Tag: liberia

  • Liberians ready to pick next president after delays in run-off vote

    Liberians will go to the polls on Tuesday for the presidential runoff vote that pits former international footballer George Weah against incumbent Vice President Joseph Boakai.

    Weah, representing the Coalition for Democratic Change, won 38.8 per cent of votes in the Oct. 10 first round, while Boakai came in second place with 28.8 per cent.

    There was then a delay in the run-off, initially scheduled for Nov. 7, after the party of a third candidate filed a complaint alleging “massive fraud and irregularities.”

    However, the Supreme Court ultimately cleared the way for the vote to go ahead on Dec. 26.

    The polls are expected to mark the first time in 73 years that a democratically elected president, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, is peacefully handing over power to a successor chosen by the people.

    The last peaceful transfer of power between two democratically elected presidents took place in Liberia in 1944, when former President Edwin Barclay handed over to William Tubman.

    Liberia remains one of the poorest countries in the world and continues to struggle with the aftermath of the 2013 to 2015 Ebola crisis, which killed more than 4,000 people nationwide.

    There are roughly 2.2 million registered voters in the country of 4.1 million.

    Boosting the economy, creating jobs and fighting corruption were high on the agenda of both candidates’ campaigns.

    The 72-year-old Boakai, a former agriculture minister and World Bank consultant, is pledging to prioritise infrastructure development – with a focus on road construction – to open Liberia up to regional and international trade.

    His 12 years as vice president, as well as his experience of working in various economic sectors, are expected to gain Boakai many votes.

    His main rival is retired striker Weah, who is promising to ignite economic recovery by fighting widespread corruption.

    The 51-year-old senator, who lost against Johnson Sirleaf in the 2005 polls, is often described as an idol by Liberians and highly regarded for his down-to-earth attitude.

    Weah was born in a slum in the capital, Monrovia, and worked as a switchboard technician at the national telecommunications company before gaining football fame.

    Regardless of who takes over, he has big shoes to fill.

    Johnson Sirleaf, Africa’s first female head of state, shared the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize with her compatriot Leymah Gbowee and pro-democracy activist Tawakkul Karman of Yemen.

    Sirleaf, 72, is often dubbed the “Iron Lady” and will retire after two six-year terms.

    Liberia, a country founded by freed American and Caribbean slaves, has had a turbulent history, with a brutal civil war that claimed more than 250,000 lives and displaced about a million people.

    The war, which was notorious for its use of child soldiers, ended in 2003, and former warlord and president Charles Taylor has since been sentenced to 50 years in prison by The Hague for war crimes.

    His ex-wife, Jewel Howard-Taylor, is footballer Weah’s unlikely running mate.

    In a statement in November, the U.S. embassy in Monrovia urged that the run-off election be allowed to go ahead unimpeded.

    “The Liberian people and the international community have worked too hard and invested too much to watch Liberia’s progress stall,” the U.S. said.

     

  • BREAKING: Liberia’s NEC schedules presidential runoff for Dec 26

    The runoff in Liberia’s presidential elections will be held on December 26, the country’s electoral overseer announced on Tuesday, clearing a final hurdle in a protracted saga.

    “I am pleased to announce that the 2017 presidential runoff elections will be conducted on Tuesday December 26, 2017,” the president of the National Elections Commission (NEC), Jerome Korkoya, said.

    The Supreme Court last Thursday ordered the commission to proceed with the vote after it was delayed for a month by fraud complaints.

  • Liberia’s ruling party accuses President Johnson-Sirleaf of interfering with election

    Liberia’s Unity Party (UP) said it would back a legal challenge to the result, accusing President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf of interfering in the vote.

    Unity Party, Liberia’s ruling party candidate finished runner-up in the first round of this month’s presidential election.

    The party said in a statement that the October 10 poll, meant to usher in Liberia’s first democratic transition of power since 1944, was “characterised by massive systematic irregularities and fraud”.

    The statement, read to reporters by Unity Party Chairman Wilmont Paye, said Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf had acted inappropriately by meeting privately with elections magistrates before the vote.

    “Greed has resurfaced in its most callous form, sowing seeds of discord yet again with the intent of disrupting the fragile peace of Liberia,” the party said in its statement.

    Unity Party officials said they were supporting a legal challenge by Liberty Party of the third-place candidate Charles Brumskine, which has petitioned the elections commission for a re-run of the first round.

    The All Liberian Party of businessman Benoni Urey also said on Sunday it was backing the complaint.

    “It doesn’t mean we will not take part in the (run-off),” Augustine Ngafuan, Unity Party’s national campaign chairman, told Reuters.

    “We hope the court can rule before the run-off. If not, we will decide what next to do.”

    An official from the elections commission said it expected to hear the formal complaint on Monday.

    The commission’s findings can be appealed in the Supreme Court.

    At Johnson Sirleaf’s residence, where she was celebrating her 79th birthday, her spokesman Jerolinmek Piah told reporters that he would comment on the accusations later as he did not want to overshadow the festivities.

    International observers from the European Union, the Carter Centre and the National Democratic Institute have said they saw no major problems with the vote.

    Unity Party’s statement cements a falling out between Johnson-Sirleaf, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and her party’s leadership after 12 years in power that saw the country consolidate a post-war peace but it also drew sharp criticism over alleged corruption and underdevelopment.

    Joseph Boakai has served as Johnson Sirleaf’s vice president since the president’s inauguration in 2006.

    However, Johnson-Sirleaf declined to endorse him and he distanced himself from the last administration.

    George Weah, a former soccer star in Europe, won the first round with 38.4 per cent of the vote to Boakai’s 28.8 per cent and has momentum heading into the run-off.

    On Thursday he picked up the endorsement of former warlord Prince Johnson, who won eight per cent of the vote in the first round.

    Morluba Morlu, a senior official from Weah’s CDC party, said those challenging the result were “opting to stage trouble”.

    “But no matter what they do … they cannot stop the election of Ambassador Weah,” he added.

    Weah has been a UNICEF goodwill ambassador.

     

     

     

    Reuters/NAN

  • Photos: George Weah in Nigeria, visits TB Joshua for prayers ahead of Liberia rerun

    The presidential candidate in Liberia and football legend, George Weah on Sunday, worshipped at the Sunday Church service of the The Synagogue, Church Of All Nations (SCOAN) in Lagos, Nigeria.

    Weah was said to have come to the Church service to “seek God’s face” for his country. During the sermon by Pastor T.B. Joshua which was broadcast live on popular Christian channel Emmanuel TV, Joshua warmly welcomed Weah and spoke directly to him.

    “My brother is here today because he loves his country and wants God’s choice for his country,” Joshua stated. “He is not here to impose himself. What does God say about his country, Liberia? What is God’s opinion? That is why he is here.”

    The cleric went further to reiterate that he was not favoring any particular side of the political spectrum but his own role was to pray for “the will of God” to be done in the nation of Liberia “We are not herbalists or witch-doctors; we are people of God.

    God’s choice is our choice. We cannot pray against God’s will,” Joshua stressed, with Weah nodding firmly in agreement.

    “Without God’s corresponding power, we cannot pray to Him. For every step we take – every movement and action – intimation comes first,” Joshua further expounded. “There must be suggestion from the Spirit to move before we move.

    If truly I am a man of God, I must hear from God – move or don’t move.” Joshua, who is known for political neutrality, noted that Liberia’s incumbent Vice President and Weah’s contender in the upcoming presidential run-off, Joseph Boakai had also contacted him to request a meeting.

    “God’s opinion is what we should seek in our country – simple! God is the Answer, the Final,” the influential Nigerian pastor added.

    Also present in the service was Senator Yormie Johnson, a former Liberian war lord and also one of the nation’s prominent presidential candidates. Joshua was instrumental in Johnson’s conversion to Christianity and mediated his reconciliation with the family of the late Liberian President, Samuel Doe.

    “You cannot twist or bribe God; He is not a man… The best place to go is to meet people God has given the grace to be a communicator between visible and invisible,” Joshua concluded. “Meet them and let them tell you what is the way out – the next thing to do.”

    The presidential run-off elections between Weah and Boakai is scheduled to hold on November 7, 2017.

    Other prominent visitors to The SCOAN in the past have included Tanzania’s President, John Magufuli, the late President of Ghana, John Atta Mills, Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangarai and Julius Malema, South Africa’s fiery opposition leader.

  • Liberia Decides: Weah, Boakai set for runoff as none clinched required 50% of votes

    The presidential election in Liberia is set for a runoff as none of the candidates scored 50 per cent of votes after final tabulation of results.

    As at 9 p.m Sunday evening, results in 95.6 per cent of the polling units had been announced by the National Elections Commission of Liberia. Of the 5,390 polling places, results have been announced in 5,151 polling places.

    The former World footballer of the year, George Weah, leads other candidates with 572,374 votes or 39 per cent of total votes. He is followed by the current vice president, Joseph Boakai, who has 427,544 votes or 29.1 per cent, while Charles Brumskine has 144,353 votes or 9.8 per cent of votes.

    The Liberian electoral law requires the eventual winner to have at least 50 per cent of votes cast which none of the candidates will be able to meet in this round of elections.

    A run-off is thus expected between Mr. Weah, the only African to ever win the World footballer of the year award (1995) and Mr. Boakai who earlier on Sunday said he still hoped to be elected president.

    As far as I’m concerned, I know the Unity Party is going to win the elections; nothing is going to stop it,” Mr. Boakai told journalists according to a report by the News Agency of Nigeria.

    I went into the election to win, and I don’t settle for second round, I went to the polls for first round.”

     

  • Liberia set for presidential elections as Sirleaf prepares to step down

    Voters in the West African nation of Liberia are set to elect a new head of state, as President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf prepares to step down after 12 years in power, an official poll has said on Tuesday.

    Report says Tuesday’s polls are expected to mark the first time in 73 years that a democratically elected president is peacefully handing over power to a successor chosen by the people.

    Twenty candidates are in the race for president, with 72-year-old Johnson Sirleaf, a Nobel Peace Prize-winner often dubbed the “Iron Lady,” retiring after two six-year terms in office.

    The official report said that there are only three contenders who analysts believe have a real chance of winning.

    They are Vice President Joseph Boakai of the ruling Unity Party ( UP ), former international football star George Weah, who leads the main opposition Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC) and Charles Brumskine, the head of the Liberty Party ( LP ).

    Boosting the economy, creating jobs and fighting corruption are high on the agenda of all candidates’ campaigns.

    The last peaceful transfer of power between two democratically elected presidents took place in Liberia in 1944 when former President Edwin Barclay handed over to William Tubman.

    Liberia remains one of the poorest countries in the world and continues to struggle with the aftermath of the 2013-15 Ebola crisis, which killed over 4,000 people nationwide.

    As well as a brutal 14-year civil war that ended in 2003 after having claimed over 250,000 lives and displaced about a million people.

    The roughly 2.2 million registered voters in the country of 4.1 million are also set to elect 73 members of the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

  • Nigerian Army to deploy 230 personnel to Liberia for peacekeeping operations – Buratai

    The Nigerian Army is to deploy 230 personnel, including 19 officers and 211 soldiers to Liberia, Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai has said.

    Speaking in Kaduna at the end of a four-week intensive training on leadership and peacekeeping for the personnel, Buratai, charged them to shun acts that could tarnish Nigeria’s image.

    “You must observe human rights, and respect the cultural and religious sensitives of Liberians,” he said.

    The army chief said that since 1960, Nigeria has deployed over 20, 000 troops to 40 peacekeeping missions in Africa and across the world.

    Earlier the Nigerian Army Peacekeeping Centre, Jaji was renamed Martin Luther Agwai International Leadership and Peacekeeping Centre, in recognition of his commitment to peacekeeping efforts and excellent service.

    The centre was established in 2004 by Agwai as a Wing, when he was the Chief of Army Staff.

    Speaking, Agwai noted that peacekeeping was gradually becoming an intra-country issue with the military at the centre stage following internal conflicts such as ethnic, religious other crises.

    He, however, noted that Nigeria has been involved in peacekeeping operations in Africa and world at large, but had not repeat the economic and diplomatic benefits of such venture.

    Agwai, who was also a Chief of Defence Staff, called on government and private-owned organisations to partner the centre in leadership training on conflict prevention and management in the quest to achieve enduring peace.

    He thanked current and past leadership of the army for the honour done him by naming the centre after him.

    NAN reports that Agwai, was former Deputy Force Commander, United Nations Peacekeeping Operation in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL), Chief of Army Staff Nigerian Army, Force Commander of African Union/United Nations Mission Hybrid Mission in Darfur (UNAMID).

    He was later Special Adviser to Secretary-General of the UN.

     

    NAN

  • See how Flavour made blind boy’s dream come true

    See how Flavour made blind boy’s dream come true

    Nigerian high-life singer, Flavour N’abania recently paid a visit to Liberia where he met a blind boy Semah G Weifur, whose dream is to meet with the star and sing with him.

    The crowd were stunned by Semah’s vocal dexterity and musical talent. Even Flavour couldn’t hide his excitement when the boy started singing his song.

    He took to his Instagram page to share the experience. According to him:”I made a new friend Semah G. Weifur. He’s blind and sang my songs better than me” he said

    Flavour met the visually impaired boy at Liberia Crusader for Peace Village . He was so touched to the extent that he shared the video on his Instagram page.

    Watch the video below

  • Flavour bags chieftaincy title

    Flavour bags chieftaincy title

    Nigerian highlife singer, Flavour has been honored with a chieftaincy title in Liberia. The sexy artiste is now referred to as Chief Zanzan of Liberia.

    The talented singer was honoured as a result of his contributions to African music and culture.