Liberia’s history of recent is largely replete with economic and human rights related crimes. Two debacles, if not checked and corrected, will continue to undermine and erode economic and political advancement of our country.
Liberia’s uncertain future
Without efforts by the International Community and Liberians themselves, at home and abroad, to consolidate concrete actions in dealing with these menaces, the revival and restoration of our Country and its weak institutions, will be visited with failure and faltering.
Liberia is so jaundiced and held hostage by forces with heavy burden of war and economic crimes, gallivanting around the political and business platforms where they insidiously rise to power and fame by manipulating our ever weak and greedy voters.
These war lords and economic plunderers are no longer satisfied with legislative seats, rather they are yearning for the common presidency, on the other hand, who can blame them when some of the current leaders wear the golden crown of human blood and ghosts of our civil war?
In a country where war lords and perpetrators of economic crimes are rewarded by system of undermined sovereignty and national integrity, we have fallen prey to the venomous and verminous acts of these plunderers who are busy exsanguinating us to our very death.
Will we keep rewarding acts of malfeasance?
The trend of globalization in international politics and fight against crimes is changing. First, we ourselves must begin to initiate a prompt stance and seek remedy in collaboration with international partners and institutions.
Rewarding these inane vampires (to use President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s words) sends a signal that we are complacent with the state of our minds and national situation.
Meaning, “What is wrong with us, is us”. Only by concrete civil and/or legal action, to punish crimes that threaten our very survival that will set the basis for our Country’s affability for international actors to help our situation.
We, intellectuals, technicians, politicians, activists, religious leaders, traditional leaders, etc need now than ever before to demonstrate a cocksure nature and approach to fighting the ills of war and economic crimes in our national existence.
Our real problem is we easily coax each other toward wrong tendencies in our personal interests than harmonizing our differences and resolve towards solving national problems.
Liberia’s convalescence, following years of war and greeted with almost 12 years of economic degradation and erosion, (a period in which we have also witnessed the metamorphosis of crooks, killers and plunderers into Kings, Queens and tycoons) can be midwives into a better society if we ignite justice against crimes that are hunting down our overall progress.
In this business, the powerful crooks and killers will threaten a total State’s collapse and retrogression
to war. This is a vain threat intended to delay people’s might and action. Surely public revenge through justice of the law is more urgent than ever before. Sierra Leone, our closest neighbor is a perfect example where people’s power has out weighted the glory of killers and plunderage of war.
Burkina Fasso too chased out Blaise Campaore in his attempt to manipulate their constitution, but the consequence of his bloody hands in the death of his own brother, Thomas Sankara, one of Africa’s progressive leaders (not the Liberian types of Progressives, many of whom have been enslaved and ensnared and are reliving the very things they have condemned) and their quest for social-political justice, became the Burkinabes’ motivation and willpower.
I could go on citing more examples, but we Liberians are “ever learning and never coming to the knowledge of the truth.” As long as we allow murderers and economic plunderers of our national wealth to go with joyful impunity, we must all then apologize to seventeen men murdered in cold blood in April 1980.
We owe them and their loving families sincere apology for all that we claimed they committed against us and the state are here living with us in the administrations after them, but have been multiplied in abundance since their painful and disgraceful departure.
The global community and their institutions have always offered a hand of partnership, especially if their own interest is involved. For instance, western superposition over the African and sub regional influence saw Nigeria hand over Charles Taylor (former Liberian President).
The sub regional political dynamism that has brought strong willed leaders like Nigeria’s Mohammed Buhari, amongst others needs to super pose its own machinery to punish perpetrators of war and economic crimes within the sub region, if West Africa must build on the pillars of an integration of people in a stable environment.
We have seen over times that corruption and undemocratic tendencies- bad governance or for Liberia’s situation, worse governance, which undercut the attainment of human security and survival, have all served as recipes for instability in West Africa. We follow the history of a region of coups that later were elevated to brutal civil wars spreading from Liberia like tornado.
Recently, revolutionary forces in Burkina Faso did not only deny long serving Blaise Campaore extension of term of office, but also ejected him of the presidency. This indeed was a bloodless exercise growing out of the people’s power.
Eventually, their action has paved the way to hold Campaore accountable for crimes he committed during the untimely murder of Captain Thomas Sankara and others and the deployment of several Burkinabe (who may not be accounted for) in Liberia for warfare assignment during the brutal Liberian civil war.
The scourge engineered by Blaise Campaore via Cote D’Voire, we are quite aware, spread to Sierra Leone, and later to Guinea.
Blaise Campaore will/should not go down alone. His Liberian partners that aided him in the Thomas Sankara episode should be called to book. Their political status in Liberia must not deter the sub Region. The Liberian Legislature or Executive mansion therefore provides easy delivery to justice as the Charles Taylor’s case has proven.
Abuja, West Africa’s most powerful capital must not, in these circumstances provide safe haven for war lords. Already, with credible news filtering around about a list of suspects in the possession of America’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), one can be certain, that in partnership with other members of the international community, the FBI will help clean some of the mess around here.
Similarly, other western partners in whose countries suspected Liberian thieves have deposited huge savings and investments are under obligation to demonstrate goodwill. As in the FIFA case, they need to go beyond freezing accounts, to actual arrest and prosecution. America and Europe cannot afford to grant these suspected criminals sanctuary.
Sometimes ago, there was harsh interaction/exchanges between the U.S. government (through its Ambassador in Liberia) and the Liberian Government over a U.S. human rights report is a welcoming adventure.
The U.S. Embassy stood its grounds on the report and daringly challenged the government to disprove any aspects of the report. Since then, there has been guilty silence. Silence of course means “consent”.
But the U.S needs to go further than just cataloging human rights violations. It needs now, with the stability we have growing out of their support, focus on the setting up of war and economic crimes court to arrest and bring to trial those war and economic vampires.
Washington, under the leadership of President Donald Trump needs to exert strong will and leadership here. He needs to follow the good example of former president George Bush who would not take “no for an answer”.
This administration has to be called to account for the millions it is presiding over. Fortunately, at the end of the civil war, ECOWAS commissioned an audit. Based on the audit report, the government prosecuted former Chairman Gyude Bryant and others for economic crimes.
This was/is a classical example and demonstration of holding individuals (who hold the public trust) accountable. This government and others before must be held accountable.
Where are the Progressives?
Over the years, failed attempt to reach the presidency and other key related positions have baptized many Progressives into the symbiosis problem of self survival, and they see this administration as the last stage of destiny.
These group of people who, in the seventies and eighties propelled the society into action on key national issues, are dormant silent like the environment of a mid night grave yard in rural community. “Here too, people are fighting for belly full”, someone lamented to me.
“In Ellen’s case, she is a master player”, one political observer told me. “She has them to herself and makes good job offers and controls their thinking and lips.
One has to think now about resting with his/her fat salary and benefits, of course prestige too, then to open your mouth and you are axed out. With age weighting them (Progressives) down, where else can they comfortably survive? It is not in their younger ages when they could run to Europe or America and cut eight hours to earn living, I dare them now.
The 2017 presidential elections and it results could spark renew tension amongst war lords and very powerful tycoons. The rivalry between and amongst war lords, tycoons and stand by forces, if not checked by the international community who have dumped in their millions and the sub region that has borne the burden of human and material loss, Liberia will fail. Abuja has much to do with this, because if trouble breaks out, she bears the huge costs of it.
The reasons I stress the urgent involvement of the international community or the sub region, Liberians and their institutions are weak, porous and vulnerable. Liberia’s former minister of Justice Cllr. Christina Tah, in her letter of resignation declared “President Johnson-Sirleaf herself is the chief under miner of the rule of law”.
Not much is desirable in our judicial system. Shielding corrupt officials and gross human rights violators has been at the core of the present government gimmick. It fears if it “pulls rope, rope will haul/pull bush”.
Today, General and Senator Prince Johnson is a darling political golden egg singing praises around here. Sen. Prince Johnson is out for his usual game. He has again sold out to Vice President Joseph Boakai in the hope that Amb. Boakai will shield him from persecution.
Right now PYJ is preaching Congauman-Countryman divide on account of majority over minority. This is a lazy and pointless political argument.
Why did Prince Johnson kill the Countryman and majority leader Samuel K. Doe in 1990? I have even heard feeble thinkers amongst some of our educated elites propounding the countryman-conga man divide.
What a shame of our national existence! What is before us is to monster the courage to set up both a war crimes court and economic crimes court. These actions will move our society forward. Only true justice I insist can help put our country on the right trajectory of moving forward.
We welcome the action of the United States Government to probe into the death of their citizens( Elladini Devi Dasi or Linda Jury, the Catholic Nuns, amongst others) murdered during our senseless war.
We urge the US Government and the International Community at large to take concrete action in helping ordinary Liberian victims find justice. We are tired paying war and economic criminals with our taxes and seeing them make mockery of us.
Time is running out, and if we fail or refuse to act, not in a long distance, the people will rise up!
Sam K. Zinnah, Monrovia, Liberia
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