Wednesday, April 11, 2012

PRICE OF 100 POUND BAG OF RICE IN LIBERIA IS HALF THE OF MOST LIBERIANS MONTHLY SALARY


 PRICE OF 100 POUND BAG OF RICE IN LIBERIA IS HALF THE OF MOST LIBERIANS MONTHLY SALARY
Written by Roberta Williams

I was in Liberia last year May, 2011, like I tell people food in Liberia is more expensive than they are here in America. The average Liberian cannot afford smoke fish in Liberia any more. I went to various markets to see for myself.  How our people are making it every day in Liberia I don't know? There are family of six in Liberia cooking with one sick looking fish in a large pot of water called soup because that one fish cost 300.00LD. And for a lot of them, that is their pay for the day.  I saw small children in Liberia selling a pack of gum one stick at a time to earn money for food.  I saw five and six years old kids on the streets of Monrovia begging for water to drink.  Those of you that go home come back and say Liberia is sweet, you must not have left the airport or maybe you were blind folder the entire time you were there to say "Liberia is sweet". There are young mothers in the streets with their baby on their backs walking the streets selling anything they can find to sell to feed that child at the end of the day.

I understanding Ellen cannot find jobs for everyone that is workable in Liberia, but why are Liberians not helping themselves?  I did not see much gardens in the areas, even in Bomi, there were very few gardens around the homes. What happen to the days when our parents used to plant just about every vegetables known to man in their back yard?

The war is over so…


1.    Go back to the town you used to live in before the war and try to get your life back the way it was, everyone can't fit in Monrovia. I am sure the smaller the town the easier it will be find food. All those fruit and vegetable trees in the country side, why are we hungry in Monrovia?


2.    Start looking for other ways to make a living besides government jobs. Start a farm, open a day care center, etc. Network, group up with your family or neighbors to start a small business. Start a neighborhood garden to help with food. Plant your own rice farm. As much rice as we eat, why are we not growing our own rice like the Chinas? We cannot afford to be lazy and expect to survive. Liberia need a "lead, follow or get out of my way" attitude to make it in Liberia and stop been lazy.


3.    Demand that your rights are met, Liberians need to stop been afraid of their government officials, they are not God, they are crooks that don't care. If they are not doing anything for you, stop voting them back in, try someone new, continue until they get the message.



4.    What are the non government businesses doing for the country? What are their contributions? Beside slavery of their own people, what are they doing?



THE BOTTOM LINE IS, THE PEOPLE IN LIBERIA THAT ARE IN THE POSITIONS TO FIX THE PROBLEM JUST DON'T CARE.

Thank you,

Roberta Williams
Application Integration Services
Wellspan Health System
Office: (717) 851 6009
Fax: (717) 851 3155.
 
__,_._,___

Monday, April 9, 2012

'Sirleaf May Not End Six Years If…'- Deepening Acrimony Between Two Ex-Allies


'Sirleaf May Not End Six Years If…'- Deepening Acrimony Between Two Ex-Allies

Written by Wade C. L. Williams 

Source: Front Page Africa                                                                             

Monrovia - No one ever imagined that representative Bhofal Chambers of  Pleebo-Sodoken District Maryland county a former stalwart of the ruling Unity Party and a once close ally of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf would become her fiercest critic.

Chambers would seize every opportunity given him to criticize the Liberia's first woman president and the stalemate between the two has also gone to a level where the Maryland lawmaker has threatened that Sirleaf may not end her six years in office if certain measures are not put in place to seek the welfare of Liberians.

"If madam president wants to remain as president of this Republic of Liberia; she must do what she is constitutionally elected to do, that is to bring happiness to the people of Liberia," says Chambers.

Speaking at the funeral activities for the fallen Montserrado District # lawmaker Moses Tandapolie at the headquarters of the Congress for Democratic Change, CDC in Congo Town on Friday, the Maryland Lawmaker accused the president of Nepotism.

"To discourage nepotism Never Appoint Your Children to positions when you have qualified Liberians; nepotism is a crime in our constitution; it is against our constitution. Nepotism is even worse than tribalism. Madam President who kind of elevated herself above the stature of sins is acting worse than a sinner," he says.

Chambers blames the leadership of President Sirleaf for not doing enough to protect the lives of Liberians by providing adequate and affordable healthcare for all which led to the death of Representative Tandapolie.

"There is something called defrabulator , it helps to restart the heart, but I don't think in any single Liberian hospital this exists. It cost s from $1200 to 5,000 and I think we need to prioritize those things that will sustain our people," he says.

Continued Chambers: "That is why honorable Tandapolie along with myself worked on a communication to the legislature, that has to do with prioritizing the health delivery system, my dear partisans, it's a sad day because Liberia is in the hands of cleptocrats. We feel that many things are stolen away from our people, that is why we have this sad situation. We must work together to change things around."

Chambers went on to threaten Sirleaf with removal from office if she fails to do the right thing: "If Madam President persist, if Madam President does not listen to the mighty voice of the people; the people; the people will democratically act on her. That is maybe six years will be too much for her."

The Maryland lawmaker who deserted his mother party the UP over differences he had with the Liberian leader during her first administration over the failure of the President to act in the awarding of the cavalla plantation to SIFCA, says President Sirleaf is involved in acts of political corruption. He says the fact that the president has chosen to employ her children to all lucrative positions against logic and democracy is unacceptable.

"Nepotism is a crime in our constitution; it is against our constitution. Nepotism is even worse than tribalism. Madam President who kind of elevated herself to her stature of sins is acting worse than a sinner," he says.

[B][IMG]/images/stories/chamb1.jpg[/IMG][/B]Continued Chambers: "We are not happy about her overzealousness , her domineering spirit; democratically we may impeach president Sirleaf if she continues to do what she's doing, because it is against the interest of the Liberian people."

Chambers maintained that there are more qualified Liberians than the President's Children who should also be given a chance to work in the government.

Since the appointment of two of her sons to lucrative public portfolios, President Sirleaf has come under massive criticism but the president has maintained that her children are also qualified Liberians who are contributing to the country in a positive way and should be given a chance to do so.

Rep. Chambers has used every opportunity given him to lash out against the Liberian Presidency. Since his fallout with Sirleaf over SIFCA, Chambers has left no stone unturned in terms of his criticism of the Liberian leader and her administration of the state.

Genesis of the Chambers Sirleaf Acrimony

Rep. Chambers has led a robust resistance to the Cavalla Rubber Company's parent company,  SIFCA  financial  strength after it signed  50-year US$74 million concession with the Liberian government in January 2011 to operate an oil palm company in Pleebo, Maryland County.

The Maryland Representative has insisted SIFCA is not financially solvent to run the oil palm concession in the County.

Chambers' fight with President Sirleaf and the UP saw him being was removed from his post as Chairman of the party's Legislative Caucus in the 52nd Legislature. Chambers maintained that SIFCA is not financially strong to run the oil palm company in his district.

After the signing of the SIFCA agreement Chambers described the process as "nemesis" noting that President Sirleaf did not mean well for the people of Maryland County by agreeing to sign the agreement which, according to him, is intended to inflict sorrow on the people of Maryland County and stall the development of the County.

Chambers was angered that SIFCA deceived the government when it came into the country. He said the company boasted that it would do everything within its power to make sure its agreement was passed.

Accusations of bribery also surfaced wherein Chambers disclosed that the company promised him US$1.5 million and two houses, one to be built in Monrovia valued at US$100,000 and the other in Maryland County valued at U$50,000 an offer he rejected reportedly.

"SIFCA, in my view, is a kind of slave gangster, slave gangster because they have given our people sub-human treatment. I haven't seen in this country where a group of investors will partition a district."

"As you can see, this is a gate about eight feet high mounted in Pleebo Sodoken District partitioning towns and villages and if one has to get through any of these gates, one needs to ask the permission of a security, not government security officers but from a plant protection force. This is unacceptable, we cannot accept this," he said during one of his interview  to  reporters on the issue.

Continued Chambers: "All these appear to me that SIFCA is a republic within this republic and all of government state security officers take instructions from SIFCA. Whenever it calls for some demonstration or petitioning for the people's interest, whenever SIFCA's name is called the ERU rushes on the people," Rep. Chambers asserted.

Also condemning the SIFCA agreement, Rep. Biney disclosed that the agreement stated that any disagreement after the passage of the agreement could not be settled in any Liberian court besides the London International Court of Arbitration. Chambers is not wavering in his new criticism of Sirleaf appointing her sons to key positions in the Liberian government.

Justice for Mae Azango, Fierce of the Fearless in the face of danger

Justice for Mae Azango,
Fierce of the Fearless in the face of danger
Written by: Bernard Gbayee Goah
President Operation We Care for Liberia
 
A Liberian female Journalist, Mae Azango, unveiled to the public the hidden sagas of the deepest and most forbidden secrets of the Liberian Grebo bush. She wrote a story about the health implications of female genital cutting within a secret society of women in Liberia. Since the time of publication by the Liberian Newspaper, FrontPage Africa, Mae Azango has lived in fear as a result of threatening messages she received from anonymous callers. Mae fled for her life and is now in hiding.

Most interestingly Mae experienced these threats and went into hiding under the watchful eyes of the person she emulates the most, her role model, the one she had looked up to for redemption for years. The one who claims to have advocated for the rights of Liberian women for decades, the iron lady of Liberia, Africa's first female President, President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf.
 
Mae Azango hasn't slept in her own bed, or seen her 9-year-old daughter, in weeks. She has been living in fear since March 8, 2012. While in hiding, Mae questions why her role model has not come to her aid? Friends visit her under darkness and take with them Liberian newspapers for her to read. She read about her role model's children and how most of them were appointed to top positions in their mother's government. Mae read about nepotism in government, but most embarrassingly the Liberian President justifying why the President's children and relatives should hold top position in government. She read about one of the President's son's grand-style birthday celebration. But there she is, in hiding without her only daughter who has just turned 9 and who's birthday she may not celebrate this year or not for a while.

Mae's cry for justice has reached us and that is why we at "Operation We Care for Liberia" feel morally obligated to act without delay. We see the threatening of any journalist's life in Liberia as a jarring reminder of the senseless harassment faced by the press community in that part of the world. While investigations are still going on, the human right community owes Mae Azango, and all journalist victims who suffer harassment from both government authorities and organized criminal organizations in Liberia protection.

We demand that justice for Mae is served in a timely manner. We call on all human rights organizations to support our effort in pressuring the Liberian government to provide bodily protection for Mae Azango. Mae should not be separated from her daughter as a result of Government's failure to protect her.
Also we condemn the Liberian government for abusing the rights of a 9-year-old child in time of crisis. The Liberian government has failed to respect the United Nations Child Protection act. If the mother of a 9 year old is in hiding for life threatening reasons, it does not require a rocket scientist to deduce that the child's wellbeing is also threatened.
 
Let us put aside the fact that Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has won accolades and admiration from the international community for her "work and advocacy" on women's rights.  Let us put aside the fact that as an advocate, we should expect Sirleaf to call upon Mae to assist her in educating and addressing the very issues Mae brought to light.  The issues of Sirleaf's inaction around women's rights are secondary to the issue of preserving human rights, independent of gender. 
 
We call upon Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf to protect a person who put their life on the line for the greater good of humanity.  We call upon Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf to take Mae Azango's report as a top priority than to allow Mae to be bullied into silence.  The silence has been allowed for far too long.
 
 
Bernard Gbayee Goah
President, Operation We Care for Liberia

‘Sirleaf May Not End Six Years If…’- Deepening Acrimony Between Two Ex-Allies

'Sirleaf May Not End Six Years If…'- Deepening Acrimony Between Two Ex-Allies
Written by Wade C. L. Williams 
 
Source: Front Page Africa                                                                            
 
Monrovia - No one ever imagined that representative Bhofal Chambers of  Pleebo-Sodoken District Maryland county a former stalwart of the ruling Unity Party and a once close ally of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf would become her fiercest critic.
 
Chambers would seize every opportunity given him to criticize the Liberia's first woman president and the stalemate between the two has also gone to a level where the Maryland lawmaker has threatened that Sirleaf may not end her six years in office if certain measures are not put in place to seek the welfare of Liberians.
 
"If madam president wants to remain as president of this Republic of Liberia; she must do what she is constitutionally elected to do, that is to bring happiness to the people of Liberia," says Chambers.
 
Speaking at the funeral activities for the fallen Montserrado District # lawmaker Moses Tandapolie at the headquarters of the Congress for Democratic Change, CDC in Congo Town on Friday, the Maryland Lawmaker accused the president of Nepotism.
 
"To discourage nepotism Never Appoint Your Children to positions when you have qualified Liberians; nepotism is a crime in our constitution; it is against our constitution. Nepotism is even worse than tribalism. Madam President who kind of elevated herself above the stature of sins is acting worse than a sinner," he says.
 
Chambers blames the leadership of President Sirleaf for not doing enough to protect the lives of Liberians by providing adequate and affordable healthcare for all which led to the death of Representative Tandapolie.
 
"There is something called defrabulator , it helps to restart the heart, but I don't think in any single Liberian hospital this exists. It cost s from $1200 to 5,000 and I think we need to prioritize those things that will sustain our people," he says.
 
Continued Chambers: "That is why honorable Tandapolie along with myself worked on a communication to the legislature, that has to do with prioritizing the health delivery system, my dear partisans, it's a sad day because Liberia is in the hands of cleptocrats. We feel that many things are stolen away from our people, that is why we have this sad situation. We must work together to change things around."
 
Chambers went on to threaten Sirleaf with removal from office if she fails to do the right thing: "If Madam President persist, if Madam President does not listen to the mighty voice of the people; the people; the people will democratically act on her. That is maybe six years will be too much for her."
 
The Maryland lawmaker who deserted his mother party the UP over differences he had with the Liberian leader during her first administration over the failure of the President to act in the awarding of the cavalla plantation to SIFCA, says President Sirleaf is involved in acts of political corruption. He says the fact that the president has chosen to employ her children to all lucrative positions against logic and democracy is unacceptable.
 
"Nepotism is a crime in our constitution; it is against our constitution. Nepotism is even worse than tribalism. Madam President who kind of elevated herself to her stature of sins is acting worse than a sinner," he says.
 
[B][IMG]/images/stories/chamb1.jpg[/IMG][/B]Continued Chambers: "We are not happy about her overzealousness , her domineering spirit; democratically we may impeach president Sirleaf if she continues to do what she's doing, because it is against the interest of the Liberian people."
 
Chambers maintained that there are more qualified Liberians than the President's Children who should also be given a chance to work in the government.
 
Since the appointment of two of her sons to lucrative public portfolios, President Sirleaf has come under massive criticism but the president has maintained that her children are also qualified Liberians who are contributing to the country in a positive way and should be given a chance to do so.
 
Rep. Chambers has used every opportunity given him to lash out against the Liberian Presidency. Since his fallout with Sirleaf over SIFCA, Chambers has left no stone unturned in terms of his criticism of the Liberian leader and her administration of the state.
 
Genesis of the Chambers Sirleaf Acrimony
 
Rep. Chambers has led a robust resistance to the Cavalla Rubber Company's parent company,  SIFCA  financial  strength after it signed  50-year US$74 million concession with the Liberian government in January 2011 to operate an oil palm company in Pleebo, Maryland County.
 
The Maryland Representative has insisted SIFCA is not financially solvent to run the oil palm concession in the County.
 
Chambers' fight with President Sirleaf and the UP saw him being was removed from his post as Chairman of the party's Legislative Caucus in the 52nd Legislature. Chambers maintained that SIFCA is not financially strong to run the oil palm company in his district.
 
After the signing of the SIFCA agreement Chambers described the process as "nemesis" noting that President Sirleaf did not mean well for the people of Maryland County by agreeing to sign the agreement which, according to him, is intended to inflict sorrow on the people of Maryland County and stall the development of the County.
 
Chambers was angered that SIFCA deceived the government when it came into the country. He said the company boasted that it would do everything within its power to make sure its agreement was passed.
 
Accusations of bribery also surfaced wherein Chambers disclosed that the company promised him US$1.5 million and two houses, one to be built in Monrovia valued at US$100,000 and the other in Maryland County valued at U$50,000 an offer he rejected reportedly.
 
"SIFCA, in my view, is a kind of slave gangster, slave gangster because they have given our people sub-human treatment. I haven't seen in this country where a group of investors will partition a district."
 
"As you can see, this is a gate about eight feet high mounted in Pleebo Sodoken District partitioning towns and villages and if one has to get through any of these gates, one needs to ask the permission of a security, not government security officers but from a plant protection force. This is unacceptable, we cannot accept this," he said during one of his interview  to  reporters on the issue.
 
Continued Chambers: "All these appear to me that SIFCA is a republic within this republic and all of government state security officers take instructions from SIFCA. Whenever it calls for some demonstration or petitioning for the people's interest, whenever SIFCA's name is called the ERU rushes on the people," Rep. Chambers asserted.
 
Also condemning the SIFCA agreement, Rep. Biney disclosed that the agreement stated that any disagreement after the passage of the agreement could not be settled in any Liberian court besides the London International Court of Arbitration. Chambers is not wavering in his new criticism of Sirleaf appointing her sons to key positions in the Liberian government.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

SEE WHY HE WAS CALLED BUTT NAKED


SEE WHY HE WAS CALLED BUTT NAKED: With his "birthday suit" on, he hands on an object with his right hand and handles his gun with his left hand perhaps targeting his opponent. See his shoes on.
GENERAL BUTT NAKED: This is Reverend Joshua Milton Blahyi, popularly referred to as GENERAL BUTT NAKED in Liberia, a once ruthless and fearsome battle front commander during the ill-fated April 6, 1996 onslaught that destroyed untold lives and properties in the wake of an open confrontation between forces loyal to Rooselvet Johnson of ULIMO J on the one hand and the combined ones of Charles G. Taylor and Alhadji Kromah on the other hand. After that incidence, Blahyi who had claimed to have possessed supernatural powers from SATAN to repel and crush any enemy, renounced violent and reinvented himself into a christian evangelist on the journey for self-proclaimed transformation. He had told the TRC hearing that he was under the influence of satan to do those things he could not have done under normal condition; he asked for forgiveness and agreed to have a date with justice at the ICC at the Hague whenever he is called upon. Today, hefaces those who he once tormented , preaching at places where he murdered and trying to rebuild the shattered lives of those he once commanded. But at the end of the day, are some crimes beyond the pale of forgiveness? If all the known major perpetrators of the heinous crimes committed in Liberia decided to take the same path of BUTT NAKED by either clutching a bible, quran or performing other religious rites in the name of reconcilliation and forgiveness will that be enough to heal the wounds of the past and make us to move forward and live like one family once again even if we had never lived like one before? Just asking...







 
The need for post-war justice is a step toward lasting peace, stability and prosperity for Liberia, West Africa. Without justice, peace shall remain elusive and investment in Liberia will not produce the intended results. -Bernard Gbayee Goah 
 Also see: "Inside Liberia with Bernard Gbayee Goah" at: http://bernardgoah.blogspot.com/ 
Copyright © 2011

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Facts Vs. Allegations; Thank God for US Library... Sirleaf Supported NPFL's forced enlistment of Child Soldiers


CC: US Congress


Sirleaf Supported NPFL's forced enlistment of Child Soldiers



"The United States has always been a place of refuge and freedom from oppression for millions. We must ensure that those who come here seeking freedom and the rule of law do not have to fear that their persecutor may become their neighbor." -  US Immigration Judge John Reid's
In June 1990, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf testified at a U.S. congressional hearing on "US Policy and the Crisis in Liberia".  She stated in her testimony that Charles Taylor NPFL revolt symbolizes a civil war which encompasses regions of the country where more than two thirds of the Liberian people live and the greatest resources are located. These were her words to the US Congress: " These people, many of them children, have joined this struggle for freedom, with little more than courage and hope for the future. It is within this context that the uprising represents an opportunity for creative transformation of the Liberian political landscape". Madam Sirleaf knowing full well that the NPFL was involved with the use of Child soldiers to oust the Samuel Doe administration, willfully advocated for, as well as  contributed thousands of United States dollars to the cause of the NPFL. 

We ask the United States government not to allow Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf entrance into the United States at anytime because her presence in the United States would be a violation of  the United States  "Child Soldiers Accountability Act of 2008".

Bernard Gbayee Goah
President Operation We Care for Liberia
503-292-2622


Read Below:



Facts Vs. Allegations; Thank God for US Library of Congress: Ellen Instructed Taylor to use "Child Soldier" See Her Statement to United States Congress in June 1990

TESTIMONY OF ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, LIBERIA ACTION PARTY
BEFORE THE AFRICA SUBCOMMITTEE

ON THE
CURRENT CRISIS IN LIBERIA
JUNE 19, 1990

Chairman Wolpe, I thank you and members of the Africa Subcommittee, for the opportunity to give testimony concerning the current crisis in Liberia

My name is Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, a member of the Executive Committee of the Liberian Action Party. I was twice jailed between 1985 and 1986, charged respectively with sedition and treason as a result of my activity with the party. Thanks to you and to several human rights monitoring organizations, I am free.

Currently, I serve as Vice President and Washington Representative of Equator Banks.

My testimony will be very brief, touching upon the legacy of the Doe regime, the reality of the ongoing insurgency of the National Patriotic Front and what I believe to be the vision which the Liberian people have for the future of their country.

By overwhelming endorsement, the Liberia people gave legitimacy to the Samuel Doe regime when it came to power through a violent military coup in April, 1980. We did so because we believed that this indigenous son, as leader would represent and seek to achieve the aspirations of the majority of the Liberian people-a society characterized by equality and equity, responsibility and responsiveness, resourcefulness and honesty.

Today the Liberia State is exhausted and virtually near collapse. Economic resources have been plundered and misused by public officials whose greed and conspicious consumption are unparalleled in the nation's history. Citizens and country alike have been reduced to begging for survival whil substantial wealth accumulates in the hands of a privileged few. A once lowly master sergeant who came to power to redress the improprieties and inequalities in the society now rides, draped in jewelry and three piece suits, in a Roll Royce with some fifteen other luxury cars in waiting. He speaks of love for a people, but a people who are feeling the brunt of a steady economic decline which has left them impoverished. Unemployment, spiraling cost of living, the lack of medical facilities, inadequately equipped schools, little means of transportation and a depleted national capital stock are common conditions which they face. Even their culture and traditional ways of life are being threatened by wanton environmental degradation.

Attempts to address these grave economic shortcomings have been consistently spurned over the years by a government lacking the political will to reform. As a result, financial institutions have withdrawn their support. The country is bankrupt; civil servants have not been paid for months and are unable to receive the social services such as power and water which enhance the quality of life.

This economic tragedy is mirrored by a political system which is maintained through state terrorism.

Arbitrary arrests, imprisonment, torture, secret and public executions, together with wilful destruction and dispossession of private properties have been a consistent pattern. Unfortunately, this has been helped by repeated external sympathy for the regime, as each new atrocity ignored has served as a license for even more gruesome activities.

We are sure that when the record of the Doe regime is finally assessed, we will find a human rights record so profound in its tally of death and destruction as to astound the world.

Liberia does not represent an example of social harmony, given the dichotomy which has characterized our society. But in the past ten years we have seen the development of ethnic strife, divisions and hostility unknown to us before. The oligarchy which now exists thus perpetuates itself on the divide and rule principle.

This is the legacy of the present regime and its chief architect, Samuel Doe-a legacy of economic mismanagement and decline, lawlessness, violence, political repression and social discord.

The post-December 24 events developed out of these conditions and out of a sense of hopelessness, helplessness, humiliation and rage. In Ideally. Liberians should be prepared to exercise patience until 1991 and then seek to oust the Doe regime by the ballot box. But given the experience of the fraudulent elections of 1985 to which I can give personal witness, and in the absence of any evidence since that time of a change in his policy and practices, not one single Liberian can honestly attest to confidence that Samuel Doe in power the 1991 elections or any other scheduled before that time would be more that a repeat of 1985.

Additionally, the current uprisings should not be seen as a repeat of the 1980 coup or the 1985 invasion involving the participation of a small number of armed dissidents who seek to overthrow a government and proclaim for themselves a new one.

This revolt symbolizes a civil war which encompasses regions of the country where more than two thirds of the Liberian people live and the resources are located. These people, many of them children, have joined this struggle for freedom with little more than courage and hope for the future. It is within this context that the uprising represents an opportunity for the creative transformation of the Liberian political landscape.

To use the words of noted Liberian academic and professional, Elwood Dunn, "In 1990 Charles Taylor is as much the principal instrument of history as Samuel Doe was in 1980."

This is the reality and one to which the Liberian people must give adequate response to ensure that the future for which we hope - a democratic society which is based upon participation, concensus and compassion and one which seeks to promote the creative talents of all its citizens under conditions of equity and equal opportunity - can come to pass.

For, it is these ideals which form the foundation for sustainable growth and economic prosperity.

In pursuit of these goals, the Samuel Doe regime must go - the mandate must pass to Charles Taylor who must in turn commence the process toward democracy.

There is another reality. whether we like it or not, Liberia is perceived as the closest one can come to an American colony in Africa. A shared history, a long standing friendship, and to a certain extent a common culture, make Liberia in the eyes of the international community an example of the commitment or lack of commitment, the effectiveness or ineffectiveness, of United States policy in Africa. The time to act is now. Liberians, with support of friends of Liberia, particularly the United States, must get off the fence and assist the process of political transformation. In practical terms, this means concerted actions to pressure Samuel Doe into resigning; it means initiatives to restore political stability perhaps with the help of an acceptable international peacekeeping force; it means continued leaning on Taylor to announce a fixed timetable for free and fair elections monitored and observed by international agencies.

We will need more. Liberia is an economic disaster despite the more than half a billion dollars provided by the United States since 1980 and almost like amount provided by other bilateral and multilateral donors. However, I believe that with good government (and we will settle for no less) and with your assistance, the task of economic recovery and reconstruction can commence and can be made successful. I believe that a politically transformed Liberia can break the traditional shackles of dependency.

Members of the committee, on Saturday in Alexandria where I live I will bury my mother. She had hoped that she would have been able to return home to the warmth of additional family and friends before being called to the great beyond. For he time ran out. The more than 12 percent of the Liberian population, some 200,000 people which are in neighboring countries, and 70,000 in this country, and the countless number of citizens who are internally displaced, pray daily for what my mother dreamed a chance to return home and lead normal lives.

A hundred years of friendship with America deserves your support to the current struggle which seeks to help these people achieve this simple goal.

I thank you

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