Tag: Liberia

  • Liberia to get new President today

    Liberia to get new President today

    A new Liberian President will be known today following Tuesday’s presidential runoff election.

    The National Elections Commission (NEC) of Liberia set today’s date for the announcement of official provisional results.

    The run-off was between former FIFA World Football of the Year Senator George Weah and Vice President Joseph Boakai. The winner will succeed outgoing President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf.

    Spokesman of the commission Henry Flomo who announced the date yesterday, said tallying of votes was ongoing at different centres across the country.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Liberians are eagerly awaiting announcement of the official results by NEC.

    The NEC has  warned parties and the media against declaring unofficial results.

    Preliminary results trickling in from collation centres across the country through radio stations yesterday indicated that Weah was in early lead.

    As of the time of filing this report at 7.30 p.m. Liberian time (1930 GMT), Weah was ahead in three counties (Bomi, Margibi and Grand Bassa) with over 50 per cent of the votes processed so far.

    Reports from different parts of the country indicate that supporters of Weah were already celebrating his purported victory.

    The ECOWAS Election Observation Mission to Liberia called on NEC to “work diligently and expedite action on the proclamation of results to avoid creating anxiety’’.

    Head of the mission and former President of Ghana John Mahama made the call at a news conference in Monrovia last night.

    He also urged the electoral umpire to conduct the concluding part of the process with “fairness, openness and transparency until the proclamation of results’’.

    UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, has sent former President Olusegun Obasanjo to Liberia to support a peaceful transfer power to a democratically-elected president.

    Guterres, who announced this yesterday in New York through his spokesperson Stephane Dujarric, also welcomed the peaceful conduct of the second round of the presidential election in Liberia.

    “The Secretary-General hopes that the will of the Liberian electorate will be respected and that a seamless transfer of power will take place within constitutional timelines,” the statement said.

    Guterres had requested Obasanjo, who is a member of the Secretary-General’s High-Level Advisory Board on Mediation, to travel to the capital Monrovia, from today till Saturday.

    Obasanjo is one of 18 global leaders, senior officials and experts on the high-level board created earlier this year to advise the Secretary-General on mediation and back those efforts around the world.

    The former President of Nigeria was involved in mediation efforts in Angola, Burundi, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa, among others.

  • Stable government best for Africa — Jonathan

    Stable government best for Africa — Jonathan

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan says stable government is the best way of attracting development to Africa.

    He also added that Liberia is becoming a model of democracy in Africa and beyond, having attained “political stability’’.

    “Looking at the political history of Liberia, the country has passed through challenges.

    “They conducted elections and the (outgoing) president stayed for the complete two terms, and this president is about handing over to another elected president.

    “That shows that Liberia is now politically stable to be a good example of democracy. Democracy is being institutionalised in Liberia.

    Also read:  Liberia’s Presidential Re-run: Jonathan leads NDI Observation Mission

     “It will help the country because it shows that the country is stable and it will attract foreign direct investors

    “And for Africa, especially in the West African sub-region nit is a great achievement.’’

    “When I was in office, we tried to make sure that we stabilised democracy across the ECOWAS states because the issue of all kinds of unconstitutional government, we see that it is over in ECOWAS and Africa.

    “The Liberian situation will help us so much because it is another clear case of a country that has moved from some illegitimate government and crisis to an established and stable democracy.

    “This transition is critical because if we succeed, if Liberia succeeds, West Africa has succeeded, Africa has succeeded.’’

    Liberian voters have chosen a successor to outgoing President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, whose 12-year tenure as Africa’s first elected female head of state ends in January.

    Results of the delayed run-off election, due to be announced in three days, will determine who becomes the next President between ex-football superstar, Sen. George Weah and incumbent Vice President Joseph Boakai.

  • Liberia: Low turnout in decisive re-run presidential election

    Liberia: Low turnout in decisive re-run presidential election

    Liberia’s Run-off election to determine the successor of Africa’s first female President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf finally kicked off Tuesday morning with indications of low voter’s turnout. George Stewart reports

     

    Voters at polling centers loosely formed queues, while some were not interested in the process. A group of young men opted to vote later in the day. They stood around the polling center identifying their names on displayed voter rolls at the Duahzon Public School Building in Margibi County. Officially, polls closed at 6pm local time, enabling electoral officials to tally votes and conclude the process early in the evening.

    A taxicab driver only known as David is committed to fully running traffic without any plan to vote. He said even the voting day added to the fatigue of Christmas makes it uncertain for him to get his day’s report. “The hustle already hard, then their voting business makes things harder”, David said as he drove on.  Like some qualified voters, David’s candidate was defeated; thereby weakening him to repose his confidence in any of the two candidates.

    Reports from polling centers across the country on local radio stations further pointed to signs of possible low voter’s turnout. Run-off elections in Liberia usually experience dramatic low voter’s turnout, because second time voters feel reluctant to sacrifice for another round of voting, especially in a hash voting process like that of October 10.

    Once National Elections Commission (NEC) reveals low voter’s turnout, reasons such as post-Christmas voting date and voter’s refusal to return to the polls for the second could surface. Also, the October 10 polls included nearly 1000 candidates who contested legislative seats.

    There are reports that some representative candidates relocated voters in their favor.  Now the burden of returning to their polling centers this time lies with the voters themselves.  Mr. Arthur Kieh and his family supported an incumbent representative who lost the seat. The kiehs are unable to vote in this runoff since the cost of returning to their polling center is as high as Ten Thousand Liberian Dollars.

    Former Football star, George Weah and Sirleaf’s Vice President, Joseph Boakai are the two candidates qualified in today’s election.  Weah won the October 10 polls with 38%, defeating 19 candidates, but fell short to uprightly obtain at least 50% plus one vote.  His contender, Vice President Joseph Boakai obtained 28% as the second highest candidate in the first round. Liberian elections law qualifies the two highest to contest another round of election in two weeks after the announcement of the first round results, but the results were heavily protested on court.

    The third place winner, Cllr. Charles Brumskine of the Liberty Party challenged the October 10 polls, describing it as marred with “frauds and irregularities”, but Liberian Supreme Court ruling on December 7 authorized the NEC to conduct the runoff after a cleanup of the voter’s roll. Boakai’s Unity Party joined Brumskine’s Liberty Party in court action against the NEC for the cancelation of the first round results. If their plead to the Supreme Court were  anything to go by, Liberia would by now be preparing itself to again hold crowded elections with more, if not all, candidates returning to the ballots against the inauguration of the new president on the

    The winner of the Liberian run-off election is poised to break record as the first president in more than 70 years to take over from another democratically elected president. Liberia’s last democratic transition was in 1944 when the 18th President, Edwin Barclay turned over to William V.S. Tubman as the 19th President of the country.

    As vice to Tubman, William R. Tolbert took over the presidency but was killed in  a  coup d’ etat led by Master Sergeant Samuel Doe who ruled the country for 20 years. All these years, Liberia had had civil wars until 2005 when Mrs. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf won the first post war elections in a highly contested election.

    Liberians expect a more robust president to step up the gains of Mrs. Sirleaf, whose administration was weighed down by rampant corruption, luxuries in government and the outbreak of Ebola. Her administration enjoyed huge international support and presence in Liberia. The largest United Nations peacekeeping troop was deployed during her first tenure of six (6) years.  After 12 years of the Sirleaf Administration, the country is yet to fully restore of basic social services such as water, electricity, roads and airport facilities.

    Footballer turned politician George Weah has overwhelmed Liberian politics as his sporting popularity heavily wins for him the young people representing at least 60% of the country’s population. Liberia is a small size West African nation of less than six (6) million people.

    Weah is heavily criticized for what his opponents point to as his weak public speaking skills and his inability to understand the intricacy of government. He boycotted all of the presidential debates for undisclosed reasons.   Weah’s Congress for Democratic Change has always won all of Liberia’s first round elections since 2005. This time, his party is standing in collaboration with other political parties including jailed former president Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Party (NPP). Taylor’s former wife Jowel Howard Taylor, herself a senator, serves as the vice presidential candidate to George Weah.  If the Weah ticket wins the runoff election, Mrs. Taylor by law will preside over the senate as its President.

    Weah’s contender, Vice President Joseph Boakai, 73 has complained and longed for President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s support to his presidency. Though Sirleaf has not openly confirmed the withdrawal of her support to Boakai, she stayed out of most of his political rallies in the name of wrapping up her government logically.

    Boakai has rated himself nominal in the Sirleaf administration, though he has presided over the House of Senate for 12 years and attested to globally condemned concession agreements. He claimed President Sirleaf did not give him the chance to play active role in her government. In one of the electon debates, Boakai referred to himself as “a race car parked in garage for 12 years”, meaning he was not given the chance to fully exert himself in government.

    Liberia stands at a crossroad. The more than two million registered voters have to decide the fate of this challenged nation either led by aged and preserved Boakai or an inarticulate and politically limited Weah, already enclosed by political radicals. “To fit in the shoes of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the new president must possess the skills and charisma to rub shoulders with today’s world leaders”, Reporter George Harris of Daily Observer Newspaper told me as he covered the polls outside Monrovia.

  • Liberia run-off poll: Jonathan meets candidates, sues for peace

    Liberia run-off poll: Jonathan meets candidates, sues for peace

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan  has sued for peace and transparency in Tuesday’s presidential run-off election  in Liberia.

    Jonathan, who is co-leading the United States’  National Democratic Institute (NDI) International Elections Observation Mission to the country, made the appeal in Monrovia.

    The former president spoke during separate meetings with the two contestants in the race – former FIFA World Football Player of the year, George Weah, and incumbent Vice President Joseph Boakai.

    His media adviser, Mr Ikechukwu Eze, made public the meetings in a statement on Tuesday morning.

    While calling for a free and fair process in the Boxing Day poll, he advised the two presidential candidates to accept the result of the election  in the interest of peace and stability in Liberia.

    Weah of the opposition Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC)  and Boakai of the ruling Unity Party (UP) are battling to succeed outgoing President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, whose constitutional two terms in office end in January.

    Jonathan met with both men alongside former President of Kosovo, Atifete Jahjaga; former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ghana, Hanna Tetteh, and other NDI leaders, according to Eze.

    He noted that the future of Liberia depended on the outcome of the run-off, urging Weah and Boakai to advise their supporters to conduct themselves peacefully during the election.

    “In any election, there are winners and losers. Only one presidential candidate will be declared winner.

    “The other should accept the election results to avoid a political crisis, especially if there are no good grounds to challenge the outcome,” he was quoted as saying.

    Jonathan equally called on the National Electoral Commission, security agencies and other stakeholders to be conscientious in playing their role to ensure a “peaceful, inclusive and transparent electoral process.’’

    “The economy of Liberia will benefit immensely from a positive and peaceful outcome  as a free and fair process would go a long way in reassuring investors that the country is now safe for lasting investment.

    “If the election fails it means Liberia has failed, it also means that Liberia has failed West Africa and failed the entire Africa,’’ he said.

    The former president noted that Nigeria and other West African nations played vital roles in stabilising the nation, urging Liberians not to do anything that could jeopardise the post-war peace in the land.

    “ Although both candidates pointed out some lapses in the preparations, especially with the issue of the voter register, they, however,  agreed to accept the outcome of the results.

    Speaking at the meeting, Weah reportedly said he was prepared  to accept the outcome of the election.

    “If the Liberian people decide that the other side will have another twelve years in the Presidency, we will call and congratulate them.

    “But as I said, if the election is free and fair, we are going to win. This is because we have worked so hard and our people want the change which we are offering,” he said.

    Jonathan and other NDI team members also met with the chairman of NEC, Mr Jerome Korkoya, where  he emphasised the need for a transparent, free and fair election.(NAN)

  • Liberia holds run-off vote on Dec. 26: electoral commission

    Liberia holds run-off vote on Dec. 26: electoral commission

    Liberia will hold a delayed presidential run-off vote on Dec. 26, the electoral commission chief said.

    Former soccer star George Weah faces Vice-President Joseph Boakai in the poll that was held up for several weeks by a court challenge by the candidate who came third in round one.

    The winner replaces Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as president in what will be, if it goes smoothly, Liberia’s first peaceful handover of power in 70 years.

    The Supreme Court on Dec. 7, dismissed a complaint from third-place finisher Charles Brumskine’s Liberty Party, which had said fraud had undermined the first round in October.

    Electoral Commission chairman Jerome Korkoya said campaigning could start immediately but must end by December 24.

    Liberians are eager for change after Nobel Peace Prize winning Johnson-Sirleaf’s 12-year rule, which sealed a lasting peace in a country that for decades had only known war, but which has failed to tackle corruption or much improve the lot of the poorest. (Reuters/NAN)

  • FG pledges support for FCWC

    FG pledges support for FCWC

    The Federal Government has pledged to support the Fisheries Committee for the West Central Gulf of Guinea ( FCWC ) to achieve its goals for the benefit of the member states.

    Dr Bukar Ibrahim, the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, conveyed the assurance at the 10th Annual Ministerial Conference on FCWC in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Ibrahim, who was represented by Mr Azeez Muyiwa, a Director in the ministry, said that the Federal Government would support the efforts of the committee to ensure that the fishery resources of the sub-region were sustainably exploited and managed.

    “Today’s annual conference is unique because the organisation is celebrating its 10th anniversary of existence.

    “The organisation’s excellent performance in fisheries management, promotion of fish trade, fight against Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported ( IUU ) fishing and regional cooperation among the member countries cannot be overemphasised.

    “The conference could not have come at a more auspicious time than now that the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari has redirected the focus of the Nigerian economy towards agriculture.

    “Efforts at harnessing the huge potential of fisheries and aquaculture will no doubt give an added impetus to the realisation of our shared objectives in wealth creation, food and nutritional sector in the Gulf of Guinea,’’ he said.

    Ibrahim, however, urged the participants to come up with a workable document that could be used to implement fishery development programmes that would be beneficial to the sub-region.

    Read also: ‘Mechanised Farming, key to Nigeria’s food security’

    Mr Seraphin Dedi, the Secretary General of FCWC, said that if the public and private sectors and all partners in the fishery sector invested appreciable resources in fishery development projects, the sector would record significant improvement.

    “If we are able to invest enough resources in the fishery sector, we may improve the contribution of fisheries to the food security, nutrition and the development of the sub-region.

    “The fishery sector is one sector that is helping a lot in terms redistributing the value addition of the sector to the population. So, if we invest in fisheries, you are sure that it will affect the people of the region.

    “If we look at the value chain of the fishery sector, we will discover that different people are involved in the system; by investing in the sector, you can touch all these people and facilitate the development of the region,’’ he said.

    Dedi said that FCWC was the regional fisheries body that managed the fishery resources of the region which comprised six countries — Nigeria, Liberia, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo and Benin Republic.

    “We are having this meeting in Nigeria, which is the conference of ministers.

    “We use to meet once a year and move from one country to the other. Part of the focus of the current meeting is the celebration of the 10th anniversary of our existence.

    “It means for the past 10 years, we have been working together as a body, sharing our experiences and implementing measures to combat illegal fishery in the region and manage our fishery resources.

    “So after 10 years, we need to sit down and reflect on what we have done so far and how far we can go again.

    “We have noted in our past discussions that investment in fisheries is not sufficient enough.

    “So, in efforts to support our region’s development, we decided to choose `Investment for Growth and Sustainability in Fisheries in West Africa’ as the theme of this year’s conference,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • Liberia’s Supreme Court lifts suspension on presidential run-off election

    Liberia’s Supreme Court lifts suspension on presidential run-off election

    The Supreme Court of Liberia has lifted its stay order on the country’s presidential run-off election earlier billed for Nov. 7.

    Ruling on an appeal for a re-run of the first round of elections held on Oct. 10, the apex court said evidence provided by the appellants was insufficient to grant their prayers.

    Opposition Liberty Party (LP) and the ruling Unity Party (UP) lodged the appeal after the Board of Commissioners of the National Elections Commission (NEC) dismissed their petitions for lack of evidence.

    LP led by Mr Charles Walker Brumskine, who came third in the Oct. 10 elections with less than 10 percent of the votes, took the lead in protesting the election results.

    The party claimed that the exercise was marred by massive irregularities and fraud, and thus fell short of the minimum standards of credibility.

    In its 4-1 ruling, the Supreme Court acknowledged that the first round of presidential and legislative elections were, to some extent, characterised by fraud, irregularities and disregard of the New Elections Law.

    But the court held that the appellants failed to establish that such malpractices were on a scale that warrants a rerun of the entire elections.

    Associate Justice Philip Banks read the ruling on behalf of the five-man Supreme Court Bench, according to local media.

    However, as precondition for the run-off election, the court ordered NEC to fully comply with the standards of publications of the voter register known as the Final Register Roll (FRR) in accordance with law.

    It also mandated the electoral body to conduct a full cleanup of the FRR to have it comply wit the provision of the law.

    The FRR is to be available in published hard copies to all Election Magistrates and polling places across the country in accordance with law prior to the conduct of the run-off election.

    NEC was also ordered not to allow anyone whose name is not in the FRR to vote during the runoff.

    The apex court noted that the FRR is the only electoral document that speaks to the eligibility of voters.

    “Poll watchers, who did not register at their places of assignment and those whose names are not in the FRR should not be allowed to vote,” the court ruled.

    It also prohibited the Chairman and members of the Board of Commissioners of NEC and other employees of commission from public utterances and pronouncements relating to any matter that may emanate from the run-off.

    Meanwhile, NEC is expected to announce a date for the second round, which would be between the two leading candidates, football icon George Weah and incumbent Vice President Joseph Boakai.(NAN)

  • Liberia: Election dispute heads to Supreme Court

    Liberia: Election dispute heads to Supreme Court

    Liberia’s National Elections Commission (NEC) Board of Commissioners has upheld Tuesday’s ruling of NEC Dispute Hearing Officer which dismissed complaints of fraud against the Oct. 10 presidential elections.

    The hearing officer, Mr Muana Ville, had trashed the complaints filed by the Liberty Party (LP) and its presidential candidate, Mr Charles Brumskine, for lack of evidence.

    The complainants are seeking a rerun of the Oct. 10 elections, which they alleged were marred by massive fraud and irregularities perpetrated by the elections commission.

    In its ruling delivered on Friday and published on the NEC website, the board said the complainants failed to prove their allegation of fraud against the commission.

    “The Supreme Court has defined fraud as the employment of trick, artifice or deception to cheat or mislead another.

    “It is not sufficient to merely allege fraud as a basis for relief, it must be established by proof,” the board said.

    It agreed that some “transposing errors” occurred during the Oct. 10 election, but they were corrected.

    The board held that such errors could not have constituted fraud because they did not affect the overall outcome of the elections.

    “Accordingly, we hold that the Hearing Officer did not err, and the first and second appellant for a rerun of the Oct. 10 elections is hereby denied.

    “Wherefore and in view of the foregoing, appellants appeal is hereby denied.

    “The Hearing Officer’s final ruling in these proceedings is hereby confirmed and reaffirmed and it is hereby so ordered,” the board averred.

    The ruling Unity Party (UP) and its presidential candidate, Mr Joseph Boakai, who is the country’s incumbent Vice President, are backing LP in its bid for a rerun of the elections.

    Lawyers representing the two political parties (UP and LP) said they would take an appeal to the Supreme Court, according to local media.

    By the provision of Article 83 of the Liberian Constitution, the aggrieved parties have seven days to file their appeal to the Supreme Court.

    The apex court, in turn, has a maximum of seven days to review the board’s ruling and make its determination.

    On Oct. 31, the Supreme Court issued a stay order on the runoff presidential elections earlier slated for Nov. 7, pending the outcome of NEC’s hearing into the complaints.

    The runoff will see football legend, Mr George Weah, competing with the Vice President to succeed outgoing President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, whose tenure expires in January.

  • Liberian crisis will be resolved constitutionally – Buhari

    Liberian crisis will be resolved constitutionally – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari says the current political challenges in Liberia will be resolved through constitutional means.

    He also urged all parties in the crisis to exercise patience while waiting for the verdict of the Supreme Court.

    Buhari gave the assurance when he received the President Faure Gnassingbe of Togo, who is the current Chairman of ECOWAS, at the State House, Abuja on Tuesday.

    He expressed hope that the outcome of the country’s Supreme Court verdict would be acceptable to all in order to ensure a peaceful transfer of power.

    On the political situation in Guinea Bissau, the President told the ECOWAS Chairman that the leading political actors in the country should agree to a resolution and a transition that would pave way for elections in the country in 2018.

    In his remarks, the ECOWAS Chairman said he had met with Buhari on a number of challenges facing the West African region and seek his counsel on the best way to resolve the issues.

    Gnassingbe said they reviewed the political situations in Liberia, Guinea Bissau and Togo, and also talked about the ongoing reform in ECOWAS.

    He said they were both satisfied with the progress made so far in implementing the reform in the regional body.

    The Togolese president expressed support for the rules and regulations endorsed by the ECOWAS Council of Ministers as guide for the selection of leaders of the ECOWAS Commission.

    The ECOWAS Chairman said the institution’s Heads of State meeting will be held in Abuja in December.

  • Buhari, Ouattara  meet over Togo, Liberia, other issues 

    Buhari, Ouattara meet over Togo, Liberia, other issues 

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday  met  with Cote d’Ivoire President Alassane Ouattara at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The leaders discussed issues bordering on the situation in Togo, Liberia, among others.

    The meeting also deliberated on issues of mutual benefit to the countries.

    Speaking with reporters  said: “It is a great honour and privilege to be in Abuja to see my brother and exchange views with him on the bilateral relations between Nigeria and Cote D’Ivore and to see how our sovereign nation is doing and also of course we had the opportunity to exchange views on major issues on the continent and the world.

    “I will like to thank President Buhari for his invitation. I had expressed the wish to come and see him, we had been in touch and I came to tell him that we are very happy that he is back in good health. This is important not only for Nigeria but for the whole of West Africa and our continent. We pray God that his health continues to be strengthened and be better for him to lead our sub region.

    “The leadership of Nigeria is quite important to all of us which is something that is obvious but I think it needs to be said.

    “President Buhari has shown a great leadership with the fight against Boko Haram, insecurity in the sub region and also on economic matters.

    “I expressed to him the fact as an economist and having worked in Nigeria many years ago, I am impressed by the measures which have been implemented to lift Nigeria out of recession.

    He said that Nigeria and his country have similar experiences resulting from crash in the prices of the two countries’ main export commodities at the international market.

    He specifically commended the President for the measures engaged to bring Nigeria out of recession.

    “Nigeria has seen sharp drop in the price of oil and Cote D’Ivore has also experienced an important decrease in the price of cocoa. As you are all aware, Cote D’Ivore produces 40 percent of world cocoa,  two million tons and the price dropped early this year by 40 percent.

    “So this has had negative effect on our economy. I know what Nigeria went through with the sharp drop in the price of oil.  So I expressed to him my admiration for all the measures which have been taken to lift Nigeria out of recession and to wish all the Nigeria people well because our sub region has made a lot of progress over the past few years and we need to strengthen the bilateral relationship between Cote D’Ivore and Nigeria. This is what we discussed and we have committed ourselves to do so.

    “We also discussed the situation in Togo and situation in Liberia on those we have complete consensus on how we should go about to strengthen democracy in our sub region.” he said

    According to him, President Buhari had promised to attend the AU/European meeting in Abidjan at the end of November.