“Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel”
A
Press Statement Issued by CEDE, FIND, FORHD and Green Advocates
On the ECOWAS Panel of Investigators to Liberia Bienvenue
to ECOWAS Panel of Investigators
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
April 9, 2005
Our circumstances in so far as the issue of sovereignty is concerned rests on the premise that the State is willing, ready and able to defend the territorial integrity of the nation, protect life and property, secure, uphold and defend the inalienable rights of all Liberians including the right to social services such as education, health and affordable access to safe drinking water and electricity as well as employment opportunities. Our reality today is very far from this. We have a transitional government whose claim to power is suspect at best and most certainly is not a result of any popular mandate. In addition, our national security is the responsibility of the United Nations and whatever form of humanity that has been visited upon our kinsfolk has been the result of humanitarian assistance.
Our reality also includes the fact that those entrusted with public authority in our country appear to be engaged in a multitude of efforts that has apparently resulted in the misapplication of public funds and by extension increase the hardships of the Liberian people. The increases in the prices of basic goods including food, building materials and petroleum products are telling in this regard. No doubt the behaviors and actions of public officials are embedded with negative implications for the peace process and are impregnated with immense possibilities of harmfully influencing the outcome of the October 2005 presidential and general elections.
The Comprehensive Peace Agreement which constitutes the de jure framework for our existing governance gives the responsibility of oversight to the International Contact Group of Liberia (ICGL) to which ECOWAS belongs. It is therefore a responsible decision on the part of ECOWAS to send to Liberia the Panel of Investigators to examine probable financial malfeasance and/or non-feasance on the part of public functionaries. Liberians can only loudly applaud this decision and its leaders would do well to fully cooperate. What is more, we are in knowledge of the fact that the presence in the country of the ECOWAS Panel of Investigators is at the behest of the Chairman of the National Transitional Government of Liberia, Mr. Charles Gyude Bryant.
The nation has been racked by accusations of corruption among public officials. Currently the Liberian state is in both a political and constitutional crises. The National Transitional Legislative Assembly (NTLA), supposedly our deliberative body, is marred in confusion and a number of its leadership has been accused of the misapplication of state resources. The Supreme Court has been invited to intervene and establish the constitutionality of the suspension of the Speaker and others in the leadership. Our national legislature has threatened members of the Judiciary with impeachment if it dares intervene. Our citizens remain clueless as to the checks and balances that should animate our republican form of government. But the continuous drudgery of the people is palpable, our peace process is well known to be on shaky ground given the fact that we may be about to squander, for the second time, international goodwill towards our country.
There is not enough money to attend to the important work of implementing the Reintegration and Resettlement portion of the DDRRP. Those who want to contribute to our recovery from war to peace are not at all pleased with the fiscal policies and management of our government. Amidst this self-inflicted crisis, the ECOWAS leadership decided to dispatch to our country a Panel of Investigators to establish what is wrong and propose possible corrective measures but a tiny few of our fellow citizens, who appear to be interested in maintaining the status quo of “business as usual”, are screaming
above their breath and frothing at the mouth about
sovereignty. What careless and callous citizens!
We therefore want to state our unequivocal endorsement
of the decision of ECOWAS to send a team of independent
investigators to establish the fact in the corruption
scandal, which is undermining our efforts, to build
sustain peace and is bedeviling the nation. We want
to call on others civil society organizations, the
citizens of this country, Liberians abroad, political
parties, and Church leaders to join in our efforts
and publicly declare their support for the wise and
prudent decision of ECOWAS.
We want to applaud Chairman Bryant for inviting ECOWAS
to undertake this investigation. Meanwhile, we would
like to inform the National Transitional Government
of Liberia (NTGL) that it is in the best interest
of our beloved country that all and every public official
fully cooperate with the ECOWAS Panel of Investigation.
At the same time, we would like to inform those of
our citizens who want to obstruct this process that
they are aligning with the wrong forces of history.
A well respected Liberian woman once said: “Our
country has always done things the wrong way; it is
about time that we start to do things the right way.”
We must not hide under the guise of sovereignty to
once again squander international good will towards
our country and return to the status quo ante, which
brought us war, destruction and endemic underdevelopment.
Released [on April 7, 2005] by:
Ezekiel Pajibo, Center for Democratic Empowerment
(CEDE) +231 534 604
Sam Hare, Jr. Foundation for International Dignity
(FIND) +231 510 058
Aloysius Toe, Foundation for Human Rights and Democracy
(FOHRD) +231 515 158
Atty. Alfred Brownell, Green Advocates +231 560 313