Dutch Journalist Sophie van Leeuwen has revealed that she was arrested by the Sierra Leone Police while en route a location where Jos Leijdekkers, one of Europe’s most-wanted drug traffickers was reportedly staying.
In an interview with RTL News, van Leeuwen detailed her arrest, interrogation, and eventual release, which she described as a harrowing experience.
Van Leeuwen, who was accompanied by Sierra Leonean journalist Joseph Turay, said: “I was on my way to a location where Jos Leijdekkers – according to my sources – was. There I drove into a roadblock. The police saw my Dutch passport and I was immediately arrested.”
“They confiscated everything: my passport, phone, and camera. I heard them saying, ‘We’ve got her.’ I was then escorted through Freetown in a truck full of armed men to the police station.”
The journalist was interrogated for approximately 15 hours over two days by senior police officials, who accused her of being a “danger to national security” and suspected her of espionage. “I was put under a lot of pressure,” she said.
“It was not a pleasant experience, though I was not physically abused.”
The unit questioning her is reportedly responsible for investigating drug-related crimes in Sierra Leone.
Van Leeuwen’s arrest has drawn attention to the alleged presence of Jos Leijdekkers, a 33-year-old Dutch fugitive, in Sierra Leone. Leijdekkers, who was sentenced in absentia to 24 years in prison by a Rotterdam court in June 2023 for smuggling over seven tons of cocaine, is believed to have been living in the country for about six months. However, the Government of Sierra Leone has repeatedly denied Jos Leijdekkers’ presence in Sierra Leone.
Reports suggest that his presence may have been facilitated by high-ranking officials, not limited to President Bio’s daughter who is alleged to have a relationship with the convicted drug traffiker.
Following her release, van Leeuwen was escorted to Freetown International Airport by her lawyer, Charles Abass Bangura, and left the country on Tuesday evening. Before her departure, she spoke briefly with Ahmed Sahid Nasralla, President of the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ), who confirmed that her safety and freedom were the association’s top priorities.
Although van Leeuwen’s passport, phone, and camera were returned to her through her lawyers, police retained her SD card, citing “security reasons.”
Chernor Bah, Sierra Leone’s Minister of Information and Civic Education, stated that van Leeuwen is welcome to return to the country at any time and emphasized that the police were merely performing their duties.
ACP Allieu Jalloh, head of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), claimed that police found “a lot of inconsistencies and deception” in van Leeuwen’s statements. He added that her release was a government decision.