Kenema is a city in the Eastern Province of Sierra Leone and the administrative capital of Kenema District. With a population of 255,110 recorded in the 2021 mid-term Population and Housing Census, it is the second most populous city in Sierra Leone, after the national capital Freetown. During the Sierra Leone Civil War (1991–2002), Kenema's proximity to the diamond fields of Kono District and Kailahun District made it a recurring theatre of conflict between the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), the Civil Defence Forces (CDF), and government troops.

Kenema Government Hospital occupies a distinctive position in global public health history. It operates one of the few dedicated Lassa fever treatment and research units in the world, and it was at this institution that Sierra Leone's first confirmed case of Ebola virus disease was diagnosed on 25 May 2014, at the onset of the West African Ebola epidemic.

History

Pre-colonial and early settlement

Local oral tradition holds that Kenema was founded by Ngombulango, a hunter from the nearby settlement of Gombu, who identified the present site on a hunting expedition and established a permanent settlement several generations before the arrival of European colonial administration. The wider Kenema region forms part of the Upper Guinea forest zone historically inhabited by Mende-speaking communities, whose chieftaincy systems governed land tenure, agricultural production, and inter-community trade across southeastern Sierra Leone.

Colonial period

The British established the Sierra Leone Protectorate in 1896, extending formal colonial administration to the interior. Kenema expanded considerably when the Sierra Leone Government Railway reached the town in 1909, connecting it directly to Freetown and facilitating export-oriented trade in timber, palm oil, palm kernels, cocoa, and coffee. Under colonial administration, Kenema developed as a collection and distribution point for produce from the surrounding countryside; markets, administrative offices, and mission schools were established during this period.

Ebola outbreak (2014–2016)

Kenema Government Hospital confirmed Sierra Leone’s first Ebola case on 25 May 2014. By the end of the epidemic, Sierra Leone had recorded over 14,000 cases and nearly 4,000 deaths, with Kenema among the early epicentres.

Geography

Kenema lies at approximately in a broad valley at a natural gap in the Kambui Hills, within the Upper Guinea forest ecosystem of southeastern Sierra Leone. The city sits at approximately 173 metres above sea level. The Kambui Hills Forest Reserve lies immediately to the west, reaching elevations of up to 645 metres; it serves both as a biodiversity area of international significance and as the primary catchment for reservoirs supplying the city with water.

Kenema is connected by road to Bo to the west, to Kailahun and Kono districts to the north and east, and to Pujehun District and the Liberian border via the southern corridor through Zimmi. The former Sierra Leone Government Railway, which linked Kenema to Freetown until its closure in 1974, helped establish the city's initial settlement and commercial geography, and the course of the former railway line still shapes the city's main commercial corridor.

Climate

Kenema has a tropical monsoon climate (Köppen Am), characterised by a pronounced wet season from May to October and a drier season from November to April. The Harmattan, a dry northeasterly wind from the Sahara, moderates conditions briefly between December and February, though its effect in southeastern Sierra Leone is considerably milder than in the country's north or in the broader Sahel zone. Annual rainfall averages approximately 2,600 to 2,700 mm, consistent with the dense forest belt of southeastern Sierra Leone. Mean annual temperature is approximately 26 °C, with limited seasonal variation.

Demographics

Population

Kenema has undergone rapid urbanisation, with its population increasing nearly eightfold between 1974 and 2021. Urban growth has been driven by in-migration linked to mining, trade, post-war resettlement, and expansion of public services.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

|+ Historical population of Kenema

! Year !! Population !! Change

|-

| 1974 || 31,458 || —

|-

| 1985 || 52,473 || +66.8%

|-

| 2004 || 128,402 || +144.7%

|-

| 2015 || 200,443 || +56.1%

|-

| 2021 || 255,110 || +27.3%

|-

| colspan="3" style="font-size:85%; text-align:left;" | Source: Statistics Sierra Leone

Ethnicity

Kenema is among the most ethnically diverse cities in Sierra Leone. The Mende form the largest ethnic group and represent the dominant population across Kenema District. Significant communities of Kono, Kissi, Limba, Temne, and Fula are also present, reflecting patterns of internal migration linked to trade and mining. A Lebanese-Sierra Leonean community, with historical roots in colonial-era commerce, remains active in the retail and wholesale trading sectors.

Economy

Kenema is the commercial hub of southeastern Sierra Leone, with economic activity organised around mining, agriculture, agro-processing, trade, banking, and public administration.

Mining

Kenema remains the administrative centre of Sierra Leone's alluvial diamond industry. The Government Diamond Office, established in 1959, coordinates the valuation, licensing, and certification of diamonds exported from the Eastern Province.

Agriculture

The Eastern Province, and Kenema District in particular, forms the heartland of Sierra Leone's cocoa and coffee production. Cooperatives in Kenema, Kailahun, and Kono districts aggregate beans for export. The surrounding countryside also produces palm oil and palm kernels, rice, cassava, and timber-based products including furniture and wood carvings, most of which are transported by road to Freetown for domestic sale or export. Smaller-scale processing of palm oil, rice, gari, and sawn timber also takes place in and around the city.

Trade and retail

Kenema hosts one of the largest open-air markets in southeastern Sierra Leone and serves as a regional distribution centre for goods moving between Freetown, the Kono diamond districts, and neighbouring Liberia via the Zimmi corridor. Informal cross-border trade with Liberia constitutes a significant component of the local economy. The formal retail sector includes branches of national supermarket chains alongside locally owned shops, pharmacies, hardware merchants, and Lebanese-owned trading houses.

In October 2025, the Ministry of Finance and the World Bank signed contracts under the Resilient Urban Sierra Leone Project (RUSLP) for a major upgrade of Kenema Central Market, incorporating expanded market facilities, improved drainage and sanitation infrastructure, and safer trading structures for vendors.

Banking and financial services

Kenema is an important financial centre in the Eastern Province. It hosts the only provincial branch of the Bank of Sierra Leone, alongside branches of the Sierra Leone Commercial Bank, GTBank Sierra Leone, and other commercial financial institutions.

Infrastructure and urban services

Access to electricity in Sierra Leone remains limited, with national electrification rates below 30%, and significantly lower in rural areas.

Urban transport in Kenema is dominated by motorcycles (okada) and tricycles (kekeh), reflecting broader transport patterns across Sierra Leone.

Health

Kenema Government Hospital

Kenema Government Hospital (KGH) is the principal referral hospital for the Eastern Province and a facility of international significance in infectious disease research and response. The hospital provides secondary and tertiary care to a catchment population spanning Kenema, Kailahun, and Kono districts.

Lassa fever

Kenema District is among the highest-burden endemic zones for Lassa fever in West Africa. The rodent-borne haemorrhagic illness caused by the Lassa virus is estimated to cause between 100,000 and 300,000 infections annually across the West African region. Kenema Government Hospital has operated a dedicated Lassa fever treatment and research programme since the 1970s, run in partnership between Sierra Leone's Ministry of Health and Sanitation and the international Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Consortium (VHFC). The programme conducts nationwide surveillance, contact tracing, rodent control, and community education, and has contributed to the development of rapid diagnostic tests for the virus. KGH operates one of the few dedicated Lassa fever isolation and treatment wards in the world. The hospital's existing Lassa fever infrastructure was rapidly converted into the country's first Ebola isolation and diagnostic facility.

Between May 2014 and January 2015, approximately 600 Ebola cases originated in Kenema District, of which 92 (15 percent) were health-care workers, including 66 staff members of KGH itself. Among those who died was Dr. Sheik Humarr Khan, chief physician of the Lassa Fever Programme, who died on 29 July 2014. President Ernest Bai Koroma posthumously named Khan a national hero; Nature named him one of its "Ten People Who Mattered" of 2014. Head nurse Mbalu Fonnie also died during the outbreak. In August 2014, KGH was temporarily closed. In late November 2014, burial workers in Kenema publicly deposited bodies outside government offices in protest at non-payment of hazard allowances, an incident reported widely in international media.

In 2019, the asteroid 6781 Sheikhumarrkhan was named in Dr. Khan's honour by the Minor Planet Center.

Médecins Sans Frontières paediatric hospital

In March 2019, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) opened a dedicated paediatric hospital at Hangha, on the outskirts of Kenema, to address the high child and maternal mortality rates recorded in the Eastern Province. The facility operates as a 91-bed children's hospital offering an emergency room, an intensive care unit, two general paediatric wards, a laboratory, and a blood bank. It provides free inpatient and outpatient care to children under five.

COVID-19 pandemic

Kenema Government Hospital served as one of Sierra Leone's primary molecular-diagnostic centres during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, the World Health Organization secured a €500,000 grant from the German Corporation for International Cooperation (GIZ) to expand SARS-CoV-2 testing capacity at the hospital. Reporting in Nature noted that the hospital's response was constrained by shortages of personal protective equipment and by strike action arising from unpaid staff salaries.

Recent developments

In April 2026, the Government of Sierra Leone donated a consignment of medical and logistical equipment to Kenema Government Hospital, including a 64-slice CT scanner, an ultrasound machine, a staff bus, and a utility vehicle. The CT scanner was the first to be installed at a public hospital outside Freetown and was described by the government as a measure to reduce the need for patients in the Eastern Province to seek advanced diagnostic imaging abroad.

Education

Sierra Leone’s literacy rate is estimated at approximately 43% for adults, with lower rates in rural areas.

Kenema hosts several secondary schools and tertiary institutions, including Eastern Technical University.

Culture

The Mende cultural heritage is central to Kenema's civic identity. Traditional Mende crafts, including wood carving and furniture making, have their roots in the surrounding forest economy and remain important cultural and economic activities. The city's markets function not only as commercial spaces but as social institutions, gathering points for communities across southeastern Sierra Leone and arenas for the exchange of goods, news, and cultural expression.

Islam shapes daily life substantially in Kenema, with Friday congregational worship marking the city's weekly rhythm. Christian communities maintain an active presence through churches, schools, and the institutions of the Diocese of Kenema. Traditional religious practices coexist alongside both faiths across much of rural Kenema District.

Sport

Association football is the dominant sport in Kenema, as throughout Sierra Leone. The city's principal professional club, Kamboi Eagles F.C., competes in the Sierra Leone National Premier League. Kenema has produced several of Sierra Leone's most notable international footballers, including Mohamed Kallon and Kei Kamara, both prominent in international club and national team football. Kenema Town Field serves as the city's main football venue and home ground for the Kamboi Eagles.

References

Colonial period and the railway

Kenema's modern growth was promoted during the colonial period by its position on the government railway and by its role in the export economy of southeastern Sierra Leone. The town developed as a collection and distribution point for timber, palm produce, cocoa and coffee.

Mining boom

The discovery of alluvial diamonds in the Kenema area in 1931 transformed the local economy. The town became the administrative centre of the Alluvial Diamond Mining Scheme and, from 1959, the site of the Government Diamond Office, which regulates the valuation and export of diamonds from south-eastern Sierra Leone.

Geography and climate

Kenema lies at approximately , in a valley at a gap in the Kambui Hills. The city has a tropical monsoon climate (Köppen Am), with a pronounced wet season from May to October and a drier season, influenced in part by the Harmattan, from December to February. Annual rainfall is substantial, consistent with the south-eastern forest belt of Sierra Leone, while mean monthly temperatures remain warm throughout the year.

The surrounding Kambui Hills Forest Reserve is a protected Upper Guinean forest landscape of international biodiversity significance. It lies immediately west of the city, reaches elevations of up to 645 m, and acts as a catchment area for reservoirs supplying Kenema and surrounding communities.

Demographics

Kenema is one of the most ethnically diverse cities in Sierra Leone. The Mende people form the largest ethnic group, alongside significant Kono, Kissi, Limba, Temne, Fula and Lebanese communities.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right"

|+ Historical population

|-

! Year !! Population !! ±%

|-

| 1974 || 31,458 || —

|-

| 1985 || 52,473 || +66.8%

|-

| 2004 || 128,402 || +144.7%

|-

| 2015 || 200,443 || +56.1%

|-

| 2021 || 255,110 || +27.3%

|-

| colspan="3" style="text-align:left" | Source: Statistics Sierra Leone.

|}

The surrounding Kenema District recorded a population of 772,472 in the 2021 census, making it the most populous district in the Eastern Province.

Kenema is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kenema, erected on 11 November 1970, which covers the civil districts of Kenema, Kailahun, and Kono and forms part of the ecclesiastical province of Freetown. Traditional religious practices coexist with both Islam and Christianity across much of rural Kenema District.

Economy

Kenema is the commercial hub of southeastern Sierra Leone, with economic activity organised around mining, agriculture, agro-processing, trade, banking, and public administration.

Mining

Kenema remains the administrative centre of Sierra Leone's alluvial diamond industry. The Government Diamond Office, established in 1959, coordinates the valuation, licensing, and certification of diamonds exported from the Eastern Province.

Agriculture

The Eastern Province, and Kenema District in particular, forms the heartland of Sierra Leone's cocoa and coffee production. Cooperatives in Kenema, Kailahun, and Kono districts aggregate beans for export. The surrounding countryside also produces palm oil and palm kernels, rice, cassava, and timber-based products including furniture and wood carvings, most of which are transported by road to Freetown for domestic sale or export. Smaller-scale processing of palm oil, rice, gari, and sawn timber also takes place in and around the city.

Trade and retail

Kenema hosts one of the largest open-air markets in southeastern Sierra Leone and serves as a regional distribution centre for goods moving between Freetown, the Kono diamond districts, and neighbouring Liberia via the Zimmi corridor. Informal cross-border trade with Liberia constitutes a significant component of the local economy. The formal retail sector includes branches of national supermarket chains alongside locally owned shops, pharmacies, hardware merchants, and Lebanese-owned trading houses.

In October 2025, the Ministry of Finance and the World Bank signed contracts under the Resilient Urban Sierra Leone Project (RUSLP) for a major upgrade of Kenema Central Market, incorporating expanded market facilities, improved drainage and sanitation infrastructure, and safer trading structures for vendors.

Banking and financial services

Kenema is an important financial centre in the Eastern Province. It hosts the only provincial branch of the Bank of Sierra Leone, alongside branches of the Sierra Leone Commercial Bank, GTBank Sierra Leone, and other commercial financial institutions.

Public health

Lassa fever

Kenema lies within the West African Lassa fever endemic zone. Kenema Government Hospital (KGH) has operated a dedicated Lassa fever research and treatment programme since the 1970s, run in partnership between Sierra Leone's Ministry of Health and Sanitation and the international Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Consortium (VHFC). The programme conducts nationwide surveillance, contact tracing, rodent control and community education, and has developed rapid diagnostic tests for the virus.

2014–2016 Ebola outbreak

Kenema was the epicentre of Sierra Leone's role in the 2013–2016 West African Ebola outbreak. On 25 May 2014, Augustine Goba, head of the Lassa fever laboratory at KGH, produced the first confirmed diagnosis of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in Sierra Leone. The hospital's existing Lassa fever infrastructure was rapidly converted into the country's first Ebola isolation and diagnostic facility.

Between May 2014 and January 2015, approximately 600 EVD cases originated in Kenema District, of which 92 (15%) were health-care workers, including 66 staff members of KGH itself. Among the dead were Dr. Sheik Humarr Khan, the chief physician of the Lassa Fever Programme, who died on 29 July 2014 and was posthumously named a "national hero" by President Ernest Bai Koroma and one of Nature "Ten People Who Mattered" of 2014, and head nurse Mbalu Fonnie. In August 2014 KGH was temporarily closed; later that year, burial workers in Kenema publicly dumped bodies outside government offices in protest at non-payment of hazard allowances, an incident widely reported in international media.

In 2019, the asteroid 6781 Sheikhumarrkhan was named in Dr. Khan's honour by the Minor Planet Center.

COVID-19

KGH served as one of Sierra Leone's primary molecular-diagnostic centres during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020 the World Health Organization (WHO) secured a €500,000 grant from the German Corporation for International Cooperation (GIZ) to expand SARS-CoV-2 testing capacity at the hospital. Reporting in Nature noted that the hospital's response was constrained by shortages of personal protective equipment and by strike action arising from unpaid salaries.

MSF Hangha Paediatric Hospital

In March 2019 the international medical-humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) opened a dedicated paediatric hospital at Hangha, a town located on the outskirts of Kenema. Built specifically to address the very high child and maternal mortality rates recorded in the Eastern Province, the facility operates as a 91-bed children's hospital offering an emergency room, an intensive care unit, two general paediatric wards, a laboratory and a blood bank. It provides free inpatient and outpatient care to children under five.

Upgrade of Kenema Government Hospital (2026)

In April 2026 the Government of Sierra Leone, through the Ministry of Health and Sanitation led by Minister Dr. Austin Demby, handed over a consignment of medical and logistical equipment to Kenema Government Hospital. The donation included a 64-slice CT scanner, a new ultrasound machine, a 38-seater staff bus and a Land Cruiser utility vehicle. The CT scanner was the first to be installed at a public hospital outside Freetown and was presented by the government as a measure to reduce the need for patients in the Eastern Province to travel abroad—notably to Ghana—for advanced diagnostic imaging.

Infrastructure

Transport

Road transport is Kenema's primary link to the rest of Sierra Leone and to neighbouring Liberia. The city lies on the main highway connecting Freetown, Bo, Kenema, and the eastern districts of Kailahun and Kono. The 87-kilometre Kenema–Zimmi road, linking the city to Pujehun District and the Liberian border, was handed over for rehabilitation in the early 2020s under a Sierra Leone Roads Authority contract.

The Sierra Leone Government Railway formerly connected Kenema to Freetown through Bo, serving as the backbone of the colonial-era export economy. The railway was closed in 1974 and subsequently dismantled; no rail service currently operates in Sierra Leone. Local urban transport is dominated by shared taxis, motorcycle taxis (okada), and three-wheeled auto-rickshaws known locally as kekeh.

Electricity

Kenema's electricity supply is provided through the Côte d'Ivoire–Liberia–Sierra Leone–Guinea (CLSG) Interconnection, a regional high-voltage transmission network developed under the West African Power Pool (WAPP). The network is owned and operated by TRANSCO CLSG, a special-purpose transmission company jointly established by the four participating states. The Sierra Leonean section of the CLSG project comprises approximately 530 kilometres of 225 kV transmission line passing through seven districts, including Kenema District. The Kenema substation serves as the principal injection point for grid electricity in southeastern Sierra Leone.

Local electricity distribution is managed by the Electricity Distribution and Supply Authority (EDSA). In the mid-2020s, EDSA commissioned a new 33 kV transmission line between Kenema and Bo, replacing an ageing 1985-era circuit that had been a persistent source of supply disruptions. The African Development Bank-supported Bo and Kenema Distribution System Rehabilitation and Expansion Project has further upgraded local distribution networks to improve reliability and household access.

Water supply

Kenema's water supply draws on reservoirs in the Kambui Hills catchment and on district-wide infrastructure implemented by the Sierra Leone Water Company (SALWACO). In 2026, SALWACO handed over construction works for gravity-flow water systems in Kenema District intended to extend reliable access to safe water across ten chiefdoms. The city has also been included in externally supported programmes for municipal waste management and environmental sanitation implemented in the post-Ebola period.

Tourism

Kenema functions primarily as a service and transport base for visitors to the Kambui Hills Forest Reserve and the eastern approaches to Gola Rainforest National Park. Tourism remains secondary to trade, public administration and health-sector activity, but the city serves domestic travellers, NGO staff and researchers working in Sierra Leone's south-eastern forest zone.

Education

Kenema follows Sierra Leone's national 6-3-3-4 education structure: six years of primary schooling, three years of junior secondary, three years of senior secondary, and four years of tertiary education. Primary education is free and compulsory in government-sponsored public schools under national policy.

Notable secondary schools in Kenema include Kenema Government Secondary School (GSSK), Holy Trinity Secondary School, Ahmadiyya Secondary School, Holy Rosary Secondary School, the Islamic Secondary School, and the Kamboi Lebanese International School.

Sport

As in the rest of the country, association football is the most popular sport in Kenema. The city's principal club, the Kamboi Eagles, plays in the Sierra Leone National Premier League.

Media

Local radio is the primary mass medium in Kenema, serving communities across the city and the broader district. National radio and television broadcasting services, including the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC), are received throughout the region. Digital and online media platforms have expanded in reach as mobile internet access has grown across Sierra Leone.

Notable people

  • Mohamed Kallon, footballer
  • Kei Kamara, footballer
  • Sheik Umar Khan, virologist and Lassa fever specialist; national hero
  • Salia Jusu-Sheriff, former Vice-President of Sierra Leone
  • J. B. Dauda, politician
  • David J. Francis, former Chief Minister of Sierra Leone
  • Emmerson Bockarie, musician
  • Paul Kpaka, footballer
  • Alpha Lansana, footballer
  • Brima Sesay, footballer
  • Kemokai Kallon, footballer
  • Musa Kallon, football manager
  • Amadou Bakayoko, footballer

References

Further reading

  • Alie, Joe A. D. (1990). A New History of Sierra Leone. Macmillan.
  • Richards, Paul (1996). Fighting for the Rain Forest: War, Youth and Resources in Sierra Leone. Heinemann.
  • Schieffelin, John S. et al. (2016). "An Outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease in the Lassa Fever Zone". The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 214(suppl 3): S137–S142.
  • Statistics Sierra Leone (2022). 2021 Mid-Term Population and Housing Census: Preliminary Report.
  • World Bank (various years). Sierra Leone Economic Update. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.
  • Statistics Sierra Leone
  • Resilient Urban Sierra Leone Project