Thursday, July 15, 2010

Dilemma: “A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand”

Written by Edmund Zar-Zar Bargblor

Source: Liberian Forum

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Edmund Zar-Zar Bargblor

In his account of Jewish history, Rabbi Goldson alluded in his article, the Jewish people’s internal divisiveness left them vulnerable to the power of Rome. According to Rabbi Goldson, in the year 3826 (66 CE) , the excesses of Roman governance over the Land of Israel finally drove the inhabitants of Jerusalem to the breaking point.

Kamtza and Bar Kamtza reported that the destruction of Jerusalem occupies a prominent place in Jewish tradition as a painful illustration of the consequences of senseless hatred, as well as a reminder of how the Jewish people have failed repeatedly to learn its fundamental lesson of history.

There seems to be a parallel comparison of the experiences of the Jewish people’s suffering to that of the Krahn people of Liberia. The prevailing situations for the Krahn people, both in Liberia, and in the Diaspora, especially in the United States is a sad state of affairs that left most Liberians to wonder, “What is happening to Krahn people?” Unlike the Krahn people, the Jewish people have a binding religious belief system that continues to forge them forward, irrespective of their internal differences.

Finger pointing and allegations of corruption have become the order of day amongst Grand Gedeans, internal unending conflicts within the legislative Caucus , unresolved conflict within the Grand Gedeh Association, and conflicts between the superintendent and some citizens in Grand Gedh County, all these have paralyzed the possibility of fostering sustainable economic developments. For example:

It was reported by FrontPage Africa, Citizens from Gbarzon Statutory District in Grand Gedeh County petitioned the Auditor General of Liberia, Mr. John Morlu, II in December 2008 calling for an audit of their county development fund.

According to the report, the Citizens said since the county development fund was allotted to the county in the last fiscal budget, their district is yet to benefit anything substantial in terms of development.

The numerous complaints of mismanagement of county development fund from Grand Gedeh and some counties have reportedly prompted President Sirleaf to declare that the Executive take charge of the county development fund.

The Analyst reported on September 9, 2009, that a delegation from the Gborho Clan in Grand Gedeh County, visited Monrovia to meet with President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf on issues affecting their areas. The delegation informed the Liberian leader of the collapse of two major bridges in their area, which is impeding the movement of goods and services.

Litigations and counter-litigations have become a routine within the Grand Gedeh Association.

FrontPage Africa, (June18, 2010), reported that, Mr. Chris Bailey, Superintendent of Grand Gedeh County has been booked in audit conducted by the General Auditing Commission of Liberia for misdirecting thousands of dollars for various projects in the county. The Superintendent has made numerous withdrawals from the coffers of the county without the approval of others paying money to his private company which is offered most of the contracts for the implementation of projects in the county.

$33,000.00 US, has been allegedly withdrawn from a Citizens Bank in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by the current Chairman of the Board of Directors and the self-styled president of the Grand Gdeh Association. This money was allocated for the construction of a Library in Zwedru City, Grand Gedeh County. Until now, no one knows the whereabouts of said amount.

The time has now come for both Mathar Kannah and Henry Glay to step aside and let us set up an interim leadership that will eventually supervise new general elections and eventually a new leadership. The time has now come for us to forgive each other and respect our differences and forge on to enhance our common destiny. Let us heed the words of great personalities like Abraham Lincoln and others who advised their respective nationals about the destructive power of disunity.

In June of 1858, Abraham Lincoln gave a speech which contained the quotation “A house divided against itself cannot stand”. In his speech, Lincoln was referring to the division of the country between slaves and the states. In 1812, Abigail Adams wrote a letter to Mercy Otis Warren in reference to the war of 1812,: “ A house divided upon itself- and upon that foundation do our enemies build their hopes of subduing us.”

Some friends advised me to stop writing about the disunity among Grand Gedeans. Their reason, simply, Grand Gedeans will not pay heed to the issues that I continue to write about. They will instead, throw insults at me and call me names. But I am convinced, there are reasons why some of us as Krahns are still living and why other brothers and sisters died in Liberia during the civil war. But, if we failed to learn the lesson of disunity from the dead, we too will perish. We need to come together, we need to use our experiences from residing in the Diaspora, especially in the United States, to help to improve the conditions of our people…We can review the content of the Grand Gedeh Association’s constitution all we want, we can form council of elders, all we want, we can insult and disrespect our elders or each others all we want, we can go ahead and continue to steal the little funds deposited in the name of Grand Gedeh Association in American banks all we want, at the end of the day in Liberia, our county, the land of our fore fathers, will be first from the real, in the area of human resource and economic developments.

Indeed, “ A house divided upon itself- and upon that foundation do our enemies build their hopes of destroying us.”

____________________________________________________________________________
Edmund Zar-Zar Bargblor is an Educator within the Providence School Department, Providence, Rhode Island. He is a graduate of Cuttington University College, Liberia, Howard University, Washington, D.C, and Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel. Mr. Bargblor is former Chairman, Board of Directors .Grand Gedeh Association, and grandson of Chief Bargblor of the Gborho Chiefdom, Grand Gedeh County. Presently, he is President of the African Catholic Community of Rhode Island. He can be contacted at: Zbargblor@aol.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

House concerned about SSS security alert

Written by Julius Kanubah

Thursday, 15 July 2010
Source: Star Radio Liberia
The House Committee on National Security has expressed concern over a security alert issued by the Special Security Service.

The Committee said the SSS was in error to publicly state that Liberia’s security situation was not favorable.

The Chairman of the Committee said the SSS does not have the authority to comment on national security matters.

Representative Saar Gbollie said the alert by the Special Security Service which was contained in a letter to the House was intimidating.

The SSS on Tuesday wrote the House warning of strict jacket security measures to protect the President during the July 26 celebrations in Nimba.

In the letter, the Presidential guard force said the measures are a result of what it considers the security situation not been favorable.

Lawmaker Gbollie said following the July 26 celebrations, SSS authorities would be invited by the House to further explain the security alert.

Ex-Police Chief Munah Sieh, Others Recommended for Prosecution

Source: FrontPageAfrica

Monrovia -

Following months of investigation into alleged procurement of uniforms and accessories by the Liberian National Police(LNP) for the use of emergency Response Unit(ERU), and Phase II of the missing civil servants salary checks at the Ministry of Finance, the Liberia Anti-Corruption Commission(LACC) has recommended to the Justice Ministry that several former and current officials of the two institution be formally charged and prosecuted for acts of corruption. The commission also recommended that two staff of the Ministry of Finance and the proprietor of the Ultimate Investment & Holding Company be formally charged and prosecuted for acts of corruption.

The recommendations of the LACC were contained in two separate letters addressed to Justice Minister, Cllr. Christiana Tah on Wednesday, July 14, 2010.

LNP/ERU Uniform Procurement: In the investigation involving the alleged procurement of uniforms and accessories valued at $US199,800.00 by the LNP for use by the ERU, findings revealed that the Ultimate Investment & Holding Company owned by one Prince O.A. Akinremi which was said to have won the bid to procure the uniforms has no record of Import Permit Declaration(IDP) from the Commerce Ministry for the items nor a pre-shipment record from the Bureau Veritas Group of Company(BIVAC). The investigation further revealed numerous irregularities surrounding the alleged procurement of uniforms, which in fact were never delivered as shown by the findings.

Accordingly, the LACC has recommended that the former Inspector General of Police, Beatrice Munah Sieh-Brown, Prince O.A. Akinremi, Proprietor of the Ultimate Investment & Holdings Company, and Harris Manneh Dunn, Former Deputy Commissioner for Administration, LNP, be formally charged and Prosecuted under Chapter 10 Inchoate Offenses, Section 10.4 Criminal Conspiracy and Chapter 15 Subchapter F of the New Penal Law of Liberia captioned Economic Sabotage, Section 15.80 Fraud on the Internal revenue of Liberia.

The commission has also recommended that Madam Kaymah N. Zeon and Mr. Nebo Garlo, Physical Auditors of the Ministry of Finance be charged and prosecuted for the Crime of Economic Sabotage under Section 15 Subchapter F, Section 15.80(d) of the New Penal Law for making and signing fraudulent entries in the book of records of the Ministry of Finance thru their physical audit reports which misrepresented the facts about the delivery of the ERU uniforms and accessories by the proprietor of the Ultimate Investment & Holding Company, Mr. Prince Akinremi.

Missing Civil Servants Salary and Checks for the months of July-August 2008: The second phase of the LACC investigation into missing salary checks for Civil Servants for the months July-August 2008 and their subsequent fraudulent encashments by various banking institutions, including the Central Bank of Liberia(CBL), without the coded release agreed upon between the Ministry of Finance and CBL established the identities of the current and former officials of the Ministry of Finance, who played roles in the movement of the checks in question. The LACC has therefore recommended that Mr. James Boker, former Comptroller and Jenkins Yonly, Former Director of Electronics Data Processing Section of the Ministry of Finance be formally charged and prosecuted under Chapter 15 Subchapter 15 F of the New Penal Law of Liberia captioned Economic Sabotage, Section 15.80 Fraud on the internal revenue of Liberia.

DEPUTY SPEAKER MULBAH WALKS: High Court Halts Probe into Cop Assault

07/15/2010 -  by M. Welemongai Ciapha II
Source: FrontPageAfrica
Monrovia -

Tokpah J. Mulbah, (Congress for Democratic Change, 5th District, Bong County),the embattled Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives of Liberia, will hold no responsibility for his alleged role in last weekend’s flogging of Police Patrolman Lexington Beh, according to a writ of prohibition in possession of FrontPageAfrica.

The writ was filed with the Chambers Justice on Wednesday, July 14, 2010, ordering the police to release all suspects arrested into connection with the Sunday, July 12, street protest, allegedly staged by CDCians of the grass root in solidarity to prevent police from arresting the Deputy Speaker at his Fish Market residence.

A communication from Associate Justice Kabineh Janeh to Justice Minister Christiana Tah reads:
“By directive of His Honor Kabineh M. Ja’ neh, Associated Justice presiding in Chambers you are hereby cited to a conference with His Honor on Thursday, July 15, 2010, at the hour of 10:00a.m in connection with the case: Tokpah Mulbah versus Ministry of Justice. Meanwhile, you are hereby mandated to stay all further proceedings/actions in this matter pending the outcome of the conference.

Section 31 of the Legislative Law proscribes and prohibits the issuance of any precept or arrest of any Legislator, or his family living in his household, or his servants, clerical staff during the Session of the Legislature, or 30 days before or after the opening of Session.

It further states that: “no judge or magistrate or justice of the peace or officer who administers the law shall issue or cause to be issued any writ of attachment, or other legal precept against any member of the Legislature, or the members of his family living in his household, or his servants or clerical staff during the session of the Legislature or for 30 days before or 30 days after such session, except for treason, felony, or breach of the peace. Any judge or other official acting in contravention of the provisions of this section shall be guilty of contempt of the Legislature and may be dismissed from office at its next session”.

Petitioner Mulbah submitted that in utter violation and wanton disregard of the immunity vouchsafed to him and family members under the above quoted provision of the constitution and the statutory law, Co- Respondent, Director of Police, Marc Amblard, arbitrarily ordered 15 LNP officers, led by its Deputy Director for Operations, Al-Karley invaded, searched, arrested carried away and detained occupants of house, situated in Sinkor.

The petitioner, represented by Cllr. Francis Y. S. Garlawolo told Justice Ja’neh in the petition filed that the ‘illegal order or mandate’ executed by Amblard and Al-Karley occurred on Saturday, July 10 at about 11: 15 P.M, in which seven wards of Mulbah were handcuffed and taken away by the police and detained in police holding cells.

Petitioner’s counsel, Garlawolo who described the incident as an ‘illegal invasion’ of the Deputy Speaker’s official residence, further alleged that in the process, US$ 500. 00 and L$ 16, 000.00 including four cell phones were taken in the police raid.

Cllr. Garlawolo further maintained that his client freedom of movement and liberty have been restrained, which he said, is in quite violation of Article 21(b) of the Liberian Constitution, which reads: “no person shall be subject to search or seizure of his person or property, whether a criminal charge or for any other purpose, unless upon warrant lawfully issued upon probable cause supported by a solemn oath.

Petitioner Mulbah contended that to the best of his recollection, he has committed no breach of the peace, after ordering the flogging of officer Beh, for which he would have been arrested on the scene, nor has he committed any first degree felony for which he would be divested of his immunity by his peers and turned over to a court of competent jurisdiction consistent with established protocol and procedure as hoary with age.

“That this illegal act of the respondents, Amblard and Karley have not only infringed upon Petitioner’s constitutional immunity, but also rendered it impossible and diminished his ability to attend upon legislative session and official function prescribed by law,” Petitioner’s counsel averred.

According to the petitioner, the respondents have grossly violated the privacy and citizen’s immunity, when agents of the respondents, without the benefit of any warrant issued by a court of competent jurisdiction, searched and invaded the private home of Mulbah.

The petitioner further submitted that Amblard and his deputy Karley, repugnant to the doctrine of Separation of Powers and in violation of the Legislative Immunity that he was entitled to has, in addition to the invasion of his privacy and premises, initiated an extra judicial investigation, thus arbitrarily citing him to a purported interrogation, when allowed, shall obviously subordinate the office of the Deputy Speaker to mere police officer.

Attached to the copy of the petition was a letter, written by Marc Amblard to Deputy Speaker Mulbah, which was dated July 12, 2010.

Portion of the letter reads:
Dear Hon Tokpah Mulbah.

We present our compliments and wish to bring to your attention the incident of July 10, 2010, where an officer of the Liberia National police (LNP) was physically beaten while on official duty on the Robersfeild Highway. The LNP has reliably learnt that you were present at the scene of the incident and were involved in the commission of the offense.

As a follow-up to the investigation that commenced on July 10, you are hereby cited to the headquarters of the LNP on July 14 at 0900hrs.

In keeping with your request and consistent with your constitutional rights, you are entitled to be accompanied by your counsel of choice.

The petitioner further told the court that his arrest was predicated upon his persistent stance and protest on the passage of the Threshold Bill, now before the House of Representatives.

Representative Mulbah has set his political future on a bad note, beginning with the confiscation of several tons of high grade rubber from one Tamba, without paying for the seized rubber.

This was followed another incident when in 2007, his official assigned pick-up was impounded by police at Pipeline Road Community, after the discovery of several compressed bags of narcotic drugs in his vehicle.

With the latest incident of Beh on a critical list at the John F. Kennedy Hospital, counsel representing the legal interest of Representative Mulbah, who was expected to submit to police investigation has shield under Title 19, Section 31 of the Legislative Law of Liberia, by filing a petition for a Writ of Prohibition to the Justice-in-Chambers, Kabinah M. Ja’neh against the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) and the Directors of the Liberia National Police (LNP), from further criminal investigation into the beating of officer Beh.

Meanwhile, latest information reaching FrontPageAfrica Thursday night revealed that two of the seven arrested suspects in connection with the beating of Patrolman Beh have admitted to the act.

The suspects King T. Mulbah and Emmanuel Quemine told investigators that they were asleep when Mulbah woke them up to proceed to the Zone Eight Police Checkpoint where Patrolman Beh was beaten.

U.S.Department of State - Press Releases: 15th Anniversary of Srebrenica Genocide

Source: U.S. Department of State

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
July 11, 2010
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today we remember the tragic events in Srebrenica 15 years ago. I join President Obama and the people of the United States in offering our deepest condolences on this most solemn occasion. We honor the memories of the victims and mourn with their families.

The United States stands with Bosnia and Herzegovina, and all countries in the region who wish to foster peace and reconciliation. We remain committed to ensuring that those responsible for these crimes face justice. We recognize that there can be no lasting peace without justice. It is only by bringing all responsible parties to account for their crimes that we will truly honor Srebrenica’s victims.

We are duty-bound – to the victims, to their surviving family members, and to future generations – to prevent such atrocities from happening again. Our common faith in the value of freedom and peace unifies us and drives us to act. That is why we are committed to working with all the communities that make up Bosnia and Herzegovina to move forward and build a pluralistic, democratic state that can take its rightful place in the Euro-Atlantic community. A prosperous, free, and unified Bosnia and Herzegovina is the most worthy monument to those who lost their lives at Srebrenica and the best guarantee against such a tragedy ever repeating itself.

LEAD Liberia Constitution

Rules and Regulations of LEAD Liberia


PREAMBLE

We, the LEAD Liberia, united under common purpose, hereby dedicate ourselves to the principles of engaging, educating and empowering the people of Liberia—while demanding respect, accountability and transparency from our elected officials across Liberia. Liberians, the time for change has come, and we as Liberians must seize this moment. LEAD Liberia, a non—partisan political group that sends one message to our elected officials across Liberia, which is “Do the right thing” and stop playing politics with our future and the national interest of our beloved country (Liberia). We believe in the power of the people to compel change for the betterment of Liberia thereby forcing our elected officials to listen to the people and to champion the interest of all Liberians, regardless of their socioeconomic class, religious and traditional believes. We believe in grassroots force for change through citizen participation in government. We believe our leaders should abandon the politics of partisan division, personal greed and find creative solutions to promote the common good of Liberia, so help us God.



The “LEAD Liberia” will be independent and strictly non-party in our approach because we believe that there has been policy failure in relation to public services over a period of years under all governments, and we want to persuade all parties that there is a better way. Our non-party approach is reflected in our organization general policies, which states “this political group shall be a non—partisan political group that sends one message to our elected officials across Liberia, which is “Do the right thing” and stop playing politics with our future and the national interest of our beloved country (Liberia). LEAD Liberia’s volunteers, community organizers, advisors, team members and staff must not use the name of LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia to create any local or national political party in Liberia and/or outside of Liberia. LEAD Liberia’s volunteers, community organizers, advisors, team members and staff must not use the name of LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia to bash anyone political parties in Liberia and/or outside of Liberia”.


However, LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia shall shine a light on our elected officials and individuals within various political parties of Liberia who do not support the goal of engaging, educating and empowering the people of Liberia. LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia shall shine a light on our elected officials and individuals within various political parties of Liberia who do not support the goal of respect, transparency and accountability in government. LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia shall shine a light on government spending; the justice system, Capitol Hill and the Executive Mansion so that all Liberians would be empower to be a watchdog and a whistle blower. The LEAD Organizing For Liberia and/or LEAD Liberia shall support political candidate (s) that shared LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia goal and vision for Liberia; shall issue endorsements, political campaigns, or boycotts any activity that does not support LEAD Liberia goal and vision for Liberia. This non—partisan political group shall by no means be turned into a partisan political group or political party in Liberia and/or outside of Liberia, so help us God.


The LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia, a group of inclusion and one that respects differences of perspective and belief. When we disagree, we will work together for the common good and to move our beloved country in the right direction. This is the Liberia we dream off—we should not only say we love Liberia but we should show it in everything we do–by our deeds, our priorities, and the commitments we keep.


Discrimination Statement: LEAD Liberia does not discriminate, nor do we support programs that discriminate against people on the basis of gender, race, religious, tribes, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, or age.


LEAD Liberia Political Ideology: At LEAD Liberia, we believe in the role of the government to fight poverty, both by means of welfare programs, and economic regulation. We believe in empowering ordinary people because when the people are empowered they become the backbone that builds the country. We believe in the education and family values because they are the core values of development, which leads to security, peace and prosperity for all. We believe in small government thereby limiting monetary waste and eliminating fraud and corruption through government over-sized programs.


LEAD Liberia Economic Ideology: At LEAD Liberia, our goal is to forge an environment that doesn't favor the rich and wealthy people through laws that ensure that workers get sufficiently paid instead of a few directors and/or executives getting paid more than the whole workforce thereby creating an industry that works for the people and not the people for the industry. We believe everyone should have the same chances and opportunities through incentives for ambition, while managing and constricting greed and exploitation that may lead to the masses being dependent on the few who control 90% of everything. We believe giving back to the community where businesses and/or companies operate help to create an effective market and economic environment that is conducive to living and working.


Our Vision is “A Liberia with 21st Century healthcare system; high standards in school; investment in a 21st Century education; a modern infrastructure and efficient transport system; safe streets, safe drinking water, food production, and a free, dynamic and competitive economy.


The Goal of “LEAD Liberia” is to……..


• Engage, Educate, and Empower the people of Liberia


• Demand respect, accountability and transparency from our elected officials across Liberia.


• Build grassroots force for change through citizen participation in government across Liberia.


Membership


Membership of LEAD Liberia is opened to well meaning Liberians living in Liberia and in the Diaspora. Membership will be by invitation, appointment and/or nomination of qualified, committed and experienced Liberians across Liberia.


Please note that it is a deliberate policy of LEAD Liberia no single member and/or representative speaks against any one political party in Liberia, thereby reinforcing the credibility / independence for non-party approach of LEAD Organizing For Liberia. Meetings will be held across Liberia. They will be responsible for news releases/articles, presenting research on particular topic, presenting depth of analysis on a particular topic in the shortest time possible, write papers and proffer credible solutions to the country’s myriad of socio-economic and political problems through a non-party approach. Members shall be appointed or elected every four years, except for the five-member executive organizing team whom shall be appointed or elected every three years by the entire LEAD Liberia, and all members may be reelected or reappointed, including the five-member executive organizing team. Members shall communicate via emails, letters, phones, meetings, and/or the internet at least once each month and from time to time, shall make recommendations for the effective operation of LEAD Liberia special projects. The emails exchange meeting and/or the internet communication shall be called by the chief community organizer, counties coordinator and/or the assistant chief community organizer, by the five-member executive organizing team of LEAD Liberia, or by email or letter requests of no fewer than one-fourth of the entire membership of LEAD Liberia. The optimum number of the executive organizing team will be five (5); however, this number may be increased by the majority votes of the “LEAD Liberia entire Membership.”


Members' Responsibilities


Members will be expected to participate in all meetings and/or events whenever possible. Any member of LEAD Liberia who misses three consecutive meetings and/or events of LEAD Liberia had failed to meet the minimum level of attendance and is deemed to have resigned from LEAD Liberia. Any member of LEAD Liberia who fails to discharge his/her duty within the shortest time possible given by the five-member executive organizing team had failed to meet the minimum level of attendance and is deemed to have resigned from LEAD Liberia.


Members will also be required to appoint a suitable 'deputy' in the event that they are not available for any meetings and/or events of LEAD Liberia. It is their responsibility to participate in meetings and/or events of LEAD Liberia, if they cannot participate in order to maintain the representative odd-number of members and the high quality of non-party input. They are responsible for news releases/articles, fashioning out an agenda for LEAD Organizing For Liberia, presenting research on particular issue, presenting depth of analysis on a particular issue in the shortest time possible, writing papers and proffer credible solutions to the country’s myriad of socio-economic and political problems through a non-party approach.


All references by spokespeople to the work of LEAD Liberia should be made "on behalf of the LEAD Liberia. Members will also be expected to make available to LEAD Liberia any useful data to which they have access and more particularly which reflects the discipline and specialist skill/knowledge set for which they have been invited to LEAD Liberia.


Executive Organizing Team


At least 10 days after the meetings of LEAD Liberia and the appointment and nomination of new members, the LEAD Liberia membership at the time shall choose a governing board (called Executive Organizing Team) and appoint the members of the Executive Organizing Team to serve as an oversight body of LEAD Liberia. The appointed members of the governing board will serve as an oversight and advisory body to be known as the “Executive Organizing Team." The Executive Organizing Team shall be composed of five members, two of which shall be the opposite sex of the Chief Community Organizer. The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall include the Chief Community Organizer; the Counties Coordinator of LEAD Liberia and the Assistant Chief Community Organizer and additional two members chosen by majority votes of the entire membership. The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall be persons who have completed college and/or in graduate school and have demonstrated an interest in the social economic development of Liberia. All LEAD Liberia Community Organizers shall be persons who have completed high school, college and/or in graduate school.

The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall be appointed or elected every three years by the entire LEAD Liberia membership, and may be reelected or reappointed. The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall serve for terms of 2 years. The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall communicate via emails, letter, meeting and/or the internet at least once each month and from time to time, shall make recommendations for the effective operation of LEAD special projects. The emails exchange, meeting and/or the internet communication shall be called by the Chief Community Organizer, Counties Coordinator of LEAD Liberia and/or the Assistant Chief Community Organizer, by the five-member Executive Organizing Team or LEAD Liberia, or by email and/or letter requests of no fewer than one-fourth of the entire membership of LEAD Liberia.

The five-member Executive Organizing Team shall continuously review particular issues and bring to the attention of the entire membership any significant changes, topics, objections, and suggestions needed for the effective operation of LEAD Liberia. Unauthorized uses of LEAD Liberia intellectual property and/or its outputs shall be reported by any members of LEAD Liberia, to the five-member Executive Organizing Team for referred to the entire membership of LEAD Liberia. The membership of LEAD Liberia shall review the findings of the five-member Executive Organizing Team and take appropriate administrative or judicial action to ensure compliance with this constitution.



Outputs


LEAD Liberia will issue regular news releases/articles (via LEAD Liberia Chief Community Organizer; Counties Coordinator of LEAD Liberia and/or the Assistant Chief Community Organizer) and write papers addressing specific issues affecting the Liberian’s people at all levels such as achieving the highest standards of effective governance in a rapidly changing socio-economic environment. The cardinal objective is to provide a broad framework of how our elected officials could engage, educate and empower the people in the public and private sectors, improve service delivery and make policy formulation and implementation coherent.


An initial news release/article will summarize the general conclusions of LEAD Liberia with individual quotes as necessary. In particular it will issue last quarter/next quarter position statements on the state of the nation economy, social economic development and the standard of living for ordinary Liberians; write article/paper' which will follow a week or so later driving down in more depth of analysis into any of the key issues or specific topics debated.

Funding
LEAD Liberia


• No funding is needed; however, if the members decide to raise fund and/or seek sponsors for events and publishing of articles in news paper across Liberia than such should be considered in a non-party approach.


• This is an important step in the evolution of empowerment because it is a framework based on the principles of citizens’ participation and sustainability in their government, regardless where they are living, empowerment and unity.


• It is the framework needed to help all Liberians living in Liberia and abroad to remain active and productive members of their government.


• This is a common sense approach to empowering ordinary people with the tools they need to make the difference in their country while saving money on travel expenses.


• It is a cost effective way to bring a diverse group of scholars together in one place, so they could interact via internet communication and local meetings for the purpose of coming together to provide a blueprint for engaging, educating and empowering the people of Liberia and to provide sustainable development for our beloved country.


Copyright - All the intellectual property within LEAD Liberia and/or LEAD Organizing For Liberia and its outputs will be owned by LEAD Liberia. Members shall, of course, retain copyright over their own data which they exchange in emails; meetings, and/or internet conversations but shall allow use of properly credited extracts, as required in outputs.


Public Face

The public face of LEAD Liberia will generally be expressed by news releases/articles and the writing of papers. Media enquiries and interviews will be handled by the LEAD Liberia (Executive Organizing Team). No member may express publicly any views purporting to be on behalf of LEAD Liberia without the permission of LEAD Liberia (Chief Community Organizer; the Counties Coordinator; the Assistant Chief Community Organizer/ the entire membership jointly. Where a LEAD Liberia spokesperson is required by the media or at seminars etc that spokesperson shall be offered by reference to the most appropriate member as determined by LEAD Liberia (Chief Community Organizer; the Counties Coordinator and/or the Assistant Chief Community Organizer. The Executive Organizing Team and the entire membership of LEAD Liberia will refrain from discussing publicly any confidential information learned during the LEAD Iberia emails exchange and/or meetings.



Individual members of LEAD Liberia may, with formal, prior permission of LEAD Liberia (Executive Organizing Team), issue their own news releases/articles disassociating themselves from the majority view, if desired, or ask for their minority views to be represented in news releases/articles. The decision on what shall be or not be in the final outputs shall rest with LEAD Liberia (Executive Organizing Team) membership. Members will be able to identify themselves in their personal outputs as being a member/founder member/former member (as appropriate) of LEAD Liberia.


Philosophy


LEAD Liberia will attempt to think one or two steps ahead of the game, to look at the challenges facing the Liberian’s people and suggest ways in which those challenges may be met. The LEAD Liberia will not be sensationalist for the sake of sensation, nor will it be afraid to speak its collective mind within the shortest possible time. The LEAD Liberia will not aim to ruffle feathers but will not flinch from expressing its democratically-arrived-at opinion and proffer credible solutions to the country’s myriad of socio-economic and political problems. The LEAD Liberia will aim to become the authoritative, credible and most trusted window on what is really happening with the Liberian’s people and the areas where our elected officials must adopt, adapt and survive. The LEAD Liberia will aim to become the first citizen port of call for journalist and commentators interested in the social economic development and empowerment of the Liberian’s people.


Format
The Format for each LEAD Liberia emails exchange and/or meetings is in three-parts:



• The first part is to determine a specified diagnostic measurement of the state of Liberia by reviewing a series of inputs, broadly to capture the 'health' of citizens engagement, empowerment and participation in their government and be able to comment on its performance in the previous years and looking forward to the next year;


• The second part is discussion of a significant issue in Liberia at the time that is affecting the people and proffer credible solutions to the significant issue and the country’s myriad of socio-economic and political problems for social economic development of the people.


• The third part comprises a discussion of a likely upcoming issue or trend that may impact our elected officials over the coming months.


The definition of LEAD Liberia is:


" A non—partisan political group that sends one message to our elected officials across Liberia, which is “Do the right thing” and stop playing politics with our future and the national interest of our beloved country (Liberia). We believe in the power of the people to compel change for the betterment of Liberia thereby forcing our elected officials to listen to the people and to champion the interest of all Liberians, regardless of their socioeconomic class, religious and traditional believes. We believe in grassroots force for change through citizen participation in government. We believe our leaders should abandon the politics of partisan division, personal greed and find creative solutions to promote the common good of Liberia.


RESOLUTION OF ADOPTION


The LEAD Liberia assembled in a Conference on LEAD Organizing For Liberia Committees and Policy pursuant to resolution adopted by the July 15, 2010, LEAD Liberia and the Call to the Conference hereby adopts for the governance of LEAD Liberia Constitution by the rules and regulations enclosed hereto, so help us God.


















Wednesday, July 14, 2010

US $ 30 million cash crop plantation starts in Lofa

Written by Matthias Daffah
July 2010


Source Star Radio Liberia
The Liberia Cocoa Corporation has begun work on another thirty million US dollar cash crop plantation in Quadu Gbondi District, Lofa County.

The Corporation’s General Manger Winston Tolbert told Star Radio the plantation will yield both Ivorian and Ghanaian hybrid cocoa.

Mr. Tolbert disclosed nearly sixty-five hectares of cocoa have already been planted on the plantation.

The management of the corporation has hired three hundred fifteen laborers, mainly youth from all over Liberia.

Our correspondent observed several Ghanaians and Ivorian plantation experts have also begun arriving at the newly established cocoa plantation.

The Ghanaian and Ivorian experts are to assist in laying-out the plantation’s blocking system.

The establishment of the plantation is to enhance government’s poverty reduction strategy.

Twelve million US dollars will be used on the first phase of the plantation’s operations.

VP Boakai condemns assault on police officer

Written by Emmanuel Broh
July 2010
Source:Star Radio Liberia

Vice President Joseph Boakai has condemned the violent assault on Police Officer Lexington Beh.

Vice President Boakai made the condemnation Tuesday when he visited Officer Beh at the John F. Kenney hospital in Sinkor.

A release quotes Vice President Boakai as saying government subscribes to respect for human rights and would not condone such acts on the part of anyone.

He assured officer Beh justice will be served and that those who perpetrated the act will meet the full weight of the law.

The release said the officer briefed the Vice President from his hospital bed, saying he was simply performing his duty required of a police when brutalized.

According to the release, Officer Beh told Vice President Boakai his attackers rained verbal insults on him and his family before physically assaulting him.

Officer Beh is undergoing treatment for injuries he sustained during the scuffle with men believed to be bodyguards of Deputy House Speaker Togba Mulbah.

Grebo Governor missing in Grand Gedeh

Written by Wlekumon Degbe

Tuesday, 13 July 2010
Source: Star Radio Liberia
Police in Grand Gedeh County have begun investigating two separate criminal incidents.

They include the mysterious disappearance of the Grebo Governor Paul Hoto and the discovery of some blood in the fence of the Faith Restaurant.

The Governor’s son told the police, his father went in the bush since July 10 and has not returned .

Grand Gedeh Police Commander Prince Gballeh told reporters police have been searching the bush and are compiling a report.

Sources told Star Radio, Mr. Hoto’s slippers and cutlass were found by bundles of sticks apparently cut by him.

Grebo women from Maryland County are demanding the living body of Mr. Hoto

Acting Grand Gedeh Superintendent Claska Bah appealed to the women to exercise restraints as police investigate the incident.

Ivorian Government Provided Accomodation For The RUF Longer Than Charles Taylor Did, Former Rebel Leader Testifies.

July 2010

Source: The Trial of Charles Taylor

As he took the witness stand for a second week, a Sierra Leonean rebel leader today testified that the Ivory Coast government gave his rebel group a base to stay for far longer than former Liberian president, Charles Taylor – again distancing the former Liberian president from charges that he supported and controlled the neighboring rebels during the brutal 11-year conflict in Sierra Leone.

Issa Hassan Sesay, former interim leader of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel group, currently serving a 52 year jail sentence in a Rwandan jail, has said that from 1996 to around 2000, the Ivorian government provided housing facilities where RUF leader Foday Sankoh was based together with his special adviser David Kallon and an RUF radio operator Memunatu Deen.

Prosecutors have long maintained that Mr. Taylor supported and controlled the RUF rebels during the conflict in Sierra Leone, including the provision of a guesthouse in the Liberian capital, Monrovia, sometime in the late 1990s. The guesthouse, according to prosecutors, served as a residence for RUF commanders when they brought diamonds to Liberia for Mr. Taylor to exchange for arms and ammunition. Mr. Taylor himself has admitted that sometime in the late 1990s, he indeed provided a guesthouse for the RUF in Monrovia – but it was solely to facilitate meetings geared towards bringing the conflict in Sierra Leone to an end. Today, Mr. Sesay testified that another government – the Ivorian one – was far more supportive to his rebel group than Mr. Taylor was, at least in terms of places for his rebel forces to stay.

“Mr. Sesay, what was the distinction between the assistance provided by the Government of Ivory Coast to the RUF and the assistance provided by the Government of Liberia?” Mr. Taylor’s lead defense lawyer, Courtenay Griffiths, asked Mr. Sesay.

“Well, the Ivorian government provided housing for the RUF from 1996, so they provided accommodation for a longer period that the Liberian government,” Mr. Sesay responded.

He said that the RUF maintained the residence in Ivory Coast until the year 2000.

When asked about which RUF officials occupied the house in Ivory Coast, Mr. Sesay explained that “it was Mr. Sankoh who was there, but when they arrested Mr. Sankoh in Nigeria, his adviser Pa Kallon was there.

“When they both [Sankoh and Kallon] returned to Sierra Leone in 1999, Mr. Sankoh’s wife Josephine Tengbeh was there up to 2000 with some wounded soldiers,” Mr. Sesay said.

Was there a radio operator based at those premises from 1996 to 2000?” Mr. Griffiths asked Mr. Sesay.

“It did not go up to 2000 — but up to 1998 an operator was there and it was that operator who left and moved to Liberia,” Mr. Sesay said. “She was Memunatu Deen.”

He added that Ms. Deen returned to Sierra Leone at some point in 1998, but that during the signing of the peace agreement between the Sierra Leonean government and the RUF in Togo in 1999, she was again deployed at the guesthouse in Abidjan. She was subsequently relocated to the RUF guesthouse in Monrovia, Mr. Sesay said.

As prosecutors have alleged that Mr. Taylor served as the main source of support for the RUF, defense lawyers now seek to establish that the RUF received assistance from several other sources, including foreign governments and West African peacekeepers. In Mr. Sesay’s testimony, he has pointed out that the RUF did not receive assistance from Mr. Taylor but rather from officials in Burkina Faso who supplied them with arms and ammunition, and Ivory Coast where he says that housing was provided to the RUF leadership.

Mr. Sesay also testified about diamonds that were given to him in 1998 and which went missing while he was in Liberia. According to prosecutors, Mr. Sesay had taken these diamonds to Mr. Taylor in Liberia — an account which Mr. Sesay has denied. The former RUF leader has said that he was on transit in Liberia on his way to Burkina Faso where the diamonds were to be used to purchase arms and ammunition. He explained today that RUF commander, Sam Bockarie, instructed Ms. Deen to pick up Mr. Sesay in Sierra Leone and take him to Liberia to meet RUF associate, Ibrahim Bah. Mr. Bah was to eventually take Mr. Sesay to Burkina Faso where the diamonds were to be delivered and arms and ammunition collected, Mr. Sesay said today. (Prosecutors allege that Mr. Bah was a close associate of Mr. Taylor).

“She [Memunatu Deen] was instructed by Bockarie to come to Kailahun. The purpose for her to come when Bockarie called her was to take me to meet Ibrahim Bah. Ibrahim Bah was to meet us in Monrovia so that we can go to Burkina Faso,” Mr. Sesay.

The diamonds eventually went missing in Monrovia and were never given to Mr. Bah, Mr. Sesay said.

Mr. Sesay refuted suggestions that the diamonds were to be taken to Mr. Taylor, saying that if that were to be the case, he would not have taken several days carrying the diamonds in Monrovia when they eventually went missing.

“If the diamonds were to be given to Mr. Taylor, then they wouldn’t have been missing from me because I was in Monrovia for six days,” Mr. Sesay said.

Mr. Sesay’s testimony continues on Tuesday.

IS CDC LOSING MOMENTUM? String of Bad Publicity Puts Weah’s Party on the Ropes

Source: FrontPageAfrica

LABOR IN VAIN



“We see similar things still obtaining and we are going to comment because we labored for the formulation of the CDC to the extent that it became a vibrant opposition party. But that aspect of a lack of respect for functional specificity still exists”.
TARPEH HITS STRONGHOLD
Supporters of Tarpeh say the key to his victory in the New Kru Town area in last November's by-elections, was due to the fact that unlike Weah and the CDC, Tarpeh has actually been working with the borough’s youths, helping them to find jobs and giving scholarships to many in the area. While he came up short in the by-elections, his victory over CDC in New Kru Town did no go unnoticed.
07/14/2010 - Rodney D. Sieh

TWISTED IRONY: The irony of it all remains that the Congress for Democratic Change on its own may be incapable of winning majority votes come 2011. In 2005, Weah placed first in the presidential poll, but only managed 28.3% of the vote. He was defeated by Sirleaf in the November 8 run-off election, winning 40.6% of the vote compared to Johnson-Sirleaf's 59.4%. The party though did win three seats in the Senate and 15 in the House of Representatives. Even with that, critics say the party’s representatives in both houses have done very little to impact the lives of its core supporters in the Monrovia districts of West Point and New Kru Town, pointing to Professor Wilson Tarpeh’s Montserrado County by-elections victory in the CDC stronghold as a sign of things likely to come in 2011, if a viable opposition alternative arises or if the party fails to put its act together.

Monrovia -
Since the second round defeat in the 2005 Presidential elections, George Weah’s Congress for Democratic Change has been struggling to keep its head above water. The aftermath of the defeat, three years later, in 2008, was followed by the resignation of the party’s first constitutional National Chairman, Mr. Cole Bangalu, who went on to renounce his his membership with the CDC after what he described at the time as a thorough study of all of the circumstances. Bangalu would later say he had chosen to disengage from the CDC without any regret in his mind.

The departure of Bangalu was followed by notable departures of the likes of James Kollie and the high-profile resignation of Samuel D.Tweh, who stepped down as head of CDC-USA. Samuel A. Stevquoah, the former Head of CDC’s Media and Propaganda machinery also broke ranks and is now Chief of Staff in the Office of the Vice President, Dr. Joseph Boakai.

Bangalu leads exodus, CDC yet to recover

Cole Bangalu, Founding Member, former Chairman, Congress for Democratic Change
Prior to his resignation, Bangalu had been suspended by the Party’s Executive Committee because, according to them, he had decided as the Party’s National Chairman to singularly attend the programme officially announcing the 2005 election results by the then National Elections Commission (NEC). The CDC had contested the second round election results won by the Unity Party’s candidate, Mrs. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. But Bangalu reiterated at the time that though he was the National Chairmanthat led the Party to the second round, there were other Executives in the Party who wanted to play dual roles. “However, I was very tough and strong and did not allow that.”

While many were baffled at that exodus of key CDC stalwarts and the party did not do enough to keep Bangalu in the fold, many viewed Bangalu’s departure as a defining moment in the rapid decline of the party in recent years.

On Tuesday, Bangalu, whose prophecy of what is rapidly becoming CDC’s political demise, appears to be coming through, said, he saw the writings on the wall long before the party’s current predicament.

Said Bangalu : “My basic reason of resigning at the time was due to the lack of respect for functional specification. I think when this is present in every institution, it is a bad sign because it does not afford any opportunity for those who assume leadership and those who are occupying positions are not opportune to function properly. I believe that was the major reason within the movement that we formed. We thought people were not opportune to perform the functions they were supposed. For example, when I was Chairman, I don’t think I was opportune to exercise my responsibilities as Chairman of the party but instead others thought the process needed to be controlled by a few people.”

Tarpeh’s New Kru Town win points to decline
Those few people, critics say are Weah and the party’s secretary general Lenn Eugene Nagbe, who have single-handedly masterminded the party to its current predicament.

Critics of the party point to Weah’s lack of education and persistent stay away from the country and the realities on the ground as a sign that the party is losing grip on its predominantly strongholds.

Eventhough the party won the 2009 run-off by-elections for the vacant Montserrado County Senatorial seat to fill the void left by the late Hannah Brent, the party’s poor showing in its’s once stronghold, New Kru Town raised eyebrows. The borough was won by Wilson Tarpeh, a former Finance Minister now Vice President for Fiscal Affairs at the University of Liberia.

Supporters of Tarpeh say the key to his victory in the area was due to the fact that unlike Weah and the CDC, Tarpeh has actually been working with the borough’s youths, helping them to find jobs and giving scholarships to many in the area. While he came up short in the by-elections, his victory over CDC in New Kru Town did no go unnoticed.

Complicating matters, the party needed the support of several other opposition parties including Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Party, Charles Brumskine’s Liberty Party and Winston Tubman’s Liberian National Union to break through and see its candidate Geraldine Doe-Sheriff defeat the ruling party’s Clemenceau Urey.

Many observers took notice that despite a strong campaign mobilizaton by Weah only 105,800 Voters turned out to vote in the By-Election Run-Off which amounted to 22.36%of the 473, 193 voting populace of Montserrado County. The turn out was higher than the recorded turnout in.the first. Round on November 10. While the increment was invariably an expression of voter interest in the process, the number was still low for the most populous county in Liberia. The CDC candidate Doe-Sheriff won 58,384 -- 56.0% to the ruling party’s Urey, 45,864 - 44.O%.

Fast-forward to recent years, critics of the party remain uncertain whether it is capable of holding on its own and winning in 2011. More importantly, whether its candidate, Weah is capable of running on his own as the head of a ticket against a formidable incumbent.

Bestman saga rocks party
Weah has not hidden his position and has made it quite clear that he will not run second to any other politician.

But that was before June 4, 2010 and the John Bestman incident which has rocked the CDC in more ways than one.

FrontPageAfrica reported that Weah was on the property of his childhood friend, James Bestman when U.S. federal investigators arrived at Bestman’s home valued at US$450,000 in Howard County, Laurel, Maryland and arrested Bestman. Weah, who was on the scene was also questioned by the arresting officers and let go. However, details of what actually transpired remains a mystery amid multiple versions of the event and numerous denials by Weah and his close associates.

Today, the stains of arrest still haunts Weah as his friend, Bestman lingers in the custody of the FBI and as U.S. prosecutors prepare its case against Bestman. One of the key reasons for the delay of the case going to trial, sources say, is the fact that Bestman has cases pending in a number of different states including the states of Virginia, North Carolina, New York and Maryland. Thus, prosecutors are looking to throw additional charges on in a bid to supersede the indictment to add more counts. As a result Bestman remains in FBI custody in the Howard County jail. No bond hearing has been set and Bestman has not yet been arraigned until prosecutors have consolidated the case for multiple jurisdictions.

While Weah insists that he did not sleep on the property the night leading to the morning arrest of Bestman as has been reported and speculated in many circles, many remain unsure especially after Weah, in admitting that he was on the property at the time of the arrest said he was only questioned for 45 seconds. “When I pulled into the driveway, Mr. James came down the stairs and I saw two officers that served him a warrant that he needed to come with them,” Weah said.

Weah says he was questioned by officers on the scene who asked him for his identification and even thanked him afterwards. Weah’s aide and CDC’s Secretary General Lenn Eugene Nagbe had earlier denied that Weah was anywhere on Bestman’s property at the time of Bestman’s arrest.

Just as the CDC were looking to put the Bestman incident behind, one of its prominent lawmakers, Tokbah Mulbah’s actions appear to have once again drawn the party in the line of political fire.

It all came crashing down last weekend, when a truck belonging to the Deputy Speaker, filled with cement, was arrested by a police officer Lexington Beh around the Bonjal area along the Robertsfield Highway. Eyewitnesses say following his intervention via phone for the police officer to release his truck which failed, the Deputy Speaker reportedly went on the scene and a scuffle ensued, thereby leading to Beh being brutally maltreated. Beh remains in critical condition at the John F. Kennedy Medical Center in Monrovia but the aftermath of the incident continues to dog the CDC amid conflicting response from the party.

Conflicting Accounts : Gray, Nagbe at Loggerheads
Just like the Bestman case in which Nagbe initially denied that Weah was ever around the scene of the arrest, the party has put out at least two different version of responses in the beating of officer Beh.

In the aftermath of the incident, Acarous Gray, the party’s deputy secretary general declared that the statement issued by the police against the Deputy Speaker was concocted and falsified as their overdriven action is well-calculated and politically motivated. The guys are blatant liars and petit criminals,” Gray said.

Days after the incident, Gray’s boss, Lenn Eugene Nagbe issued a much calmer response in which the party commended the Justice Minister Christiana Tah, House Speaker Alex Tyler and other Officials of Government for cooperating with the Party’s Leadership to ensure that the situation at the residence of House Deputy Speaker Tokpah Mulbah on Sunday, July 11, did not deteriorate.

Said Nagbe : The CDC as a mass based Party which supports the rule of law, condemns the brutal assault on Policeman Lexington Beah, and calls for those who allegedly committed this act to be made to face the consequence of their action in keeping with law. The CDC encourages Deputy Speaker Tokpah Mulbah to continue to cooperate with the police as they carry out investigation into the incident.

The CDC hereby warns all detractors to abandon their futile efforts of seeking to use this unfortunate incident to besmear the image of the Party and allow the Police to conduct a fair and impartial investigation. Meanwhile, officials of the party have contacted the family of officer Beah and expressed concerns for the well-being of their relative. The CDC again assures citizens, residents, and our international counterparts, alike, of its commitment to the sustenance of peace security, and the rule of law in Liberia. The party therefore urges all of its partisans and sympathizers to observe its core values of peace, stability and justice for all.

Gray on the way out? Speculations arising
As the party struggles to find its way out of its latest turmoil, FrontPageAfrica has gathered that the recent string of bad occurrences and incidents have divided the party and the latest one in particular, the handling of the beating of officer Beh could very well lead to the departure of Gray from the party. Multiple sources within the party have suggested that the relationship between Gray and several higher-ups in the party is on the rocks, pointing to the recent conflicting statement and position over the handling of officer Beh’s beating.

As the 2011 elections nears, the party led by Weah which came closed to winning in 2005 finds itself having to answer questions about whether it is ready for the big time.

The irony of it all remains that the party, on its own may be incapable of winning majority votes come 2011. In 2005, Weah placed first in the presidential poll, winning 28.3% of the vote. He was defeated by Sirleaf in the November 8 run-off election, winning 40.6% of the vote compared to Johnson-Sirleaf's 59.4%. The party though did win three seats in the Senate and 15 in the House of Representatives. Even with that, critics say the party’s representatives in both houses have done little to impact the lives of its core supporters in the Monrovia districts of West Point and New Kru Town, pointing to Tarpeh’s victory in a CDC stronghold as a sign of things likely to come in 2011, if a viable alternative arises.

Like the Bestman saga, the beating of officer Beh, also has the party on the defensive looking for answers as a slew of criticisms pile up. On Tuesday, Vice President Joseph N. Boakai condemned the violent assault on officer Beh, while performing his regular police duties. Veep Boakai said the Unity Party-led Government subscribes to respect for human rights and would not condone such acts on the part of any private citizen or official of government. Boakai, who placed a call to the injured officer Monday, assured the officer (in his hospital bed), that justice will be served and that those responsible will meet the full weight of the law. Briefing the Vice President from his hospital bed, Policeman Beh said he was simply performing his duties required of him by the law when he was brutalized. He told the Vice President that his assailants rained verbal insults on him and his family before physically assaulting.

The U.S. through its ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield also criticized officer Beh’s beating. “I would like to use this opportunity to emphasize that no private citizen or official is above the law and entitled to act with impunity against law enforcement officials who are trying to promote public safety and respect for the rule of law”, Ambassador Greenfield said in a press release issued Monday

'Disorganized from within', Sam Jackson says

JACKSON'S THEORY

"The case of the United States of America versus James Bestman could provide a glimpse into the personal lifestyle of the suspected money launderer. Some legal experts are concerned that if monies from any of Mr. Bestman’s alleged criminal enterprise were used to fund Weah or CDC activities, it could mean major problems for the former international football star."

Samuel P. Jackson, Political Commentator
In the quest for viable alternative, political analysts say the recent string of bad occurrences in the CDC does not augur well for the party in 2011. Unless the party change its approach from the way it handled things in 2005, critics say, history will be bound to repeat. But even if the party join forces with other political opposition, it remains to be seen what impact the Bestman episode and the assault and handling of officer Beh will have on the party and its new alliances. But change critics say have come swiftly and timely. As Bangalu said Tuesday, the party the left behind still has its work cut out for it : “When I look at my alternative, I sometimes find solace in my alternative because it is better not to be somewhere where there are these kinds of activities than to remain there thinking that you will change things when you actually will not”.

With barely 15 months before general and presidential elections scheduled for October 2011, political analyst Samuel Jackson sees a downward trend for the party.

Says Jackson : The party, disorganized from within, unwilling to make solid alliances and headed by a football star without any experience in the political arena is teetering on the brink of disaster. Political pundits are shaking their heads in disbelief.

Jackson points to the brewing disaster within the party: the interrogation of Mr. George Weah during the arrest of his best friend James Bestman and the alleged merciless beating of Officer Beh by people close to Deputy Speaker, Mr. Togba Mulbah a stalwart of the CDC during a routine traffic stop.

For Jackson, the party that won the most votes (28 percent) in the first round of the 2005 presidential sweepstakes has not demonstrated the level of maturity or the political astuteness required of a strong opposition. Jackson says the two recent events seem to demonstrate the level of disintegration within the party. George Weah’s flirtation with a known serial criminal, Mr. James Bestman, a man with a rap sheet several pages long within the American justice system has himself to blame. Anyone who has spent any time with Mr. Bestman should know that his life style and associates are indicative of a man with a criminal past and should be avoided at all costs by any aspiring politician. Mr. Weah’s proverbial 45 seconds of interrogation by FBI agents in the driveway of James Bestman’s luxury home in the suburbs of Washington DC is symptomatic of a party hierarchy seemingly unprepared for national leadership.

Some CDC partisans have privately stated they have been uncomfortable with the relationship between Bestman and Weah. But as in most political structures in Liberia, Jackson says hushed tones and behind- the-back bickering are substituted for facing leading politicians with the facts of life.

The case of the United States of America versus James Bestman could provide a glimpse into the personal lifestyle of the suspected money launderer. Some legal experts are concerned that if monies from any of Mr. Bestman’s alleged criminal enterprise were used to fund Weah or CDC activities, it could mean major problems for the former international football star.

In the case of Officer Beh, who lies in the hospital with concerns for his life, the matter is unlikely to rest easy, especially coming after some very disingenuous remarks by members and officials of the CDC. The CDC in an official statement, now denied by some within the party claims that Officer Beh was drunk. Assuming that the officer was in a drunker stupor, does normal restraint mean beating him senseless to the point of death?
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The statement by US Ambassador Linda Thomas Greenfield means international attention has been brought to the case of Officer Beh, which indicates the normal Liberian way of sweeping things under the rug may be difficult to accomplish. It means the case will stay within the front pages of the media for a considerable length of time and could erode a substantial degree of popular support from the CDC as more facts are revealed in what will become a closely watched investigation. The CDC is not falling from the weight of outsiders, but it is being destroyed from within, which seems to signal the tragicomedy of the Liberian existence.

In the coming months, the Congress for Democratic will have its hands full as it looks to rediscover its identity in hopes of convincing voters that it has improved its credentials and agenda. To date, it is not clear whether Weah himself will complete his studies before campaign season rolls around or whether that would be enough to convince voters that he has upgraded his education lapses which handicapped his candidacy in 2011. Whichever way it plays out political analysts say the party riding on Weah’s shoulders has taken a hit and it may take a lot of work for Weah’s political voice to convince voters that it remains the viable alternative to the incumbent government.
"The case of the United States of America versus James Bestman could provide a glimpse into the personal lifestyle of the suspected money launderer. Some legal experts are concerned that if monies from any of Mr. Bestman’s alleged criminal enterprise were used to fund Weah or CDC activities, it could mean major problems for the former international football star."Samuel P. Jackson, Political Commentator

Tale of Three Counties: How Independence Day Projects Die After Celebration

Source: FrontPageAfrica



07/14/2010 - Nat Nyuan Bayjay

Add caption
MAKING SACRIFICES: Allen Tubah, pictured here in front of the Twin Perkins Generators which supplies Bong County, heads the BES. Tubah says he and his small team of eleven workers are committed to keep the city’s lights on. Tubah says the BES maintains a client-ship of less than 60 persons for a twin Perkin-generator of 110 and 250 KVA that consumes between 35 to 40 gallons daily. “We are barely sacrificing here because it is even difficult to have the few customers we have on the line paying their bills regularly”, Tubah told FPA.

Gbarnga, Bong County –

When the Unity Party (UP) led government decided to rotate the official observance of the National Independence Day one year into its grip of state power to various sub-political capitals across the nation, one key purpose of such decision was to also rotate and spread the long-centralized developmental agenda in Africa’s first independent nation.

With the Herculean task of restoring basic social services to the Capital proving to be difficult to overcome, many had thought that the rotational policy of celebrating the Independence Day in provincial capitals outside Monrovia would have helped to restore some of these basic services to these capitals of the other 14 counties which has not experienced them for over two decades.

Key among them is electricity which remains scarce and far away from these capitals.

Seven years after the official end to the 14 years civil war, the Liberia Electricity Corporation (LEC) still struggles to fully restore electricity to the capital, settling for a ‘Small Lights Today, Big Lights Tomorrow’ project that has seen a few parts of the capital electrified.

The destruction of the nation’s sole hydro-plant during the war has left thousands of Liberians to only but dream of electric power in their homes while thousands other young Liberians who are 20 years old and below are yet to see electricity in their homes with the exception of those who burn gasoline to run mini-generators and those who are fortunate to be in the city and see it on some of the few electrified street lights.

While the Liberian government continues to state that more than the country’s entire fiscal annual budget is needed to rehabilitate the Mount Coffee St. Paul River Hydro Plant in White Plains, Upper Caldwell which remains Liberians’ hope to being fully able to afford and maximize such an important utility both domestically and industrially, the introduction of an alternative power source in the country seems just the right way out of this electricity nightmare for the ordinary Liberians.

The inclusion of restoring public electricity as a vital project to the host cities of the Independence Day for the past years was met with public overwhelming excitement which has been seen as a gradual return of these host cities to the restoration of electric-power, at least at a minimum skill.

Unfortunately, two of the three previous host-cities of the Independence Day have failed miserably in being able to maintain the electric power that was restore to them when they served as hosts, something that many have considered to be a shame on the county leaderships of the counties involved.

Grand Bassa County & Its Blame-Game Denies Citizens of Post-Independence Day Electricity
Following its inception into power in 2006, the first post-war government identified Grand Bassa County, which is one of the country’s first three original counties, as the first and privileged host of Independence Day 2007 with was the 160th Independence Day celebration. The county’s provincial capital, Buchanan, happens to be the country’s second largest seaport city subsequently making it to be the country’s second major city.

On July 26, 2007, all roads led to the port city following the identification and implementation of some Independence Day projects that the citizens of Grand Bassa County were to be later denied in just few months after the festivities.

The citizens of the county whose last sight of a public electricity was during the morning hours of May 19, 1990 when the then raging war entered the port city had their hope of being able to see street lights once again dashed and let them by the mismanagement of the electricity that went down only within few months after the celebration.

The leadership of the county then got into a blame-game that witnessed the Superintendent of the county and some of the county’s lawmakers being entangled in a deadly political game in which both parties accused one another of being responsible for the lights going off in Buchanan all at the expense of the residents of the port-city.

Superintendent Julia Duncan Cassell alleged that the county’s Liberty Party dominated Legislative Caucus had ‘sabotaged’ the supply of electric power to the city while the accused group of legislators reversed the Superintendent’s accusing finger to her, citing that she mismanaged the city’s supply of electric power.

The swinging war of allegations including the Superintendent’s alleged personal usage of the generator that once supplied the city with electric power to the allegation that the Liberty Party’s lawmakers-as led by Junior Senator Nathaniel Innis and Representative Gabriel Smith’s ‘paying of thugs’ to cut down the electric wires-was the only redress the residents of the county could get while the Port-city of Buchanan remains in complete darkness up to today’s date.

Prior to the hosting of the event, Superintendent Cassell had said projects earmarked for the occasion were all well on course.

The projects included the rehabilitation of the Buchanan Highway, a town hall and a Commissioner’s office in Lloydsville outside Buchanan and the establishment of a juvenile session at the Buchanan Police Detachment.

Madam Duncan-Cassell had also boosted of Buchanan being equipped with internet facility during the July 26 celebration.

The situation led a disappointed and enraged President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf during a visit to Buchanan to ask the citizens of Grand Bassa County to repay for the costs of electricity, though another two years have passed since she made the pronouncement without any result from what was seen as a heavy ‘Presidential Order’ at the time.

Margibi County’s Local Authorities’ ‘Non-Progressive’ Attitude Cost Residents Darkness
Then came Margibi County’s turn when its provincial capital played host to the 2008 Independence Day Celebrations that commemorated the 161st Independence of Liberia.

Margibi ’08 did not prove to be too hectic as far as transportation and lodging were concerned due to its close proximity to the capital Monrovia.

Vital among the projects earmarked for the observance of the national event in addition to the rehabilitation of some of the streets in the city were the restoration (at least partial) of both running water and public electricity.

Kakata is one of Liberia’s major commercial centers that lies right on the major route that leads from Monrovia to the Ivory Coast and Guinea and its re-electrification to mark the celebration soon stepped in the shoes of its neighboring sister city of Buchanan which had apparently set a bad incidence a year earlier.

Frustrated and disappointed citizens of the county only found themselves like those of neighboring Grand Bassa as they lamented what they termed at the time as the ‘non-progressive’ leadership of Margibi County they said was responsible for the breakdown and mismanagement of the electric project that has left Kakata in complete darkness.

Hurray To Bong County! Its County Leadership’s ‘Sacrifice’ Keeps Power On
Obviously determined to not repeat the mistakes of the past two host counties of the Independence Day, the centrally located county of Bong which served as the host for Independence Day 2009 that commemorated the country’s 162nd Independence, one year on, still runs its electricity, making its provincial capital of Gbarnga to be the only electrified provincial capital in Liberia outside Monrovia.

Though similar noise emerged few weeks following the hosting of the Independence Day over the electrification of Gbarnga after power went off for a while, public electricity returned to Gbarnga’s streets following the intervention of a group of retired workers of LEC who grouped themselves and began to manage the city’s electric power. The county leadership gladly accepted the former LEC workers to then proceed with the management of the power in the county.

Named the Bong Electricity System (BES), a small staff who volunteers services, is said to be sacrificially managing the county’s electric power Independence Day project. It is being accredited for Bong County’s upkeep of the electricity along with the county’s leadership.

Bong County’s functionally electricity, though still on a smaller scale, distinguishes the county from Grand Bassa and Margibi Counties as far as maintaining the Independence Day projects are concerned.

However, the maintenance of the electric power comes with a prize which both the management team and the county’s leadership are well living up to the task.

Allen Tubah who heads the BES explained the constraints under which he and his small team of 11 committed personnel are operating to keep the city’s lights on.

During a recent visit to Gbarnga, Tubah revealed to FrontPageAfrica that the BES maintains a client-ship of less than 60 persons for a twin Perkin-generator of 110 and 250 KVA that consumes between 35 to 40 gallons daily.

“We are barely sacrificing here because it is even difficult to have the few customers we have on the line paying their bills regularly”, Tubah told FPA.

Disclosing that the BES is independent of the LEC, Tubah also disclosed that they-former workers of the LEC prior to the war-had to intervene to keep the project running because according to him, LEC had abandoned the project due to the constraints.

Bong County Superintendent, Renney Jackson and Bong County Representative George Mulbah both told FPA that keeping the lights on requires some extra and personal sacrifices.

“We sometimes have to put in our personal gasoline to keep the lights on”, said Superintendent Jackson while Representative Mulbah, also Chairman of the county’s Legislative Caucus, added: “Even the guys that work there are not on salaries. We at times have to dig into pockets just to keep Gbarnga on in order to not be like the other cities that tried but could not make it. This is what some people out there don’t know but will choose to say whatever they wish to say.”

Gbarnga’s Success, Nimba’s Cue
Later this month, Nimba will serve as the host to the 163rd Independence Day and observers are saying that Nimba County should take cue from its neighbor Bong County if Sanniquellie’s electric power is to last and serve residents of the provincial capital after the Independence Day celebrations are over and the President and her guests have left.

According to a United Nations Development Program (UNDP) statistics in 2007, Liberia's total production of electricity in 2000 was 450 million kWh, down from 834 million kWh in 1988. Of the 2000 total, 100% came from fossil fuels.

The former Managing Director of LEC, Harry Yuan, in 2007 told Liberian media that Liberian Government needs “US$500 million for the complete rehabilitation of the existing St. Paul Hydro Plant and the construction of an upstream storage dam”.







The city of Gbarnga, Bong County is one of few counties in post-war Liberia enjoying reasonable amounts of electricity daily.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Grand Gedeh Supt. Hidden Account Busted

Source: Newdemocratnews

Written by Staff

Tuesday, 13 July 2010

Grand Gedeh County Superintendent Christopher Bailey is operating a secret account containing questionable transactions relative to the County Development fund, the General Auditing Commission has busted.

Auditor General John Morlu informed legislators (Grand Gedeh caucus) via a letter dated 9 July that Mr. Bailey’s converted account was uncovered following the GAC’s extended audit procedure and that he (Barley) has not disclosed its existence to auditors.

Mr. Morlu indicated in his communication that US$100,000 has been deposited into the said account with US$28,250.71 being withdrawn and allegedly used for “outstanding liabilities on county sports”.

Viewing the apparent dubious nature of the account and transaction thereto, the Auditor General has recommended to the Grand Gedeh County legislative caucus that the account be frozen until the ongoing audit is finalized.

Efforts exerted to contact Mr. Barley on these issues were unsuccessful but here’s the Auditor General’s full detail on the secret account:

“Senator William Sandy Chairman
Grand Gedeh Legislative Caucus Capitol Building
Monrovia, Liberia

“GAC is completing the audits of the CDF for all counties, including Grand Gedeh. On 8 July 2010, as part of the final analysis of the bank statements, we obtained a bank statement from Ecobank, account number 10210138822012.

“The audit team was not informed of this bank account by Superintendent ‘Christopher B. Bailey. However, through an extended audit procedure, we obtained the bank statements for this second account.

In review of the analysis of this bank statement for Grand Gedeh County, we noted several transactions that require your immediate attention and action. On 9 November 2006, the amount of US$12,760 was deposited and expended by Superintendent Christopher B. Bailey.

On 12 December 2008, the amount of US$20,000 was taken as a loan and on 12 December 2008 the amount was withdrawn.

Furthermore, on 16 June 2010, an amount of US$100,000 was deposited. This amount was payment on the CDF by the Ministry of Finance. Of this amount, US$48,250.71 was withdrawn as payment for outstanding liability on County Sports.

We have not been provided evidence to indicate the substantive authority under which the US$20,000 loan was obtained and for what purpose it was expended. We also have not been provided substantive authority for the deposit and expenditure of the US$12,760. We further have not been provided the substantive authority for the payment of US$48,000 for “County Sports.”

Furthermore, we have not been provided the substantive authority under which the amount of US$100,000 of the CDF was deposited into this second account when all other CDF monies have been deposited in bank account number 10710040322014.

“I have attached the bank statement and recommend that a freeze be placed on both CDF accounts until the audit is finalized. This is intended to prevent fraud, waste and abuse in the management of the CDF for Grand Gedeh.

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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