Looking for a President who cares and stands up for others- an examination of the five leading candidates
By Tiawan S. Gongloe
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
October 7, 2005
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Cllr. H. Varney G. Sherman
Cllr. Varney Sherman is known in Liberia as a corporate
lawyer. This means that he is a lawyer for businesses
and individuals and groups engaged in business, or
with the intention to do business. Most of the businesses
that he represents are big foreign businesses. Some
of his clients include the Firestone Rubber Corporation,
The Liberia Agricultural Company (LAC), The Bridgeway
Corporation and other companies belonging to Lebanese
businessman George Haddad, Club Brewery, Tradevco
Bank, Chase Manhattan Bank, Citibank, and several
logging corporations, amongst others. During the 1990s,
he defended Tradevco Bank’s position that the
Liberian Dollar and the US dollar had one to one parity
before the Supreme Court and based on this, many Liberians
who deposited their money at the bank in US dollars
in the 1980s were only allowed to withdraw Liberian
dollars. Many Liberians suffered as a result of this
decision of the Supreme Court. Interestingly, it is
the same Sherman who represented Tradevco that some
Liberians consider today to be a hero and savior of
the poor. I have no recollection of him representing
small foreign businesses or Liberian businesses. Perhaps
small businesses and Liberian businesses cannot afford
to pay him. By Liberian standards, he is a very rich
lawyer and has many times boasted of being not a man
of “ inconsequential financial means”.
Therefore, by his own admission, he is a rich man.
It is good to be rich, but it is important to say
that in the process of accumulating his wealth, many
workers and victims of his various corporate clients
have cried in the name of candidate Sherman. Also,
the law profession requires each lawyer, based on
his or her oath, in Liberia not to turn anyone seeking
legal service away for lack of money. This is a social
responsibility of every lawyer in Liberia. It is a
responsibility that the late Cllrs. S. Raymond Horace,
Joseph P. H. Findley and M. Fahnbulleh Jones (the
father of candidate Sherman) amongst others met very
well. Yet, I have no recollection of candidate Sherman
assisting any poor Liberian seeking legal redress
in the Liberian justice system, whether at the Justice
Ministry or in the courts of Liberia. Justice should
not only be for the rich, therefore, legal service
should not be just for the rich. The poor too, are
entitled to adequate legal representation. His past
record of legal service leaves no doubt that as president
he will choose to satisfy the interest of the rich
over the poor, the majority of the people of this
country and that he will choose to satisfy the interest
of big corporations over the interest of the people,
the sovereign. The point I am making here is that
based on his past record, Varney Sherman will always
choose money over people. This certainly makes him
unfit for the presidency, in my view.
Has candidate Sherman ever stood up for the rights
of the Liberian people in any manner? I have no such
recollection. Even though lawyers are trained to defend
rights of people, the only rights that he has defended
are rights of big corporations and rich individuals.
For example, candidate Sherman has over the years
represented Firestone against thousands of workers
and is currently representing LAC as it evicts Bassa
people from their ancestral land, based on a 1959
concession agreement. The most shocking memory of
his failure to stand up for the Liberian people was
his failure to represent executives and members of
LAP when they were arrested during the regime of Samuel
Doe. The lawyers who represented Jackson F. Doe, Ellen
Sirleaf, Jim Holder and Robert Philips were Cllrs.
Philip A. Z Banks, S. Raymond Horace Sr., Laveli Supuwood
and others. Cllr. Sherman refused to come to the defense
of the LAP partisans, although, the candidate claims
that he is a founding member of LAP. Why did he not
stand up for his partisans? To the best of my recollection,
candidate Sherman has never represented a Liberian
journalist and the right of the Liberian people to
write and speak freely. Yet, today, he is enjoying
extensive media coverage. He is reaping where he did
not sow. I have no recollection of candidate Sherman’s
contribution to the building of democracy in Liberia.
Candidate Sherman has succeeded in forming a coalition
call COTOL ( coalition for the transformation of Liberia)
but did nothing legally to assist in sustaining the
Grand Coalition of LAP, LUP and UP formed by these
opposition parties, following the 1985 elections.
Candidate Sherman was silent under the Doe and Taylor
regimes in the face of massive human rights abuse.
A true leader is always concerned when the rights
of others are abused. I am always reminded of a statement
made by my friend Mohamedu F. Jones, Jr, candidate
Sherman’s paternal brother, during our admission
to the Montserrado Bar in 1988. He said, “ The
violation of the right of one person in a society
is the beginning of the violation of the rights of
all”. Although, Samuel Doe was repressive and
very sensitive to criticism, Mohamedu stood up for
the Liberian people by making such a statement. Even,
while Mohamedu lives in the US he has been very much
part of the debate for the transformation of Liberia
into a better country and has represented the interest
of Liberians in the US in diverse manners. On the
building of democracy and rule of law, he has a better
credential than his brother, candidate Sherman. My
most painful recollection of the failure of candidate
Sherman to contribute to the building of democracy
was the undermining of the boycott staged by the Liberian
National Bar when the House of Representative arbitrarily
detained three leaders of the Bar in 2001. The Bar
was the only civil society organization that had not
been weakened by Taylor’s government; hence,
other civil society organizations were supporting
the Bar’s position, when candidate Sherman and
others undermined the efforts of the Bar and started
going to court-an effort which broke the resolve of
the Bar. Perhaps he can refresh my memory on what
he has done for the poor and the building of democracy
in Liberia over the past two decades.
Candidate Sherman also has low marks in community
associations and activities. In Gaye Town where he
and I lived before, I cannot recall seeing him in
any meeting or his contribution to the community.
He did not show even the generosity he displays now
in the Gaye Town community before this time. Many
within his immediate neighborhood slept in darkness
while he had a big generator. The streetlights on
top of his 20ft fence have always faced inwards, thereby
not affording poor children in the neighborhood the
opportunity to study around his fence at night. The
situation was different when former associate Justice
John N. Morris moved in the area. He shared power
with his neighbors. I do not think candidate Sherman
can win a majority of the votes in Gaye Town, Sinkor
Old Road. Also on the question of community, another
brother of candidate Sherman stands out above the
candidate. Cllr. Cyril Jones, has been very active
in the Cape Mount Development Corporation, over the
years. If my recollection is right, Cyril was President
of this community organization in 2002 and may stay
be serving his community in that capacity. I have
mentioned the issue of the candidate’s community
relation because leadership is about people. If a
person is not concerned about his immediate community
can he be concerned about the people in an entire
nation?
Does Sherman have any national or international experience
that makes him fit for the top job? From my recollection,
candidate Sherman worked at the Ministry of Labor,
while attending law school. After law school, he joined
the Maxwell and Maxwell Law Firm and has remained
in law practice since. Whether his limited experience
qualifies him for the top job is left for the voters
to decide. I have no knowledge of any relevant experience
of candidate Sherman in international affairs. Whether
this lack of experience in international affairs disqualifies
him for the top job is left with the electorates to
decide.
Amb.George Manneh Weah
Candidate George Weah is loved nationwide for his celebrity as a soccer player and humanitarian services to some Liberians. But can be a celebrity and a humanitarian without any other knowledge or experience make him fit for the presidency of Liberia? I do not think so. Candidate Weah by his own admission is only an 11th grade student. With his low level of education, if he had had substantial relevant experience in government, it would have, perhaps helped him as was in the case of John Major, former Prime Minister of Great Britain. John Major was only a high school graduate, but he was a member of the British Parliament for many years before he was elected Prime Minister. In candidate Weah’s case, he has had no exposure to government service, even at the level of civil service. His appointment by the Interim Government of National Unity as sport ambassador was merely ceremonial without any functional duty. Weah also has no relevant international experience to qualify him for the presidency of Liberia. He has not worked with any international organization or being in a position to understand the intricacies of international politics. His appointment as UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador was a mere ceremonial post without any functional duty on a day-to-day basis. I am not sure that with his level of education he has been able to follow international politics either by reading or listening to news. The other issue of concern is that a president could commit the people of Liberia and their resources in ways that could have negative consequences without knowing the impact of his action. This is more likely if a president is not knowledgeable or lacks the requisite experience to understand the full implication of action. For example, the Bassa people are being evicted from the land of their forefathers based on a 1959 concession agreement signed by President Tubman. Although Tubman is dead and gone the Liberian people in the Grand Bassa are suffering from the negative consequences of his action. In fact a friend was more blunt when he said to me that one signature of a president could sell his country, without him knowing the implication if he is not sufficiently educated to understand what he signs. While this notion of sale could be considered an exaggeration, however, it should be noted that a signature of a president could compromise the sovereignty, security, welfare and happiness of the people. Is electing Ambassador Weah not a big risk to take, given how the signature of a president could affect the lives of the Liberian people. Can Ambassador Weah intelligently hold telephone conversations with leaders of other nations in a manner that would benefit the government and people of Liberia? This is a question that a voter must answer before thinking of voting for candidate Weah.
Cllr. Winton A. Tubman
Candidate Tubman is a top diplomat, perhaps the best
that Liberia has and the country could very well benefit
from his diplomatic experience. But in my view, he
is not the best man for the top job amongst the available
candidates. I do not recall his view on issues of
human rights, corruption, injustice, inequality and
other contending issues that led to the failure of
the Liberian state. It is difficult to predict the
performance of a Winston Tubman administration on
these and other major policy issues confronting Liberia.
Winston has been too quiet on the political issues
around which Liberia degenerated into armed conflict.
In other words he has not stood for any principles
regarding the dignity of the individual and the maintenance
of peace and security. In this respect he can be easily
placed in the category of Liberians who believe that
they have remained neutral in the conflict in Liberia.
This is quite dangerous, as no real leader can remain
neutral between good and evil. His silence during
the brutal regimes of Doe and Taylor while others
spoke out is a sign of a lack of concern for the people-the
subject and object of state power. Besides, the record
of the leadership of “neutral people”
during the transitional period has been quite disappointing.
Commenting recently on candidates Winston Tubman and
Ellen Sirleaf, Brian Atwood, former USAID director,
speaking to a group of Liberians in Minnesota, USA,
said that Liberia would recover faster with Ellen
Sirleaf as president and Winston Tubman as foreign
minister because she understands development and has
worked extensively with development institutions,
while Tubman is an excellent diplomat. This reinforces
the fact candidate Tubman is better known as a diplomat
than a politician. Even his campaign message of promoting
good citizenry is vague and difficult for the ordinary
person to understand. Therefore, he is not the best
choice for the recovery of Liberia.
Cllr, Charles Walker Brumskine
Brumskine is one of Liberia’s leading lawyers.
Before Taylor appeared on the political scene, all
he did was to practice law. Unlike his late father,
who was known in Grand Bassa County as a poor man’s
lawyer, Cllr. Charles Brumskine main clients were
big corporations and other businesses. His experience
in government is limited to his two years as a member
of the Liberian Senate and President Pro Tempore of
the Liberian Senate. To the best of my recollection,
his international experience is limited to being a
one-time short-term election observer.
I have said a lot about this candidate in my previous
writings and would not spend much time on him in this
article. However, I want to focus on the his main
claim that he stood up against Taylor while in the
Liberian Senate, made the Senate independent and for
that reason he was forced to flee Liberia because
Taylor was after his life. First, it is not true that
at anytime, the Senate was independent of the Executive
Mansion under rule of Charles Taylor. Here is the
reason why. In the 1997 elections, only parties were
voted for, not individual candidates. When the NPP
won, the founder and head of NPP, Charles Taylor decided
who would go in the Senate, it was he who had to choose
which county, he wanted to occupy the slot of the
senatorial seats allotted to the NPP. For example,
he could have chosen all his Senators from other counties,
instead of Grand Bassa, and still get the seventy-five
percent of the seats in the Senate, in which case
Brumskine would not have been a senator. Also, it
is public knowledge that it was Taylor who made Brumskine
President Pro Tempore of the Senate. In the early
days when the Senate attempted to reject some ministers
that Taylor really wanted, sources close to the Senate
said he reminded them that they should remember that
each of them got to the Senate through him. Taylor
got everything he wanted from the Senate and if there
was any compromise then it was on a term that Taylor
was comfortable with.
To say that the Senate was independent suggests that there were times that the Senate succeeded in doing things against the will of Taylor. This was not the case. If that were the case then Brumskine would not have resigned when Taylor asked him to resign, because his refusal to resign would have been supported by the Senate. To the best of my recollection, the Senate under the leadership of Charles Walker Brumskine did everything to strengthen the control of power by Taylor. For example, the first act passed by the Senate was the restoration of the sovereign authority of the government of Liberia and the next was to call for a status of forces agreement- something Brumskine, speaking for and in the interest of the NPP had failed to achieve before the 1997 elections. The apparent object of the call was to subjugate ECOMOG to the control of Taylor. Eventually, ECOMOG left Liberia without retraining and restructuring the Armed Forces of Liberia as was required under the ECOWAS Peace Plan. The departure of ECOMOG, contributed to the total breakdown of order and the resumption of hostilities in Liberia. I believe that candidate Brumskine as a “born again” Christian regrets for his contribution to the departure of ECOMOG.
Now, the issue that created sympathy and eventually made Brumskine initially popular is his claim in the international press that Charles Taylor wanted to kill him. The question is whether or not this claim is true. If it is true then, he deserves the sympathy and whatever political gain he has enjoyed and continues to enjoy. However, if this claim is false, then, he has committed fraud against the Liberian people and the democratic process. To the best of my recollection, candidate Brumskine's claim that Taylor wanted to kill him has not been independently verified or corroborated in any manner by any Liberian, then in the position to know the truth. In the absence any direct evidence, it is important to examine the circumstances of Brumskine’s departure in order to judge the validity of his claim. Brumskine says that he left the country because Taylor wanted to kill him. Is it true that there was anybody that Taylor wanted to kill and could not kill or did not make any effort to kill? Of course the answer is no Taylor killed anyone he wanted to kill at will. For example, he told the Late Samuel Dokie, “ You can go under your mammy’s bed I will get you.” He later killed Dokie along with Dokie’s wife, his sister and cousin and burned their bodies. He killed many others whom he wanted to kill, including two of his deputy ministers. There was nothing to stop Taylor from killing Brumskine, if he wanted to do so. Brumskine was not politically known and had no following before he entered the Liberian Senate. Also, Brumskine had no security force to protect him, neither was there an international security force like ECOMOG or UNMIL to restrain Taylor’s death squad. Further, Brumskine, like the late Enoch Dogolea, the Taylor’s late vice president, was not an internationally known person whose death would have caused some international problems for Taylor. Even this factor could not restrain Taylor. If it were so, he could not have brutalized former interim President, Dr. Amos Sawyer. Taylor had no restraint in arming or killing anyone he wanted to kill. So, without further evidence, it is difficult to believe candidate Brumskine’s claim.
Another reason why I find Brumskine’s claim difficult to believe is that Brumskine passed through Roberts International Airport (RIA). Could anyone run away from Taylor by using Roberts International Airport, particularly at the time Gen. Martina Johnson was controlling the RIA? During Taylor’s presidency, nobody could pass through RIA or any immigration post, if he did not want that person to leave the country. For example, Alphonso Nimely and his colleagues of the Student Union of the University of Liberia ran away from Taylor and went to Ghana not through RIA or other routes manned by the Liberian immigration. Human rights activist, Aloysius Toe, for example, went to Ghana in a fishing canoe. I could not pass through RIA until Taylor, bowing to national and international pressure and allowed me to leave the country. In fact, I first attempted to leave the country without Taylor, I was re-arrested and detained at the National Security Agency (NSA). Therefore, I find it hard to believe that Taylor wanted to kill Brumskine and yet he left Liberia via RIA, at the time Gen. Martina Johnson was the security commander there.
But lets assume that Brumskine's claim is true. Why did he come to Liberia when hostilities was almost in Monrovia and at the time people were being killed, detained or tortured on the mere speculation that they were associated with the rebellion? In fact at the time of Brumskine’s return, human rights activist Aloysius Toe, journalist Hassan Bility and others were in detention for political reason. Why did Brumskine return under such condition, given his claim that Taylor was after his life for political reason? Could it be just because he says he returned because he believes in God? Why with the protection of God, he chose not to speak against the unlawful detention of Aloysius Toe and others? Brumskine’s support has been, largely based on the story of his “escape and heroic return”- a story, apparently created by him, since there has been no independent confirmation. In any case, following Brumskine’s claim that Taylor wanted to kill him, Taylor publicly said that Brumskine was his cousin and that he could not kill him. He also said that he did not consider Brumskine a political threat because it was he who brought Brumskine into politics (which is true). As Taylor correctly said, nobody knew Brumskine politically before Taylor entered Liberian politics. Brumskine so loyal to Taylor, in appreciation for bringing him into politics, that he did not oppose gross human rights abuses under Taylor such as the killing of the Dokies, market woman Nowai Flomo, and over three hundred innocent women and children on Camp Road on September 18, 1998 by Taylor, while Brumskine President pro tempore of the Liberian Senate. In spite of these developments, candidate Brumskine tells the Liberian people that he is the best man for the top job. And interestingly he has begun to make big promises like Taylor. He recently said that when he becomes president every old person will be on government salary, whether or not such persons previously worked for government or not. This sounds like Taylor’s promise of giving hot meal to every Liberian school kid and giving them access to computers. Attempting to win election by making false promises is fraudulent.
In view of the foregoing, I do not believe Brumskine’s claim that Taylor wanted to kill him. Yet this is the only claim that Brumskine has to his political fame. Liberia does not want a president who will gain any support based on falsehood. In any case the name Charles in Liberia politics has not been associated with honesty and love of people. Charles D. B. King won election by cheating T. J. R. Falkner; Charles Taylor deceived the Liberian people and the international community in everyway; and Charles G. Bryant told the Liberian people that their suffering was over and that under his leadership governance will not be” business as usual”. Should the Liberian voters trust another Charles?
Ellen's supporters on Broad Street
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Apart from candidate Sirleaf’s experience as an administrator, she is widely known to be a woman of principles and the courage to defend those principles. For example, she refused to take her seat in the Liberian Senate following the 1985 elections; on the grounds that Liberian Action Party (LAP) of Jackson F. Doe was unjustifiable denied victory by the military junta of Samuel Doe. Yet all other members of her party, including her party chairman, took their seats for fear of reprisal from the military. Other members of LAP, accepted positions in the NDPL Government. Amongst them, presidential candidate David Fahart, who became minister of finance under Doe. Her argument for not taking her seat was that by doing so she would be legitimizing fraud and betraying her party and Jackson Doe, who was believed to have won the elections. She stood her ground in defense of democracy, even at risk of losing her life. Unlike candidate Brumskine who ran from dictator Taylor via RIA, candidate Sirleaf ran away from dictator Doe by using non-conventional means. Also unlike many candidates in this race she has been active in efforts at building democracy in Liberia and has suffered for for standing up for the Liberian people. In my view she is the best for Liberia at this time. A vote her will be a vote for reconstruction and the building of a just and human social order in Liberia. As someone who understands what it takes to develop a country she will do well for her own country and as someone who has been a victim of human rights abuse she will pay keen attention to building respect for human rights and the rule of law. Her past experiences make her the best amongst the presidential candidates for Liberia at this time.