SAO BOSO KAMARA CORNER

“Having sold your land and accepted payment, you must accept the consequences”. This site is christened after the 19th Century Bopolu and Guadu-Gboni Mandingo King, Sao Boso Kamara, in the hope that his equitable and just approach to reconciling the elements of the Liberian population will serve as a lesson for fashioning a lasting solution to our national quandary. Let the betterment of others be your vocation.

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

We can fix Liberia and we intend to fix Liberia, Says Varney Sherman


We can fix Liberia and we intend to fix Liberia, Says Varney Sherman
Inaugural Address Of Cllr. H. Varney G. ShermanAs Standard Bearer of the Liberia Action Party

The Perspective Atlanta, Georgia May 24, 2005

At the National Convention of the Liberia Action Party held at the Unity Conference Center inVirginia, Liberia (May 13 -14, 2005), Varney Sherman became the first presidential candidate to be elected by a registered political party to contest the ensuing October 2005 presidential election under the party's banner. Below is the full text of Mr. Sherman's Inaugaral AddressMy fellow Liberians,Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen:

One of the well-known propositions on which this nation, Liberia, was founded, is that people of the Black race have the capacity to govern themselves. Yet, after nearly 158 years of independence, we have failed so miserably in the governance of this country. Another proposition on which our country was founded is that all men are born equal, with certain inalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Yet, throughout most of our years of independence politics of exclusion, marginalization and opportunism have been practiced in this country. Continuous misrule, abuse of power, nepotism, corruption, uninhibited greed and inordinate ambition of a few, culminating with divisive civil conflicts over a protracted period of time, have now reduced us to abject poverty, misery, degradation, deprivation, and sufferings of the magnitude that many of us never dreamed about before we experienced it. We are here to today to change things around; and we make a clarion call on all Liberians everywhere to join the enterprise of transforming our native land to a safer and better place for all Liberians.
I will never forget that afternoon in Accra, Ghana in 1990, while I was in temporary exile from the NPFL-led civil war, when the Bulk Challenge, a decrepit, un-seaworthy vessel, took off from the Free Port of Monrovia, with hundreds of our fellow citizens, seeking refuge from the cruelties and miseries of our civil war. As the Bulk Challenge took off to the high seas, some patriotic Liberian on that vessel started to the sing the battle song of our Republic: “The Lone Star Forever”; Liberians on deck joined in the singing as they waived good-bye to their beloved country.

Right there fleeing from destitution, depravity and suffering, even as they left the shores of their home for strange lands, Liberians not only showed their love for our country, they re-committed themselves to something bigger than themselves - that our country and people will endure and overcome the tragedies of our civil war. And so they sang:

The Lone Star forever!
The Lone Star forever!
O long may it float
O’er land and o’er seas!

In the passion of the moment, those Liberians on the Bulk Challenge rekindled my faith in our people and my hope for my country; they rekindled my love for country in the final words of the refrain of our battle song:

Desert it, No never!
Uphold it, forever
O shout for the Lone Starr’s banner – All hail!

Even today when I recall the images of the departure of the Bulk Challenge, tears come to my eyes. You can then imagine how openly I wept that afternoon for my people and for my country. It was then that I decided to read the “Lone Star Forever” and for the first time, I really digested the words of our battle song, especially a part of the last stanza, which reads:

Then forward, sons of freedom, march!
Defend the sacred heritage!
Where’er it sounds ‘neath heaven’s arch,
Wherever foes assailBe ever ready to obey
Gainst treason and rebellious front,
Gainst foul aggression in the brunt.
From that moment, I quietly vowed to myself that if there is anything that I can do, either singly or in conjunction with other Liberians, to ensure that never again, never again, would our people suffer so terribly and our country be so utterly destroyed, I would. And it was then that I decided that I would leave the comfort of my successful law practice, get involved with politics by seeking elective office and help steer my country out of the “mess” that it had been plunged into by evil, rebellious, misguided sycophants of our times. True to my vow, I was a candidate for the Liberian Senate on the ticket of our beloved political party, the Liberia Action Party, and ultimately, our coalition, the Alliance of Political Parties.

In campaigning for the Alliance of Political Parties in 1997, many of you will recall that I put in my “everything” – my time, my energies, my financial and material resources, and my intellect. I need not repeat the conduct that several other speakers at this Convention have alluded to as the reason why the Alliance of Political Parties failed and one of the protagonists in our civil war became the victor in the 1997 Special Elections. I need only say that even as we strived to organize the Alliance of Political Party, that victor, (a warlord, who now stands indicted by the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone and who brought so thick a “darkness” over our county), warned that the egos and inordinate ambitions of certain political leaders would break the Alliance up. Those political demagogues were not even noble enough to prove the warlord wrong; yet, today, some of those same persons whose conduct landed the 1997 Special Elections into the hands of that warlord, have come up again to ask the Liberian people for their votes. We stand here today to oppose them; we stand here today to challenge them; we come here today to offer ourselves and all that we are as an alternative to them.

Worse than those political demagogues of 1997 are those Liberians who collaborated and cooperated with the destruction of our country and campaigned to place state power and governance of our county into the hands of warlords – people who persisted and marveled in the destruction of our country and literally enjoyed the abject poverty and misery they subjected our people to. They too have come, pretending to have changed with the passage of years, carrying the Bible in one hand and perhaps in the other hand, a fist covered with iron spikes, asking our Liberian people to forgive them today and give them state power tomorrow. We stand here today to oppose them; we stand here today to challenge them; we come here today to offer ourselves and all that we are as an alternative to them.

And there are those who collaborated with the dictatorship of the 1980s – a dictatorship, whose very conduct of the affairs of this country made the soil fertile for rebellion and anarchy – who have also come back to ask our people for the mantle of state power, hoping that our people have forgotten their misdeeds and their collaboration with dictatorship. We stand here today to oppose them; we stand here today to challenge them; we come here today to offer ourselves and all that we are as an alternative to them.

And then there are those who chose to abandon Liberia and seek their good fortunes in other parts of the world, secured in their person, their possessions, and their profession or business endeavors, dining and wining well, while Liberians ran from the fires of bullets and from the difficulties of war and the uncertainties of a tomorrow. Then as the storms have calmed down and the fires are out and there is light in the tunnel, those who abandoned our country for the comfort of other countries have now come and asked for the leadership of our country. Even for them, as insignificant as their conduct may be for our political future, we stand here today to oppose them; we stand here today to challenge them; we come here today to offer ourselves and all that we are as an alternative to them.

I believe deep inside that those who destroyed our country with the level of wantonness and recklessness we have experienced in our recent history and those who helped or assisted in such destruction have neither the capacity nor the commitment to rebuild this country. They just don’t have the moral fiber that is required for the challenges of our times, especially the need to transform our society. It is this conviction and my personal vow to never again let our country be so utterly destroyed and our people undergo such unnecessary suffering that have propelled me to seek the high office of President of Liberia. Following the calls of the battle song of our Republic, we are here to defend the sacred heritage “gainst treason and rebellious front” launched against it by some of our fellow citizens; we call on you to join us to defend the sacred heritage “gainst foul aggression in the brunt”, which has destroyed everything, including even our values as a people. We come here committed and dedicated to change things around – “ever ready to obey” the wishes of our people.

I pray to God for his continuous blessing on this enterprise that we have embarked on; I thank you, my fellow partisans, my friends and family, especially my wife, Joyce, my sons, Zoeluma and Zuanna, and my old mother, Theresa Jande, for your support so far; and I ask you to continue to support me in this process.

As I stand before you today, my fellow Partisans, I recall the prophetic consolatory message of our first Standard Bearer, Jackson Fiah Doe, when the Military Regime of Samuel Doe rigged the 1985 elections that LAP had resoundingly won – “Around and around we seem to go – but one day soon the Rooster will crow”.

The Rooster, my fellow partisans, will crow only if men and women who worked with Jackson Fiah Doe, Harry Greaves, A.T. Nah, E. Seku Koroma, Edgar Sie Badio, Vulate Tate, Gbarmie Sahn and so many other senior partisans of the Liberia Action Party in 1985 were to take on the mantel of our Party, rise to the challenges of our times, and bring the “dawn of a new day” to our beloved country and its people. And I am most honored this evening by the presence in this conference hall, sharing the stage with me, two of these great and courageous men of yesteryears in persons of A.T. Nah and Gbarmie Sahn. I give you my word, Sirs, and I take an oath before man and God, that I shall never, ever betray the confidence of our Partisans nor shall I ever depart from the core values of our beloved Party.

Fellow Partisans, we, who have offered ourselves to be your political leaders know that our country is at its lowest in every respect and in every regard; but we believe very deeply that given the enormous wealth of our country, coupled with the resourcefulness and resilience of our people, we, with good management, can rebuild our country and make it a land of justice, peace, prosperity and opportunity for all. We also believe that bringing the dawn of a new day to our country would require transforming the system and processes of governance. It would require some level of political decentralization and capacitating our political sub-divisions through a combination of both “revenue-sharing between the central government and county governments” and “independent sources of revenue for the county governments”. It would also require a new vision of promoting both self-reliance of individual counties and fostering competition between counties. It will require enabling all Liberians to participate fully and actively in the economy of our country, re-tooling the Liberianization policy and program as an effective mechanism for capacitating Liberians and providing all Liberians with opportunities for self-enhancement and self-actualization. And with that combination, we will be able to unleash the tremendous energies and resourcefulness of our people, directed at the sustained balanced development of our country.

We can fix Liberia and we intend to fix Liberia. “Good governance” will not be only talk and no action; accountability and transparency will not only be a dream; they will be a reality and an experience that all our people will benefit from. We shall fight corruption with all our might; we shall restore discipline and responsibility in every aspect of our country; and the rule of law shall abide with us in everything we do in this country.

My fellow Liberians, I have been a lawyer throughout my professional life, accounting to my clients for the conduct of their affairs, and being transparent with them in how I manage their affairs. I don’t know how else to do business or how else to conduct myself. The values and virtues of private sector governance, which have been my entire professional life for more than 25 years, can be brought to bear on public sector governance to make government and governance in Liberia, in the words of our illustrious Chairman, D. Sheba Brown, “respectable and admirable”. And I am committed to this principle.

We have a commitment to look again at the propositions which form the basis for the founding of this Country; we intend to adhere to those propositions both in words and in our deeds, as our guide and as our focus. So let me assure all of you who are listening to me today, let me assure all Liberians all over the world that the Liberia Action Party has the capacity, the competence and the moral obligation to make our country a far safer and better place than it is today. Certainly, when the time of our generation is over, we intend to hand over to the generation after us a baton of hope for a safer and better Liberia; we must turn over to them a country that is safer and better than what we met – certainly not an abjectly poor, traumatized, war-ridden, destroyed county, as it now is.

Our Political Party has a moral obligation to show to the world that those Liberians who destroyed our country, those Liberians who advocated for the destruction of our country, and those who assisted in the destruction of our country are a small, insignificant and inconsequential fraction of the Liberian people, who by the use of military force, overwhelmed us and destroyed our country. They do not represent the aspirations of the Liberian people; they have never ever represented our values. The Liberia Action Party must reveal to the world the true nature and character of the Liberian people – that we are not an inhumane, ruthless, uncouth, uncultured, ungovernable people; we must reveal to the world that, as a matter of fact, we are truly a civil, cultured, enterprising and resourceful people.

Our country may be “down” and “low” today; but we are not “out”. Let the word go forth throughout the length and breadth of this Republic, from the mountains of Nimba and Lofa to the swamps of Sinoe and Bassa, from the Cape of the East to the Cape of the West, that a different kind of Liberians have at last risen to the challenges of our times – to take our country from the brink of self-destruction, revive, renew and transform it into a safer and better place for all of us. Let the word go out to our fellow Liberians that while we are aware that the task of transforming our native land appears daunting, we are nor perturbed or discouraged by its enormity or difficulty; we will work every moment for the rest of our lives to make this country a safer and better place for all Liberians; and we shall succeed. Yes, we shall succeed.
Success in transforming our country calls for proper and strategic planning and implementation, hard work, commitment, dedication, sacrifice and discipline. The success of this Convention and the manner in which it was conducted is the first evidence of the kind of government that LAP is offering to the Liberian people.

Success in transforming our country calls for firmness of purpose and conduct; it requires consistency in the conduct of the affairs of state; but it also requires fairness in all that we do. So, the Liberia Action Party will give to the Liberian people a government that not only subscribes to the tenets of good governance, but also a government that is firm, consistent and fair in the conduct of the affairs of state.

Fellow Partisans, as you leave here tonight and begin your return journey to your various homes all over Liberia, I encourage you to sleep well tonight and dream about a vibrant, prosperous, fair and respectable country – our homeland. I call on you to start making your dream a reality by working hard for our success at the polls in October. I call upon you to roll up your sleeves, put on your boots or slippers, take your walking cane, if you must, and go out there to canvass for the votes and support of the Liberian people for us and your beloved Liberia Action Party. I call upon you to work so hard that you sweat; work hard so that Jackson Fiah Doe’s prophecy of the crowing Rooster will be a reality in October. I call upon you, my fellow partisans, to re-dedicate and re-commit yourselves to the core values of our Party – liberty, in all its social, political and economic ramifications for all our people; honesty, in all of its dimensions, for the conduct of government; and justice, with all its implications, for the governance of our people.

GOD BLESS YOU! AND GOD BLESS THE REPUBLIC!

Interview With Counselor Varney Sherman

The Perspective: We are on an assessment tour of the city. Our intention is to use the opportunity to talk with some of the major stakeholders on the ground. We have learned that you are running for the presidency of Liberia, and as such we have come to find out why you are running, why do you think that you are the right person to take Liberia out of this mess?

Cllr. Sherman: First, you call it a mess? You said we are in a mess?
Oh yes! From what I see, we are in a mess. I agree.

And our question is: why would anybody want to be president of Liberia?

I agree with you that the country is in a very difficult period, the most difficult of her history. And you ask why would anyone want to be interested. The answer could be "to get us out of the mess." One of the reasons why I want to become President of the Republic of Liberia is to ensure that none of those who got us in the mess becomes President of Liberia. Or If may put it another way, we must not allow those who helped others to get us in the mess to become President of Liberia. We believe very strongly that if any of the protagonists of our civil crisis were to be elected president of this country there is a strong likelihood that the country would return to violence - because a large group of Liberians will feel threatened. Even those who may not be direct participants but somehow lent their support to protagonists should not be allowed to run this country. We need real reconciliation. We need real unity. We need real integration. We need somebody with integrity - that means independent from the mess. Somebody whom nobody will feel threatened by. We need somebody who has no axe to grind, who has nobody to revenge against.

What was your position during the war? Would you consider yourself another neutral person?

I used the word neutral before, but political a scientist told me nobody should be neutral. "Say you are non-aligned. You are not aligned with any of the protagonists. You never supported any protagonist." That’s the kind of person I was.

Does it mean that you were not aligned with the warring factions and the victims of the war?

I call myself one of the victims. I mean my properties were destroyed, I ran away, I was a refugee several times and I had to come back to rebuild.

Yet still you do not have a position - you are non-aligned?

I did not have a position in support of any warring faction. My position was to oppose the warring factions or to oppose the war.

During the war, did you speak out?

Yes, I spoke very frequently. In fact, that was the basis upon which I ran as a candidate on the ticket of the alliance of political parties. I couldn’t imagine being on the ticket of any warring faction. I was a senatorial candidate in 1997. You’re probably not aware of that. Before that, I was organizing chairman of the Liberian National Conference for the civilian population to step up against the military juntas of Liberia (1994-1995).

During your recent trip to the US, people felt that though you were in the US for graduation exercises, the Liberian government paid for the trip. Could you comment?

Well you are here now. Have you gone to the Ministry of Finance to see the vouchers?

No, I have not. I just wanted to hear your side of the story.

The "Analyst" newspaper carried that story and it was nonsense. The editor of the "Analyst" and I have been here… Before Gyude Bryant became Chairman, I traveled to the United States four or five times a year. My wife lives there, my two children are there,[and] we have a home there in Maryland. Why wouldn’t I have two or three thousand dollars to go there when all these years I have been going there that often at my own expenses? If I had never been to the United States or never had the means to visit the US, somebody could have said: "Varney Sherman needed two or three thousand dollars to pay his way." But I’m always there! Either for family or for business, I’m always there! So why will they… say Varney Sherman’s way was paid to go to the Security Council? I had absolutely nothing to do with the Security Council meeting. I never went around there. I went there (US) for two things: first and foremost for the graduation of my son from the University of Maryland at College Park… I then visited a couple of cities to talk to non-resident Liberians about my vision, about this country and what their visions were - trying to get ideas and information to put a platform together for our political party. The suggestion that Mr. Gyude Bryant gave me money to go attend a Security Council meeting and I was there having fun with my family is ludicrous.

Were you on the same flight with Mr. Bryant?

No way! I left Monrovia weeks before Mr. Bryant’s departure.

Are you legal advisor to Mr. Bryant?

No! Who said that?

What is your position?

I have no position. My [Mr.] Bryant is my friend. Chairman Bryant was four years my senior at St. John’s. I went to St. John’s Episcopal High School in Cape Mount. He left Monrovia and went there. I was born there and went to school there. At Cuttington, when I was in my first year I think he was in his last year. Mr. Bryant was Chairman of my political party (the Liberia Action Party) from the mid 1990s. He was chairman when we contested the 1997 elections. He was chairman up to the day he was elected chairman of the government. I left America on August 4th (2003) and went to Accra for one singular purpose: campaign for Gyude Bryant to become chairman. In my tradition from the Vai culture, when you dress the devil and bring it to town you don’t go back to the bush. You stay there to beat the drum for the dance. When I campaigned with people to vote Gyude Bryant I made certain promises. Even though I am a private lawyer, I stick around to see those promises come to fruition and reality - I try my best to do that. Mr. Gyude Bryant has asked that from time to time he might need my services to get certain things done and therefore asked me to serve as special envoy. I said I would be glad to. Mr. Gyude Bryant’s legal advisor is called Counselor Samuel Clark and he has his office at the Executive Mansion.

How do you get paid?

I don’t get paid. I live on my law firm.

Free service?

I also work free at the University of Liberia - I’m just coming from there. I spend two hours there every Wednesday and Friday. I have been doing that for years.

How about your trip to the UN to the Donors conference?

Yes I was on that delegation.

Did you pay your way?

Of course I didn’t. You think I will pay my way on a government delegation? Of course not! If you were to ask me to perform a service for the government - going out of the country, the government will pay. If it requires my brain, it is free, but if it requires expenses the government will pay.

The Accra Comprehensive Peace Agreement bars the chairman from taking part in the 2005 elections and requires him to be neutral. But there seem to be indications that the chairman is not neutral. There are indications that he is supporting you.

What are the indications?

For example, Mr. Harry Greaves, the economic advisor to chairman Bryant, recently said that you are in the better position to win the 2003 elections.

Harry Greaves said I am in the better position?

Oh yes, The Perspective carried the story.

And he said what [puts] me in a better position?

Well, you are from his party, Chairman Bryant’s party.

Well he is promoting me.

Yes he is promoting you and he is seen as serving as the point man for Mr. Bryant.

Harry Greaves will never deny that he is a member of Liberia Action. Let’s be honest about that. Harry Greaves has been a member of the party from 1984. So was his father. His father was one of the people who signed the original document. Let’s assume that Harry Greaves is a member of Liberian Action Party for almost 20 years, that there will be a candidate for the Liberian Action Party, and under normal circumstances [will he] be supporting a candidate from Unity Party? So what he is doing by saying that the candidate of Liberian Action Party will win, to me it is natural.

So the same applies to Mr. Bryant. He has been member of the Liberian Action Party; in fact he was chairman of the party. So by the same token, he will support you.

Not necessary support, it will be foolish for him not to desire for me to win. Supporting me is different and wrong. You don’t think it will be foolish that we have a Republican candidate for the senate and George Bush, President of the United States, would prefer that a democratic candidate wins. Or because Mr. Bush desires that a republican candidate would win, that means he will take the government resources to support the republican candidate?

Well, if they have an agreement that compels George Bush to be neutral, he would be neutral.

The agreement says Mr. Gyude Bryant should not support a candidate, should not use his position as one of influence, and should not use the resources to support a candidate. You don’t think Mr. Gyude Bryant will vote? The agreement says he must not exercise his franchise? If he will vote, he will vote for somebody.

The Liberian Unification Party is currently in crisis. The assistant secretary alleged two or three months ago that you are supporting the former chairman of the party to whom you gave a vehicle and some cash. He added when they met with you at the Mansion once, you allegedly said that as long as you are with Chairman Bryant, Cllr. Brumskine will not run on the LUP ticket. Could you comment?

Who is the person?

One Jacob Smith.

I do not know him. He and I had no discussion on politics. And one thing about me, I don’t normally talk to journalists- if he is a journalist.

No, he is not a journalist. But are you following the development within the Liberian Unification Party?

Yes, I read the newspaper every day. You see these papers? You see them over there? So those who are journalists, I patronize them everyday.

Well, some of these are reports from other publications that we wanted clarifications on.

Well, I have made a determined decision that the newspaper will not be sold on my back - where they will go and make these outrageous accusations and expect that Varney Sherman will respond and there will be another reaction and another response. When somebody writes with dignity I will dignify him, but when you write with indignity I wil ignore you.

A few months ago, The Chairman of the Elections Commission said that it is not time for campaigning. Are you abiding by that?

Oh yes! Even though I differ with them as a matter of law. Our political party challenged them on the basis that the regulation is unconstitutional. The regulation is invidious, the regulation institutes what we call in constitutional law, prior restraints of free expression, it constitutes prior restraints on free assembly. But what we haven’t done though is to challenge them in court.

But are you abiding by the regulation?

Of course, I am. Do you have reason to believe that I am not abiding by it?

Well, I saw you in West Point this gone Saturday. Was it not campaigning?

No, not at all.

What was it?

What you think? The elections commission says that we must not go and canvas for a candidate. They will not allow people to organize political platforms for a candidate, or posters and parades in the streets for a candidate. But the Commission does not ban membership drive, mobilization, or awareness and sensitization programs, and recruitment of membership, these are activities political parties undertake normally. What we do not agree with is campaigning. And the program in West Point, even though I was the speaker, we continuously said, "we are not here to campaign." The program in West Point was in support of members of the Liberia Action in the West Point community. That’s what we went there for. They - organized it, and were doing a membership drive for us. We went there to pay tribute to the resilience of the West Pointers during the course of the civil war and to support - West Point’s membership of the Liberian Action Party.

You gave $1000.00 to the West Point school for chairs and $500.00 to the West Point members of the Liberian Action Party. Was it not campaigning?

How can it be? We went there [and] the West Pointers came up, the commissioner came up and said look we have a problem here - these are our problems: our streets, our this, our other things and chairs in our school. We need chairs in our school! So we said from our political party, we will make a contribution of $1000.00 to put chairs in the school, for our political party, for your own sustenance here, we’ll make a contribution of $500.00 How can it be campaigning? How can you go on a membership drive to recruit members, and you get to a community and they say our school needs something, and you have the means [but] say I’m sorry, we are not supposed to campaign.

When was this problem brought to your attention?

It was stated at the meeting.

So prior to that you didn’t know?

About that particular school?

Yes.

Of course we knew about that particular school - maybe that was one of the reasons why they brought us there because they thought that during the course of the program of our political party, they would ask us to make contribution to the school. But they had a long [list] of things that they wanted, but we had to choose what we thought was in our means that we made the contribution to. So it was not an orchestrated request, they asked us for so many things. We just chose the little one, the chip on the block that we thought we could afford.

I was in West Point for funeral when I saw the crowd and decided to stop to see what was going on. When I got closer, I realized it was you. Besides the crowd, I also saw four to five jeeps with each bearing the Liberian Action Party logo on the side. Is the party that wealthy?

You are asking if the party is that wealthy?

Right, is the party that wealthy or are these private vehicles or government jeeps?

Well, if they are government jeeps, they will have government license plates on them. They certainly are not government jeeps. I think you see some of them up here - those are mine personally. Some of them belong to my campaign. One of those jeeps outside there belongs to my executive assistant - he had it for years. Some of them belong to my law firm - we put the Liberian Action Party logo on all of them.

A member of your party, in fact, the former chairman of your party now heads the interim government of this country. There has been a spate of accusations about corruption within the government. How do you evaluate the current interim government?

I think they have done fairly well. If you look at the government, i.e., the way it was organized, the way it is structured, and you wanted to be fair, very fair, you will conclude that this government is doing a tremendous job. Gyude Bryant’s election, you know how it went: politicians got together and made a nomination of three persons and the warring factions made the selection. And because of that some warring factions expect - Mr. Gyude Bryant to be submissive to them.

In reality, what it supposed to be? Is he supposed to be responsible to them?

No, I think he supposed to be responsible to the people. But isn’t that normally the principle that the appointee is responsible to the appointing power? That’s normally the principle! There are deviations, but that’s the general principle - the appointee is responsible to the appointing power. I who appoint you, you are responsible to me. Here we have a government where Mr. Gyude Bryant is given people [heads of agencies] to work with. Under the agreement, for example, the Ministry of Finance is reserved for Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy. They appoint the minister of finance. Mr. Gyude Bryant just passes the name to the NTLA. The Minister of Commerce is an appointee of MODEL, they appointed him. Don’t forget about the general principle - the appointee normally feels responsible to whom? - the appointing power. Some people say when you suspect that the Minister of Finance or commerce is doing something wrong, fire him. But if you fire him and there is shooting and ten people die [people will ask]: was it worth it?

So should there be corruption with impunity?

No, no, no! I’m saying that the government has done well because of these restrictions. The plate has been prepared and the plate is just set before you. You don’t even have the right to put salt and pepper in the food. You see what I mean? And so managing that kind of government is extremely difficult. I do not condone corruption. I think it is wrong. It eats out the fabric of a nation. But if you put a government like this together, you run the a high risk of corruption. Do you know why they call him chairman? Nobody wants him to exercise presidential powers. That’s why the title is chairman. They didn’t want him to even believe that he is a president.

Some Liberians have recently spoken of the necessity to hold a national conference in order to charter a new course as we come out of this long conflict. What is your position?

We, Liberia Action Party, are fundamentally in agreement with the broad objectives for a National Conference as recently proposed by some Liberians; but we are wary about the efficacy of establishing a new interim government or about postponing elections in order to give effect to the decisions of such National Conference. Secondly, we don't believe that a conference of a few weeks would comprehensively and sufficiently address our myriad problems and properly chart our future; we think that the necessary broad-based consultations, the acceptance of the proposals from such consultations and galvanizing the commitment of our people to the new system and processes will take two to three years. So we don't believe in the efficacy of a National Conference at this time.

Can you be more specific?

For example, we agree with proponents of a National Conference that there is need for a change of the structure of political governance; not only are we advocating for such change, we are committed to making such change. However, a more effective change would require constitutional amendments, the legitimate process which takes more than one year, - requires a referendum. Having a National Conference to achieve this objective would then mean either extension of the term of this transitional government or establishment of a new transitional government.

So, why not extend this government or create a new one if it means changing Liberia for better?

Given the obvious operational problems of this current transitional government, the extension of its term is not acceptable to the Liberia Action Party. On the other hand, the establishment of a new interim government, which would diminish the level of influence and participation of the warring factions, is likely to be unacceptable to warring factions. In fact, the quagmire that the debate itself at a National Conference will place our country in might likely inadvertently extend the term of the current transitional government and yet not accomplish the desired objectives.

What is your solution?

What the Liberia Action Party proposes is an elected government that perceives itself as the "real" transitional government. This is what the Liberia Action Party proposed for the 1997 Special Elections and that is why we called for and participated in an alliance of political parties. This is one of the premises on which we are canvassing for the 2005 elections and that is why we are welcoming all like-minded Liberians into a campaign, dubbed "Enterprise Liberia", in which all stakeholders can be a part of the process of transforming our country. This "real" transitional government will open the national consultations with all Liberians on the way forward for us, as a people and as a country. These broad-based consultations will culminate into putting in place the system and setting in motion the processes that would transform our country and reinvigorate our people. This, of course, will include some amendments to our Constitution; but the time will be there to accomplish it.

Do you have any closing message for Liberians in the Diaspora and all those who read this interview? You do not have to campaign.

No, no, no, I don’t want to campaign. And you don’t want me to campaign. When I went to America I visited several states - I told them, among other things, [that] this is your country. We've got in that country (America) maybe 250,000 Liberians. There are gardeners, engineers, lawyers, carpenter, masons, and electricians - anything you can think about... I went to the Liberian medical Association in the Americas and I met some doctors and [saw] their listing - 105 medical doctors in the United States of America graduated from Dogliotti. If 50 of them were to come back to Liberia, our health system would be completely manned. Help us fix this country so you can come home. Get involved in Liberia and help us fix this country so you can come home. I know enough about America to know that [for] most of you, your standard of living will drop the day you retire. Your standard of living will drop the day you retire! That retirement income, that social security intake will not be able to keep you at the level you are today. In a few years, you will be retired especially those who are my age, I’m fifty-one. Come back here! We need your services, we need your wealth, we need your newly found skills - and you will still be able to receive your [social security retirement] checks right through these financial institutions here. That check that cannot do you enough good in America, will do you lots of good here. You will be able to send your children to school; you will be able to pay your bills, and you will be living a far better life - far better life than in America. I am asking you to join us here in this country. I’m not saying transpose yourself immediately or move yourself - no, but manifest some interest in this country and plan that tomorrow you will want to move back. The way to prove it is to get involved in the political process in this country. It is not enough to just criticize. Yes, you need to criticize for us to set the thing straight, [but] what are the proposals? Why weren’t you involved in Accra to make sure that the government that came out of Accra was the government that is desirable by you or at least you would have made a big input. I welcome you. Come to Liberia and get involved in Liberia. It’s your home. It is a far better place to live than the United States of America. Honestly! But you and I can make it that better place. That’s my message to the people in the Diaspora. I call you all non-resident Liberians. If I become president, no law should be able to take your citizenship from you; [and this will facilitate your continous involvement with Liberia].

Thank you

About 1.3m Voters Registered…UNMIL Electoral Advisor Discloses

About 1.3m Voters Registered…UNMIL Electoral Advisor Discloses
By Josephus Moses Gray
Monrovia, Liberia Jmoses1970@theperspective.org
The Perspective Atlanta, GeorgiaMay 24, 2005

The United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) Operations Advisor on the Electoral Process has revealed that about 1.3 million Liberians have registered to vote in the ensuing 2005 elections. Mr. Bjornsson disclosed the figure when he spokes on the mission run FM radio Station last night. Mr. Bjornsson who wouldn’t give a complete breakdown of the figure relative to the number of people registered in each of the 15 political sub-divisions of Liberia, said it will take additional two weeks to get the accurate statistics. According to him, figures of registered voters for Montserrado and Margi[bi] counties have been received and are being processed, while the rest of the other counties are in the process of sending in their reports.

Commenting on the general atmosphere of the exercise, the UNMIL Electoral Advisor described the voters’ registration process as “very unique and positive.” Expressing delight over the turnout, Mr. Bjornsson said from the initial stage of the exercise it was very difficult owing to lack of accurate information on the population for each of the 15 counties.

Meanwhile, the elections commission has extended the voters’ registration exercise for additional two weeks to cater to only Liberian refugees who are returning home to participate in the process. The exercise, he said would be carried out in collaboration with the United Nations Refugee agency-UNHCR at a specific location in each of the counties. At the end of the additional two weeks exercise, he said that all registered voters’ names would be placed on display at the various registration centers across the country to enable people to scrutinize the lists.