Sierra Leone's wildlife series of the mid-2000s was produced almost entirely for the collector export market — none of these pieces were ever intended for domestic circulation in a country whose everyday currency ran to Leone denominations orders of magnitude smaller than ten dollars. The honey badger issue sits in a crowded field of similar silver rounds produced under licensing arrangements common among smaller sovereign mints during this period, where the issuing authority lent its name and legal tender status to coins designed, struck, and distributed almost entirely by private minting contractors in Europe.
KM#427 was struck by the Pobjoy Mint in the UK under such an arrangement.
Sierra Leone's wildlife series of the mid-2000s was produced almost entirely for the collector export market — none of these pieces were ever intended for domestic circulation in a country whose everyday currency ran to Leone denominations orders of magnitude smaller than ten dollars. The honey badger issue sits in a crowded field of similar silver rounds produced under licensing arrangements common among smaller sovereign mints during this period, where the issuing authority lent its name and legal tender status to coins designed, struck, and distributed almost entirely by private minting contractors in Europe.
KM#427 was struck by the Pobjoy Mint in the UK under such an arrangement.