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Archive for March, 2012

Historical Lecture to the American People

By Ivan Simic

 

Every day, we have the opportunity to read articles, opinions and news analysis from one group of the American people in which they more or less express their will in very confusing ways. Many of them do not know historical facts about their own country, not to mention history of other countries.

Sometimes, they behave like the world did not exist before the formation of the US; like Americans fell from the sky in 18th the century; and everything good that happened in the world happened because of the United States. Many of these Americans often publicly criticize other countries and nations, accusing them of injustice, genocide, the devaluation of human rights, racism, war crimes, among others. However, they seem to forget their own history, therefore, it is pertinent to remind them about few very interesting things concerning U.S history.

The American Revolutionary War - the American War of Independence (1775 – 1783).

The American Revolutionary War was a war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and thirteen united former British colonies, and not war between Americans and British as many present in public. In 1776, during the American War of Independence, British revolutionaries gained control of the thirteen united colonies and declared independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain, claiming sovereignty and rejecting any allegiance to the British monarchy. This act resulted as a way for the United States to be officially recognized as the sovereign state by the Treaty of Paris in 1783. Therefore, we can say the American Revolutionary War was a civil war fought on colonized soil as a war between British Crown and British rebels, with help of other immigrants from Africa, Asia and Europe.

Pertaining to the US independence from Great Britain, the US proclaimed independence first as a new nation: the United States of America. Other countries did it much later. However, when it comes to independence, there are similarities between the US and Sudan, Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia, Gambia, and India among others, gained independence from the Great Britain. These countries were fully functioning countries before colonization, the US was not. Therefore, the question that arises is: does Her Majesty British Queen still have the document which makes her the owner of the United States?

There is a strong believe in the United States that the American Revolutionary War was a good war which brought freedom to the people and gave birth to the U.S. Yes, it was, but only for the new American nation. Many Americans forgot the other side of this war, the fact that the war started as the war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and British rebels in North America, and extended out to Europe and the European colonies, ending as a global war between Britain, France, Spain and the Netherlands (Dutch Republic).

The American Revolutionary War also left African-Americans and Native Americans humiliated. African-Americans saw the revolution as a fight for liberty and freedom from slavery, however, were wrong. Both Patriots and Loyalist used African-Americans for their own cause.

African Americans

More than 20,000 African-Americans such as Agrippa Hull and Prince Hall sided with the Patriot cause. Around 5,000 black men served in the Continental Army during the war, however, when George Washington took command of the Continental Army in July 1775, he issued an order to recruiters ordering them not to enroll “any deserter from the Ministerial army, nor any stroller, Negro or vagabond”, despite the fact that they had fought side by side with their white counterparts at the battles of Lexington, Concord and Bunker Hill.

In November 1775, the Royal Governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore issued a proclamation that he would free blacks who came to fight with the British. By December 1775, the British army had 300 slaves wearing a military uniform.

In response to Lord Dunmore’s proclamation in 1776, George Washington issued orders to the recruiters to re-enlist liberated blacks who had already served in the army, and worried that these soldiers might cross over to the British side. The British also feared that blacks with weapons in their hands would start slave rebellions.

After the war, British loyalist left America with their African slaves. There were about 2,500 African-Americans who belonged to the White loyalists who remained slaves until slavery was abolished throughout the British Empire in 1834. Blacks who sided with the British were registered to the Book of Negroes, and were promised freedom. As the book came to close, they sailed to London and Nova Scotia as a free people as others left for Jamaica. Life for those who left for London and Nova Scotia was not easy; therefore, in 1792, around 1,193 blacks left for West Africa.

The African-American Patriots who gave loyal service to the Continental Army received no reward. In 1792, the United States Congress formally excluded the African-Americans from military service, allowing only “free able-bodied white male citizens” to serve in the military. An estimated 100,000 African-Americans escaped, died or were killed during the American Revolution.

One fifth of the total American population in 1776 was enslaved, with about 500,000 black men, women and children. By 1860, there were 3.5 million enslaved African-Americans in the United States due to the Atlantic slave trade; another 500,000 African-Americans lived free across the country. After 200 years of depression, African-Americans saw freedom in the Civil Rights Movement, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Black Power movement.

Native Americans

In 1492, Columbus arrived in America and made his first contact with indigenous people and marked the beginning of the persecution and genocide of Native Americans. European colonization of the Americas and the rise of the new US Government brought nothing but problems to Native Americans.

European explorers and settlers killed many Native Americans, used force to expel them from their lands and brought infectious diseases (chicken pox, smallpox and measles) to North America against which the Native Americans had no natural immunity and medicine. Later, American Revolutionary War tucks additional Native American lives. Most Native American joined the struggle by siding with the British, hoping to use the American Revolutionary War to stop the progress of colonial expansion onto Native American land with some, however joining the revolutionaries.

In 1783, the British made peace with the Americans with the Treaty of Paris, through which they ceded vast areas of Native American territories to the United States without informing the Native Americans, which immediately lead to the Northwest Indian War. American policy toward Native Americans continued to evolve after the American Revolution. Native Americans, who fought with British against rebels were treated as a conquered people who had lost their lands to the United States Government. The Native Americans lost 5,000,000 acres (20,000 km2) of land with just one rule by the State of New York.

The newly formed United States Government was eager to expand, to develop farming and settlements in new areas. During American expansion into the western frontier, one primary effort to destroy the Native American way of life was the attempts of the US government to make farmers of the Native Americans, to force them to adopt the practice of private property, to built homes, to educate their children, and embrace Christianity. In addition, one of the most extensive methods that destroyed their way of life was the deliberate destruction of flora and fauna, and the slaughtering of buffalos, which the Native American used for food.

In addition, President Andrew Jackson and United States Congress passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which authorized the President to conduct treaties to exchange Native American land east of the Mississippi River for lands west of the river. In one word; it was a policy of the US government to ethnically cleanse Native American tribes living east of the Mississippi River to lands west of the river. The Removal Act of 1830 set into motion a series of events which led to the “Trail of Tears” in 1838; a forced march of the Cherokees, resulting in the destruction of most of the Cherokee population. The age of “Manifest Destiny” had serious consequences for Native Americans. Policy was put into action to clear the land for white settlers. Methods used for their removal included slaughter of villages by the military and also biological warfare. These methods caused increased death of Native American, diseases, starvation, and the destruction of their way of life.

By conservative estimates, the population of Native Americans prior to European contact was greater than 12 million. Today there are around 2.8 million Native Americans living on the territory of the United States, or around 0.8% of total population. In addition and in 2000, eight out of ten Americans with Native American ancestry were of mixed blood.

However, maybe the biggest historical question is: who are Americans, really?

The majority of 306 million people currently living in the United States consist of White Americans, who traced their ancestry to the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. Most White Americans are European Americans, descendants of immigrants who arrived since the establishment of the first colonies.

According to the United States Census Bureau’s report from 2008; 68% of the US population are White Americans, 15% Hispanic, 12% African Americans and 5% Asian Americans. This numbers are likely to change by the year 2050 when White Americans will no longer be in the majority; 46% White Americans, 30% Hispanic, 15% African American and 9% Asian American.

In the 2000 census, Americans were able to state their ancestries; 7.2% of the US population was unaware about or could not trace their ancestry, so they were counted as “Americans”. The most interesting part was the fact that German ancestry counted 15.2% or 42,885,162 million of the total population, African-Americans came second with 12.9% or 36,419,434. Also, very interesting was the fact that in 1980 US Census 61.3 million Americans reported British ancestry (English, Scottish, Scotch-Irish, Welsh); just two decades later, that number is 36.4 million.

If we look back to political history, the ancestry of 42 US presidents is limited to the following seven heritages, or some combination thereof: Dutch, English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Swiss, or German. These include; John F. Kennedy (Irish), Franklin D. Roosevelt (French and Dutch), Abraham Lincoln (English), Martin Van Buren (Dutch), among others.

Eight Presidents were born British subjects: George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, and William Henry Harrison.

Therefore, our good friends and neighbors who like to condemn others should remember these facts next time they decide to criticize and lecture. They should address other countries and nations with respect, because Americans, and the United States are the creation of older and astute countries and nations. Americans are in fact Europeans, Africans and Asians.

Ivan Simic lives in Belgrade, Serbia. Address: Paloticeva 12, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia, Tel: +381 63 7508500.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LAMA 27th Inaugural Ball and Fundraiser Event

March 21, 2012

Liberian Association of Metropolitan Atlanta (LAMA)

Press Release

LAMA 27th Inaugural Ball and Community Cultural Center Fundraising Event

Norcross, GA., Saturday, March 31, 2012 – The Liberian Association of Metropolitan Atlanta (LAMA) cordially invites you to join hundreds of Liberians and friends of Liberia witness the public installation of its new executives

and board members, which will be climaxed by a fundraising rally geared towards the acquisition of the first ever Liberian Community and Cultural Center in Georgia. The event is scheduled to start at 7 o’clock Post Meridian at 6100 Live Oak Parkway (Live Oak Plaza), Norcross, GA 30093.

As you reflect on our thirty-five years of history, working selflessly and collaboratively to bring about social advancement among our people and to unite our community, LAMA is behooved to undertake the funding of a

community and cultural center which is estimated at $1.6 Million, for the purposes of serving and accommodating our rapidly growing population in Georgia and its environs.

We remain optimistic that with our collective effort, the center will embrace several initiatives, and serve as premise for the strengthening of our community and families. If consummated, the center will enable people of all generations to learn, earn and thrive.

It will bring about job development assistance for students and individuals seeking employment, library for research and education, provide daycare and afterschool programs for kids of working families, help with social adjustment and orientation for new immigrants, implement adult literacy programs, provide assistance accessing government services, create internship opportunities for students, and provide youth enrichment programs to help our children understand the importance of making good decisions and learning character values.

As part of the proposed project, the community and cultural center will have a conference hall that could accommodate over five hundred people, along with a shared or central office for county organizations.

The keynote speaker of the event is His Excellency Hon. Joseph N. Boakai, Vice President of the Republic of Liberia.

Senator G. Milton Findley of Grand Bassa County, President, Pro-Temp, Liberian Senate will preside over the installation of LAMA’s executives. Other dignitaries expected to attend the event are Monrovia City Mayor, Mary Broh; Liberia Maritime Authority’s Boss, Mr. Binyan Kesselley; outgoing President of National Oil Company of Liberia, Mr. Christopher Neyor; Liberia’s Ambassador to the United States, Hon. William Bull, Sr.; the honorary Consul General of the Liberian Embassy to the United States, Hon. Cynthia B. Nash; and Mayor of the City of

Lawrenceville, Mrs. Judy Jordan Johnson. Also anticipated in attendance are a number of Corporate and business representatives.

Dinner will be served during the official ceremony, followed by live display of cultural dance and performances by the Liberian Traditional Dancers. A grand ball will ensue thereafter to conclude the event.

All proceeds generated from this event will be used for the purposes of acquiring the community and cultural center for our local youth and population.

As part of the build-up to the main event on Saturday, March 31, there will be an interactive town hall forum with Vice President Joseph Boakai and his delegation on Thursday, March 29, 2012 at 7:00 pm. The venue of this town hall forum is the International Christian Fellowship (ICF) at 3076 Humphries Drive SE, Atlanta, GA 30354. Everyone is encouraged to attend, as questions will be asked and directed at the Vice President and his delegation.

In light of this endeavor, we extend our thanks and heartfelt appreciation to Vice President Joseph Boakai and his delegation for their unwavering support and commitment to our cause. We also acknowledge officials of the Liberian Embassy to the United States for their support and cooperation, the Mayor of the City of Lawrenceville, participating businesses and corporations, churches, county and local organizations, and the Liberian community at large.

As you purchase your ticket and participate in this worthy event, you will not only be identifying with funding a building project in our community, but contributing to the lives and socio-economic development of our children.

Please visit our website at www.lama-atlanta.com to purchase your ticket and learn more about LAMA. Thank you!

Contact: Leo Mulbah,President, LAMA Phone: (678) 508-0106

[email protected]

“TOGETHER WE CAN SUCCEED”

6961 Peachtree Industrial Blvd. Suite 224

Norcross, GA 30092

Email:[email protected] / [email protected] / Website: http://www.lama-atlanta.com

678-608-8407 / 770-249-3842

LAMA 27th Inaugural Ball and Fundraiser Event

March 21, 2012

Liberian Association of Metropolitan Atlanta (LAMA)

Press Release

LAMA 27th Inaugural Ball and Community Cultural Center Fundraising Event

Norcross, GA., Saturday, March 31, 2012 – The Liberian Association of Metropolitan Atlanta (LAMA) cordially invites you to join hundreds of Liberians and friends of Liberia witness the public installation of its new executives

and board members, which will be climaxed by a fundraising rally geared towards the acquisition of the first ever Liberian Community and Cultural Center in Georgia. The event is scheduled to start at 7 o’clock Post Meridian at 6100 Live Oak Parkway (Live Oak Plaza), Norcross, GA 30093.

As you reflect on our thirty-five years of history, working selflessly and collaboratively to bring about social advancement among our people and to unite our community, LAMA is behooved to undertake the funding of a

community and cultural center which is estimated at $1.6 Million, for the purposes of serving and accommodating our rapidly growing population in Georgia and its environs.

We remain optimistic that with our collective effort, the center will embrace several initiatives, and serve as premise for the strengthening of our community and families. If consummated, the center will enable people of all generations to learn, earn and thrive.

It will bring about job development assistance for students and individuals seeking employment, library for research and education, provide daycare and afterschool programs for kids of working families, help with social adjustment and orientation for new immigrants, implement adult literacy programs, provide assistance accessing government services, create internship opportunities for students, and provide youth enrichment programs to help our children understand the importance of making good decisions and learning character values.

As part of the proposed project, the community and cultural center will have a conference hall that could accommodate over five hundred people, along with a shared or central office for county organizations.

The keynote speaker of the event is His Excellency Hon. Joseph N. Boakai, Vice President of the Republic of Liberia.

Senator G. Milton Findley of Grand Bassa County, President, Pro-Temp, Liberian Senate will preside over the installation of LAMA’s executives. Other dignitaries expected to attend the event are Monrovia City Mayor, Mary Broh; Liberia Maritime Authority’s Boss, Mr. Binyan Kesselley; outgoing President of National Oil Company of Liberia, Mr. Christopher Neyor; Liberia’s Ambassador to the United States, Hon. William Bull, Sr.; the honorary Consul General of the Liberian Embassy to the United States, Hon. Cynthia B. Nash; and Mayor of the City of

Lawrenceville, Mrs. Judy Jordan Johnson. Also anticipated in attendance are a number of Corporate and business representatives.

Dinner will be served during the official ceremony, followed by live display of cultural dance and performances by the Liberian Traditional Dancers. A grand ball will ensue thereafter to conclude the event.

All proceeds generated from this event will be used for the purposes of acquiring the community and cultural center for our local youth and population.

As part of the build-up to the main event on Saturday, March 31, there will be an interactive town hall forum with Vice President Joseph Boakai and his delegation on Thursday, March 29, 2012 at 7:00 pm. The venue of this town hall forum is the International Christian Fellowship (ICF) at 3076 Humphries Drive SE, Atlanta, GA 30354. Everyone is encouraged to attend, as questions will be asked and directed at the Vice President and his delegation.

In light of this endeavor, we extend our thanks and heartfelt appreciation to Vice President Joseph Boakai and his delegation for their unwavering support and commitment to our cause. We also acknowledge officials of the Liberian Embassy to the United States for their support and cooperation, the Mayor of the City of Lawrenceville, participating businesses and corporations, churches, county and local organizations, and the Liberian community at large.

As you purchase your ticket and participate in this worthy event, you will not only be identifying with funding a building project in our community, but contributing to the lives and socio-economic development of our children.

Please visit our website at www.lama-atlanta.com to purchase your ticket and learn more about LAMA. Thank you!

Contact: Leo Mulbah,President, LAMA Phone: (678) 508-0106

[email protected]

“TOGETHER WE CAN SUCCEED”

6961 Peachtree Industrial Blvd. Suite 224

Norcross, GA 30092

Email:[email protected] / [email protected] / Website: http://www.lama-atlanta.com

678-608-8407 / 770-249-3842

Beware The Grandstanding: Vote Yes for Dual Citizenship and Other Hot-Button National Issues

By Tewroh-Wehtoe Sungbeh

Like the Liberian capital, Monrovia, that needs a complete overhaul or relocation because of decadence, over-crowdedness and health and safety concerns, the archaic Liberian constitution also needs to be overhauled because it is flawed and not serving the Liberian people well.

While it is true that the original 1847 constitution gives overwhelming power to the president, the 1984 constitution also gave unprecedented powers to the legislative and judicial branches of government. That power and privilege makes it extremely difficult to challenge an incompetent or dictatorial president and members of the other branch of government without one risking prosecution or even death.

The amended 1984 constitution is super-flawed from day one when it was introduced to the Liberian people by the dreaded military/civilian government of Samuel Kanyon Doe, who did all he could at the time to protect his selfish political interests as he went on to macro manage a constitutional commission that needed independence to do its job.

At the end of the day, however, the final work resembled the original 1847 constitution, which enslaved a cross section of the population, rehashed the nation’s painful past, enhanced Mr. Doe’s presidential aspirations, and took the nation into a nosedive.

Worse of it all, burning national issues such as decentralization and a decentralized government with limited presidential powers, recognizing, respecting and giving local governments voting rights to elect local leaders such as mayors, superintendents, county commissioners, paramount, clan and town chiefs, and the right to collect and keep their own tax monies they can use in their own regions, voting rights and granting dual citizenship to Liberians in the Diaspora, and citizenship for non-Negroid were left out.

So flawed, the current constitution grants a 10-year term to Senators, and a 7-year term to members of the House of Representatives making the current Liberian constitution reckless and insane to be taken seriously.

Not surprisingly, the same issues that were not addressed over two decades ago with the hopes that they will suddenly go away are still with us today, as Liberians at home and abroad continued to pressure lawmakers to amend the constitution to reflect modern day realities and the realities of their own lives.

One particular issue that was or is being debated in the Liberian legislature and in political circles abroad is the dual citizenship issue; with most Liberians raising their hands high in support of it while a vocal minority claimed to be in opposition for reasons even they cannot understand.

The dual citizenship debate is an emotional issue that involves a person’s relationship with his/her place of birth, their families, and their connection to a country they always called home even as they live elsewhere to earn a living for themselves and their respective families. It is a personal issue that involves a person’s desire to voluntarily (or involuntarily for political/medical reasons, etc) leave their birth country to seek opportunities unavailable in their country of birth that eventually benefits the individual and his/her family.

So if Liberians are unable to prosper in their own country because of their government’s inability to provide them opportunities for personal growth, would it not be in the interest of the Liberian government to warmly embrace those Liberians that wants to give back through dual citizenship and the other benefits that comes with it?

Let it be known that most Liberians are not compelled to be Liberian citizens. As such, individual Liberian could have easily kept their citizenship in their adopted country and completely divorce themselves from their country of birth without looking back.

However, Liberians who painfully leave their birth country for opportunities abroad have not forgotten their native country and the countless relatives, friends, schools, place of worships and the cherished and loving neighborhoods that influenced their upbringing, always transmitting remittances to those relatives and other institutions that helped them to become what they are today.

That desire to live elsewhere and still be connected to one’s country through financial and emotional contributions, and a willingness to continue to contribute meaningfully to the country’s development should have been a positive sign that signals patriotism that is embraced wholeheartedly by the nation’s political leaders.

Unfortunately, the political leaders failed miserably to provide a vision and a road map that develops the country, provide opportunities for its citizens, and put forth a plan that improves the basic standard of living of the Liberian people.

This is not the time to grandstand and shout patriotism at every turn when broken and hungry souls, with nowhere to turn stare painfully at broken infrastructure, while uninspiring government officials, also with no vision and a single plan to move the country forward obstruct every available avenue that could possibly ease the suffering in all of Liberia.

Sadly, these are the same individuals who hangs around Monrovia and elsewhere daily waiting for the eventual phone call/announcement from the President of Liberia for that elusive government job. Are these people not capable of creating jobs in the private sector?

This is the same regressive tactics that has since killed progress, development, and the call to grant Non-Negroid citizenship of Liberia, while those that are opposed to the bill are fast sending their girlfriends, wives and children to live in foreign countries eventually becoming citizens of those countries.

How can Liberian politicians not approve these bills at this critical time when Liberia seriously need infrastructure development and financial assistance from everybody, everywhere to move the country from point a to point b?

How can the nation’s politicians continue to allow Non-Negroid to live in Liberia but don’t want them to be citizens of Liberia; but are allowed to do lucrative business in Liberia, have children by Liberian women only to leave Liberia, take their children with them, or leave their children behind with no financial support for the children and the mother?

Do we respect those Liberian women and their emotional health and well-being when their children are taken from them by a father who never brings them back?

After the Non-Negroid leave Liberia with their wealth, are we aware of the fact that they often end up investing their money in other countries that welcomes them with open arms? Why continue to talk development through our lips when we (as broke as some of us are) continue to drive away those who could help in the development process?

We all know that the Liberian government has never made any effort in tracking down those Non-Negroid men who also leave their children behind in Liberia with no financial support for the poor and helpless Liberian woman. How can we reconcile the emotional destruction and injustice that comes with this reckless and inhumane act against a Liberian woman and her child who is also a Liberian citizen?

Are these individuals just going to oppose this bill and other bills without looking at the other painful issues that affects the Liberian nation, its people, and especially Liberian women in particular?

It is true that the idea of Non-Negroid becoming citizens of Liberia (which I wholeheartedly support) is not even at the center of any national debate right now. However, I do not support the senseless policies that disallow dual citizenship and out of country voting for Liberian citizens living abroad, either.

With most Liberians traveling out of the country these days in record numbers to seek opportunities in foreign countries, and Liberian professionals and non-professionals fast becoming citizens of their adopted countries, either for the love of that country or for the opportunities the country has to offer, are enough reasons for lawmakers in Monrovia to do the right thing and not grandstand to prolong this issue.

Beware The Grandstanding: Vote Yes for Dual Citizenship and Other Hot-Button National Issues

By Tewroh-Wehtoe Sungbeh

Like the Liberian capital, Monrovia, that needs a complete overhaul or relocation because of decadence, over-crowdedness and health and safety concerns, the archaic Liberian constitution also needs to be overhauled because it is flawed and not serving the Liberian people well.

While it is true that the original 1847 constitution gives overwhelming power to the president, the 1984 constitution also gave unprecedented powers to the legislative and judicial branches of government. That power and privilege makes it extremely difficult to challenge an incompetent or dictatorial president and members of the other branch of government without one risking prosecution or even death.

The amended 1984 constitution is super-flawed from day one when it was introduced to the Liberian people by the dreaded military/civilian government of Samuel Kanyon Doe, who did all he could at the time to protect his selfish political interests as he went on to macro manage a constitutional commission that needed independence to do its job.

At the end of the day, however, the final work resembled the original 1847 constitution, which enslaved a cross section of the population, rehashed the nation’s painful past, enhanced Mr. Doe’s presidential aspirations, and took the nation into a nosedive.

Worse of it all, burning national issues such as decentralization and a decentralized government with limited presidential powers, recognizing, respecting and giving local governments voting rights to elect local leaders such as mayors, superintendents, county commissioners, paramount, clan and town chiefs, and the right to collect and keep their own tax monies they can use in their own regions, voting rights and granting dual citizenship to Liberians in the Diaspora, and citizenship for non-Negroid were left out.

So flawed, the current constitution grants a 10-year term to Senators, and a 7-year term to members of the House of Representatives making the current Liberian constitution reckless and insane to be taken seriously.

Not surprisingly, the same issues that were not addressed over two decades ago with the hopes that they will suddenly go away are still with us today, as Liberians at home and abroad continued to pressure lawmakers to amend the constitution to reflect modern day realities and the realities of their own lives.

One particular issue that was or is being debated in the Liberian legislature and in political circles abroad is the dual citizenship issue; with most Liberians raising their hands high in support of it while a vocal minority claimed to be in opposition for reasons even they cannot understand.

The dual citizenship debate is an emotional issue that involves a person’s relationship with his/her place of birth, their families, and their connection to a country they always called home even as they live elsewhere to earn a living for themselves and their respective families. It is a personal issue that involves a person’s desire to voluntarily (or involuntarily for political/medical reasons, etc) leave their birth country to seek opportunities unavailable in their country of birth that eventually benefits the individual and his/her family.

So if Liberians are unable to prosper in their own country because of their government’s inability to provide them opportunities for personal growth, would it not be in the interest of the Liberian government to warmly embrace those Liberians that wants to give back through dual citizenship and the other benefits that comes with it?

Let it be known that most Liberians are not compelled to be Liberian citizens. As such, individual Liberian could have easily kept their citizenship in their adopted country and completely divorce themselves from their country of birth without looking back.

However, Liberians who painfully leave their birth country for opportunities abroad have not forgotten their native country and the countless relatives, friends, schools, place of worships and the cherished and loving neighborhoods that influenced their upbringing, always transmitting remittances to those relatives and other institutions that helped them to become what they are today.

That desire to live elsewhere and still be connected to one’s country through financial and emotional contributions, and a willingness to continue to contribute meaningfully to the country’s development should have been a positive sign that signals patriotism that is embraced wholeheartedly by the nation’s political leaders.

Unfortunately, the political leaders failed miserably to provide a vision and a road map that develops the country, provide opportunities for its citizens, and put forth a plan that improves the basic standard of living of the Liberian people.

This is not the time to grandstand and shout patriotism at every turn when broken and hungry souls, with nowhere to turn stare painfully at broken infrastructure, while uninspiring government officials, also with no vision and a single plan to move the country forward obstruct every available avenue that could possibly ease the suffering in all of Liberia.

Sadly, these are the same individuals who hangs around Monrovia and elsewhere daily waiting for the eventual phone call/announcement from the President of Liberia for that elusive government job. Are these people not capable of creating jobs in the private sector?

This is the same regressive tactics that has since killed progress, development, and the call to grant Non-Negroid citizenship of Liberia, while those that are opposed to the bill are fast sending their girlfriends, wives and children to live in foreign countries eventually becoming citizens of those countries.

How can Liberian politicians not approve these bills at this critical time when Liberia seriously need infrastructure development and financial assistance from everybody, everywhere to move the country from point a to point b?

How can the nation’s politicians continue to allow Non-Negroid to live in Liberia but don’t want them to be citizens of Liberia; but are allowed to do lucrative business in Liberia, have children by Liberian women only to leave Liberia, take their children with them, or leave their children behind with no financial support for the children and the mother?

Do we respect those Liberian women and their emotional health and well-being when their children are taken from them by a father who never brings them back?

After the Non-Negroid leave Liberia with their wealth, are we aware of the fact that they often end up investing their money in other countries that welcomes them with open arms? Why continue to talk development through our lips when we (as broke as some of us are) continue to drive away those who could help in the development process?

We all know that the Liberian government has never made any effort in tracking down those Non-Negroid men who also leave their children behind in Liberia with no financial support for the poor and helpless Liberian woman. How can we reconcile the emotional destruction and injustice that comes with this reckless and inhumane act against a Liberian woman and her child who is also a Liberian citizen?

Are these individuals just going to oppose this bill and other bills without looking at the other painful issues that affects the Liberian nation, its people, and especially Liberian women in particular?

It is true that the idea of Non-Negroid becoming citizens of Liberia (which I wholeheartedly support) is not even at the center of any national debate right now. However, I do not support the senseless policies that disallow dual citizenship and out of country voting for Liberian citizens living abroad, either.

With most Liberians traveling out of the country these days in record numbers to seek opportunities in foreign countries, and Liberian professionals and non-professionals fast becoming citizens of their adopted countries, either for the love of that country or for the opportunities the country has to offer, are enough reasons for lawmakers in Monrovia to do the right thing and not grandstand to prolong this issue.

Another mysterious death in Lofa County

By: Moses Owen Browne, Jr.
  

Salayea District, Liberia: The county once
considered the breadbasket of Liberia is
gradually turning into a dangerous place where
secret killings and disappearances are creating fear in the minds of
citizens in that county.

Residents of the small town of Mentmenta in Salayea District,
couldn't hold back tears when news of Falimo Tokpah,
believed to be in her 40s was discovered dead on a cool Sunday
afternoon.

According to Mr. John M. Tokpah, the victim's husband, he and his
wife were together earlier in the day producing palm oil for commercial
use. He then left her briefly to run an errand. When he returned
later, he met her lifeless body in the oil pit.

“I was far into the forest looking for additional palm nuts. As soon I
came back, I saw my wife (Falimo) lying down in the hole,” John lamented.

John and Falimo had nine children together. Three are deceased.
Mary Tokpah, who is daughter in-law of the late Falimo, said Falimo's
death is “too strange and unbelievable.”

The area nurse, Tokpah Y. Kennedy, who works at the Gorlu Clinic
confirmed Falimo's death but could not administer any test because of
the mysterious manner in which she died, he said.

Frantic efforts were made to get the police, but the only police depot
is located in Salayea, 15-minutes away from mentmenta town. Residents
of the town obviously are eager to know what caused Falimo's sudden death.

Mentmenta Town chief, John Y. Morris said Falimo was not ill at all,
and said something must be responsible for her death. He called on
authorities of the Liberia National Police to speedily investigate the
matter.

Lofa County witnessed most of the fighting during the Liberian
civil war, which took place largely along ethnic lines, and caused
a great divide among the people. A major mob violence in 2010 over the
death of an eleventh grade student named Korpo Kamara.
led to the death of several citizens in Voinjama, the county seat

Since then, there has been several efforts made by the government,
international organizations, IREX and civil society groups to resolve the
tension; but disagreements among the people have not yet been
addressed, which has made peace more fragile for Lofans.

Moses Owen Browne, Jr. is a print and broadcast journalist. He is based in Liberia, and can be reached at 231-886-493-370 or [email protected]

Police misconduct on the rise in Liberia

By Moses Owen Browne Jr.


The U. S. government through USAID and other
international partners has spent millions on the
Liberian National Police for training. They were trained to
protect lives, properties, and to ensure sanity and civility amongst the
citizens of Liberia.
However, some officers of the Liberian Police Force refused to obey these
moral principles, and have resulted to violence and unruly behavior,
which is causing havoc for ordinary Liberians.
An officer of the Police Support Unit (PSU), was seen fighting at the
Salayea Immigration checkpoint in Lofa County, when the commercial vehicle
he was riding in was stopped by officers of the Bureau of Immigration and
Naturalization (BIN). According to the Police Support Unit officer on the
scene, the officer got into a fight with the other officers because his
colleagues disrespected him when they stopped to check the commercial
vehicle he was riding in as a passenger.
Contrary to the officer’s claim, BIN Commander Othello Kolliebo said he
suspected suspicious behavior by some passengers onboard the vehicle, and
asked his officers to check the names and other relevant information
before the vehicle can go through the checkpoint. To this officer, this
was a violation, which he wouldn’t accept. As a result, he decided to
create a scene.
 Liberia's security situation is deteriorating by the day, and the recent
announcement that the United Nations’ security force in Liberia (UNMIL)
will eventually leave Liberia by the end of 2012, left most Liberians in a
state of frustration and fear that the Liberian National Police Force may
not be able to adequately carryout that role at this time.
The glaring evidence are the increasing incidence of violent crimes, which also include armed robbery and rape; violent protests over employment disputes by youths and former combatants; and deadly land disputes all around the country, are feeding into the frenzy.
The undisciplined, poorly managed, and ill-equipped Liberian police were
challenged to maintain law and order on several occasions, necessitating
the intervention of United Nations peacekeepers deployed in Liberia since
2003.
Lack of public confidence in the police and the judicial system
perpetuated the culture of impunity and led to mob attacks on alleged
criminals, resulting in several deaths.
Since 2004 the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) has vetted and trained over
3,500 police officers, and, together with international donors, has set up
 numerous police stations and barracks.
Nonetheless, Liberian police continue to engage in unprofessional and
sometimes criminal behavior, including extortion, bribery, and armed
robbery; frequent absenteeism; and failure to adequately investigate and
later freeing alleged criminals.
Lack of funding for transportation, communications, and forensic equipment
further undermine the effectiveness of the national police, especially in
rural areas.
The police did, however, show some progress in 2009 in their ability to
detain and arrest alleged suspects and criminals on the run, and the
police leadership has shown an increased willingness to investigate
complaints of misconduct within the force according to the World Report on Liberia 2010.
Police officers must begin to realize that they are generally charged with
 protecting the public, apprehension of criminals, and not harbor
criminals.


						

Breaking Nimba County in half will not solve nation and region's massive problem

By Tewroh-Wehtoe Sungbeh

Like many Liberian kids during my days in the Liberian school system, I grew up learning about the original nine counties that made up the Republic of Liberia.

My teachers in both the private and public schools I attended did not only teach me about the first five counties (Cape Mount, Montserrado, Grand Bassa, Sinoe and Maryland, and what made them great in their own right, they also taught me about the other four: Nimba, Lofa, Grand Gedeh, and Bong.

Since then, Liberians and Liberian students have been introduced to an additional six counties: Bomi, Gbarpolu, Grand Kru, Margibi, River Gee, and Rivercess.

Memorizing the various counties and their appointed Superintendents and other political leaders were a ritual that came handy when it was time for ‘current event’ – that time of day or year when we students congregated and lined-up to compete against the other to show how smart and how much we knew about our history, geography and everything Liberia and the African continent. Also memorizing the names of the various African countries and their dictatorial leaders who were often overthrown and killed made that part difficult to keep up with.

Since I wasn’t a math whiz, however, I always looked up to and was interested in that part of my school day, which was about history and current events, which also exposed me to my current life as a political writer and analyst.

Anyway, what made the inhabitants in those counties so unique is the fact that they were united as a people, and withstood the tides of times that included political neglect, abject poverty, oppression, discrimination, taxation without representation, and violent erosion from the Atlantic Ocean.

Lacking jobs, a feasible and accessible road system, hospitals, bridges and vehicles to travel from one end of town to the other did not make them wanting to get away from the other, but bonded them as they struggled together and were determined to make life better for themselves, for their communities, their respective families and those around them.

That’s the Liberia I remember, a pre-war Liberia whose citizens believed in community, family, unity and faith, and was intact for over a century before it was broken up into pieces to make room for additional counties, bringing the total to 15 as of 2012.

The idea of a group breaking away to form their own county is an endeavor that has a feel-good dimension to it because it provides an avenue for bragging rights and ethnic pride.

However, creating a county out of another in a conflicted, troubled and corrupt centralized government without a strategic plan and the funds to put in place the various institutions and infrastructure can lead to political upheaval, decadence and dysfunction as we’ve seen throughout the years in Liberia.

True indeed this is about ethnic pride, a feeling of marginalization, not wanting to co-exist or share a county with a minority ethnic group (with the exception of some) than it is about progress, development and making the county livable and better for all.

The call to breakaway also has a political tone to it because for it to be successfully implemented, the petition needs the approval of the national legislature and the imperial president who is always ready to exploit the political aspirations of the people by currying this favor to cement his own questionable tenure in office.

To her credit, however, the current president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, has not had the chance as yet to put her imprints on the county-status fad brewing in some parts of Liberia, which always played conveniently into the hands of her predecessors who often jumps immediately on the bandwagon to leave their own marks on the map of Liberia.

It is not that President Sirleaf will not have her chance to impact the map of Liberia in her own image, but a matter of time when Liberians who are seeking county status for their towns and villages to lobby her to make their dream a reality.

The citizens of Nimba County – or at least the ones on the Internet daily mainly in United States, are the latest bunch to hint at such distraction without considering the negative impact that idea could have on the Liberian nation and people in the second largest county in the country in terms of population, in this post-war era.

However, with hatred, suspicion and animosity between the various ethnic groups always a threat to their own survival as a people, and the Mandingoes, historically seen as not belonging, could also feel marginalized in this polarized region, which could spell trouble.

What’s so unfortunate is the cavalier nature of these discussions; coupled with the antics that followed as if the act of breaking away is unworthy of serious discussion.

Because unity is strength and strength can be found in numbers, the right thing to do is to put forward a united front that keeps all of Nimba County intact so that Nimba will continue to be the cultural and political force it has been throughout the history of Liberia.

 

Breaking Nimba County in half will not solve nation and region’s massive problem

By Tewroh-Wehtoe Sungbeh

Like many Liberian kids during my days in the Liberian school system, I grew up learning about the original nine counties that made up the Republic of Liberia.

My teachers in both the private and public schools I attended did not only teach me about the first five counties (Cape Mount, Montserrado, Grand Bassa, Sinoe and Maryland, and what made them great in their own right, they also taught me about the other four: Nimba, Lofa, Grand Gedeh, and Bong.

Since then, Liberians and Liberian students have been introduced to an additional six counties: Bomi, Gbarpolu, Grand Kru, Margibi, River Gee, and Rivercess.

Memorizing the various counties and their appointed Superintendents and other political leaders were a ritual that came handy when it was time for ‘current event’ – that time of day or year when we students congregated and lined-up to compete against the other to show how smart and how much we knew about our history, geography and everything Liberia and the African continent. Also memorizing the names of the various African countries and their dictatorial leaders who were often overthrown and killed made that part difficult to keep up with.

Since I wasn’t a math whiz, however, I always looked up to and was interested in that part of my school day, which was about history and current events, which also exposed me to my current life as a political writer and analyst.

Anyway, what made the inhabitants in those counties so unique is the fact that they were united as a people, and withstood the tides of times that included political neglect, abject poverty, oppression, discrimination, taxation without representation, and violent erosion from the Atlantic Ocean.

Lacking jobs, a feasible and accessible road system, hospitals, bridges and vehicles to travel from one end of town to the other did not make them wanting to get away from the other, but bonded them as they struggled together and were determined to make life better for themselves, for their communities, their respective families and those around them.

That’s the Liberia I remember, a pre-war Liberia whose citizens believed in community, family, unity and faith, and was intact for over a century before it was broken up into pieces to make room for additional counties, bringing the total to 15 as of 2012.

The idea of a group breaking away to form their own county is an endeavor that has a feel-good dimension to it because it provides an avenue for bragging rights and ethnic pride.

However, creating a county out of another in a conflicted, troubled and corrupt centralized government without a strategic plan and the funds to put in place the various institutions and infrastructure can lead to political upheaval, decadence and dysfunction as we’ve seen throughout the years in Liberia.

True indeed this is about ethnic pride, a feeling of marginalization, not wanting to co-exist or share a county with a minority ethnic group (with the exception of some) than it is about progress, development and making the county livable and better for all.

The call to breakaway also has a political tone to it because for it to be successfully implemented, the petition needs the approval of the national legislature and the imperial president who is always ready to exploit the political aspirations of the people by currying this favor to cement his own questionable tenure in office.

To her credit, however, the current president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, has not had the chance as yet to put her imprints on the county-status fad brewing in some parts of Liberia, which always played conveniently into the hands of her predecessors who often jumps immediately on the bandwagon to leave their own marks on the map of Liberia.

It is not that President Sirleaf will not have her chance to impact the map of Liberia in her own image, but a matter of time when Liberians who are seeking county status for their towns and villages to lobby her to make their dream a reality.

The citizens of Nimba County – or at least the ones on the Internet daily mainly in United States, are the latest bunch to hint at such distraction without considering the negative impact that idea could have on the Liberian nation and people in the second largest county in the country in terms of population, in this post-war era.

However, with hatred, suspicion and animosity between the various ethnic groups always a threat to their own survival as a people, and the Mandingoes, historically seen as not belonging, could also feel marginalized in this polarized region, which could spell trouble.

What’s so unfortunate is the cavalier nature of these discussions; coupled with the antics that followed as if the act of breaking away is unworthy of serious discussion.

Because unity is strength and strength can be found in numbers, the right thing to do is to put forward a united front that keeps all of Nimba County intact so that Nimba will continue to be the cultural and political force it has been throughout the history of Liberia.

 

Children first, career after

By Clemente Ferrer

 

Having a child can significantly alter the working lives of more than half of the women between the ages of 30 and 44. They are obliged to reduce their working hours, or in other cases, to leave work on a temporary basis or even permanently. Children alone do not explain the difficulty of reconciling work and family. It also depends on female employment rates and on the low fertility of 1.34 children per woman.

Member States of the European Parliament have a high fertility rate and register to have the highest female employment rates in comparison to countries not members of the European Union (EU). An interesting fact for Spain relating to birth rates is that about 37% of female workers have temporary contracts while the EU average is only 15.5%.

In a young family, it is common for both spouses to have a temporary contract, which influences their child-related plans. Most women of the EU believe that the ideal family model is one where both spouses have similar professions and share the childcare responsibilities that being a parent bring. However, less than half of families live such ideal situation.

Being a working woman does not impede bringing a child to this world or having a big family. A 20th century author shares his opinion on work and family by reminding parents “not to doubt having a big family, because what is important in life is not to search for professional success, but to transmit to your children human and Christian values, which give true meaning to our human existence”.

In this decadent society, children have to be valued for their entire dimension and transcendence as a developing human. Unfortunately, some adults seem to have a special tendency to go “against nature”, thus degrading, or even killing through abortion, a child’s physical and moral integrity. Those cruel mothers must never forget that those developing children in their wombs are God’s and not theirs.

“Childhood misadventures can impact a child’s entire life and can leave an inexhaustible fountain of melancholy in their hearts”, states P. Brulat. (Translated by Gianna A. Sanchez Moretti).

Author and journalist Clemente Ferrer has led a distinguished career in Spain in the fields of publicity and press relations. He is currently President of the European Institute of Marketing.

[email protected]