Tag: Weah

  • Liberia’s George Weah concedes defeat to Boakai, says I respect democracy

    Liberia’s George Weah concedes defeat to Boakai, says I respect democracy

    Liberian President George Weah has conceded defeat after results from the week’s runoff vote showed opposition party candidate Joseph Boakai was leading him by more than one percentage point.

    Election officials reported that after 99.58 percent of the votes cast in Tuesday’s election were counted, Boakai had 50.89% of the total, compared to Weah’s 49.11%.

    The outcome was a stark contrast to the election six years prior, in which Weah defeated Boakai easily.

    Weah made a concession speech even before official results were announced,  coinciding defeat at a time when there have been mounting concerns about the deterioration of democracy in West Africa.

    Read Also: Tinubu commends Liberia’s Weah for conceding defeat

    Weah said:  “The utmost respect for the democratic process that has defined our nation.

    “The Liberian people have spoken, and we have heard their voice.

    “I urge you to follow my example and accept the result of the elections. Our time will come again in 2029, Weah said in an address to the nation, adding that Boakai “is in a lead that we cannot surpass.”

    During the past few years, the West African region has witnessed a number of military coups, including one that occurred in Gabon earlier this year following a presidential election.

  • Weah, 19 others await results in Liberia’s poll

    Weah, 19 others await results in Liberia’s poll

    Liberia went to the polls for the presidential and parliamentary elections yesterday in which 20 presidential candidates, including incumbent George Weah, were hopeful to lead the country of five million.

    Hundreds of people had gathered at polling stations in the capital, Monrovia, early yesterday morning ahead of the start of voting at 08:00 GMT.

    Weah, a former international football star, rode to victory on a wave of optimism in 2017, bringing hope to a country that had been devastated by two back-to-back civil wars between 1989 and 2003, and the Ebola epidemic of 2014-2016.

    His election was an historic event, marking the country’s first democratic transfer to power since 1944. He promised to tackle poverty, create jobs, build roads and end corruption.

    Nearly five years after he took office in 2018, the former Ballon d’Or winner remains popular in some parts of the country, but anger is growing over persistently high levels of corruption and the cost of living.

    The main political parties have pledged that the presidential and legislative elections in the West African country would pass off peacefully.

    Read Also: 2023 AFCON: Weah singles out Osimhen for praises

    However, the death of three people last month during clashes between rival party supporters has raised concerns about a return to bloodshed.

    Scuffles also broke out on Sunday as Weah, who is seeking a second six-year term as president, held his final campaign rally, leaving several injured.

    The election was the first to be held since the United Nations ended its peacekeeping mission in Liberia in 2018.

    UN peacekeepers were deployed to the country after more than 250,000 people died in two civil wars between 1989 and 2003.

    Weah has argued that he needs more time to fix the nation’s decrepit economy and infrastructure.

    The former athlete is the favourite among 20 candidates but could face a second-round run-off if he does not secure an absolute majority in the first round of voting.

    The European Union, the African Union, the West African bloc ECOWAS and the United States have deployed observers to oversee the vote.

    Some 2.4 million Liberians were eligible to vote in the elections, with polling stations closing at 18:00 GMT.

  • The Match in Lagos Next Year: Weah, Drogba, 19 former African stars expected

    Twenty-one African football legends including Didier Drogba and Liberian President, George Weah, have been selected to participate in ‘The Match: A Celebration of Excellence in Sport’ project scheduled to hold March 16, 2019.

    Some of the other former stars of the Beautiful Game in the continent who have been approached to join in extolling the giant strides made by Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode, include Senegal’s El -Hajj Diouf, Drogba’s former Elephants teammate, Kolo Toure, Ghanaian duo of Michael Essien and Stephen Appiah. Former French star, Christian Karembu is also on the card to storm Lagos.

    From the home front, ex internationals like Samson Siasia, Nwankwo Kanu, Austin Jay Jay Okocha, Joseph Yobo, Julius Aghahowa and several others have been listed to participate in the African All-Stars versus Nigerian Legends.

    Speaking at a media parley in Lagos yesterday to announce the project, Waidi Akanni, who along with Samson Siasia are the chief architects of The Match, said Gov Ambode had made laudable sports development in Lagos that he is worth celebrating.

    “As internationals, we have seen the infrastructural developments in Lagos under Gov Ambode. The Onikan Stadium that has been abandoned over the years is under reconstruction to meet FIFA standard. Teslim Balogun Stadium is undergoing similar reconstruction while the Agege and Epe Stadiums are in fantastic shape not to talk of the Maracana Sports complex in Ajegunle. These and other laudable efforts of Gov Ambode in providing sports infrastructure, we believe, are aimed at providing the enabling environment for youths to thrive and achieve their dreams in sports,” explained the former Super Eagles player.

    Akanni further hinted that part of the proceeds from the event will go into supporting families of distressed ex Nigerian international players.

    “If you go around, you will see several former footballers who served this country in several capacities but unable to meet up in life. We will support their children’s education where ever possible.”

    A representative of Drogba who flew into Lagos for the media session lauded the project of celebrating African former legends and urged organizers of the project to provide adequate security and logistics for the invited former African stars.

    Present at the event which held at the Regent Hotel inside Ikeja GRA were former Green Eagles captain, Henry Nwosu, Tajudeen Disu and Ifeanyi Udeze.

  • Wenger receives Liberia’s highest honour

    Liberian President and former football star George Weah awarded ex-Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger with the country’s highest honour in a ceremony on Friday.

    The award, it was disclosed, was for services to African football that included launching Weah’s own acclaimed career.

    Wenger found Weah playing for Cameroon’s Tonnerre Yaounde and brought him to French side Monaco in 1988.

    The move paved the way for the striker at some of Europe’s top clubs, including AC Milan, Paris St Germain and Chelsea.

    In 1995 Weah was named World Footballer of the Year and won the Ballon d’Or, still the only African to win either award.

    “You proved yourself as a teacher when you revolutionised forever the approach of scouting young talents all over the planet, particularly throughout Africa,” Weah said of Wenger during a ceremony in the capital Monrovia.

    Wenger was named a Knight Grand High Commander of the Humane Order of African Redemption, the highest rank in Liberia’s Order of Distinction.

    Fellow coach Claude Le Roy, who first told Wenger about Weah’s talent, also received the award on Friday.

    Thousands of spectators clapped and cheered as Wenger received his medal in a hall at the national stadium adorned with the national red, white and blue.

    Thousands more listened to the ceremony on the radio in the stadium, once a shelter for people displaced by a civil war that ended fifteen years ago.

    Weah’s footballing successes helped launch his political career back home.

    His unlikely rise, from kicking a ball on the dusty streets of a Monrovia slum to world fame, won him support in one of the world’s poorest countries.

    Development in the West African country has been hobbled by the 14-year civil war that ended in 2003 and an Ebola outbreak which killed thousands from 2013-16.

    Read Also: Liberians divided on Arsene Wenger honour

    He succeeded Nobel Peace Prize winner Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as president after a landslide election victory in December last year.

    “I think Wenger deserves it. If he had not spotted ambassador Weah in those days, he would not have reached this level,” said university student Cynthia Kollie.

    Some took issue with the awards, saying the president’s choice was based on personal ties rather than on what the recipients did for the country.

    “President Weah is bestowing our nation’s highest honour on his two former football coaches who have made no direct impact or contributed to Liberia’s collective interest,” said Martin Kolle, a student.

  • Liberia seeks 6,000 teachers as Buhari, Weah meet in Abuja (Audio)

    Liberia seeks 6,000 teachers as Buhari, Weah meet in Abuja (Audio)

    • ‘Nigerians ’re welcome in Liberia for business’

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday met behind closed doors with Liberian President George Weah at the Presidential Villa, Abuja with the latter seeking 6,000 teachers from Nigeria.

    Weah said the request, under the Bilateral Teacher Exchange programme, will make up for the shortage of good teachers in Liberia’s educational system.

    The Liberian president, who spoke with State House reporters at the end of meeting with Buhari, said Nigerian businessmen and women were welcome to help develop his country’s economy.

    He said: “I hereby declare that Liberia is now open for business to the Nigerian private sector. There is a need to address the current volume of trade between our two countries, which is very low and does not exceed million, by some estimates.

    “Yet, the Liberian banking sector is dominated by Nigerian banks, and I am made to understand that their head offices in Nigeria may be considering reducing their support or even shutting them down because of the recent downturn in our economy.

    “If this is true, l urge them not to do so, as l am optimistic that trade and commerce will increase in the near future. There are also major shortcomings in the electricity and power sectors, in road construction, in housing, in mining and in fisheries, to name a few, that could be of serious interest to Nigerian investors, either as individuals or companies or through joint-ventures or public-private partnerships.

    “We invite all of you to come to Liberia and explore the many new opportunities for investment that are bound to increase under this new political dispensation. I promise you that you will find a government that is not only business friendly, but ready to do business.

    “On a personal note, President Buhari, it is my intention, with all due respect and affection, to frequently seek your wise counsel and advice as I embark upon this arduous task of nation-building, reconstruction and transformation of my country.

    https://soundcloud.com/thenationnewspaper/liberia-needs-nigerias-help-to-jump-start-economy-weah

    “Nigeria’s historical benevolence towards Liberia cannot be quantified. And once again, we seek your urgent assistance.”

    He thanked Buhari for the invitation extended to him and his delegation.

    According to him, the visit was to express gratitude and respect for the extraordinary and exceptional role Buhari and Nigerians played in maintaining peace and stability in the West African sub-region, especially in Liberia.

    He said: “Although yours is the largest economy in Africa, with the most powerful army in our sub-region, you have never used your wealth and military prowess to expand your territory, threaten your neighbours, or de-stabilise any sovereign nation in the region.”

    Weah added that the prices of Liberia’s two basic export commodities, rubber and iron ore, have continued to fall in the world market.

     

  • I won’t let you down, Weah assures Liberians

    I won’t let you down, Weah assures Liberians

    Liberian President George Opong Weah promised his country men and women yesterday he would not let them down.

    He spoke at a jam-packed Samuel Doe International stadium in Monrovia shortly after he took his oath of office as the 24th president of his country.

    It was the first time since 1944 that power was transferred from one president to another in the country which went through a long-running civil war.

    The former football star had packed football stadium, but yesterday’s was most significant.

    “I have spent many years of my life in stadiums but today is a feeling like no other,” Weah, sporting beards and dressed in white, told the ecstatic crowd.

    He added: “I have taken an oath before you and before almighty God. Rest assured I will not let you down.

    “This victory would not have been possible without the youth of this country, the women of this country who made their living selling in the market. This is your government,” he said.

    Speaking on corruption, Weah said: “The way to directly affect the poor is to ensure our resources do not enter in the pockets of government officials. I promise to deliver on this mandate,”

    Weah, 51, said he couldn’t offer any “quick fixes” but rather steady progress towards the goals of Liberians.

    His biggest priorities, he said, would be to fight corruption and pay civil servants “a living wage,” and show the private sector that Liberia was “open for business”.

    Vice-President, Jewel Howard-Taylor, the former wife of the warlord and former president Charles Taylor, who is serving a 50-year sentence for war crimes, stood side by side with her boos.

    Former President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who stepped down after 12 years as Africa’s first elected female President, was joined by dignitaries including Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Mali’s President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita and Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo, Sierra leone President Ernest Koroma, among others including a representative of South African President Thabo Mbeki. Cameroonian football legend Samuel Eto’o also watched the historic moment.

    More than half of Liberians live in poverty and it was these people who filled Weah’s rallies and turned out to vote for him, full of hope that his charmed life might somehow rub off on theirs.

     

     

  • Liberia scores a great one for Weah

    The news about George Oppong Weah’s election as president of Liberia was an especially pleasant one to round-off 2017.

    However, perhaps unknown to many of the young supporters whose votes propelled him to victory during the country’s recent run-off election, Weah’s road to Liberia’s impressive Executive Mansion was beyond unpleasant, and one paved with rivers of blood.

    Let us start from April 12, 1980, when a segment of the country’s armed forces launched a coup in the early hours of that day and butchered the-then incumbent president, William Tolbert. The especially bloody coup, led by Master Sergeant Samuel Doe, was justified – and inspired – by the utterly clannish argument that it was time for the “indigenous Liberians” to take over “their country” from freed black American slaves who had been transported to Liberia to start a colony in their home continent. Ever since those first slaves settled on Liberian soil, a settlement that took on greater urgency after the end of the American Civil War in 1865, peoples of the indigenous tribes whom the freed American slaves met there ceaselessly fussed about how the newcomers completely dominated all facets of life in the new territory and wielded unlimited political power and influence.

    All that ended on that bloody day in April 1980, when soldiers who hailed from the “indigenous” tribes of the country invaded the Executive Mansion in the early hours of the morning and not only shot then-President Tolbert (an “Americo-Liberian”, like many members of the ruling class in the country then) to death but also disemboweled him.

    The violent deaths of the Tolbert brothers, Dennis and other members of the “Americo-Liberian” ruling class in Liberia eventually led to a series of unfortunate events that turned the entire country into a giant river of blood; in December 1989, less than 10 years after Doe’s coup, Charles Taylor invaded the country to launch a rebellion against Doe’s government.  Curiously, Taylor had been one of the few “Americo-Liberians” that had supported Doe’s coup and had indeed served in his government. But he had fallen out with Doe after the latter (of all people!) accused him of corruption and hounded him out of the country. The bloody sequel to Taylor’s act of rebellion was the infamous Liberian Civil War, even “wars”, in which a plethora of individuals and characters became etched in the worldwide imagination, through newspaper and cable news headlines / stories that dutifully chronicled the carnage in that country.  For those of us who worked in Nigeria as journalists at that time, two of those names, Krees Imodibie and Tayo Awotusin, continue to be etched in our collective memories: they were journalists who crossed into Liberia just a few weeks after Taylor’s invasion started, to cover the events, and then got cut down in its fierce cross-fires.

    We also all watched on video as troops belonging to the armed faction of Prince Yormie Johnson very early on in the Liberian Civil War captured, tortured and killed President Samuel Doe, with the garish spectacle of Doe’s ears being cut off on camera while he lay squealing on the floor still the stuff of many nightmares.  It also did not do Liberia any good that it became the country of drug-crazed child soldiers, massacres of internally-displaced refugees who had sought protection in churches and other places of worship, along with other demonic indignities.

    Through the Liberian ordeal that spanned from December 1989 to at least April 2003 when Charles Taylor was forced to give up the power he had seized over the corpses of many Liberians (anyone remember the campaign chants of “He Killed My Pa. He Killed my Ma, But I will Vote for Him” that preceded Taylor’s election as Liberia’s President in 1997?), one man stood out as the beacon of light and hope in Liberia: George Oppong Weah.  While Johnson, Taylor and others of their ilk were either preoccupied with the “herculean tasks” of drawing and quartering Samuel Doe or raping, slaughtering and dehumanizing their fellow Liberians, George Weah was making waves on the world soccer stage, and generating positive publicity for Liberia. The trend continued after he joined French club Paris Saint-Germain in 1992, winning the French Premier League title with the club just two years after, in 1994, and topped the goal-scoring charts during PSG’s UEFA Champion’s League run in 1994-1995.

    But Weah was not done with his great run of generating positive news about himself and his beloved Liberia: in 1995, he joined the Italian Seria A Club, AC Milan (at a time the Italian Seria A was the best soccer league in the world to watch, not the English Premier League, as is now the case!), making such an immediate impact that at the end of that year’s campaign, Weah dribbled off with the highest award in the world of professional soccer, FIFA’s Ballon d’Or (yes, the same ones won later by the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, soccer’s top superstars today).

    I am equally not surprised that the votes of Liberia’s youth (those usually in the 18 – 49 age demographic) propelled Weah to power in the recent Liberian run-off presidential election. In the desperate years of the country’s very bloody and bitter civil war, when despair ruled the land and the country epitomized everything wrong with the African continent and its leadership cadre, only George Weah and his exploits on the world stage comforted many Liberians. Through the soccer star’s extraordinarily-individual efforts, many Liberians inside and outside the country fervently believed the best in their country and in its future potential as a stable and self-sufficient land in the comity of nations, not a warring laughing-stock of disparate tribal interests, as another African country – Somalia –has remained, despite the fact that its civil war started just about the same time as the one in Liberia.

    Even more impressive, especially in retrospect, Weah actively embraced his people and country during their darkest days.  While his fame grew well beyond Liberia and encompassed the whole world, the soccer star in turn continuously embraced his beleaguered countrymen without hesitation. Weah stridently made calls for peace among the warring factions during Liberia’s Civil War, while also urging the presence of peacekeepers that would impose a peace; the West African peacekeeping force, ECOMOG, was believed to be a response to such calls. I also recall reading reports of Weah funding the expenses of Liberia’s national soccer team, the Lone Star, in those parlous times, especially the team’s international matches.  This, in addition to his contributing large sums of money to assist displaced Liberians who had found refuge in other countries during the war, especially the country’s infamous former child soldiers.

    Just as George Weah put his beloved country on the world map in a very positive way at the same time others were thrashing it in the name of crass personal vendettas, conduct steeped in deprivation-of-others, mayhem, murder, strange / satanic sexual escapades and quests, along with selfish political rivalries, to say the least, one implores him at this time to put the interests of all Liberians, whether Americo-Liberian or indigenous (which Weah is) above those of himself and his “inner circle” of supporters.  His country’s bitter past dictates this, as well as the grace and eloquence of conduct he had shown years earlier at the highest levels of world soccer, while entertaining millions and uplifting Liberia at the same time.

    The ascendance of 51- year old Weah (he shares the same birthday with Nigeria, incidentally) to Liberia’s Presidency is also a lesson to others on the African continent that they must truly give Africa’s youth a chance at leading their countries, and not stymieing same under the chimera of the-youth-continuously-growing. The latter attitude only encourages and engenders the unfortunate recycling of politicians in their 70s, 80s and even 90s (as in Mugabe’s Zimbabwe!) who aspire to and then seek return to offices and positions in which they have barely delivered on past promises, while relying instead on discredited and dangerous practices and policies of the past that only deepen the despair of citizens they falsely profess to love or care about.

     

    • Soboyede, former newspaper editor, is currently a US-based attorney.
  • PDP congratulates Weah, tasks INEC on 2019 poll

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has congratulated the Liberian President-elect, Mr. George Weah on his victory in an election he contested on the platform of an opposition party.

    The party also congratulated the Liberian people for a peaceful and successful political transition, saying that the development was a firm and loud statement that democracy has taken firm roots not only in Liberia but also in the entire African continent.

    In a statement on yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP also commended the Liberian national electoral umpire for its internal reforms that paved the way for a credible election.

    The PDP described the outcome of the election as being in consonant with the wishes and aspirations of the citizens.

    “As a leader in the West African sub-region, Nigeria, especially under the PDP, played key roles in ensuring political stability in Liberia and must continue to show direction by ensuring the consolidation of democratic practice and culture both at home and in other countries in the sub-region.

    “On that note, the PDP charges the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu to ensure credible elections in 2019, by insulating the commission from external interference.”

  • Milla, Weah storm Lagos for Kanu

    Milla, Weah storm Lagos for Kanu

    No less than 46 African football legends have confirmed their participation in the clash of legends – a Charity /Peace football match being organized by Kanu Heart Foundation and Nelson Mandela Foundation for charitable initiatives.

    The match will hold in Lagos on April 29 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium. According to a press statement by the General Secretary of the Local Organising Committee of the event, Pastor Onyebuchi Abia, the match would feature the greatest gathering of the continental bests.

    Among the galaxy of stars will be two former world footballer of the year and European Award winner George Weah of Liberia and Abedi ‘Pele’ Ayew of Ghana.

    Other expected legends include: Patrick Mboma of Cameroon, Benny Mc Carthy (South Africa), Anthony Baffoe (Ghana), Kalusha Bwalya (Zambia), Lucas Radebe and Mark Fish (South Africa) among others.

    Also expected are Didier Drogba (Cote d’Ivoire), Samuel Eto’o (Cameroon), El-hadji Diouf (Senegal), Benjani Mwaruwari (Zimbabwe), Frédéric Kanouté (Mali), Phil Masinga (South Africa), Peter Ndlovu (Zimbabwe), Samuel Kuffour of Ghana and the legendary Roger Milla of Cameroon.

    They will be joined by their Nigerian counterparts like Kanu Nwankwo, Austin Jay Jay Okocha, Daniel Amokachi, Celestine Babayaro, Garba Lawal, Victor Ikpeba, Taribo West, Uche Okechukwu, Peter Rufai, Emmanuel Amuneke and Samson Siasia.

    Meanwhile corporate bodies such as MTN, Nigeria Breweries, the South African Embassy VFS Global have indicated their preparedness to be part of this event which the Legends of African are using to make a statement against xenophobic attacks in the African continent.

  • Weah cautions NFF on election

    Weah cautions NFF on election

    Former World Footballer of the Year  1995, George Opong Weah has advised football stakeholders in Nigeria to work in the interest of the game by allowing those that are qualified to run for elective positions into the Board of the Nigeria Football Federation(NFF).

    “All we want for African football and Nigerian football is to put somebody at the helm of who can develop the game in the country. Everybody has the right to aspire to be in charge of football administration but the people that would put them there (through voting) should ensure that the right person who can develop the game is put in charge.  I don’t think anybody that has the interest to serve in the capacity as the President should be restricted. All candidates have the desire to contest and they have the right to do so,”Weah said.

    Weah, who is in Abuja on a private visit, also advised CAF to give Africa Cup of Nation(AFCON) host, Morocco more time.

    Confederation of Africa Football (CAF) has given Morocco till November 8 to decide whether it would still host the competition before looking for an alternative country. Morocco had called for time in order to put in place measures against the dreaded disease Ebola.

    “What brought me to Nigeria is personal and I am happy to be here and I am glad with the reception I received so far from my fans in Nigeria since I flew in. So, I am glad to be here,” he said.

    On hosting of 2015 AFCON by Morocco that has now been a subject of doubt as a result of the Ebola disease that is  ravaging some parts of Africa, the former Liberia Presidential candidate said:“Let us be positive about everything. We are aware of the fact that the world is experiencing the (Ebola) epidemic and it is not what anybody should handle with levity and we should all fight very hard to eradicate it from our society. We should put a precautionary method to checkmate the scourge,”Weah said.