Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Unity Party Celebrates July 26th Amidst Liberia’s DEARTH! (Letter of the Day

Source: theliberianjournal


By: Benjamin Kofa Fyneah

Jul 27, 2010

Despite Liberia’s dire economic circumstances, the Unity Party had cause for a pompous display of pageantry to celebrate Liberia’s 163rd independence anniversary.

Considering the overwhelming poverty and widespread destitution impacting MAJORITY of Liberians one would have imagined this occasion and ALL other planned celebrations be observed in a low key manner. It could also be a day of sober reflection of where we are, how we got here, and the way forward.

The Unity Party’s zest for wasteful spending, that adds no value to our national life and or positively impact Liberians needs to stop!

  • What is there to celebrate when 80% of your constituents are unemployed?

  • What is there to celebrate when over 80% of your constituents live far below the poverty line?

  • What is there to celebrate when MOST citizens have no access to portable running water?

  • What is there to celebrate when the country is overcome by darkness - lack of electricity?

  • What is there to celebrate when the STRATIFICATION of our social and political structures are being enhanced!

  • What is there to celebrate when a significant number of your constituents are ILLETERATE?

  • What is there to celebrate when the national economy is dependent and CONTROLLED by a FEW powerful elites?

  • What is there to celebrate when the very government is overcome by CORRUPTION?

Until the Unity Party can give honest answers to these questions, her LACK of vision and ability to provide solutions to the myriad of problems facing Liberia will always be EXPOSED.

What actually do we celebrate on July 26th? Independence? From whom? Remember, the bulk of Liberians are still feeling the impact(s) of Matilda Newport’s cannon shot!

This strange form of celebration amidst overwhelming poverty is akin to the very “temporary relief” provided by illegal chemical substances - sadly, once their effects wane, REALITY sets in!

We will ALL be in a better position to jubilate and or CELEBRATE when the Unity Party government provides the needed leadership to pull Liberians out of the crippling grips of poverty and set Liberian on a course of sustainable growth and development.

Editor’s Note: Benjamin Kofa Fyneah can be reached at bfyneah@hotmail.com

Elephant Aggression Displaces Multitude

Source: allafrica.com


28 July 2010

Rampaging elephants who launched valiance of attacks against River Cess Citizens a month ago have left many persons displaced, and are reportedly said to be in search of new homes, food and shelter, as well as clothing and medication.

River-Cess County Representative Jerry Masahn made the revelation recently in Monrovia about the destructive nature of the wide elephants who he said, have caused his kinsmen to flee their towns and villages and were displaced in Mass numbers seeking refuge in Nezohn and other nearby surrounding towns in the area, something he said, is troubling and requires urgent attention from the government and its partners to save his people from further disaster.

About a month ago, wide elephants got on the rampage in River-Cess County and attacked facilities of a logging company operating in the area, extending its aggressive conducts on high-Ways, villages as well as impeding ongoing farming activities and sending few persons to their early graves.

Reports gathered from the county at the time revealed that the rampaging elephants merciless attacks against the people of River – Cess was intended to place a stay order on the activities of the logging company operating in the area , who the reports said was refusing to abide by the regulations of the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) by not employing citizens of the county, especially the district it was carrying on its logging activities.

Consequently, one of the elephants was killed three weeks ago by hunters, but Representative Jerry Masahn disclosed that the violent conduct of the elephants left behind many problems among which were the massive displacement of citizens of the county, as a result of the destruction of their towns and villages including the destruction of farms in the county.

According to Rep. Masahn, his people whom were affected by the Elephants’ aggression were presently displaced and were sleeping in the open air without food and clothing, something he said, needed prompt intervention from government and other aid agencies to help liberate his people who he said were dying from pneumonia , starvation and other killer diseases from the heavy down pour of rain.

The River-Cess Lawmaker also revealed that Nezohn was jam packed with hundreds of displaced citizens as a consequence of the brutal and ruthless nature of the wide life, describing their situation as totally unbelievable and unacceptable.

He said as a result of the elephant invasion, currently there is no food for his people to eat, no medication and worst of all, he alarmed, children, women and the elderly people were getting sick, and that if nothing was done to immediately rescue the alarming situation, his citizens stand the risk of dying in mass.

However, Rep. Jerry Masahn felt short of disclosing how many of his kinsmen have died since their displacement, but insisted that many of his people were dying due to the heavy down pour of rain, diarrhea, cholera and other killer diseases.

Statement of Petition From Citizens of Nimba County to H. E. Mrs. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Source: allafrica.com


28 July 2010

STATEMENT OF PETITION FROM CITIZENS OF NIMBA COUNTY TO H. E. MRS. ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF, PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA TO CONTEST THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT FOR A SECOND TERM

WHEREAS, leadership is gifted to special people, and that you are such one rare gem of a leader this nation has had;

WHEREAS, we the citizens of Nimba County have followed with keen interest the leadership you have provided to this nation since you came to power;

RECOGNIZING the many development initiatives you have undertaken, including the magnificent Tappita Hospital, the Community College of Nimba County, to improve the livelihood of the citizens and residents of this country, including those of Nimba County;

COGNIZANT of the role you have played to return Liberia to its rightful place in the comity of nations through your effective international contacts, thereby restoring the dignity of Liberian citizens both at home and abroad;

REALIZING the vision you have and actions you have taken that strives towards transparency, accountability and good governance in Government, which led to the waiving of Liberia’s US$4.9 billion debt;

NOTING your recognition of the significant role women and young people play in society, thereby appointing them into responsible positions in Government;

WHEREAS, your youth empowerment program, including the provision of scholarships and other opportunities, has prepared and continue to prepare new breed of national leaders to continue the developments being undertaken now and to be undertaken in the future;

We the citizens of Nimba County believe strongly that you, Madam President, have the required leadership characteristics so needed at this time in the history of our country to keep our country and people peaceful and manage our resources in a way that will engender the kind of development that can put us on par with other great nations of the world. You are simply the right person God has given us in this dispensation to be President of the country at this time.

NOW THEREFORE, we the citizens of Nimba County, represented by the youths, women and elders, confident that you are politically, physically and mentally fit to steer the affairs of State and to complete the unfinished business of the Liberian people, do hereby petition you to run for the Office of President, Republic of Liberia, for a second term.

In so doing, we herewith present to you this petition as our commitment to support you for said second term of office.


DONE IN THE CITY OF SANNIQUELLIE, NIMBA COUNTY ON THE 26TH DAY OF JULY, A.D. 2010.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Winston Tubman: TRC Report Represents Liberia's Best Efforts to End Nightmare

Source: FrontPage Africa
Ambassador Winston Tubman

07/28/2010 - Ambassador Winston Tubman, Liberia National Union

LIBERIAN 163RD INDEPENDENCE DAY ADDRESS, BY COUNSELOR WINSTON A. TUBMAN. DELIVERED, JULY 26 2010, AT THE MALAWALA BALAWALA SPORTS FIELD ON GSA ROAD, MONROVIA, LIBERIA.

Many thanks to all of you for your presence here this Afternoon and for inviting me to make this short speech today. My heartfelt congratulations go to the President and all the people of Liberia, especially Nimbaians in whose great County the official celebrations of our country’s 163rd birth Anniversary are today taking place, in SANNIQUELLIE , the historic city where the idea of African Unity first began to take shape when the Presidents of Liberia, Ghana and Guinea met there with that objective in mind fifty years ago. One hundred and thirteen years earlier, in 1847, Liberia itself was born, not as an ordinary state but as a unique fore- runner country which aimed at extending liberty to the African Motherland, as its name, Liberia, the land of liberty, implies. Nimba County was also the place where the first shots in our horrendous Civil War were fired. Therefore, by returning to and focusing at this time on Nimba County, a place of momentous beginnings, the people of Liberia are signaling to the world that the time has finally come when the true liberation of Liberia and a more meaningful African Unity must be raised to a higher and conclusive level.

Many Africans and even some Liberians often ask: ‘what development of any kind can Liberia show for its many years of independence?’National Economic Development, in my view is the result, not of age but of investments such as were made by the colonial powers in their African colonies, comprising all of Black Africa except Liberia, at a time when nothing remotely comparable was happening in Liberia. It was Ghana’s President Nkrumah who once said that Liberia should be judged, not by the height which, on her own, she attained but by the depths from which she climbed. The founders of our country, and by this I refer both to those who came to these shores, as well as those who were here and welcomed them; they had to prove to a cruel, derisive and mocking world that they too were human beings and the equals of any other race of people, fully able to do any and all of those things, as they wrote in their 1847 Declaration of Independence: “which adorn and dignify man.”

All of the newer African states, standing as they did on Liberia’s shoulders were never humiliated by having to argue much less to prove that they too were human beings. And yet, some young Liberians of today have said to me with regret: ‘it was a mistake to get our independence so soon! We should have waited until we had been developed!’ But we were never colonized. What my young Liberian friends regret is precisely that of which Liberians of my own and previous generations were proud, even boastful: We were never colonized!

Today, ten years into the Twenty First Century, Liberians must prove all over again something no less necessary now than what the first Liberians faced: we are called upon to rise up to the stubborn challenges of putting tribal divisions and national conflicts behind us forever; we must also ensure that the prevailing peace in our country will not shatter after the UN forces depart. For these things to happen, we must make sure that in our critical elections next year, the transfer of state power from one democratically elected government to another takes place smoothly and peacefully. The US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton said precisely that when she addressed the Liberian Legislature last year. Since then, a few other Americans have made statements which some Liberian politicians self-servingly delight in misconstruing. Nevertheless, what Secretary Clinton said coincides, I believe with Liberia’s needs and the wishes of most Liberians.

It once seemed to some of us that the power transfer that Secretary of State Clinton spoke of might have been facilitated if our incumbent President had refrained from taking part in the 2011 electoral race, as she had earlier promised she would do. Instead, she could have played the unsurpassable monitoring role of the iconic, globally admired and respected leader that she has become. This, we now know she has declined to do, as is her right; and there is no need or use in crying over spilt milk. Therefore, the next best thing for Liberia, in my view would be for the opposition parties to consolidate and combine their strengths so that next year, a run-off, second round of elections does not become necessary. Run offs provide conclusion to elections but they do not produce unity among a multiplicity of competing political parties, whose leaders must now make personal sacrifices for the good of Liberia. Because the narrow initial base of support enjoyed by the eventual winner in a runoff is virtually the same base upon which that winner comes to power. No real shift of support occurs; with the result that when the full panoply of state power devolves upon the eventual winner, that winner, particularly if he or she is the incumbent merely adds new power on to their already garnered power accumulations to produce, and here I borrow a phrase: “ a formidable President”; thereby, planting seeds for the return and consolidation of a strong one party state that stifles free expression, fosters tyranny and sets the stage for violent confrontations between those in power and those constituting the majority of the population seeking irrepressibly to replace an often very corrupt minority government. Liberia cannot afford to go down that disastrous road again! Preventing a return to a one party state would be a greater gain for Liberia than any number of foreign funded projects whether resulting from grants or loans which we might soon again be unable to repay. Most African countries especially those like Liberia endowed with rich natural resources can easily secure such investments. But no other African country is today better prepared, with UN forces deployed here and the right proven leadership than Liberia to make the peaceful, sustainable democratic transfer of the already mentioned state power. Our success on this score would not only hugely benefit Liberia but it would also inspire much of Africa Just as our showing to the whole world that Africans are capable of governing themselves galvanized all of Africa to eventually win their independence too.

It is therefore not wrong to call attention to the mortal danger of Liberia’s return to a one party state; nor is it unpatriotic to do so. On the contrary, it is courageous patriotism of the highest order to point out looming danger on this our national day that is so close to next year’s elections when Liberia must seek to finally close the bloodiest chapter of our history.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Report, with all its undeniable flaws represents our best, Liberian efforts to bring closure to our long national nightmare of divisions and conflicts, and place our nation on a new path to durable peace, unity, security and development. The vile, shameful and abusive characterizations that some have been hurled against me and my innocent deceased parents; even inciting the public to attack me because of my support for the TRC deserve no response; but they show powerfully just how on target the TRC’s recommendations truly are. If those recommendations are followed; not all at once but through sacrificial leadership supported by all Liberians as would be the case, step by step over time; Liberia would be bound to soon become the shining country on a hill that by its example would transform and elevate the whole African Continent as was the evident intention of the Almighty when He granted us our independence 163 years ago today.

THANK YOU.




VEEP BOAKAI A LOCK?????: Hometown Lofa Tipped for 2011 Indy Celebration

07/27/2010 - M. Welemongai Ciapha II

Monrovia - 
Source: FrontPage Africa

For months speculations have been in the air that Liberian president Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf was contemplating dropping Dr. Joseph Boakai as her running mate in the much-anticipated presidential elections in 2011. Speculations have surfaced for months that partisans within the party’s hierarchy, fearing fielding an ageing ticket, have behind the scenes been pressing for Sirleaf to drop Boakai for a much younger candidate as the party looks to address concerns about the ageing ticket factor.

Political analysts here believed that the president’s assurance to one of the sons of Lofa of the next year celebrations is a clear signal that Hon. Boakai is physically fit to ride the political wagon of 2011 or Sirleaf is comfortable with him by her side.

On Monday, however, Sirleaf and the UP appear to have settled on sticking with Boakai. During celebrations marking the 163rd Independence Day Celebration, the incumbent leader of the post-war Unity Party government tipped Boakai’s hometown, the vote-rich Lofa County as the next stop for the Independence Day bash.

Political analysts here believed that the president’s assurance to one of the sons of Lofa of the next year celebrations is a clear signal that Hon. Boakai is physically fit to ride the political wagon of 2011 or Sirleaf is comfortable with him by her side.

In her remark, President Sirleaf told the gathering of elders, dignitaries and citizens that Liberians were proud of their global village, Liberia, despite the decade-longed civil strife fought, her country are of resilient people with undaunted pride.

The president noted that with all projects on course in Nimba, further proved that the county is on the move in terms of developments and progress.

She said that her administration has always try to celebrate the July 26th , where most of the population in leeward counties would benefit, which began in 2006 in Montserrado County, followed by Grand Bassa County, Bong County, and now it is in Nimba county, adding, “and now I say to you Lofa,” amid applause from the audience.

The president further observed that her visit to Sanniquellie has brought back to her memory of 1959, when the leaders of Ghana, Guinea and Liberia, Kweme Nkrumah, Sekou Toure’ and William V.S. Tubman and other leaders at the time, met to discuss the formation of African Unity, now African Union.

She maintained that the discussion between the three leaders led to the formation of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), now African Union (AU).

Boakai was noticeably absent from the celebrations in Sanniquellie as he represented Sirleaf in Chad at the Community of Sahel Saharan States (CEN-SAD). Following the CEN-SAD meeting, the Vice President will proceeded to Kampala, Uganda to represent President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf at the 15th Session of the African Union Summit. The Vice President also participated in the 14th Summit Bureau Meeting upon the request of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni. The Vice President and party are expected to return home on Wednesday, July 28.

With Boakai being from the ruling Unity Party, political pundits are still unsure whether UP will abide by the merger agreement signed along with LUP and LAP - or stick with Boakai.

Boakai has not shied away from addressing the controversy surrounding his political future. In a 2009 FrontPageAfrica interview, the veep said he came on the ticket of the Unity Party not as a liability but as an asset.”I have large constituency and during the campaign of this party, unlike other parties you didn’t see me follow the president to go and campaign, I campaigned independently because I knew that not just in Lofa but all over Liberia, people know who I am.”

Over the past few months, Boakai has been showing his card, making of tour in Lofa in weeks leading to the recent Unity Party convention in Ganta, Nimba County where the party tipped Cllr. Varney Sherman as Chairman. Ironically, Sherman has been one of many names in the mix of potential replacements for Boakai but Sirleaf appears to be comfortable with the subtle Boakai.

Sherman debunked the speculations himself in a recent FrontPageAfrica interview when he said that he had no intentions of replacement Boakai. But the complications of the recent merger remains a prevailing dilemma for the ruling party.

According to Sherman in a recent FPA interview, the parties had an article for merger and the article of merger says that if the standard bearer of the Unity Party is selected for one of the constituent parties, that standard bearer will exercise his or her best efforts to select a vice standard bearer from one of the other two constituent parties. “That is what the article of merger says. Based on that, you gentlemen and ladies assume that Varney Sherman will be the vice standard bearer. There is no basis for that. I don’t see how you analysis can come to that kind of conclusion.”

With Boakai being from the ruling Unity Party, political pundits are still unsure whether UP will abide by the merger agreement or stick with Boakai.

Sherman was clear when pressed as to whether the merger meant that Boakai would not be Vice President because he’s from the Unity Party as is Sirleaf.

Said Sherman: “They say exert your best efforts. If the standard bearer exerts his or her best efforts and comes to the conclusion that it is Boakai and that is approved by the party, that’s it. But the thing about it is this. Even though Madam Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has said that she would be formidable candidate, we still have to have a convention and come to that decision as to whether or not she would be the candidate. The assumption that she is automatically the candidate is wrong. Not in this unity party.”

The talk of replacing Boakai has fueled speculations that several young officials in the current government were being considered. Among them, Finance Minister Augustine Ngafuan, Dr. Henrique Tokpah, President of Cuttington University, Planning and Economic Affairs Minister, Amara Konneh, Bureau of Maritime Affairs Commissioner Binyah Kesselly and others surfacing, VP Boakai admitted in an interview with FPA in Ganta shortly before the electoral process of the UP convention that in politics anything can happen and nothing is taken for granted.

Due Process Lawsuit: Teage Appeals for Support to Keep Parties Honest

Written by Alvin Teage Jalloh, Esq
Tuesday, 27 July 2010

Source: Liberian Forum

 Click to view writ issued by court

As the public debate surrounding my lawsuit against the Liberian government for its unconstitutional enforcement of several provisions of the Aliens and Nationality Law continues, I would like to provide you with additional facts.

I was born in Bopolu, Liberia, to two natural-born Liberian citizens, and acquired my Liberian citizenship at birth. During the devastating Liberian civil war, I was forced into exile and sought refuge in foreign lands. Although forced into exile, I did not leave my constitutional rights at any of the warring parties' check points that were placed throughout our nation. My constitutional due process right comes from the same Constitution that President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, members of the Honorable 52nd Legislature, and members of the Honorable Supreme Court took an oath to defend and uphold.

I understand the political views about dual citizenship. The question in my lawsuit, however, is not about dual citizenship. Nor is it about an alleged renunciation oath as some would have you believe. Not everyone who becomes a naturalized citizen of the United States is required to take a renunciation oath. Rather, the question in my lawsuit is more fundamental to Liberia’s constitutional democracy: whether the government can enforce a statute, which on its face, purports to abrogate the due process clause under Article 20(a) of the Constitution of the Republic of Liberia.

One of the most profound accomplishments of our framers was the establishment of a document that is the highest law of Liberia. The Constitution establishes three separate, but equal branches of government, and spells out the limited roles and powers of each branch. Among other basic principles essential to our constitutional democracy, the Constitution defines certain fundamental rights of the people which the government may not violate. Due process of law is one of the fundamental rights.

Perhaps the most important, early lesson about due process comes from the Garden of Eden. Although knowing that Adam and Eve had eaten from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, God did not summarily punish Adam and Eve. God interrogates both Adam and Eve, and gives each of them an opportunity to provide an excuse for their transgression before punishing them.

In Liberia, the due process clause is found in Article 20(a) of the Liberian Constitution. It prohibits all levels of the Liberian government, including the legislature, the executive, and the judiciary from depriving any person of life, liberty, property, privilege, or any other right without a hearing and a judgment consistent with due process of law.

The due process requirements are not hollow words without substance. They are rights enumerated in our Constitution, and must be respected and enforced. If a self-executing statute, such as section 22.2 of the Aliens and Nationality Law, deprives a person of life, liberty, property, privilege, or any other right without a hearing and a judgment consistent with due process, that person has been denied the constitutional protection of due process. If a governmental action deprives a person of life, liberty, property, privilege, or any other right without a hearing and a judgment consistent with due process, that person has been denied the constitutional protection of due process.

While politicians play games with people’s rights, the judiciary operates on a different level. The judiciary’s foremost role is to defend and uphold the Constitution of the Republic of Liberia, and to protect each person's constitutional, human, civil, and legal rights without regards to public opinion.

Section 22.2 of the Aliens and Nationality Law, which is being challenged in my lawsuit, states that, “The loss of citizenship under Section 22.1 of this title shall result solely from the performance by a citizen of the acts or fulfillment of the conditions specified in such section, and without the institution by the Government of any proceedings to nullify or cancel such citizenship.” This section purports to abrogate the due process clause under Article 20(a) of the Liberian Constitution--the highest law of the land. Section 22.2 will not withstand constitutional scrutiny.

But you are aware that in this cherished Republic of ours, the status quo holds on like a mussel. And misinformation travels fast. Therefore, I am asking for your help in this matter--not with the legal argument. My claims are supported by the Constitution of Liberia, and my legal interests before the Honorable Supreme Court of Liberia are being represented by Cllr. Jerome Korkoya, one of the best legal minds we have. Rather, I need you to join others to keep the parties honest.

This case presents a constitutional question that goes beyond the rights of a Liberian from Bopolu who, with all due respect, does not need a piece of paper to tell him he is a Liberian.

If the legislative process can be used to selectively deny a group of Liberians their constitutional rights to due process, then that process presumably could be used to deprive other disfavored groups of Liberians of their constitutional rights.

The question presented in my case is also about you and other Liberians: whether the government of Liberia can enforce a statute, which on its face, purports to abrogate a right that is enumerated in the Constitution of the Republic of Liberia.

Poverty & Corruption undermine progress: National Orator declares

Written by Robert Clarke in Nimba & Vivian Gartyn Monday, 26 July 2010

Source: Star Radio Liberia

The National Orator of the 163rd Independence anniversary celebration has identified factors stalling Liberia’s progress and achievements.

Monsignor Father Robert Tikpor named poverty, dwindling away of natural resources and sectionalism.

The 84 year old catholic prelate said corruption in high places, selfishness, greed and lack of patriotism are causing poverty.

Father Tikpor observed people are continuing to put personal interest over national interest, recalling this led to serious division during the war years.

Speaking on the theme: “In National Unity We Will Stand”, Father Tikpor, urged all Liberians to work together to surgically cut-off what he calls cancerous tissues from our records.

He believes this can be achieved if we put the welfare of our country over our personal cravings and wants.

The orator also calls for the identification of a national language, and revision of the country’s motto to enhance unity.

He observed “the love of liberty brought us here” promotes sectionalism as there were people here when the settlers arrived.

It can be recalled, the 2008 Independence Day orator also call for action on the language and motto but no concrete step has been taken to address them.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf had assured, the Governance Commission would review them.

July 26 Orator: 'We Have Our National Reputation and Integrity to Restore'

07/28/2010 - Father Robert Tikpor, Orator, July 26, 2010 Independence Day, Liberia

Source: FrontPage Africa


INTRODUCTION

Your Excellency, Madam Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of the Republic of Liberia, Your Excellency Joseph N. Boakai, Vice President of the Republic and President of the Liberian Senate, The erudite and articulate Speaker, Honorable Alex Tyler and the Distinguished Members of the House of Representatives; The President Pro Tempore, Honorable Cletus Wortoson and the Illustrious Senators of the House of Senate; Your Honor Johnnie Lewis,

Chief Justice of the Republic and Associate Judges of the Supreme Court;

Your Excellency Archbishop George Antonysamy, the Papal Nuncio to Liberia; Prelates of the Christian Community, the Imams of the Muslim Community!

A Respectful and Special recognition to the Special Representative of Secretary General Ellen Magaret Løj and the men and women serving in the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) and her supporting Partners for Liberia’s civil war years’ ordeals .

The Doyen, His Excellence Mansour Abdallah, Ambassador Extraordinary & Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Lebanon and Doyen of the Diplomatic Corps. Honorable Ambassadors and Representatives of the different governments represented; God bless the lands and peoples you represent here! In your case all protocol is being ‘observed’ today.

I also want to recognize in a special way, the presence of the local and international journalists who have helped to keep the world informed of the happenings now in this once glorious land of liberty. I am not so sure whether it is still a glorious land of liberty.

Honored invitees and visitors, heartily welcome!

SALUTATION TO SANNIQUILLIE

Our revered and vigilant House of Chiefs who are the wise and trusted custodians of Liberia’s cultural and traditional heritage; reverential honor and respect to you and therefore we say: Gohn Kley Willie Tokpah. . ,AE mehn?... Kabua! M Dah, ZOTA Kaa Vueey!!!

Coma?

R.T. Lele Seh

In this one hundred and sixty-third Oration, I have the honor to choose for my topic:

IN NATIONAL UNITY, WE WILL STAND

From the very foundation of this nation in 1847 to this day, July 26, 2010, Liberia has been beset with a few but, absolutely indispensable missing links. Among which I list but three herein:

The first indispensable missing link, or bond for national unity – is the bond of blood. This bond of one blood we have been trying to attain in one hundred and sixty-three years, but it does not seem to be attainable. The second bond is that of one language. It has been working quite alright. The third bond is that of one Faith. I find this not necessary at all. In fact it is not working in many countries like The Middle Eastern countries. Why should we try it here?

There are other debilitating factors which are stalling our progress and achievements. I mention only three here:

Insidious poverty which has been exacerbated by selfishness and greed, unceasing corruption in high places and the lack of patriotism. Personal interest has been placed above a common national interest. as a result, when the test of a civil war came, we were a divided, tormented and easily turned apart people.

The second sickening factor was the dwindling away of our natural resources. At the height of Tubman’s administration I read somewhere, I think it was an account written by David Vinton, one of Liberia’s brilliant banking magnates, that Liberia’s per capital income was second only to that of Japan. In short, if Japan was the richest country in the world at the time, then Liberia came second. Not even the great U.S. A. could be placed over little Liberia. If you asked me where was the money coming from into our banks, the answer is this: Remember that our ore mines had been newly discovered virtually all over the country, at Bomi Hills, Nimba, Putu and elsewhere. Liberia was the leading exporter of natural Rubber as it had been during the Second World War? Where was all that money going? I hear you asking under your breath. Don’t ask me. I am not an economist. One thing I do know though, with the death of Tubman, Liberia was standing on the brink of the precipice of a civil war. I first pointed this out to our much revered President William V. S. Tubman when in 1964, I cited his Open Door Policy as a typical example. “This door, your Excellency, is so wide open that the merchants trading in Liberia leave nothing of the enormous profits they make here, but only the chaff. “The door is too wide open.” I concluded. I was branded with a typical Liberian adage: “These young men will teach their grandfathers how to suck eggs.” It was the first and last time I ever heard that adage.

The third sickening element to hinder progress and achievement was Sectionalism. It was shown in this form: A former classmate met a friend and gave him a firm handshake. When the one who received the handshake didn’t respond correctly, the giver of the handshake returned to his waiting “crowd-of-boys” and told them in a whisper: Don’t mind him; he is not one of US!! Since not every one in a country “can be one of us” before that country could survive, we have a long way to go as regards national unity. Sectionalism could still be among us in disguise. Until we can weed it out from the soil it could raise its hateful head now and again to divide us and thereby rule us with an iron fist. In order to avoid any future and similar factors we must surgically excise all these cancerous tissues from our records. How can we do this? That is the home-work I give to students of Liberian history, to ponder over until July 26, 2011.

We must imbue the present generation with nobler ideals of what makes a nation strong and united. For example:

By putting the welfare of our country over our personal cravings and wants; the country will emerge from the great sufferings of the fifteen-year civil war. It is then that we can say with the late President John F. Kennedy of America, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.” For example, Louis Arthur Grimes as Liberia’s Representative to the League of Nations in Geneva defended the Liberian government and gave reasons to that organization why Liberia should not be placed under a protectorate after Liberia was found guilty of some forms of slavery.

The thoughts of the sufferings of the Founding Fathers who had borne the yoke of slavery from their former masters, a yoke which made them so resolute in their desire to remain free and united. In Liberia, or even in pre-Liberian times, the main yoke of bondage on our people was slavery. Once they had gained independence, they had to work towards remaining united. They could cultivate the following values: truths, trust, sincerity, love, etc., that have made a nation like America so great.

To my mind, our people should cultivate the spirit of personal integrity as the most urgent human value. It will help the nation as strong pillars help to hold a multi-storey building. Furthermore, the institutions of learning, organizations like the Young Men Christian Organization and its female counterpart, the Boys Scout Movement and its female counterpart, and others should instill this value in the students and young people so as to prepare them for a better Liberia which would be a Land of peace, truthfulness, justice, and equality.

These omens and ideals are for all of us to critically study. Let us now turn our attention to the task that I have decided to undertake in this Oration. That is, to inform us of the issue of Ethnicity and Sectionalism.

A SILENT TRUMPET

To the founding Fathers who felt it was a national language or and a Constitution, soon began to teach the native children happily brought to them for adoption, a common language most spoken world-wide. They arrived here with that first Socio-chemical element, a national language, English, as was spoken by their former masters in America. Today we hear that English is spoken and sought after as the second language of every nation under the sun. But what the settlers did not know, but what the natives appreciated the most was not so much the education but Christian civilization they brought with them.

The Founding Fathers soon wrote the Constitution which they felt was the second missing link to those whose current “war-trumpet” is Ethnicity and Sectionalism. Now take a breath, let us pause for a few questions and answer these questions:

Who was the first to open this floodgate of multi-Ethnicity or Sectionalism in Liberia since the days of J.J. Roberts and E.J. Roye?

Was it the Constitution or the citizens who are enjoying the benefits of that Constitution?

Let me read to you that part of the Constitution of 1847 which is causing the consternation at the Immigration Bureaus and now extending even up to the House of the Senate and that of the Representatives.

From the Constitution of 1847, I read: “The great object for forming these colonies being to provide a home for the dispersed and oppressed children of Africa, and to regenerate and enlighten this benighted Continent, none but persons of color shall be admitted to citizenship in this Republic.”Cfr. Charles Henry Huberich, The Political and Legislative History of Liberia, Vol. II (New York: Central Book Company, Inc., 1947), p. 863.)

Now, I am not a lawyer. Furthermore, I stand corrected. It seems to me that these texts were written at a particular time, and referred to the people of that time, 163 years ago. In the 1960s, the former Colonial oppressors and repressors in Guinea, and Ivory Coast have granted those countries their freedom to govern themselves. But nationals from some neighboring countries still come, continuously pouring into Liberia’s porous borders. And, within a week or two, they are in Monrovia. Within another week or two, they have obtained a brand new Liberian Passport. Do you think I am joking?

Ask the appropriate officials at the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization and they will tell you how many spurious Liberian Passport holders they have detained here in the last twelve months.

I met one in South Africa recently at the Chancellery of the Liberian Embassy. He had come for a sort of official confirmation from the Consulate Officer, Mr. Ben Sie-Too Collins in Pretoria. He wanted to continue on his way elsewhere as a Liberian. After some fifty years after independence, foreigners are continuously pouring into our long cheated country. Should we not cry “Foul”?

At their July 16th 1959, Sanniquellie meeting, Tubman cautioned prudence over the readjustment of colonial boundaries, and this issue was placed on the shelf. It was this kind of rankling over wasted palm-oil that Tubman foresaw.

Put the case: If a complainer’s ethnic roots could be traced back to Guinea, for example, before that country’s independence, then he should be considered a non-Liberian because the Constitution granted him the permission of coming to Liberia as a place of refuge. Shouldn’t the Attorney-General tell the lawyer of that Liberian Passport holder, no matter how brilliant this lawyer might be, that the burden of proof lies squarely in his client’s court?

I recently presented my Passport to an immigration officer at Johannesburg International Airport. The man turned over my document and without looking up, he said hello! “Howdu yah” I answered. “You are a Liberian, for true. I was in Liberia before.” He handed me my precious traveling document.

THE CONSTITUTION vis-à-vis Citizenship

To those who are protesting their rights as given by the Constitution, let’s look at the Constitution together again. “The object of forming these colonies being to provide a home for the dispersed and oppressed children of Africa, and to regenerate and enlighten this benighted Continent, none but Negroes or persons of Negro descent shall be eligible to citizenship in this Republic.” (Article V, Section 18. Amended 1907)

Next to that I further read from Chapter 4, Art. 27 of the Constitution of 1986:

All persons who, on the coming into force of this Constitution were lawfully citizens of Liberia shall continue to be Liberian citizens.

In order to preserve, foster and maintain the positive Liberian culture, values and character, only persons who are Negroes or of Negro descent shall qualify by birth or by naturalization to be citizens of Liberia.

The Legislature shall, adhering to the above standard, prescribe such other qualification criteria for and the procedures by which naturalization may be obtained.

Article 52 of the Constitution of 1986 states, “No person shall be eligible to hold the office of President or vice-president, unless:

A natural born Liberian citizen of not less than thirty-five years of age.

The owner of unencumbered real property valued at not less than twenty-five thousands, and
Resident in the republic ten years prior to his election, provided that the president and the vice-president shall not come from the same County.

Note two points:

What one is to be and do to become a citizen?

What one is to be before he can become the President of this Republic?

CITIZENSHIP

In the days of Tubman, who came to claim “his rights” to citizenship or to the presidency? In the days of Tolbert no one came up. In the days of Samuel Kanyan Doe, no one came up to make such a claim. When Charles Taylor occupied the Presidential Chair at the Mansion no one dared stir up the dust on Broad Street when his motorcade was passing by.

Professor Joseph Saye Guannu in his Civics for Liberian Schools tells us that one can become a citizen of a country sub sole or sub sanguine. E.g. A child born in Freetown could claim Sierra Leonean citizenship sub sole, that is born under the sun; but a Liberian citizenship sub sanguine, that is born of blood. From the Latin roots it all boils down to this: The child is only a Sierra Leonean citizen sub sole, meaning that he was born in Sierra Leone where his Liberian parents were residing as non-citizens (i.e. Liberian citizens who have never had any reasons to renounce or change their country of birth sub sanguine). The child’s claim could be substantiated by the Immigration officer who knows these civic facts in order to ease the child’s fears, or the parents’ uncertainty.


When the Founding Fathers had tested all they knew and that a national language does serve as the first missing link, they then tried Blood Relationship. That too was found to be one of several missing links. If every Liberian could say I love this man or woman because they are my blood-brother and blood-sister, these then would be the missing and ever illusive links. That was why Edward Blyden’s proposal to the settlers was a wise, far-sighted one, to inter-marry with their neighboring African tribes in order to secure their survival. This was in 1850 when he joined the Settler community in Lower Buchanan, Grand Bassa County.

Liberian citizenry could be slowly, but permanently, integrated and assimilated by marriage with the surrounding tribes. On the contrary, the elite ruling mulatto group subsequently charged Blyden with being a womanizer and drove him away to Sierra Leone where he took refuge.

Perhaps what Blyden didn’t know was what the “Patriotic” Founding Fathers had secretly written behind the Presidential chair at the Mansion: Do not forget the children of the Pioneers! Now please tell me, with that obvious maxim of Sectionalism, who was the first to promote and encourage disunity in Liberia, the Pioneers or the Natives?

Madam President, I chose for this oration whatever topic was most urgent on the Liberian scene. From what one hears most frequently on the world’s radio and newspaper media, Ethnicity seems to head the list.

ETHNICITY – IT’S ROOTS

Ethnicity has been a source of division that we can trace as far back as the days of Joseph and his brothers. We read from Genesis 37:1- 28 of the plot to kill Joseph. It was one of his brothers, Reuben, in trying to save him from death, asked that Joseph be sold to some Ishmaelite traders who were traveling to Egypt.

We know from the readings in World History that there have been clashes between members of the same tribes, and between tribes. So it is not a strange phenomenon that ethnicity had been here from time immemorial.

INTER-TRIBAL WARS IN LIBERIA BEFORE 1847

In our own country, before the settlers came to found Liberia, there were frequent intertribal wars; especially, during the two hundred years (1619 – 1816) when slaves were captured, collected, from among the tribes fighting each other. Before slavery began, these intertribal wars were fought over land, wealth, and other matters that were offensive to one or the other tribe. For example, there was a war between the Bassas and Kpelles. How do we know about these wars? From maxims often repeated by the Bassas like “Glewetae Dju Dje a Kpah Kpeletoh”, and again


“Zainkpa da mehn Kpeleh da Coatin Kpo.”

We wouldn’t have known about these wars but for the maxims that have come down to us. In the first maxim, the Bassas are saying that Glewetae was a little man who was so small in body that the children saw and thought that he was one of them. So they invited him to join them and go against the Kpelle, but he displayed such warlike deeds that his deeds were cited for generations yet unborn to emulate. His heroic feats became themes for a ballad to him since then.

In the second maxim, “Zainkpa is dead and so the Kpelle man has worn a coat,” Zainkpa was a Kpelle man who was captured by the Bassa warriors and he was disowned by his own kinsmen. But the Bassas honored him as brave a captive. Therefore they kept him. But in order to retaliate against his own people, Zainkpa swore to his ancestral spirits that any Kpelle man who ever crossed his path would be captured and sold into slavery. From Zainkpa’s death, this ballad was sung and began to spread far and wide among the Bassa people.

BATTLE OF FORT HILL, DEC. 1, 1822

These intertribal wars were not limited to tribes and tribes. When the Settlers came, there were wars between them and some ethnic groups. For instance, a battle was fought between the combined forces of the Dey, Vai, and Mamban Bassa ethnic groups and the Settlers at Fort Hill on December 1, 1822. In that battle, Matilda Newport is alleged to have been the heroine, and until sometimes very lately did her alleged exploits have come to be questioned by some Liberian historians. Mind you, those native warriors were imbued with the mystic idea that no bullet or canon fire could put them to flight when they had taken a magic portion in their blood. This conviction had come down to our times as we heard amongst most of the fighters who partook in our Civil War for which, you will recall Doe is said to have sent some of his fighters to the practitioners of this “bullet proof” magic.

BATTLES BETWEEN THE GREBOES AND SETTLERS

There was a war between the Grebos and the Settlers in Maryland County in the early 1900s. Very little is known about the fighting between the Grebo and Settler community in Maryland County.

There was a Kroo war declared on the Settlers in 1915 – 1918 called the Sasstown War. One Juah Nimely was the leader of that war. Eventually, he was captured and brought to Monrovia. He was never allowed thereafter to return to his native Sasstown.

The February 26 incident in Lofa County in which little Korpu Kamara was killed, and which sparked into ethnic clashes between members of the Lorma tribe and their counterpart, the Mandingo tribe is another example.

These points are for us to be aware that there were wars between the indigenous inhabitants even before this nation was established in 1847, and between them and the settlers.

There remains, however, another evil conduct outside of Ethnicity of which I have decided to mention that continues to besmear the national character. It is this ritualistic killing of innocent children who will disappear from the watchful eyes of their parents and after sad search for them, their lifeless bodies are discovered with the private organs removed. We hear frequently about these happenings but there have been no reports made by government as to what has been done to the perpetrators of these heinous acts. Liberians need to be reminded that it was these very acts that caused the hangings of prominent citizens in Harper City in 1979.

ANOTHER LOOK AT ETHNICITY

Ethnicity and Sectionalism are necessary ingredients of all governments in the world today. For example, in the British Parliament, you have the Scots, the Welsh, and the Irish who have been emphasizing that their ethnic origins should be pointed out and maintained always. This has been accepted by the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Moreover, this has enabled the British Parliament to overcome some of the difficulties of modern times. In the American Congress, there are representatives of ethnic groups, e.g., the African-American Caucus.

In our own country, the presence of Ethnicity is not far to fetch. The Kru, Bassa, and Grebo tribes who live along the Atlantic seaboard are well known for their seamanship. As a result, the first European ships to visit our coast got their seamen from these ethnic groups.

The Krahn, Lorma, and the other hinterland tribes are well known for their militant spirit. For example, it was a Lorma man who led the Liberian Contingent that was sent by President Tubman to the Belgium Congo during the Katanga War. Up to the time of President Samuel Doe, these interior tribes form the bulwark of the infantry regiments in the Liberian Army. Now, we hear of an ethnic balance being established in the new Liberian Army so as to avoid any ethnic tension that had existed before and had been a cause of our civil war.

The Kpelles are known for their hard working capabilities.

The Vais are known for their intellectual capabilities from the very beginning of the nation because they had invented a script unknown anywhere else in the world. This script was used in the Second World War by the Germans, and nobody could easily decipher it.

Every ethnic group has its capabilities that could be useful to this country. What is left for the Liberian government to do is to find out what these capabilities are and put them to use. The government is to direct these capabilities into their proper channels and put into place mechanisms which will stop anyone from amalgamating them with bad morals.

Recommendations

I recommend that the President appoint a standing committee. It would carefully examine any ethnic clashes that would tend to suggest that they are religious confrontations. It is left with us to use ethnicity when it crops up in governmental circles. When such a committee selected to probe an incident finds out what the truth is, the committee must make its findings known to the public. It would be dangerous that the findings are not reported in the print or electronic media so that what went wrong in the case of the little eleventh grader, Korpu Kamara’s death, would not be repeated.

In the case of the eruption that went on in Monrovia in 2004 where one community versus another community clashed, some religious places of worship were burnt down and vandalized. Similar publications must be done as pertain to findings from committees sent to investigate the mayhem so that the government will not be blamed for the accumulation of grievances incurred by opposing parties.

I am very concerned about the reporting of these findings, because if not made known through journals and radio, they may accumulate into ‘justice delayed is justice denied.’ The wrongdoers must be brought to justice. Let us be aware that innocent people lost their lives. These precious lives must be accounted for by responsible government. Failure to bring the truth out and to bring the guilty to justice would make us return to the same section of the circle that once brought us to our bloody Civil War.


INTER-FAITH MEDIATION IN LIBERIA

For its efforts in fostering in Christian – Muslim ties in Liberia in which the leaders of the Liberian Council of Churches and the National Muslim Council of Liberia had merged the two religious groups into one powerful body to address the Samuel K. Doe’s Government which tended to ignore either of these two dominant religions in the country. When Archbishop Desmond Tutu heard about this novel movement from all Africa, he visited Liberia and awarded his United States $30,000.00 prize to the merged Council.

Once Liberia had achieved this recognition from a religious leader of the caliber of Archbishop Tutu, the country now goes on to make progress. Archbishop Michael Francis, who led this merger, received President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s warmest congratulations on the day of her inauguration.

In this context, I recommend that religious conflicts should not be mixed with ethnic tensions. “The death of student, Korpu Kamara, in Konia Village near Lofa’s provincial capital of Voinjama which sparked clashes in which churches and mosques were destroyed as earlier reports suggested that the violence was a result of religious tension between Christians and Muslims. But eyewitness, the Liberian Government, and the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) have since dismissed the reports as false and attributed them to ethnic tension between the Lormas and the Mandingoes in that part of the country.” Cfr. (www.frontpageafrica.com “What Went Wrong?” March 3, 2010)

For the one hundred and sixty-third anniversary of our national existence, there has been no conflict arising between the Christian community and the Muslim community. It seems that there are individuals or people who want to create an issue that was non-existent for these numbers of years. The people who are advocating these distortions must have some other vested interests, a hidden agendum elsewhere and I am begging them to keep these far-fetched thoughts away from these shores, from Liberia the home of all the oppressed children of the Negro race wherever they may be.

The government must take note not to be dragged into these so-called religious wars. The government must carefully investigate, analyze, and bring to justice anyone who is caught because we don’t want any religious fundamentalism here. The government should stay clear from taking sides which would only add more fuel to the situation.

CONCLUSION

To Liberians upset about ethnicity, I say be calm. It is not multiplicity of ethnic sources which we want to avert. It was these millions of ethnic immigrants that have enriched continental America. The Founding, Pioneering Fathers knew this. That was the reason why their Constitution left the gates wide open that if some other ethnic groups coming to Liberia were of different faith, they would be free to practice their religion and live freely. Unity is the key for a successful Liberia. Let us put aside political, social, and religious biases and hold together so that we can lift this nation to higher heights.

We could learn from the United States of America which has managed to overcome ethnic barriers and has become a great nation.

Whereas Liberia’s own ethnicity was narrowly limited to the few oppressed and depressed children of the Negro race, why couldn’t Liberia welcome them to increase and enrich our population?

From the foregoing points, I have critically and thoroughly reviewed the nation’s records up to 2010. Have we made any progress, fast or retarded? Are Liberians a bit happier or still frustrated and melancholy? I have given you reasons for which I think Liberians are surely emerging from a nightmare of miseries.

We have our national reputation and integrity to restore, our economy to strengthen and stabilize, and finally our moral consciences to reexamine and reform. Corruption, like an unwanted weed, must be uprooted out this country. Or it might cover the whole land.

I beg to leave and step down from this podium. I think my awesome duty is performed, and my mission is accomplished.

May the God of the founders of the Republic who sustained Liberia these turbulent 163 years when we saw better days as well as bad times, continue to sustain us all in this beautiful nation! May we live together as brothers and sisters in peace!

God bless you, Madame President! God bless our friends and august visitors, may He bless the people of Liberia and save the State!

Monday, July 26, 2010

Brumskine: Liberians Should be Allowed to Look to a Better Future

07/28/2010 - 163rd INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY MESSAGE By Charles Walker Brumskine

Source: Frontpage Africa


On behalf of Liberty Party, and Mrs. Brumskine and myself, I wish the people of Liberia, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and officials of her Government, the Speaker, President Pro Tempore and Members of the Legislature, the Chief Justice, Associate Justices, and Members of the Judiciary, a Happy July 26.

This is that time of the year when all Liberians should come together to celebrate the independence anniversary of our nation. A time when we, the government and opposition political parties, realize that it takes the collective effort of all to build our nation, committing ourselves to never again allow the all-powerful presidency and a one-party state, ensuring that the opposition remains strong, but also faithful to the Constitution of Liberia. There is no better time for all of us to awaken to the fact that we are in this boat together.

With the invaluable assistance of our friends and development partners of the international community, the Sirleaf Government marks the celebration of Liberia’s 163rd Independence Anniversary with the dedication of public projects such as buildings on the Fendell Campus of the University of Liberia and Liberia’s largest hospital in Tapita, Nimba County, among others. We join the government and people of Liberia in thanking the Chinese Government for their investment in the infrastructure of Liberia.

But as we celebrate our independence, we are continuously reminded that the salient question that Liberia is yet to address is, “Are we making progress toward sustaining the peace?” We have to reconcile our people, reform our institutions and the way we “do business”, and recover some of our national values that have been lost over the years. We must grow our economy in a way that empowers the people of Liberia, creating wealth instead of simply striving to reduce poverty.

Liberians should be allowed to look to a better future, where the infrastructure we build and rebuild today would not again be destroyed tomorrow. We must celebrate not only the number of years of our existence, but also our hope of a different and better tomorrow. As sad as our past may have been, especially our recent history, I still believe in Liberia, knowing that together we can do better. I, therefore, ask that all Liberians commit anew to the founding ideals of our country—establishing justice, ensuring domestic peace, and promoting the general welfare of all Liberians.

We can ill-afford to again evolve a society premised upon exclusion, cronyism, and injustice, accentuated by the divide between the haves and haves-not. Liberia cannot continue to celebrate the ills of the past—corruption in high places and indifference to the plight of other Liberians.

For example, while the government is celebrating the anniversary of the birth of our nation, Commissioners of the Truth & Reconciliation Commission (TRC) must miss out on the celebration because the government has refused to pay their salaries and benefits, which are long overdue. Teachers have been constrained to stage a peaceful demonstration in demand of their salaries, hoping that their families would also be able to join in the celebration. How many more Liberians will not be celebrating this July 26, because the government does not like what they have said, or because, as the teachers, they are not on government’s priority list?

It has been said that, “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember their past are condemned to repeat their mistakes.”

Certainly, we can build a better nation, as we renew the aspirations of every man and woman, boy and girl. But all we do depends on Liberians being reconciled. And national reconciliation cannot be attained without justice. Reconciliation follows justice, and precedes lasting peace!

We, therefore, celebrate with those Liberians who insist that we begin our 164th year of existence with a resolve to embrace those principles that will ensure justice, reconciliation, national healing, and lasting peace.

May God bless the Republic and save the people. I thank you!


Charles W. Brumskine, Esq.

‘BURY CORRUPTION, HEADS AND TOES’: Orator Identifies Missing Links In Liberia

07/28/2010 - By: Nat Bayjay


UNITY CALL: "For a nation to be united, it must have a language which all the of its different sectors must speak”, he said, continuing, “Because if they speak that language anywhere in the world, they will be hearing the Liberian language”

Father Robert Tikpor, Orator, July 26 Independence Day, 2010

Sanniqullie, Nimba County -
Even the National Orator for Monday’s National Independence Day could not deliver Liberia’s 163 Independence Oration without calling on the government to bury what has proven to be the most challenging task it has been faced with since its inception a little over four years ago: corruption.

Delivering for the second time in his life the country’s Independence Day Oration in the historic town of Sanniquellie, Nimba County, the legionary Liberian Catholic prelate Monsignor Dr. Robert Tikpor announced, “I am warning this nation, to kick away corruption, bury it head and foot in the grave, stop corruption otherwise it will raise its ugly head very loud again, we are talking about corruption in high places, it will corruption in the heavens, stop it now, it is eating up the government’s energy, please stop it catch what you can work for”, as he called on the Unity Party (UP) led-government to, in his words, bury the virus heads and toes.

Speaking on a selected theme “In National Unity, we will stand”, Father Tikpor, known in Liberia for his fearless posture on issues of national concerns, warned that unless the Government buries the deadly corruption virus that is currently eating the energy of the government, all else achieved will go down the drain.

ON CITIZENSHIP AND NEGROES
In order to preserve, foster and maintain the positive Liberian culture, values and character, only persons who are Negroes or of Negro descent shall qualify by birth or by naturalization to be citizens of Liberia. The Legislature shall, adhering to the above standard, prescribe such other qualification criteria for and the procedures by which naturalization may be obtained.

Issues of corruption continue to confront President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf’s government despite affords in the setting and funding of some anti-corruption agencies such as the Liberia Anti-Corruption Commission (LACC) and the European Union funded General Auditing Commission (GAC) which has already produced over 30 audit reports suggesting massive corruption.

The Catholic father who turns 84 in September of this year reminded the government that corruption was dangerous and called on public officials to catch what they work for.

Dr. Tikpor who delivered the 1997 Independence Day Oration at the request of then Chair of one of Liberia’s several transitional governments, Ruth Sando Perry, at the time offered similar strong warring to the audience in presence of former Liberian President Charles Taylor who was President-elect when he said, “If you don’t change the course of history of this country, those who are on board with you in the ship that carried Liberia, they are going to tie you up and dump you where the shark’s would be waiting.”

Tikpor told FrontPageAfrica last week that that aspect of the 1997 speech seriously angered then President-elect Charles Taylor at the time which prompted him to pass a note through his foreign Minister for him, Father Tikpor, to stop speaking though he requested to read the remaining text.

Thirteen years on, Father Tikpor still maintains his stance on issues with an angry voice during Monday’s celebration, warning the nation that corruption was eating the fabric of the society, though the government has in recent times said corruption is being magnified in the country and government was taking serious steps to end the pandemic which it has failed in the meantime to implement a single audit report detailing flagrant violations of acceptable financial process on the part of public officials.

The clergyman’s call for a clamp down on corruption in the presence of public officials who jam-packed the Administration Building in the host city of Sannniquellie in the midst of the heads of foreign diplomatic missions sent a strong warning down their nerves though they managed applause upon Father Tikpor’s pronouncement.

Sanniquellie, the provincial capital of Nimba County, served as host to Liberia’s 163rd Independence Day in a colorful event that was preceded by several other events heading to Monday’s main event including several dedication ceremonies.

Liberia’s Missing Links

CITIZENSHIP UNDER RULERS
"In the days of Tubman, who came to claim “his rights” to citizenship or to the presidency? In the days of Tolbert no one came up. In the days of Samuel Kanyan Doe, no one came up to make such a claim. When Charles Taylor occupied the Presidential Chair at the Mansion no one dared stir up the dust on Broad Street when his motorcade was passing by."

The fearless and outspoken clergyman who expressed complete dissatisfaction at the appalling absence of his fellow clergyman at such a national event identified what he termed as three missing links that have kept Africa’s first independent nation backward and led the country to the ills and misfortunate it have befallen the nation.

Naming them the absence of blood relationship, language and religion or common faith, the National Orator said the absence of the elements have been the reason for the country’s current state.

Tikpor, touching on blood relationship, explained that those who came from across the Atlantic Ocean refuse initially to have blood relationship with others they met in the country through inter-marriage.

Tikpor: “I told you another instrument of national unity is blood relationship. We try at the instigation of an earlier settler Edward Wilmot Blyden who came to Liberia in 1850 and the first place Blyden settled was in Buchanan my home town, and then he toured the settler community that he met there and told the community ‘These tribal people we met here, we have to inter-marry them so that we will have common blood strain, relation by blood, those of us who are just coming, we will only survive in this country if we inter-marry with the tribal women.”

“For a nation to be united, it must have a language which all the of its different sectors must speak”, he said, continuing, “Because if they speak that language anywhere in the world, they will be hearing the Liberian language”

He blamed the settlers for the introduction of the English language which is spoken in all parts of the world.

“Now when the pioneer fathers came to this land, they brought that language with them, which was spoken in the greater part of the world, most part of Africa, in India and the largest democracy in the world, they brought that language and our and when I say our people, I am saying those who the love of liberty met here’, the Catholic Church strongman told the gathering.

The catholic prelate said sectarianism still exists in Liberia, though he said it might be in disguise.
The 163rd independence orator named common religion as one of the factors that supports national unity but said that aspect does not matter at this time because according to him even in countries where there one religion, troubles still exist there, citing instances in the Middle East where almost 100 per cent of Islamic religion exist but continues to see multiples of suicide bombing daily in that part of the world.

Tikpor called on Liberians to continue to live in harmony with their various religious beliefs and avoid the problems around the world.

Knight Distinction Honor Bestowed On National Orator
Tikpor, after his oration, became the proud recipient of the ‘Knight Great Band in the Humane Order of African Redemption’, bestowed upon him by President Sirleaf.

Be United Despite Land Disputes
President Sirleaf, in her remarks, could not pretend on the host county’s most troubling effect as she used the occasion to call on the citizens of Nimba to be united in the midst of county’s engulfed land disputes.

While commending them for turning out in mass to ensure the successful staging of the celebrations in their county, she cautioned them that unless peace reigns from their hearts the recently submitted Land Commission Report will be of no significance.

The issue of land disputes became a post-war crisis in Liberia with host Nimba being the center of it, causing several misunderstandings that have led to fears of a potential.

President Sirleaf gave words of encouragement to Nambians that with the civil war being fought in the country over the last decade, Liberia has shown to the world that it will still rise up from its post- war status to a developing nation among the comity of nations.

She added: “I call on all Liberians backward never and forward ever.”

In the build-up to the celebrations in Nimba, Liberia’s 163rd Independence could go down the country’s historical achieve as probably the best in recent years of receiving tangible independence day gifts for it was bolstered by a triple package of landmark projects from its Chinese counterparts.

A US$10 million modern hospital dedicated over the weekend in the Lower Nimba County town of Tappita sealed a triple People’s Republic of China’s Independence Day gifts to the continent’s oldest declared republic, following earlier dedications of first the modern University of Liberia’s Fendell Campus in Careysburg outside Monrovia and another modern agricultural project in the Central for Agricultural Research Institute (CARI) outside Bong County’s provincial capital of Gbarnga-all done in the space of four days and two days to the celebration of the Independence Day.

All Heads Not Equal: Poor July 26 Celebration In Monrovia

07/28/2010 - By Precious S. Seboe
Source: FrontPage Africa

Despite the fact that the popular Redlight, Duala, and Waterside markets were crowded as usual, but the merchants and peddlers were more than those wanting to buy and yet among the purchasers many where just there to solicit prices of things.

In observance of Liberia’s one hundred and sixty three years of independence which was celebrated in Nimba County this year, little was seen in the Country’s capital City of Monrovia and its environs to mark the celebration. The red, white, and blue flags was sold everywhere but the usual Red, White, and Blue painting and decoration of streets in the center and around the city was visibly missing this year.

Even though the capitol hill square hosting the Capital Building office of the Legislature , The famous Executive Mansion yet to be renovation after fire destruction , The Temple of Justice, and The Foreign Ministry where the President office now reside, are smartly decorated while other area could barely give one the sense of the July 26, 2010 festivity.

John Andrews an artificial hair dealer in the well-known Waterside market reveal that there we though are in flock of customers in his shop but few were buying as compare to those only wanting to know the price.

Despite the fact that the popular Redlight, Duala, and Waterside markets were crowded as usual, but the merchants and peddlers were more than those wanting to buy and yet among the purchasers many where just there to solicit prices of things.

There were traffic in and around the city but not those ones seen when there is high momentum for a celebration, from taxi drivers to petit traders and beautician were all complaining of lack of customers.

“I have been driving in this country for years and has seen many 26s from President Samuel Doe to Charles Taylor and now Madam Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf but this 26 not many passengers are in the streets and most of all to get a charter is not easy” taxi driver Mohammed said.

The taxi driver who appears to be in his fifties said the force for this July 26 is not high among Liberian.

John Andrews an artificial hair dealer in the well-known Waterside market reveal that there we though are in flock of customers in his shop but few were buying as compare to those only wanting to know the price. "This is sad for me looking at the kind of investment I made for this 26 celebration. Many are just asking the price while just few are buying, this makes me feel sick” Mr. Andrews said.

Similarly, Betty Nagba, a beautician who braids hair in Waterside market said she been plaiting hair since 1984 when she was a school going girl and usually during independence day celebration there are numerous of customers but this year things are on a slow paste.

“The business is hard this year oh, before the people use to start coming from the 15 of July many in cars and this ground use be jam-pack with customers but this year most of our customers are complaining about civil servant not being paid”, Betty stated in sad manner.

In the Duala market, a group of petit traders jeer at a lady who was continually inquiring the prices of things from one market table and wheel barrel to another “ if you not get money go home” they were heard saying.

And the lady feeling so ashamed of the situation said “I just want know the price I will come back to buy so you people should not boo at me my husband get his check and when he cash it I will bring the children,” but even with the noise was still high over her head.

Well the lady hopes may be achieved as radio stations in the city had an announcement from The Finance Ministry on air on Sunday telling civil servant that the ECObank will be open till 4:00 pm therefore they are encourage to go and cash their checks.

So the markets in and around Monrovia expected to be full on the Monday morning of July 26, 2010 not just with dealers and price solicitors but also with purchasers as well but one things is sure is that prices will double.

Even if prices double or city are not painted one thing is certain

Committee Making Progress in Unraveling Bogus Concession Deal

07/26/2010 - Update on the Investigation into the Trade of Carbon Credits involving a UK Company, Carbon Harvesting Corporation and the Forestry Development Authority

Source: FrontPage Africa

Monrovia –

In June 2010 the President of the Republic of Liberia, her Excellency Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf set up a three-member Committee to investigate a proposed Carbon Concession agreement between a UK Company, Carbon Harvesting Corporation, initiated and the Forestry Development Authority. The committee members include Ms. Rose Stryker of the Ministry of Justice, Mr. William N. Massaquoi, a local Development Expert and myself, Cllr. T. Negbalee Warner as Chair.

The President’s communication to the Committee suggested that certain procedural requirements relative to the granting of such concession might not have been followed. For example, the proposal was recommended to the Inter-ministerial committee without any open competitive bidding process. The President expressed concern that the FDA and other relevant government agencies may have violated the PPCC Act.

The Committee was therefore mandated to investigate this issue with a particular emphasis on:

Determining whether specific procedures of the PPCC Act were duly followed in the conduct of this concession agreement.

Determining the basis upon which the deal was structured and the reasons for single sourcing this proposed concession to Carbon Harvesting Corporation.

Determining whether any act of impropriety, such as corruption, conflict of Interest; bribery or any form of irregular payment was made directly or indirectly to any official of FDA, members of the inter-ministerial concessions committee, the Board of Directors of FDA or any official of Government.

Accordingly, the committee has since started a rigorous review of all procedures and circumstances surrounding the awarding of the proposed Carbon Credit Concession, including allegations of bribery and other improprieties.

I am pleased to report that since the committee started its work, we have made tremendous progress. Specifically, the committee has achieved the following results:

The committee has established contacts with nearly all persons involved with the award and negotiation of the proposed Concession;

The Committee has interviewed several individuals within various government institutions including the Forestry Development Authority, the Liberian Senate, the Public Procurement and Concession Commission (PPCC), the National Investment Commission (NIC), and other persons;

The committee has interviewed several ex-officials of the FDA including the former GEMAP Comptroller that worked with FDA spanning the period during which this concession negotiation was taking place.

The committee has also interviewed or received information and documents from several local and international civil society organizations , which has strengthened the committee’s understanding of the Carbon industry and the settings within which the subject Concession was awarded and negotiated.

The Committee wants to assure the public that it is making steady progress in unraveling this case. But the committee would also like to inform the public that due to the complicated and complex nature of this case, there are still some serious challenges that the committee has to overcome. For example, certain key individuals implicated in this deal, who apparently hold significant information, are currently out of the country. The committed has established contacts with these key individuals and is making all efforts to receive their statement and have same considered and reflected in its final report. Certainly, this effort cannot be for an indefinite period.

The Committee believes that much work has been done, and that its investigation is likely to be concluded by the end of August 2010.

Finally, the committee regrets that it is not in the position to relate any specific details of this ongoing investigation but assures the public that as soon as the investigation is complete a full and comprehensive report will be given to the Public.

The Committee members join me in thanking the President and the Liberian people for reposing this confidence in us, and we hope we can justify this confidence by conducting a fair and an impartial investigation.

China Strikes Again: New Tappita Hospital Triples ‘Independence’ Gifts To Liberia

07/25/2010 - Nat Bayjay

Source: FrontPage Africa


THIRD TIME CHARM: This US$10 million modern hospital dedicated over the weekend in the Lower Nimba County town of Tappita added to the People’s Republic of China’s Independence Day gifts following earlier dedications of first the modern University of Liberia’s Fendell Campus in Careysburg outside Monrovia and another modern agricultural project in the Center for Agricultural Research Institute (CARI) outside Bong County’s provincial capital of Gbarnga-all done in the space of four days and two days to the celebration of the Independence Day.
Tappita, Nimba County-

Liberia’s 163rd Independence could go down the country’s historical archive as probably the best in recent years in terms of the number of tangible independence day gifts bolstered by a triple package of landmark projects from the Chinese government.

Covering an area of 22,540 square meters with a total floor space of 7,200 square meters, the newly dedicated hospital is expected to serve as a major relief not only for the county but also for the country’s entire southeastern region whose counties of Grand Gedeh, River Gee, Grand Kru, Maryland and Sinoe have no referral hospital.

A US$10 million modern hospital dedicated over the weekend in the Lower Nimba County town of Tappita added to the People’s Republic of China’s Independence Day gifts following earlier dedications of first the modern University of Liberia’s Fendell Campus in Careysburg outside Monrovia and another modern agricultural project in the Center for Agricultural Research Institute (CARI) outside Bong County’s provincial capital of Gbarnga-all done in the space of four days and two days to the celebration of the Independence Day.

Characterized by jubilations and cheers as thousands of Nimbaians from all parts of the county converged on Tappita coupled with high ranking government officials led by President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and her foreign diplomats spearheaded by Chinese Ambassador Zhou Yuxiao, the newly constructed gigantic Tappita Referral Hospital was finally turned over by the Chinese Government to the Liberian Government in what Chinese Ambassador said was his country’s gift to the people of Liberia as they celebrate their Independence Day.

Even the late arrival of the President and her entourage two hours and 45 minutes behind the scheduled 4p.m,,the dedicatory ceremony was still an elaborate and colorful one at a well attended event whose significance will come to realization in about a month’s time when the hospital will officially be opened for services.

Covering an area of 22,540 square meters with a total floor space of 7,200 square meters, the newly dedicated hospital is expected to serve as a major relief not only for the county but also for the country’s entire southeastern region whose counties of Grand Gedeh, River Gee, Grand Kru, Maryland and Sinoe have no referral hospital.

NO STRINGS ATTACHED

“Though my country is not a rich country, but it is good for poor country to help one another so that we can all one day be developed”.

Chinese Ambassador Zhou Yuxiao
The beautiful hospital which greets visitors to Tappita for its ideal location at the entrance of the town consists of an outpatient department (OPD) building, an in-patient building that contains 100 sickbeds, an imaging and radiology building and an administrative building which are all linked together by corridors in addition to its auxiliary facilities that include six apartments for doctors, a 500KVA twin-generator house, a water pumping house, sewerage and waste treatment workshops, maintenance rooms, mortuary among others.

Equipped with 171 different kinds of modern medical equipments including the country’s first and only CT scanner and a color ultrasound system, an ambulance including others, the construction of the modern health facilities took only 16 months to be completed with construction work that began in March of last year.

No Strings Attached

Presenting the keys to the hospital, Chinese Ambassador Yuxiao was quick to clarify that his country’s immense contributions to war-ravaged Liberia has no other political implications or hidden agenda.

“Though my country is not a rich country, but it is good for poor country to help one another so that we can all one day be developed”, he said as he gave a special statement during the evening ceremony.

Since the inception of the post-war government in 2006, China’s aid to the post-war country has been described by many observers as ‘incredibly amazing’, particularly as it overtook diplomatic ties from rival Taiwan, prompting room for political suspicions and a possible ‘under-sleeve’ ambition.

‘Fulfilled Promise’
A smiling and grateful President Sirleaf wasted no time in using the event to boast of fulfilling her 2005 campaign promise to citizens of the county who, according to her, she promised to revamp their hospital.

“Now instead of revamping the hospital, we have constructed a brand new one”, Sirleaf stated amidst cheers.

The Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Health in whose electoral constituency the hospital is coincidentally built, Representative Edwin P. Gaye, described the hospital as a ‘great gift’ for the people of Nimba County.

While expressing appreciation for the modern health facilities, the City Major of Tappita recommended that the old hospital structure be used for the training of medical staffs.

Residents’ Applaud New Hospital

A lot of residents and citizens of the county told FrontPageAfrica of their excitement for the construction of the hospital in that part of the country.

John D. Wehyee, a resident of Tappita said: “This hospital will be a great impact here. It will make a big difference because we carry patients to Ganta and sometimes even as far as Gbarnga for treatment for serious medical problems”.

A commercial motorcyclist in Tappita, Andy Lahm, said: “This is good for us here because sometimes we the pehn-pehn riders most of the time have to carry sick persons on the bike to places like Saclepea and Ganta. Now, people can now come from those places to come here for treatment because we now have a good hospital. Even people from Grand Gedeh will be coming to this hospital”.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

One Year Older, One Year Wiser? – Give Meaning To 163rd Independence

07/24/2010 - FPA EDITORIAL
Source: FrontPage Africa

LIBERIA TURNS 163 years old on Monday, July 26, the celebrations this year is taking on new meaning with a number of development infrastructures being unveiled by the post-war government .

FOR DECADES, Africa’s oldest republic have struggled to maintain peace and stability. Years of war, chaos and hardship shattered the economic and political life of a nation once seen as one of the most peaceful nations in the world.

ALL THAT CHANGED on April 12, 1980 when a band of lowly-ranked officers of the Armed Forces of Liberia staged a coup d’etat that ended decades of Americo-Liberian rule.

THE HISTORY of the last 163 years have been filled with drama, one-party dominance, chaos and war, assassinations, coup attempts and a host of other events which at one point or another left a dark spot in the archives of Liberia’s history.

BETWEEN 1923 AND 1930, the League of Nations investigated the transportation of migrant labor between Liberia and the Spanish colony of Fernando Po. Although the League concentrated its attention on Liberia, a closer examination revealed labor abuse as the product of conditions on Fernando Po. In the last quarter of the 19th century, black planters on the island had shifted from palm oil trading to cocoa cultivation. Their dependence on migrant labor and increasing competition with Europeans resulted in an economic crisis in the first years of the twentieth century. Planters detained labor but failed to pay contracts, resulting in a situation akin to slavery.

THE STORY OF Edward James Roye, the first pure black person to become President of Liberia, for example marked the beginning of numerous turbulent times for Liberia. Roye arrived as a new immigrant in 1846, one year before Independence was proclaimed and became President in 1870 but was deposed the following year in the first coup d’état. He died a mysterious death in Monrovia in early 1872.

YEARS LATER, Liberia would enter the history books for holding the most fraudulent elections in world history when Charles.D.B.King Of Liberia Won The Presidential Elections Of 1927 By A Margin Of 234,000 Votes And Was Duly Elected. King won the presidential elections held in 1927 as a member of the 'True Whig Party'. He has from then on lived on in infamy not because of his landslide victory but because of large scale election fraud—in fact the most fraudulent election ever reported in the world's history as per the Guinness Book of World Records (1982). In Liberia at that time, there were only 15,000 eligible voters as the constitution had limited suffrage to 15,000 citizens. The election results declared an election win by a margin of nearly 240,000 votes.

YEARS LATER, in 1985, Samuel Kanyon Doe, who had seized power by the gun won another questionable elections which was followed by a coup atttempt led by Thomas Quiwonkpa. Doe and Quiwonkpa, one of the original seventeen coup leaders, had fallen out and Quiwonkpa went into exile to the United States, and many of his supporters, mainly, decommissioned security personnel, took refuge in neighboring Cote d'Ivoire where they began training to engage the Doe dictatorship.

THE 1985 ELECTIONS featured five different political parties, with televised debates involving all five candidates. The 1985 election commission said President Doe got 51 percent of the vote, and the opposition shared the remaining 49 percent. But many observers charged that President Doe stole the 1985 presidential election. The elections were characterized by widespread fraud and rigging.

On November 12, 1985, former Army Commanding Gen. Thomas Quiwonkpa invaded Liberia by way of neighboring Sierra Leone. Quiwonkpa almost succeeded in toppling the government of Samuel Doe. Members of the Krahn-dominated Armed Forces of Liberia repelled Quiwonkpa's attack and executed him in Monrovia. Edward Slanger, at the head of a group of AFL soldiers, claimed on television that they captured and killed Thomas Quiwonkpa. They paraded his body parts around Monrovia in a grisly ritual that Liberians will remember for years. Others were put on trial, and many were summarily executed.

THE COUP OF 1980 was preceded by a rice riots which from all indications showed the writings on the wall of what was to come. Doe’s rule lasted nine years and the bulk of Liberia’s bigger troubles emerged on the eve of Christmas in 1989 when Charles Taylor led his forces by way of Nimba.

IRONICALLY, THIS YEAR’S celebration returns to the scene of the crime as the post-war nation looks to lay the ghosts of yesteryears to rest. As we celebrate this year, let us all be mindful of from where we have come and where we are about to journey to.

IN RECENT WEEKS, MONTHS AND EVEN DAYS, several incidents appear to suggest that Liberia and Liberians have still not learned from their rugged past. Corruption which led to the 1980 coup is still a major problem and reconciliation is still miles away for many. A case in point is the reluctance of the Ministry of Finance to pay commissioners of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and numerous new cases of corruption in the post-war government.

TOO MANY LIVES have been lost and too many bridges broken along the way. We hope that for the sake of peace, the memory of the last 163 years would serve as a reminder to all as we celebrate this year, keeping in mind the negatives of the past and doing all we can to ensure that those ugly years are never repeated again in our history.

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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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