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Pres.
Sirleaf 's 2nd Term
Announcement Bold and Defiant:
Where Are the Opposition
Politicians, Anyway?
Sunday,
February 7, 2010
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Tewroh-Wehtoe
Sungbeh
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President
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is not
one of those persons who will back down from a fight,
especially if that fight is
about promoting her own
opportunistic agenda to be
president of Liberia.
She
succeeded at that prior to her
run for the presidency the
first time when she trusted
herself into the popular fight
to oust the dictator, Samuel
Kanyon Doe, the indigenous who
embarrassed indigenous
Liberians for a decade when he
held the position they were
denied for over a century by
the minority Americo-Liberian
elite ruling class, and were
now elated that their native
son finally at the helm of
political leadership would
fight vigorously to improve
their living standards,
institute genuine democracy
and the rule of law, and work
hard to make Liberia a decent
place to live and raise a
family.
After
all, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s
entire political journey has
been about pursuing the
presidency, and building a
case about why she should be
president of Liberia. And
building that case before the
world and the local population
meant portraying herself as
this sympathetic pro-democracy
activist and heroine, who was
victimized by the despotic
military cum civilian regime
of Samuel Kanyon Doe whose
desire to remain in power at
any cost would eventually
throw Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in
prison.

Pres.
Sirleaf's Annual Message to
the Liberian Legislature
(Courtesy Executive Mansion -
circa, 2010).
Going to prison for
advocating democracy and free
and fair elections became
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf’s
passport to ‘sainthood’
and the presidency as she
became the darling of the
international community that did
not understand Liberian
politics or the Liberian
tragedy for that matter, but
dwelled on her staged and
crafted image as a reformer
(which, she is not), her Ivy
League education, and her
symbolic historical role as
the continent’s first
elected female president. And
the idea that she is not the
much-hated criminal, Charles
Taylor also cemented her hold
on the presidency.
Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf’s opposition
against the dictatorial Samuel
Kanyon Doe, and her clarion
call for democracy and free
and fair elections resonated
with weary, displaced and
hungry Liberians, who were
still traumatized from the
decade-old civil war that
decimated some to beggars and
homelessness.
However,
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s
inability to translate her
populist message that
resonated so well with the
Liberian people during the
2005 presidential campaign,
and mixing that message with
common sense bread and
butter/palm butter and rice
policies that put food on the
table for Liberians; policies
that provide jobs and decent
wages, affordable education
and transportation for
students to go to and from
school without having to chase
taxis and buses in the
morning/evening; affordable
and accessible healthcare,
affordable housing, modern
operating sewer system, and
garbage disposal
sites/landfills, clean air and
clean environment, adequate
and affordable public
transportation, etc, etc, has
been a disappointment.
With
a stagnant and centralized
national political system
still an impediment to
development and nation
building often inhibiting the
equal distribution of
resources, and not empowering
the political sub-divisions to
be self-sufficient in terms of
running their own local
governments, collecting and
using taxes collected in their
regions for their own regions,
prohibiting Mayors,
Superintendents,
Commissioners, and tribal
Chiefs from being elected, one
would think President Sirleaf
would use the bully pulpit of
her office to work with the
legislative branch to amend
the Constitution and have
those local officials elected
(not appointed by the supreme
president) in order to have a
decentralized government that
works.
Aware
of her arrogance and fighting
spirit even when her back is
against the wall, it didn’t
surprise me when President
Sirleaf, who like other
co-conspirators are barred
from running for office,
according to the TRC report or
("verdict") for 30
years, recently thrust
herself in the fight for a
second presidential term amid
a looming and damaging Truth
and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC) report that clearly
incriminated her, and spelled
out her deadly role in the
civil war that killed
thousands, destroyed a
country, and brought untold
suffering to many innocent
Liberians who bear the brunt
of this “Iron Lady’s”
selfish political aspirations.
Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf, the bold and
defiant “Iron Lady,” who
refuses to acknowledge the
report of her own TRC
commission, cleverly studied
the political landscape,
downsized the feeble
opposition knowing very well
that the opposition
politicians or political
parties are not prepared,
organized and ready to take
her on in 2011, defiantly
refused to set up a Liberian
War Crimes Court, and took her
case for a second term not
through a second or third
party but directly to the
political parties, their
representatives and the nation
via her Annual (2010) State of
the Union Address where she
articulated her reasons for
seeking a second term.
“Honorable
Legislators, our vision for
Liberia, enshrined in our
Poverty Reduction Strategy,
remains unswerving and
unambiguous. Liberians want to
build a new nation that is
peaceful, secure and
prosperous, with democratic
and accountable governance
based on the rule of law and
with abundant employment and
other economic
opportunities.”
“Our
critical objective, over the
next two years of this
Administration, is to continue
on an irreversible path toward
this goal: to achieve rapid,
inclusive and sustainable
growth and development; to
build the capacities of and
provide new opportunities for
Liberia’s greatest asset –
its people; to establish
responsible institutions of
justice, human rights and
governance. This is our vision
and our commitment, which can
only be achieved when the
majority of our people share
in the vision and are willing
to participate positively and
constructively in the
processes of reform and
change,” the president said.
The
timing of President
Sirleaf’s Annual Message was
wrong and inappropriate, her
in your face style
insensitive, did not address
the TRC report and its
findings, reinforced existing
beliefs that she is not
accountable to the electorates
and stone deaf to the
sensibilities of a traumatized
population, care less about
genuine peace, forgiveness and
closure, and also care less
about what is being said about
her collaborative and fatal
adventures during the civil
war.
Credit
however, must be given to
President Sirleaf for her
successful debt reduction or
debt elimination policy with
foreign governments, which she
noted in her annual message to
the nation when she said these
words:
“We
have reduced inherited
external debt arrears, which
were unprecedented across the
globe when compared to our
national wealth, from US$4.9
billion to US$1.7 billion and
we expect the bulk of this
remaining debt will be
forgiven when we reach the
HIPC Completion Point at
mid-year. We are pleased that
this includes the buy-back of
all but a small amount of
commercial debt of US$1.6
billion at 3 cents on the
dollar. We have, in short,
escaped the economic burden of
our past, and freed ourselves
for a better future. In short,
though still riddled with the
economic and other burdens of
the past, we are coping
effectively and laying a sound
foundation for a better
future.”
While
it is true that President
Sirleaf has been focused on
Liberia’s external debt,
another profound
disappointment is her
inability to make bold
decisions that are not
politically popular, but are
the right decisions to make.
An
example is her annual
recognition of the November 29th
birthday of William V.S.
Tubman, which should be
eliminated immediately. Why
continued to celebrate
Tubman’s birthday annually
as a national holiday? Why not
celebrate an annual
President’s Day for all
Liberian presidents past and
present? This guy, Tubman, was
not only the longest-serving
president of Liberia (27
years), his directionless and
visionless regime, coupled
with his despotic rule kept
Liberia in the dark age, and
defined Liberia as the
impoverished and undeveloped
country it is today.
If this president,
Sirleaf, is serious about
reforming government, then why
is there an LPRC (Liberian
Petroleum Refinery
Corporation) or a Ministry of
Information? Why not just
privatize or sell LPRC? Why
continued to have this archaic
patronage LPRC agency and a
“gas slip/coupon” system
that has the potential of
breeding corruption? Why not
have computerized card-like
system and gas depots in
various areas of the country
for fueling government
vehicles, with those cards placed
in each government vehicles
used by the vehicle operator with identifiable vehicle
numbers for each vehicle
printed on the cards, and an
on/off central control system
– a safeguard for
unauthorized use and managed
by a watchful government
employee who is also
monitored? The Ministry of
Information, which I am not a
fan of, should be abolished
because of its propaganda
mission for a sitting
president and the
administration.
Why
is the Sirleaf administration
still renting private
buildings in Monrovia for
government use? I want to
believe this is one of the
reforms the former People’s
Redemption Council’s
military government of 1980
put in place as soon as that
government took over. The PRC
government of Samuel Kanyon
Doe immediately abolished the
corrupt practice of the
Americo-Liberian
led-government of previous
administrations renting
buildings from their families
and friends for government
use.
President
Sirleaf’s inability to
provide jobs and sustainable
wages to minimize the hard
times in the country, her
inability to curb corruption,
crimes, and nepotism; her
inability to come clean with
the Liberian people about her
war past, and the games
she’s playing with the TRC
report are all legitimate
reasons for the opposition to
seriously challenge her second
presidential bid.
But
who are the opposition? Where
are they, because I don’t
see any. Do they have any
practical platform and message
that resonates with the
Liberian people? Are they
serious, ready, credible and
capable?
As
it is now, Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf seems to be a shoo-in
for a second term in 2011.
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