Liberia
Amid the festivities for Independence Day on Tuesday in Liberia, many say the West African country's promise is unfulfilled and too many of its people still live in poverty. The country is celebrating two major anniversaries this year — 200 years ago freed slaves from the U.S. arrived here and 25 years later they declared the country to be independent.
"We have had government after government, people coming into and going out of power, doing their own things without consulting or satisfying the masses," says Richard Cooper, a 67-year-old farmer in Louisiana township, outside the capital, Monrovia.
"Liberia should have been a better country if leaders had the country at heart. Money is here; but where is it going? Into the pockets of a few",Cooper said, munching on popcorn.
Nearly 20 years after the country’s back-to-back civil wars killed an estimated 250,000 people between 1989 and 2003, Liberia's children still yearn for an opportunity to go to school, he said.
Information minister Lederhood Rennie, however, said that major celebrations for these anniversaries are necessary to build national pride and honor the work of many to establish the nation.
"This country has a rich history … Liberia stood as the pedestal for Black independence south of the Sahara ... other nations of Black people were looking up to Liberia as a glowing nation on the continent of Africa," Rennie told AP as he oversaw preparations in the national stadium for the independence celebrations.
The United States has had a lasting influence on the West African country. Liberia’s flag, constitution, form of government and many laws are modeled on those of the U.S. The capital is named in honor of America’s fifth president, James Monroe, who was in power when the freed slaves were repatriated.
Trauma of civil wars
The ex-slaves established an oppressive regime that ruled the indigenous population with an iron fist from the time of their arrival until 1980, when indigenous soldiers led a military coup against President William Tolbert. Tolbert — whose family migrated from South Carolina in the 1870s — was gruesomely murdered by the rebelling soldiers.
The prolonged trauma of the civil wars followed and then the rule of Nobel Prize-winning President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
A persistent problem has been corruption, which many say is largely responsible for the underdevelopment and poor economic growth of an otherwise resourceful country of less than 6 million people.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and former U.S. Ambassador to Liberia, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, in a recent comment about Liberia, said: "Corruption is an act of robbery, plain and simple. It’s a cancer in our societies. It is government stealing from the people of Liberia, from the mouths of children ... Corruption is a democracy killer, and we cannot have that in a place like Liberia, which we’re counting on as a bulwark for Africa’s democracy."
Campaign promises
International soccer star-turned-president, George Weah, has been accused of not living up to key campaign promises that he would fight corruption and ensure justice for victims of the country’s brutal wars.
Midway into its fifth year, the Weah government has so far failed to attract foreign direct investments. Youth unemployment remains high and public institutions are faced with enormous challenges. Healthcare is almost non-existent, as Weah and officials come under frequent criticism for amassing wealth and building expensive properties.
Weah denies the accusations, saying his government is delivering well on promises. For all Liberia's problems, many say the nation has much to be proud of.
"It’s the only country in the world founded by African-Americans," said Saqar Ahhah Ahershu, a Black American from New Jersey, who came to Liberia to celebrate its independence. "The feeling of freedom is what I feel in Liberia. Liberia is a feeling that I don’t believe can be replicated anywhere in the world."
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