Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Scramble For Presidency Begins in the West Africa Nation Liberia

Source: http://www.newdemocratnews.com/story.php?record_id=1770&sub=14


Scramble For Presidency Begins in the West Africa Nation Liberia

Ex rebel commander, now Senator Prince Johnson has announced he will face incumbent President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as a major challenger for the country’s highest office.

Written By Festus Poquie
1/27/2010

The 2011 general and presidential elections euphora has surfaced with key war actors taking the lead in making known their intention for the presidency.

Ex rebel commander, now Senator Prince Johnson has announced he will face incumbent President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as a major challenger for the country’s highest office.

The Senator has named his senate colleagues Abel Massaley(Grand Cape Mount) as his running mate, claiming they will raise over US$10m to ensure that the ruling Unity Party is booted out of office for “failing the people.”

“Those that she downsized [redundant workers] and those she had failed will be our supporters. If she does not step down as promised, we will give her and the Unity Party a political disgrace and defeat,” the former INPFL rebel commander said Monday minutes after the President had declared she will seek reelection, despite her 2005 promise that should not seek a second term.

President Sirleaf and Senator Johnson were members of the erstwhile National Patriotic Front of Liberia- a rebel movement that played a dominant role in the destruction of the state coupled with systematic killings and looting as documented in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s report.

Both seceded from then rebel leader Charles Taylor. Mr Johnson headed the breakaway rebels while Mrs Sirleaf abandoned the military campaign and return to political advocacy.

Both are named in the TRC report as financier and war lord respectively. President Sirleaf is being barred from holding public office for 30 years while the Senator Prince Johnson faces criminal prosecution for their respective role in the country’s civil war.

However, the President Monday cleared those obstacles when she implicitly froze the Independent Human Rights Commission’s legal authority to implement the TRC recommendations relative to public sanctions, criminal prosecution of war lords and economic criminals.

To make her stance legal, the President has proposed a legislation that will freeze the Commission’s authority relative to implementing those aspects of the TRC’s recommendations.

News Headline

Inside Liberia with Bernard Gbayee Goah

Everyone is a genius

Everyone is a genius. But if you judge a fish on its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid. – A Einstein

Drawing the line in Liberia

Crimes sponsored, committed, or masterminded by handful of individuals cannot be blamed upon an entire nationality. In this case, Liberians! The need for post-war justice is a step toward lasting peace, stability and prosperity for Liberia. Liberia needs a war crimes tribunal or some credible legal forum that is capable of dealing with atrocities perpetrated against defenseless men, women and children during the country's brutal war. Without justice, peace shall remain elusive and investment in Liberia will not produce the intended results. - Bernard Gbayee Goah



Men with unhealthy characters should not champion any noble cause

They pretend to advocate the cause of the people when their deeds in the dark mirror nothing else but EVIL!!
When evil and corrupt men try to champion a cause that is so noble … such cause, how noble it may be, becomes meaningless in the eyes of the people - Bernard Gbayee Goah.

If Liberia must move forward ...

If Liberia must move forward in order to claim its place as a civilized nation amongst world community of nations, come 2017 elections, Liberians must critically review the events of the past with honesty and objectivity. They must make a new commitment to seek lasting solutions. The track records of those who are presenting themselves as candidates for the position of "President of the Republic of Liberia" must be well examined. Liberians must be fair to themselves because results from the 2011 elections will determine the future of Liberia’s unborn generations to come - Bernard Gbayee Goah

Liberia's greatest problem!

While it is true that an individual may be held responsible for corruption and mismanagement of funds in government, the lack of proper system to work with may as well impede the process of ethical, managerial, and financial accountability - Bernard Gbayee Goah

What do I think should be done?

The situation in Liberia is Compound Complex and cannot be fixed unless the entire system of government is reinvented.
Liberia needs a workable but uncompromising system that will make the country an asylum free from abuse, and other forms of corruption.
Any attempt to institute the system mentioned above in the absence of rule of law is meaningless, and more detrimental to Liberia as a whole - Bernard Gbayee Goah

Liberia's Natural Resources
Besides land water and few other resources, most of Liberia’s dependable natural resources are not infinite, they are finite and therefore can be depleted.
Liberia’s gold, diamond, and other natural resources will not always be an available source of revenue generation for its people and its government. The need to invent a system in government that focuses on an alternative income generation method cannot be over emphasized at this point - Bernard Gbayee Goah

Liberia needs a proper system
If Liberians refuse to erect a proper system in place that promotes the minimization of corruption and mismanagement of public funds by government institutions, and individuals, there will come a time when the value of the entire country will be seen as a large valueless land suited on the west coast of Africa with some polluted bodies of waters and nothing else. To have no system in place in any country is to have no respect for rule of law. To have no respect for rule of law is to believe in lawlessness. And where there is lawlessness, there is always corruption - Bernard Gbayee Goah

Solving problems in the absence of war talks

As political instability continues to increase in Africa, it has become abundantly clear that military intervention as a primary remedy to peace is not a durable solution. Such intervention only increases insecurity and massive economic hardship. An existing example which could be a valuable lesson for Liberia is Great Britain, and the US war on terror for the purpose of global security. The use of arms whether in peace keeping, occupation, or invasion as a primary means of solving problem has yield only little results. Military intervention by any country as the only solution to problem solving will result into massive military spending, economic hardship, more fear, and animosity as well as increase insecurity. The alternative is learning how to solve problems in the absence of war talks. The objective of such alternative must be to provide real sustainable human security which cannot be achieved through military arm intervention, or aggression. In order to achieve results that will make the peaceful coexistence of all mankind possible, there must be a common ground for the stories of all sides to be heard. I believe there are always three sides to every story: Their side of the story, Our side of the story, and The truthBernard Gbayee Goah

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