Tag: Liberia

  • Equatorial Guinea edge Liberia, Zambia frustrated by Chad

    Equatorial Guinea edge Liberia, Zambia frustrated by Chad

    Equatorial Guinea edged past Liberia with a 1-0 win in their TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Group E qualifier, thanks to a first-half penalty from Iban Salvador.

    The forward converted from the spot in the 34th minute after Sampson Dweh fouled Salvador inside the box.

    This result moves Equatorial Guinea into second place in the group with four points from three matches, while Liberia remains rooted to the bottom with just one point from their three outings.

    Algeria leads the group with a perfect nine points after three matches, and Togo is third with two points.

    Despite Liberia pushing for an equalizer in the second half, they were unable to break down the Equatorial Guinean defense.

    Several substitutions from both teams couldn’t alter the outcome, with Equatorial Guinea holding on for the vital three points.

    Mozambique and Eswatini share the spoils in 1-1 draw

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    Mozambique and Eswatini played out a 1-1 draw in their TotalEnergies CAF AFCON Group I qualifier, with both teams finding the net in the second half.

    Mozambique took the lead in the 73rd minute through Stanley Ratifo, who slotted home from close range following a well-worked move.

    Eswatini equalized just seven minutes later through Thubelihle Mavuso, whose left-footed effort found the top corner.

    The result keeps Mozambique at the top of the group with five points from three matches, while Eswatini remain at the bottom with just one point.

    Mali and Guinea Bissau, who each have games in hand, are closely trailing.

    Both sides had chances to win the game late on, but neither could capitalize, leaving the group wide open as the teams prepared for their next fixtures.

  • Liberia’s elections and scars of war:A democracy monitor’s musings

    Liberia’s elections and scars of war:A democracy monitor’s musings

    • By Mike Omilusi

    The two civil wars in Liberia (1989 – 1996; 1999 – 2003) left both physical and psychological scars which are still visible on the people till today. Even though Liberia’s Second Civil War officially ended two decades ago, the damage that it caused to the country lingers. The war, often described as an anarchic battle of warlords who preyed on the civilian population, caused displacement of an estimated 1.9 million Liberians (which at the time was around 50 percent of the country’s population), and deaths of 150,000 to 250,000 people.

    Indeed, the 14-year civil war devastated Liberia’s economy and left the country severely lagging in terms of development. It also caused a massive humanitarian crisis, widespread killing, rape of civilians, and forced recruitment of child soldiers. Since the war ended with the signing of a peace agreement, Liberia has been in a perpetual state of recovery, having difficulty dealing with its troubled past. The trauma associated with the civil war experiences which led to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and feelings of hopelessness and despair are still visible in Liberian society.

    My arrival in the country this cool evening in November 2023 reinforces memories of news reports and anecdotes about Liberia and its scars of war. At the point of entry for instance, the poor state of the Roberts International Airport road serves as a microcosm of the country’s struggles, giving visitors a sense of the dire status of the economy. Often, a country’s airport is regarded as a window to the world, and this is especially true when it comes to a country’s economic viability, status, and reputation.  The road’s driving distance of approximately 36 miles, which took us two hours (7-9pm) to the Monrovia city centre, not only leaves a negative impression on visitors but also presents a picture of a nation that has had difficulty developing in various ways.

    As would later be updated, these deplorable roads, muddy and difficult to use even during the dry season, abound in other regions of the country particularly the South-eastern region including the counties of Maryland, Grand Kru, River Gee, Sinoe, Grand Gedeh, and River Cess, posing significant risk to public safety. This much is revealed by my visit during the rainy season. My observations over the next few days continued to show how the capital city’s adjourning communities—most of which are less than 20 kilometres from Monrovia—are stereotypical representations of slums. 

    The cloudy smoke of poverty is conspicuously registered in every spectrum of the society. Though rich in human and natural resources like many other African countries, the constraints of widespread poverty and inequality hamper the citizenry’s capacity to realize their dream of living in a prosperous, peaceful nation as more than half of the population live under the poverty line, with a higher prevalence in rural regions.

    Coming from a country with similar, if not greater, challenges of infrastructural deficit, multidimensional poverty, inequality and seemingly confiscated hope, I could readily relate and adapt. But my mostly non-African friends were only trying to put a validation to extant literature read overtime regarding the continent of Africa in the comfort of their study rooms. For a few of them who have, through international engagements, traversed the continent, Liberia is yet another familiar terrain of endless struggle for basic necessities of life.

    Liberia’s history is unique in that it was founded in the 19th century by emancipated slaves from America as an embodiment of hope and African self-governance. But the history of civil wars, political unrest, and autocratic governance plagued the country soon afterward. The 2023 political rallies and the “Jehovah Witness” campaigning, mostly populated by young persons and women, underscore the unending concerns associated with many of the country’s 5.4 million people as a result of long years of economic hardship, corruption, and underdevelopment. This is true even though the frenzy of an election mood, the fourth presidential election after the civil war, seemed to mask some of the harsh realities confronting the people and offered a nebulous hope for the agitated electorate.

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    Typical of African elections, these rally attendees may have been mobilized based on primordial sentiments, in addition to the financial incentives that come with such mobilisation.  Although political alliances spanning ethnic and regional divides are usually necessary to determine a successful outcome in the country’s electoral system since no single group is large enough to ensure that, yet voters tend to favour candidates from their own ethnic group in national elections. One thing, however, stood out clearly: the majority of the people were united in their overlapping deprivations.  The cacophony of candidacy marketing slogans and colourful political rallies could not subdue this tragic uniformity.

    In my over two decades of democracy monitoring engagement, I have often observed how politicians ostentatiously acknowledge the potential of women and young people as major agents of change in the political landscape. Paradoxically, every election cycle in Africa showcases the pathetic disregard for these pragmatic segments of the population in governance and decision-making process. For Liberians who “overwhelmingly support elections as the best way to choose their political leaders”, as established in a recent Afrobarometer survey, their political leadership must be committed to governance deliverables in terms of health care and education, improved security, infrastructure investment, effective anti-corruption measures, improved access to justice systems and civil rights, among others.

    Thus, delivering on electoral promises with a view to meeting the yearnings and aspirations of the citizens is essential. In reality, it appears that citizens’ preference for a democratic transfer of power is not being met with commensurate service delivery. Suffice to say that the new government must ensure that citizens have access to secure, accountable, and transparent services, and create an environment for sustainable economic growth. More importantly, the political leadership must ensure that all citizens have a say in the decisions that affect their lives. Only then can the people of Liberia start to regain their sense of hope and optimism for the future.

    The good news however, is that the 2023 presidential election could be considered a consolidation of electoral democracy in Liberia given the 78-year-old Joseph Boakai’s narrow victory of 50.9 percent to President George Weah’s 49.1 percent and the peaceful nature of the election as well as Weah’s concession speech. Notwithstanding its flaws, the unconventional decision to concede election defeat to the opposition leader (before declaration of results in a run-off election) by the incumbent heralds statesmanship. It is anticipated that this display of outstanding sportsmanship during the election will translate into good governance if the high expectations of the populace are to be met, especially in light of the pressing social issues of poor infrastructure, food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty.

    These social concerns may however present a conundrum for students of political economy and economics when analysed within the context of improved life expectancy in the country which stands at 65.00 years. According to reports, Liberia is among the top six countries whose life expectancy has increased the most in the last decade. Yet, life expectancy has been variously assessed relative to health behaviours, socioeconomic background (income or standard of living), health care access, and the social/physical environment. And as earlier alluded to, Liberia has a multitude of citizens (52.3 percent) living in multidimensional poverty while an additional 23.3 percent is classified as vulnerable to multidimensional poverty. The assumption is that life expectancy may decline as the proportion of people living in poverty rises. A person’s standard of living may directly impact one’s health (in addition to other variables that impact health, like socioeconomic status, level of education, or place of residence) and, thus, one’s longevity.

    In the final analysis, the crucial thing to remember about good administration is that it requires addressing the desires of the voters following elections. In order to make sure that people’s expectations are realised, the Liberian government should strive to listen to citizens’ voices, understand their needs, and communicate their plans efficiently. Funny enough, when such expectations are not met, people tend to seek celestial help. Without a doubt, many African societies are profoundly steeped in the supernatural, and this belief often drives people to seek assistance from divine sources. A stopgap? Perhaps, it helps in keeping hope alive.

    For the time being therefore, many Pentecostal and orthodox churches that adore the country’s social landscape such as the Oil Ministry of Jesus Christ which caught my attention this beautiful Sunday, may continually speak hope to their situation, amidst numerous pressing existential and mundane needs, and- above all- a guarantee of an eternally blissful life hereafter.

    • Omilusi, PhD is of Department of Political Science, Ekiti State University, Ado Ekiti.
  • Liberia’s Elections Commission honours Yakubu  

    Liberia’s Elections Commission honours Yakubu  

    The National Elections Commission (NEC) of Liberia at the weekend honoured the Chairman of Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu.

    The event marked the Liberian NEC’s dedication of a workspace for its staff, officiated by Prof. Yakubu at the invitation of its Chairperson,

    Speaking at the occasion, Chairman of the Liberian Electoral body, Madam Davidetta Browne Lansanah acknowledged the technical support of INEC Nigeria and Prof. Yakubu in establishing the workspace for its staff and bolstering the electoral process in Liberia.

    She expressed the commission’s gratitude for what she described as “the indispensable contributions made by Prof. Yakubu and INEC Nigeria in sustaining Liberia’s democratic journey.”

    Recalling Prof. Yakubu’s role as President of the ECOWAS Network of Electoral Commissions (ECONEC), Madam Lansanah highlighted his advocacy for resource-sharing among regional Electoral Management Bodies (EMBs).

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    She commended his influential efforts, resulting in Liberia’s election as the First Vice President of ECONEC in 2021. She thanked Prof Yakubu for his steadfast backing of NEC-Liberia in various regional endeavours.

    In his remark, Prof. Yakubu expressed heartfelt appreciation to NEC-Liberia for the esteemed honour bestowed upon INEC Nigeria in dedicating the workspace to staff. He emphasised the value of the resource in enhancing the operational capabilities of staff, particularly through Information and Technology (IT) facilities.

    Reflecting on past collaborations, Prof. Yakubu recalled INEC Nigeria’s assistance during Liberia’s 2017 Presidential Election, highlighting the joint efforts of IT experts from INEC and NEC-Liberia in addressing stakeholders’ concerns regarding the voters’ register.

    While emphasising the significance of inter-EMB collaboration, the INEC boss underscored the complexity of election management and urged prioritising peer support amid limited resources and escalating election costs.

  • Over 40 feared dead after Liberia tanker crash

    Over 40 feared dead after Liberia tanker crash

    More than 40 people were feared dead when a tanker truck exploded after crashing in central Liberia, the country’s chief medical officer told local media.

    The tanker carrying gasoline crashed and tipped into a ditch along a road in Totota, about 130 kilometres (80 miles) from the capital Monrovia on Wednesday.

    Dr Francis Kateh told local broadcaster Super Bongese TV it was difficult to determine the number of victims because some had been reduced to ashes but he estimated that more than 40 people were killed in the incident.

    “We have our team going from home to home to check those that are missing,” he told AFP.

    Police earlier put the death toll at 15 and said at least 30 people were injured as locals gathered at the scene.

    Read Also: Cheering news from Liberia

    “There were lots of people that got burned,” said Prince B. Mulbah, deputy inspector general for the Liberia National Police.

    Another police officer, Malvin Sackor, said that after the crash, some locals had begun to take the leaking gas when the tanker exploded, killing some and wounding others.

    He said that the police were still gathering the total number of injured and killed.

    An eyewitness from Totota, Aaron Massaquoi, told AFP that “people climbed all on top of the truck taking the gas, while some of them had irons hitting the tanker for it to burst for them to get gas.”

    “People were all around the truck and the driver of the truck told them that the gas that was spilling they could take that,” Massaquoi said.

    “He told them not to climb on top of the tanker and that they should stop hitting the tanker…. but some people were even using screwdrivers to put holes on the tank.”

  • Cheering news from Liberia

    Cheering news from Liberia

    • By Tayo Ogunbiyi

    For a long time, political transition has been a serious issue in Africa. Elections are often turned into a theatre of warfare as incumbent political leaders wouldn’t want concede to electoral defeats easily.

    It is rare in Africa for an incumbent president to lose an election. It is sacrilegious!

    The ugly trend has sadly led to the existence of an array of sit-tight-leaders who hold on to power at all cost on the continent. And the list is pathetically extensive.

    In Cameroon, 90-year old President Paul Biya has been in the saddle for 41 years. He has been the country’s president since November 6, 1982, having previously been prime minister from 1975 to 1982.

    In Sudan, after 30 years, Omar Al-Bashir’s reign ended almost the same way he started. The Sudanese long time president, who seized power in a military coup on June 30, 1989 stayed in office till April 1989 when he was overthrown and arrested by the armed forces.

    The story is not any different in faraway Angola where Jose Eduardo dos Santos, 75, has been president since 1979, after the country’s first post-independence president, Agostinho Neto, died. 

    After a peace deal signed in 1991, Dos Santos beat UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi in the first round of Angola’s first contested presidential election in 1992, but Savimbi rejected the result and resumed guerrilla war. While some have praised the septuagenarian for leading the country to recovery after the end of its 27-year civil war in 2002, others accuse him of authoritarianism, overstay in office and failing to distribute the proceeds from the oil boom more widely. Detractors indicted him of being gradually dictatorial when he chose his daughter, Isabel, as the head of the country’s oil company, Sonangol. 

    In Gambia, Yahya Jammeh was forced to leave after he had refused to step down following his defeat in the December 2016 election. He went into exile after a last minute diplomatic push and threat of military invasion by ECOWAS troops. 

    Yoweri Museveni, 79, became Uganda’s president in 1986. With five presidential terms in office, Museveni claims Uganda is one of the most democratic countries in the world. In 2005, the constitution was changed to allow him to extend his time in office. Museveni was re-elected in 2016 in an election overshadowed by arrests of politicians and allegations of rigging. Police carried out multiple arrests of opposition activists, including his closest rival, Kizza Besigye, during the vote.

    During one of his re-election bids, when he addressed the issue of stepping down, for a younger generation of leaders, he asked: “How can I leave a banana plantation that I have planted when it has started bearing fruit?”

    That, of course, is the skewed mentality of some African leaders. He sees his nation as a private property. He sees his people as a conquered species. He sees his country’s resources as booty to be plundered and used for his fancy. Obviously, for him, the harvest is still not over as he has continued to rule over the country for 37 years!

    That, indeed, has been the messy state of political leadership in Africa where leaders don’t really know when to quit.  Oh, that God will give Africa more of noble, selfless and visionary leaders like late President Nelson Mandela of South Africa.  After spending a term in office, Mandela opted to step aside, stressing that his country needed younger and more vibrant leaders. Here was a man who spent almost his entire life fighting for the emancipation of his nation.

    Can Africa yet experience the privilege of having such leaders?

    Well, it is not totally gloomy for our beloved continent. There still remains a glimmer of hope that Mother Africa will not be like the biblical Nazareth that someone exclaimed had nothing good to offer.

    Can anything good come from Africa?

    Yes. It can! A new Africa is possible.

    A few days back, Liberian President, George Weah gave Africa hope. He changed the sordid African political narrative by conceding defeat to his main opponent, at the recently concluded presidential poll, Ambassador Joseph N. Boakai.

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    What really made the scenario quite ‘unAfrican’ by every standard is that President Weah conceded defeat while vote counting was still on.

    Is that possible? In Africa? Yes, it is. And it happened. President Weah made it happen.

    Hear him: “I stand before you tonight with a heavy heart, but with the utmost respect for the democratic process that has defined our nation.

    “The results announced tonight, though not final, indicate that Ambassador Joseph N. Boakai is in a lead that is insurmountable.

    “A few moments ago, I spoke with President-elect Joseph N. Boakai to congratulate him on his victory and to offer my sincere commitment to working with him for the betterment of our beloved Liberia.

    “I extend my heartfelt congratulations to President-elect Boakai, his supporters, and his campaign team. May his presidency be marked by success for all Liberians, and may our nation prosper under his leadership.

    “Under my leadership, these elections were organized with a promise to the Liberian people – a promise of fairness, transparency, and credibility. I am proud to say that, for the most part, we have fulfilled that promise. The Liberian people have spoken, and their choice will be honoured and obeyed.”

     One thing that stands out in the above message is the ex-footballer’s deep rooted patriotism and unalloyed love for his people. Unlike the sit-tight African leaders of the old order, he cared more about his country and his people. It is not about him!

    In a continent where political contests often end in bitter struggles, causing sharp and needless divisions among the people, President Weah has chosen to be different. He has chosen a path of honour and dignity. His historic concession of defeat was not just a personal feat; it was a crucial moment for his country, Africa and democracy.

    He has proven that with men of great conscience like him democracy can flourish on the continent. Like former president, Goodluck Jonathan, history will surely be kind to him and posterity will judge him right.  

    To deepen democracy in Africa, those that are entrusted with the process must not be self-seeking in their thoughts and deeds. They must be leaders who put their people first in all they do. They must be folks who will reason like Goodluck Jonathan that their ambition is not worth the blood of any of their compatriots.

    Thank you, President George Weah, for making Africa proud!  Thank you for choosing to be different in a continent where political leaders will rather ignite a needless civil war just to remain in office.

    As for the impenitent sit-tight African leaders who have taken their respective nations hostage, the advice is for them to take a voyage to Liberia and learn the art of nobility from a noble man.  

    •Ogunbiyi is a Director (Public Affairs), Lagos Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Power flips in Liberia

    Power flips in Liberia

    Liberia recorded a power shift, last Friday, as former Vice-President Joseph Boakai emerged winner of the run-off poll held Tuesday. The 78-year-old managed to secure a narrow victory over incumbent President George Weah, polling 50.9 percent of the vote to Weah’s 49.1 percent with nearly all the votes counted.

    Read Also: Meet Liberia’s President-Elect Joseph Boakai

    The beauty was 57-year-old Weah’s concession speech even before the final tally. “The results announced tonight, though not final, indicate that (Boakai) is in a lead that we cannot surpass. A few moments ago, I spoke with President-elect Boakai to congratulate him on his victory,” Weah said in a national broadcast, adding: “The Liberian people have spoken and we have heard their voice.” He asked his supporters to “follow my example and accept the result of the election,” adding that “our time will come again” in 2029 when Boakai’s six-year term of office ends. That is the stuff political gladiators in Africa should be made of. 

  • Dead heat in Liberian poll

    Dead heat in Liberian poll

    Presidential elections in contemporary Liberia are like the biblical eye of the needle through which a camel seeks to wriggle through. The polls customarily go into runoffs because contenders can’t make the cut of victory at first shot. Things were no different in the latest election held on 10th October, which threw up incumbent president, George Weah, and opposition candidate, Joseph Boakai, in the tightest tally of that country’s two decades long history of restored democratic rule. Weah secured 43.84 percent of the vote and Boakai, 43.44 percent, with more than 98 percent of the ballots counted by the electoral body as at mid-last week. Although the vote was largely peaceful across the country, the elections commission said hundreds of voters in two polling stations in Liberia’s northeast Nimba County were to re-cast their ballots last Friday after unidentified persons stole ballot boxes.

    Although official results may not be called by the National Elections Commission until later this week, the country’s electoral law requires a contender to edge past 50 percent of votes cast to win at first round. This threshold was already out of reach for the two leading candidates, Weah and Boakai, with what remained outstanding for the electoral body to tally last week, meaning they were inevitably headed for a runoff. The two men were well ahead 18 other presidential candidates who ran in the 10th October poll. A runoff between them would re-enact the 2017 contest when Weah won the runoff with 61.5 percent of the votes to Boakai’s 38.5 percent. He had won the first round at the time with 38.4 percent of the votes as against 28.8 percent polled by Boakai – suggesting that Boakai mounted a stronger challenge this time around. By law, the electoral body has 15 days from the date of the election to announce the final results. If neither candidate gets more than 50 per cent, as it looks certain already, a runoff will be held on 7th November or thereabouts.

    The 2023 poll was the first such contest to be fully organised by the Liberian government since the end of the second civil war in 2003 without major funding support from international partners, indicating that the country has come of age in nationhood and socio-economy. It was as well the first to take place since the United Nations ended its peacekeeping mission in Liberia in 2018. That mission was emplaced after more than 250,000 people died in two civil wars between 1989 and 2003. There are some 2.4million people eligible to vote in the coastal nation of 5.5million citizens, and turnout at the 10th October first round poll was as high as to reach beyond 77 percent, underscoring the intensity of public interest in the determination of the country’s leadership.

    Both George Weah, 57, and Joseph Boakai, 78, are old hands in Liberian politics. Mr. Weah, a former football superstar who in 1995 became the first and only African footballer to win the Ballon d’Or, swept to power in the 2017 poll. But he had been a contender for the top office long before that time, having contested in the first post-transition election in 2005 against Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf who eventually won the poll. He led in that election at first round on the platform of his Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), but lost out to Johnson-Sirleaf of the Unity Party (UP) in the runoff. Sirleaf polled 59 percent of the votes to Weah’s 41 percent to win her first six-year term. In the 2011 election, Weah stepped down to become running mate to Winston Tubman on the CDC ticket that challenged Johnson-Sirleaf’s second term bid. Again, no winner emerged at first round and the poll went into a runoff that was boycotted by the Tubman-led CPC, and which Sirleaf won with 90.7 percent landslide. It was reported, however, that unlike 74.9 percent voter turnout in the first round, turnout for the runoff was 61 percent.

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    For his part, Boakai is as well a veteran who was vice president from 2006 to 2018 under Johnson-Sirleaf, and the UP candidate that contended and lost to Weah of CDC in the 2017 election that was also decided in a runoff. He was also a government minister in the 1980s. In the 2017 poll, Weah cast himself as the plucky outsider who could shake things up in contrast to Boakai, seen as an establishment figure. A role swap characterised the 2023 election, however. Weah had won office in 2017 on promises to grow infrastructure and tackle widespread corruption; and although he partly delivered on infrastructure, the jury is out on whether he did much about corruption. The United States Treasury, last year, imposed sanctions on three Liberian officials for corruption, one of them Weah’s chief of staff. The president promised an investigation but has yet to follow through.

    There is also the economic factor. Food and fuel prices have skyrocketed, and even though this was partly due to global headwinds, most Liberians have had to contend with escalating living costs. This was what apparently motivated an open protest in December, last year, when more than a thousand people marched through Monrovia, Liberia’s capital. Boakai ran an anti-Weah campaign, promising to relieve the economic hardships and invest in infrastructure as well as agriculture. He is, however, being dogged by questions over his health and fitness for the rigours of the presidency. The options are what Liberians will have to make their choice from at the impending runoff.

    Meanwhile, there are lessons we can learn in Nigeria from the Liberian poll. The enthusiasm of the Liberian electorate has typically been high, and it was even more so in the latest poll with over 77 percent voter turnout, compared with 27 percent turnout in the 2023 Nigerian national elections. Whatever it is that so motivates Liberian voters is something Nigeria should be keen to learn and apply to the extent of contextual relevance in our country. Also, domestic and foreign observers applauded peaceful polls in a country that is yet recovering from two brutal civil wars. Former Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Professor Attahiru Jega led the observer mission for ECOWAS, which gave as much indication in its statement. Political passions run high in Liberia during elections just like everywhere else, and I can say this from experience because I had the opportunity of observing the 2011 and 2017 elections in that country. But political gladiators manage to rein in virulent passions and hold their supporters in check for overall peaceful conduct of the elections. Already, ahead of the impending runoff, the two gladiators – Mr. Weah and Mr. Boakai – are wooing over smaller parties to garner their support. Zero sum disposition to political competition in Nigeria makes peaceful electoral environment elusive. And this has been the bane of our electoral experience, such that the nation’s electoral body, INEC, has repeatedly raised the alarm of the threat of violence even regarding the imminent off-cycle governorship polls in Bayelsa, Imo and Kogi states. Political actors in Nigeria can learn from their Liberian counterparts about putting political passions on leash for overall security of the electoral environment.

    One other instructive thing is the fidelity of the Liberian political class to their respective partisan affiliation. Since his 2005 debut in presidential contestation in his country, Weah has been running on CDC platform, even so when he ceded the prime slot in 2011 to Tubman while he settled for being running mate. In like manner, Boakai has always run on UP ticket: he did so as running mate to Johnson-Sirleaf in 2005 and 2011, and as the main contender in 2017 and 2023. It could be an indication of  ideological commitment when political actors stick to a partisan platform, and this makes followership equally committed. The experience we have in Nigeria is of political actors defecting across political platforms at every turn, indicating crass opportunism and loyalty only to their political aspiration and not to any collective ideology. Followers are equally fickle, ideologically speaking, and it is this fickleness that apparently gets inverted to zero sum commitment to getting their candidate into power. This has not much helped our political culture in this country and Liberia offers useful lessons on alternative route.

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation  
  • How Nigeria can learn from Liberia’s electioneering process, by IPAC

    How Nigeria can learn from Liberia’s electioneering process, by IPAC

    The Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC) has said Nigeria can learn and  adopt to strengthen its electioneering process through what it observed  at the 2023 Liberian Presidential Election held on the 10th of this month.

     The National Chairman of IPAC, Engr Yabagi Yusuf, while briefing journalists during the weekend after his arrival from Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, said despite election being marred by violence in Africa, it was observed that the citizenry were very much enlightened on keeping peace, reason and need to vote and on issues at play.

     He added that the reason they embarked on Election Observer Mission (EOM) was to avail the council an opportunity to learn, compare and contrast the experiences between what obtains in Nigeria and those countries.

    He said the IPAC-EOM to Liberia, had four members who were sponsored by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Yusuf said on the election day, each poll station had an average of seven polling units, and as early as 8.30am when they arrived at the first one, the turnout was huge where officers and party agents were all present.

      “The same thing with the nine polling stations we observed. Even under the sun and in two cases rain, people stood in the queue waiting for their turn. “The list of voters and their pictures were displayed on the walls of the area where the stations were located.

    ”Also the pictures of each contestant and his/her name were on the ballot papers unlike in Nigeria. “While this looks good, considering the sheer number of contestants and ever changing list of candidates due to court orders, this may not be an option for our country for now.

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     “There were two main contestants viz; the sitting President George Weah of CDC and Joseph Bogai of the Unity Party. There were 22 other candidates for the presidency.

     “The October 10 elections availed voters the opportunity to elect a President, 15 Senators and 73 Members of the House of Representatives. Of the country’s 5.4 million population, 2,471,617 voters were certified by the National Elections Commission (NEC) in the Final Registration Roll (FRR) to vote in 5,890 polling places.

     “They have a situation room in place many weeks before the election to track activities on campaigns and trouble spots. They have a well equipped call center where calls on complaints from any part of the country are monitored 24/7. Police, immigration and other security officials are stationed in the Situation room”, Yagabi noted.

    He said enlightenment wasn’t just about voters’ education but awareness of environment, action and inactions and rule of law.

  • Weah, Boakai neck and neck in Liberia poll

    Weah, Boakai neck and neck in Liberia poll

    Liberia’s President George Weah and opposition leader Joseph Boakai are nearly tied in the race for the presidency following October 10 election, provisional results published by the West African nation’s election commission showed yesterday.

    Weah holds a slim lead at 43.80% of the vote, while Boakai has 43.54%, according to tallied results from 72.92% of polling places, the commission said.

    To avoid a runoff, the winner must secure more than 50% of votes cast.

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    ECOWAS Commission Observation Mission at the weekend called on the election commission to diligently and urgently work on ensuring the timely and transparent release of results to defuse any potential tension that may arise from long waits for results.

    The Head of the ECOWAS Observation Mission, Professor Attahiru Jega, made the call in his report on preliminary conclusions on the election.

    The mission emphasised the need for the legislature and other critical stakeholders in the country to consider the review of relevant portions of the Liberian Constitution and electoral law to allow elections to be held during the dry season.

    According to the mission, allowing elections to be hold in the dry season would enable election workers and materials to reach hard-to-reach destinations more efficiently.

  • Weah in early lead as Liberians await polls results

    Weah in early lead as Liberians await polls results

    Votes were still being counted in Liberia yesterday after Tuesday’s election with President George Weah in early lead.

      His challenger, former Vice-President Joseph Boakai, was claimed to be in contention yesterday.

     Local and regional election observers said polling was peaceful, despite clashes between rival political camps in the final days of the campaign.

     Voter turnout was reported to be high in a campaign dominated by the economic crisis and corruption allegations.

    The election commission said the first results would be announced later yesterday.

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     Weah is the favourite to win, with his main challenger seen as former Vice-President Joseph Boakai.

     But a run-off will be held if no candidate secures more than 50% of the votes cast.

     Parliamentary elections were held alongside the presidential election, with about 2.4 million people registered to cast their ballots.

     The delivery of election materials to some remote areas in south-east Liberia was delayed by floods and muddy roads.

     Some canoes that were transporting electoral staff and materials capsized, leading to the loss of the election materials, but the National Elections Commission (NEC) said that voting was extended in those areas.

    This is the first time that a generation of young voters, born in peace-time Liberia, voted in national elections.

     A brutal civil war, which killed an estimated 250,000 people, ended two decades ago.

     “I vote for the good of my country. I expect peace and development,” Agostina Momo, 18, who was voting for the first time, told the AFP news agency in the capital Monrovia.

      The electoral commission is due to begin releasing initial results, but the final announcement will be done within 15 days.

     Weah, who was 1995 Fifa World Player of the Year, entered politics following his retirement from football.  He won his first term in 2017 after securing 61% of the vote in a run-off, defeating Boakai.

     Analysts said this might be the 78-year-old’s last attempt at the presidency.