Sierra Leone's
Vice-President Samuel Sam-Sumana has been sacked for seeking political asylum
in a foreign embassy, the president's office has said.
President Ernest
Bai Koroma had dismissed him because he had "abandoned" his duties,
it added.
On Saturday, Mr
Sam-Sumana said he had asked for asylum in the US because his life was in
danger.
It is unclear
whether the constitution gives the president the power to dismiss his deputy.
The BBC's Umaru
Fofana in the capital, Freetown, says there is no doubt that Mr Koroma's
decision is controversial.
Some people believe
that the vice-president can be removed only through a parliamentary
impeachment, but Mr Koroma said he had the "constitutional authority"
to dismiss him.
The governing All People's Congress had earlier expelled Mr
Sam-Sumana after accusing him of fuelling violence, and trying to form a
breakaway party in his home district of Kono. He denied the allegations.
The dispute between Mr Koroma and Mr Sam-Sumana has raised
fears about the future stability of Sierra Leone.
The West African state has been badly affected by the
Ebola outbreak in the region, and is still battling to recover from a civil war
which ended in 2002.
Government troops surrounded Mr Sam-Sumana's home in
Freetown on Saturday.
He came out of hiding on Monday, telling journalists at
his home: "I am safe. We are all safe."
The US State Department said on Sunday it was in contact
with Sierra Leone's authorities in an attempt to resolve the crisis.
Last month, Mr Sam-Sumana said he was putting himself in
quarantine for 21 days after one of his bodyguards died of the Ebola virus.
He was the country's first senior government figure to
subject himself to a voluntary quarantine.
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