Liberians Want 4-Year Presidential Term
By Abraham Massaley
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
February 12, 2004
Philadelphia, February 9, 2004: Over fifty Liberians
from more than eight states in the United States met Saturday in Philadelphia
and adopted a 19-count vision document for Liberia which calls for constitutional
amendment to reduce the presidential and legislative terms from six
to four years each.
The meeting organized by the Movement for Political Reform in Liberia,
called for decentralization of political power, saying that political
power has been predominantly centralized, often in the hand of one individual,
the President of Liberia. The movement noted that this enormous power
of the presidency is a major reason for the hot pursuit of the highest
office, to the extent that violence has often been employed to clinch
onto that office and to defend it as all cost.
"We support the merit system and believe that public service should
be on the basis of competence and qualification," the movement
said in its seven page "Vision for Liberia" document, but
said over the years, with the presidency has come everything in the
West African nation including jobs, wealth, security and affluence.
The movement said it wants greater regional autonomy for
the counties including the election of county superintendents, and said
county superintendents should be directly answerable to the people who
elect them. The movement also said it wants counties to conduct their
own local governments, levy taxes for the smooth running of their local
governments, administer their own school systems and directly compete
for investment opportunities.
The movement is also calling for a smaller government and a well-paid
civil service, noting, "if public services can be delivered more
efficiently and less expensively through the private sector, such services
should be privatized." The movement said elected and appointed
public officials including those in the judiciary who serve their country
and leave honorably must be able to live dignified lives after public
service. To this end, the movement is advocating for former officials
to receive certain portions of their salaries for the rest of their
lives as well as benefits. The movement believes such incentives will
create the condition for people to leave office peacefully and to live
respected lives thereafter.
The movement also calls judicial reform. It wants judges
of subordinate courts to be elected, and wants a rigid national standard
for appointment of Supreme Court justices. The movement proposed that
for individuals to serve on the Supreme Court bench, they must be shortlisted
by a National Screening Committee to be established by an act of the
National Legislature for nomination by the president to the senate to
serve a five-year term.
The Reform Movement said the tenure of service for Supreme Court justices
should not be limited but the names of justices should from time to
time be resubmitted by the National Screening Committee to the president
based on good performance and good conduct. The movement observed that
often the credibility of those who manage the nation's top law enforcement
agencies has been significantly eroded while "our nation has been
faced with an unprecedented politicization of decisions emanating from
judges who supposed to dispense justice without fear, favor and reward."
The movement said it wants a small but best trained and a robust military
that will be capable and ready to respond to internal and external threats,
and a restructured police and other security apparatus that will earn
the trust and confidence of the people. It says tougher penalties must
be put in place for people who commit crimes especially violent and
economic crimes including tax evasion, noting that that taxation is
the major source of income for government. The movement also wants good
neighborliness with Guinea, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast and said it
adheres to democratic values including free, fair and transparent elections
in Liberia.
The movement said it supports privatization and a free enterprise economy,
and believes that the food and agriculture sector should be subsidized
by government to encourage modern ways of farming. The movement is also
calling for a sound Social Security program and an overhauled National
Pension Scheme, stating "our elders who give their best to the
country should not be allowed to live in poverty."
The Reform Movement said it supports the establishment
of a National Truth Commission but that a definite time period must
be set for individuals to confess and seek pardon from the state and
those they hurt. Thereafter, the movement said a War Crime Tribunal
must be constituted for those who will refuse to seize the opportunity
to appear before the Truth Commission to ask for forgiveness. The Movement
said for too long "we have allowed bygone to be bygone without
establishing the truth and without individuals accepting responsibilities
for what they did to our people and our country."
The Reform Movement said the spirit of voluntarism, community service,
patriotism and nationalism is absent among many Liberians, and underscored
the need for educational and community programs that will imbue in young
Liberians these virtues. The Movement noted that it would take new thinking
and new values in order to build a better Liberian society for ourselves
and to pass it over to our posterity. The organization also proposed
that one Liberian language should be adopted to be taught in primary
and secondary schools throughout Liberia.
The organization also wants the University of Liberia
to be adequately funded to truly make the school a research and learning
institution but said that government must adopt a "hands of"
approach to the running of that institution. The Movement wants the
university to be administered by an administration that is appointed
by an independent board of directors without the interference of the
national government.
The Movement declared that it adheres to freedom of religion and worship
and subscribes to human rights, and mentioned that no one religion should
have national preference over the other but that all should be treated
equally. The organization said it opposes laws that are inimical to
free speech and wants a deregulated media but said people should be
responsible and accountable for what they write or say.