Freetown, Sierra Leone- June 17, 2025. In a significant show of inter-institutional collaboration, the National Public Procurement Authority (NPPA) welcomed the Country Director of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Mr. Norihito Yonebayashi, to a high-level dialogue aimed at deepening ties between the two institutions. The meeting marked a pivotal step in NPPA’s relentless quest to forge strategic technical collaborations across key development sectors in Sierra Leone. At the forefront of this effort is the NPPA’s Director of Capacity Building, Allieu M. Moigboi, whose leadership continues to open new channels of engagement with international partners like JICA—an organization known for its robust commitment to infrastructure development and human capacity enhancement.
The CEO of NPPA, in welcoming the JICA team, reaffirmed the Authority’s appreciation of Japan’s enduring support to Sierra Leone and described the occasion as a great honour. He highlighted JICA’s long-standing relationship with the country and commended the agency for its consistent contributions to public development programs that have directly improved the lives of ordinary citizens. In referencing the NPPA’s regulatory responsibilities and its engagement with all Ministries, Departments, and Agencies across Sierra Leone, the CEO emphasized the Authority’s core focus: ensuring value for money, transparency, and accountability in all public procurement processes.
Among the key issues discussed was NPPA’s request for technical assistance from the Japanese government, especially in the servicing of Toyota vehicles, which dominate the fleet used by government institutions. The CEO made a compelling case for JICA’s intervention, noting that enhanced fleet management would significantly improve service delivery. The meeting also presented NPPA’s broader vision of integrating procurement integrity into every facet of national development, further underscoring the relevance of JICA’s infrastructural and technical capacity in that journey.
Responding in kind, Mr. Yonebayashi shared insights into JICA’s mandate and operations in Sierra Leone. As a statutory entity of the Japanese government, JICA is tasked with implementing development projects that deliver measurable benefits to the public. He pointed to several landmark initiatives, including support to the Lumley Hospital—one of its kind in the West African sub region—and the recent signing of a major agreement aimed at expanding electricity access nationwide. JICA, he added, is equally invested in knowledge exchange and capacity development, offering technical training and scholarships to enhance institutional capabilities across Africa.
Sierra Leone has been a major beneficiary of JICA’s multifaceted development programs. These include grant aid for expanding the Freetown power grid, technical upgrades in the health sector, especially pediatric and maternal care, as well as the promotion of sustainable rice production in rural districts. More recently, JICA has engaged in regional power pool integration and district governance support, amplifying its footprint in key sectors that align directly with Sierra Leone’s national development priorities.
What stands out in this evolving partnership is the natural synergy between NPPA’s mandate and JICA’s development philosophy. The Authority’s emphasis on cost-effective procurement, regulatory oversight, and capacity building dovetails perfectly with JICA’s approach to infrastructure delivery, local service empowerment, and institutional resilience. The potential collaboration holds immense promise: from co-funded training programs and technical cooperation on vehicle maintenance to procurement support for JICA-backed projects, and digital innovations in contract management. These possibilities are not abstract—they are urgent, practical, and mutually beneficial.
For the NPPA, this partnership could open access to global best practices in public procurement, promote staff exchanges and technical exposure in Japan, and enhance its credibility as the watchdog of transparent procurement. For JICA, it promises more efficient implementation of development projects, a stronger national procurement system to guarantee value for money, and reinforced accountability for Japanese taxpayer-funded interventions.
Ultimately, the people of Sierra Leone stand to gain the most. Whether through reliable hospital services, uninterrupted power supply, better roads, or efficient public institutions, the convergence of NPPA’s governance-driven procurement culture and JICA’s infrastructure-focused development agenda could set a national benchmark for excellence. It is a vision that aligns not only with the Sustainable Development Goals but with the aspirations of a nation poised for transformation—if only its systems can be strengthened, and its partnerships made intentional. The meeting on June 17th may well be remembered as a foundational step in that transformation.
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