I don't know if anyone came across this, but it  seems like another country  is 
giving up on British imperial.  It seems people  in Sierra Leone 
associate imperial measurements with cheating.

I wonder  Sierra Leone's move will encourage Liberia to do the  same.
 
Does anyone know when Sierra Leone will begin to  convert things like petrol 
pumps and grocery store scales, Weather reporting,  etc?  

 
Does anyone know what is already metric in Sierra  Leone?


http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100611/wl_africa_afp/sleonelawparliamentmeasurement_20100611174708

 

S.Leone goes metric after 49 years


Friday, 2010-06-11, 13:47  ET


FREETOWN (AFP) –  Sierra Leone's parliament has passed a law adopting the 
metric 
system of  measurement after 49 years using the British imperial system, Trade 
and  Industry Minister David Carew told reporters Friday.

"The law modifies the weight and measures act of 1961 under which the  imperial 
unit of measurement had been used and now  adopts the universally accepted 
metric system," he said.

"The law will enable us to get the correct measurement of foodstuffs and  other 
commodities since measurement terminologies like pound and mile  have been 
replaced with kilometres and kilograms."

Many housewives, like Hawanatu Silla, welcomed the new law.
"It will help to reduce cheating by market women and butchers who had  used the 
pound measurement to defraud customers buying meat, cups of  rice and other 
consumables."
The law stipulated fines ranging from 300 to 6,000 dollars for  defaulters 
including trade inspectors who cheat while using the metric  system.

Sierra Leone is the sole member of the three-nation economic  organisation, the 
Mano River Union (MRU) which comprises Guinea and  Liberia, that maintained the 
use of the imperial system of measurement,  officials said.

The metric system is the world's most common method of measuring units  
although 
is still not fully used by some countries, notably the United  States.



      

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