Friday, March 30, 2012

Liberia: George Boley arrives in Liberia

At Ex-Warlord's Arrival, George Boley's Brother Seizes FrontPageAfrica Editor's Camera



Monrovia-Dweh Boley, the brother of former Liberian warlord George Boley seized a camera belonging to FrontPageAfrica's newsroom editor Wade Williams late Friday afternoon upon the orders of University of Liberia journalism professor Weade Kobbah Wureh.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

George Boley won't appeal deportation to Liberia

Written by
Clarkson resident George Boley, linked to war crimes by an immigration judge, is not appealing his deportation to his home country of Liberia.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

‘Cause for Concern’: US Keeping Eye on Anti-Gay Legislations in Liberia




Monrovia – The United States has expressed concerns over recent statements attributed to Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf suggesting that Sirleaf is backing a law that criminalizes homosexual acts, saying: "We like ourselves just the way we are."

Sirleaf reportedly made the statement in a joint interview with former British prime minister Tony Blair, by British newspaper, The Guardian, who was left looking visibly uncomfortable by her remarks, Ms Sirleaf told the Guardian newspaper: "We've got certain traditional values in our society that we would like to preserve."

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Sierra Leone: Taylor Ruling Set for April

Source: allAfrica.com


Former President of Liberia
Charles G. Taylor
The international court that was set up to try suspects indicted for war crimes in Sierra Leone announced that the judgment in the trial of the former Liberian President, Charles Taylor, will be delivered on April 26.


Taylor is on trial before the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) on 11 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including pillage, slavery for forced marriage purposes, collective punishment and the recruitment and use of child soldiers

Monday, February 20, 2012

‘Significant’ Oil Discovery in Liberia!!

Written by Rodney D. Sieh

Source: Front Page Africa


Monrovia - After decades  of trying to find the elusive fossil fuel known around the world as black gold, Liberia finally hit pay dirt when African Petroleum Company, an Australian-British Company announced late Monday night that it has discovered commercial quantities of oil in Liberia.  Sources at the National Oil Company of Liberia (NOCAL) have confirmed the discovery which was announced by the Australian Stock Exchange.

‘Significant Discovery’

The discovery by African Petroleum Corporation Limited was reportedly made at Narina--‐1 well, offshore Block LB--‐09.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

George Boley ordered to leave U.S.

George Boley has 30 days to appeal a ruling that will send him home to Liberia labeled as a war criminal. / Jamie Germano file photo 2007

Written by
Gary Craig
Staff writer

George Boley, right, joined
Charles Taylor, left,
and Alhaji Kromah
in a September
1995 gathering of
Liberian leaders
to take an oath
to respect a peace process
that was
signed in August.
 / Christophe Simon/Getty
Longtime Clarkson resident George Boley Sr. will likely be returning to his home country of Liberia — this time branded a war criminal and deported by the United States.


A date has not been set for the deportation, mandated by an immigration judge's ruling Monday that Boley, 62, was responsible for killings during Liberia's civil wars and that he also recruited children as soldiers during the bloody bedlam.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Operation We Care for Liberia welcomes George Boley Sr. deportation to Liberia


We welcome the decision of the United States Immigration to deport Mr. George Boley Sr. to Liberia.

We at this time  call upon  the Liberian Government through its justice department to bring Mr. Boley and others to justice for crimes they committed during the course of Liberia's Civil War.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Liberia: Massacre, Summary Execution, and Other Gruesome Acts From 1990-2003

Liberia: Massacre, Summary Execution, and Other Gruesome Acts From 1990-2003
COURTESY OF THE FORUM FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A WAR CRIMES COURT IN LIBERIA

Re-published by:
Bernard Gbayee Goah, President
Operation We Care for Liberia
Email:
goahbg@gmail.com


Note to readers:   

Gen. Moses Wright  of the AFL was contacted by Bernard Gbayee Goah to verify allegations that are brought up against him in the below cyber list that is circulated by a group named  "Forum For  The Establishment of A War Crimes Court in Liberia" on 8/27/2015".  Based  on the phone conversation between Gen. Wright and Bernard Goah,  Gen. Wright alleged that he was not in Monrovia BTC in June of 1990. Therefore, he  could not have part took in atrocities that were committed during that time.  Others have also testified that the General was not involved in the BTC Massacre that took place when 27 Gio and Mano families that were members of the AFL and residing at the BTC barracks were allegedly killed. 

But  Liberia’s TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION
Consolidated Final Report Volume II, Page 219 says: 

"June 1990: Massacre of 27 Gio and Mano family members of the AFL by Moses Thomas, Moses Wright, James Chelly and George Dweh; reportedly under orders of Samuel Doe."



Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Speak Out! Do Something!!! Liberia Needs you!!!!

Since cessation of hostilities in 2003 Liberians have not taken definitive measures to prevent a repeat of another civil madness. The absence of war in Liberia currently, which is only due primarily to the presence of UN Troops on the ground, does not equate to peace. To believe other-wise is a complete illusion.

Unlike Sierra Leone, Rwanda and other countries where in the post-conflict period maximum attention has been given to tackling the root causes of the violence in order to ensure deterrence; Liberia, on the other hand, has done just the opposite. Those who orchestrated the mayhem are now ruling the country and dictating the pace of reconciliation. This is no way to restore peace following a brutal war where more than 250,000 civilians were murdered and almost the entire population uprooted.
Also, while these very mayhem orchestrators are a tiny minority having more than enough to live comfortably, the vast majority of the population has nothing to live for; it is impossible for there to be sustainable peace.  The vast majority of Liberians live on less than one dollar a day; undoubtedly, there is a need for change in the way Liberia is governed.  As we can all see today, Liberia’s just ended elections has produced a grieve cause for concern. Liberia is about to turn yet again into a one-party state, knowing full well this produces dictatorship, dictatorship causes rebellion; rebellion leads to war; and war means bloodshed!!! Evil has overtaken Liberia and is again prepared to destroy everything in sight.
We want you to think about what is about to happen in that part of the world.
Join Operation We Care for Liberia today and become an agent of positive change. Stand for justice in Liberia! Let those who caused the deaths of over 250,000 innocent people not be allowed to walk freely. Speak out because this is the right thing to do!!!
Bernard Gbayee Goah
President, Operation We Care for Liberia   Email: goahbg@gmail..com  

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Liberia: What Happened in Liberia?

Michael Keating

- Analysis

Not many people care about what goes on in Liberia but those that do were probably shocked this week by the images of UN Peacekeepers trying to wrestle guns away from the Liberian National Police who were intent on shooting into a crowd that was rallying in opposition to Tuesday's Presidential election.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Liberia: Operation We Care for Liberia calls on President Obama to step in!

Operation We Care for Liberia
calls on President Obama to step in!

Sunday, November 13, 2011

CDC Tubman’s Speech: Bloody Monday Was an Assassination Attempt

November 12, 2011

ADRESS TO THE NATION REGARDING “CDC MASSACRE DAY” AND November POLLS

My Fellow Liberians;

CDC Standard bearer
Winston Tubman,
a CDC supporter
shot in the head by
Liberian police
Let us observe a few seconds of silence for those killed at our headquarters on Monday, November 7, 2011 (“CDC Massacre Day”) by members of the Emergency Response Unit (ERU) and Police Support Unit (PSU) of the Liberian National Police.  Thank you for observing the silence. 

What occurred in our compound on Monday, I am convinced, was an assassination attempt on my life and that of my Vice Standard Bearer.  This is because for more than an hour on that day, our partisans were gathered on the street in front of the Lone Star Cell Company on Tubman Boulevard and the ERU and PSU did nothing until shortly after I arrived, together with my Vice Standard Bearer.  A few minutes after, we were approached by a Nigerian General of the UNMIL contingent who admonished us to turn around and go back into our compound because he feared what awaited us down the road and further in town by the ERU and PSU.  While listening to the General’s advice, we came under attack by the ERU and PSU who began heavily tear gassing us.  They followed us into our compound and began shooting live bullets at the crowd. 

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Liberia's Tubman wants disputed presidential poll annulled


Winston Tubman
Winston Tubman, who pulled out of the second round of Liberia's presidential election claiming fraud, called Saturday for Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's victory to be annulled and fresh elections held.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
The comments come just a day after Tubman had said he was willing to work with Sirleaf, despite his boycott which won him little sympathy abroad as international observers gave the first round a clean bill of health.

Tubman's boycott raised tensions in the west African nation, whose second-post war poll had been billed as a chance to cement its fragile democracy eight years after a 14-year conflict that killed 250,000 ended.

Political tensions turned bloody on the eve of Tuesday's election when police fired live bullets into a crowd of opposition protesters gathered for an unauthorised march amid a hail of stone-throwing and tear gas.

Tubman said Tuesday's vote was "a political farce of the highest order and must not be allowed to stand."
"As we speak our lawyers are busy working on all our legal options," he told reporters, reading from a prepared statement after consultation with the Congress for Democratic Change.

"We believe everything that flows from Tuesday's elections must be annulled and a new round of elections scheduled in a month. We will not recognise the so-called win of Mrs Sirleaf," he added.

On Friday, Tubman had said that while his party would not recognise the results he was "prepared to heal the wounds of this country and to unite our country.

"Since Mrs Sirleaf will now claim she is the president and is recognised by the international community, we have to find a way to work with her and I believe it is not beyond our ability to find a way for that to happen," he had said.

On Saturday however, in an apparent about-turn, he slammed Sirleaf's Unity Party as "election hijackers".
And he repeated his assertion that Monday's shooting at CDC headquarters had been an attempt by Sirleaf's forces to assassinate him. AFP journalists saw two bodies with gunshot wounds to the head.
No official toll has been released, and while Tubman said earlier up to eight may have been killed, he now says three are confirmed dead with many reports of CDC supporters missing.

The 70-year old former UN diplomat pulled out of the race claiming "massive fraud in the tabulation process" in the first round. He brushed aside international observer's assertions the poll was free and fair.
"Elections are won by votes and not strengths of political endorsement from observers," he said.

The National Electoral Commission on Friday confirmed Nobel Peace Prize winner Sirleaf the landslide winner in polls with 90 percent of votes to Tubman's 9.4 percent.

However Tubman pointed to the low turnout of 38 percent -- attributed to the boycott and fears of further violence -- as proof Sirleaf did not have wide support and that she had doctored the vote.

"They have now announced some highly inflated figures giving president Sirleaf a victory, or as she calls it, a renewed mandate ... What mandate can this flawed process give her? What mandate did she ever have in the first place?"

Tubman referred to 2005 elections when his running mate, former AC Milan football star George Weah took on Sirleaf in the first polls after the end of a brutal 14-year war in 2003.

In a first round of voting Sirleaf lost to Weah but came back to narrowly beat him in the second. Weah, who at the time had not finished high school, was criticised for his lack of education and administrative experience.

The CDC cried foul, despite observers saying the process was free and fair. Weah later withdrew his claims and accepted the results, but the party still feels it was cheated.

This time round the party thought that with the dream team of Harvard-trained Tubman and the crowd-pleasing Weah as his running mate they were sure to win.

Sirleaf on Friday called for national reconciliation and announced an independent commission would probe Monday's shooting which Tubman rejected as full of "partisans and friends of the president."

Sirleaf also named fellow Nobel Peace Prize laureate, women's right activist Leymah Gbowee, to lead a new peace and reconciliation initiative to heal the divisions in the country.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Liberia's Sirleaf wins 90 pct in boycotted vote


Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) — Africa's first and only female president handily won re-election Thursday with 90.2 percent of the vote, but her victory has been rendered hollow and her government may struggle to prove its legitimacy because the opposition boycotted the poll.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Press Statement on current situation in Liberia

Operation We Care for Liberia (OWCL)
Bernard Gbayee Goah
President,
Operation We Care for Liberia
(503) 333
6246
According to AFP news, during a protest called by Opposition Leader Winston Tubman on Monday, at least four of his supporters were shot dead following clashes that broke out with the Liberian riot police when the rally was prevented from turning into a march.  A radio and television station owned by opposition and three other radios were shut down overnight following the violence. "Right after our evening broadcast police came and asked us to leave the premises of the station and closed it down," said Samukai Dukulay, senior broadcaster at Power television and Power FM. Liberia's opposition had complained that the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Sirleaf days before the first round was tantamount to foreign interference in the elections.

Sirleaf poised for reelection in tense Liberia vote

Sirleaf
By Fran Blandy and Zoom Dosso | AFP

Liberia's Nobel-crowned president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was poised to win a second term Tuesday in a run-off marked by low turnout following a deadly shooting and her rival's boycott call. Amnesty International called for a shooting in which four opposition supporters were killed Monday to be probed, casting the shadow of Liberia's bloody past over the west African country's second post-war polls.

Liberia Tense as Presidential Runoff Vote Starts

Source: The New York Times

MONROVIA, Liberia — Turnout appeared to be light as polls opened in a presidential runoff amid calls for a boycott of the vote and after a night of violence here that left at least one person dead as police battled opposition supporters.

The runoff between President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, this year’s Nobel Peace Prize laureate and darling of the West, and the challenger, Winston Tubman, who called for supporters to boycott the vote amid accusations of fraud in the first round, may spell trouble for Liberia.

Bloodied Polls: Liberia Runoff Elections Producing Low Turnout; Media Shutdown

Written by Rodney D. Sieh, Rodney.sieh@frontpageafricaonline.com; David B. Kolleh, david.kolleh@frontpageafricaonline.com Wade C.L.Williams
Source: Front Page Africa

Monrovia - Two hours after the polling precinct at the C.D.B. King school on Clay Street opened Tuesday, fifty persons had cast their ballots.

With a total number of 200 registered voters at the precinct, turnout here was low as voting in Liberia’s run-off presidential elections got underway.
Many of those standing in line to vote pointed the blame to the violent turn which dampened the mood Monday, killing one person and injuring several others.
Voters ‘coming in drops’

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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