to desecrate our future.”
As the green, white, and blue ascend at 65, the message is unequivocal: Sierra Leone’s greatest endowment is not beneath its soil, but within its spirit. From the embers of war, a nation has risen — embracing the world, empowering its youth, and consecrating peace as her eternal creed.
Happy 65th Independence Day, Sierra Leone. May the next 65 years be defined not by what you survived, but by what you build.
By Lawrence Odoom
Press Secretary, IYNUNSCR2250