No matter how much spin we employ or rationalize
about a candidate’s leadership deficiency, the
election of 2005 is about substance. Thus, Liberians
should be encouraged to make honest and objective
analysis on each candidate. Moreover, perception is
sometimes deceptive, and that’s exactly the
dilemma we find ourselves in today. Let’s analyze
what George Weah’s supporters are saying.
George Weah Is Famous
It is a fact George Weah is famous due to his exceptional
performances on the soccer field. But what you don’t
hear is his ineffectiveness and poor leadership as
coach, coach player, and technical director of the
national team. By the way, who appointed Weah as the
national team headcoach? Did the Liberian people have
any input in the decision-making process to appoint
him as head coach? No one appointed Weah but himself.
There was no consensus in making Weah a head coach.
However, Liberians went along with the decision because
Weah was riding on the wave of fame, and people became
oblivious to his true ability to lead. Transfer Weah’s
behavior to a grand stage, the presidency, and what
you have is an egomaniac, authoritarian leader.
George Weah Will Not Pilfer Or Embezzle From The Government’s
Coffers
I find this very hard to believe because every player
can attest to the colossal corruption and the abuses
of his celebrity “power” while on the
national team. Every penny George Weah spent on the
national team was reimbursed. As a matter of fact,
he inflated the amount the government of Liberia owed
him on tickets. Weah also coerced the national team,
and to some extent officials at the LFA, into a binding
contract to purchase soccer equipment exclusively
from his brand “Weah” and sports store.
While our World Cup hope was immensely dashed, Weah’s
store bilked the LFA and Ministry of Youth and Sports.
Because George Weah was never scrutinized or accountable
to anyone on the national team, he exploited and monopolized
the team, ostracized players at whim, inflated ticket
prices, and basically controlled media fee distribution.
Why should the Liberian people trust Weah with their
resources when he failed to employ accountability
and transparency on the national team? Even proceeds
from charities in which Weah participated in Europe
for Liberia were never accounted for. Weah got away
with the unimaginable because there was no oversight,
and if there was one, he was exempted. If Weah becomes
president, he would definitely be a mouse in a cheese
factory.
George Weah Knows Lots Of Famous People
Sure, Weah does know lots of famous people. But do
those famous people know him on the basis of intellect
or political savvy? Or do they know him because of
dazzling performances on the soccer field? I’m
sure his famous acquaintances know him because of
athletic performance rather than sound, political
leadership.
Liberians must not be entirely beholden to George
Weah due to ubiquitous love almost everyone has for
this country. Weah has already admitted his leadership
shortcoming – relying entirely on “best
brains” and “yes-sir brains.” How
much revelation do we need to confirm Weah is not
wise, a critical component of leadership? Thinking
his “best brains” will compensate for
his lack of leadership is misguided.
George Weah Is A Humanitarian
I may be cynical, but Weah’s humanitarian efforts
are calculated; he wants to be a president. If Weah
were such a philanthropist, he would have secured
lots of soccer contracts for many struggling, talented,
young Liberian players considering the connections
he has. Also, with allegedly so much wealth he has,
he would have built more schools and provided abundance
of school supplies to our needy education system,
especially education for his young rebel soldiers
he supported. Or, he would have established an Education
Fund to support education reform and built education-related
institutions with the intent of alleviating illiteracy
in the Liberian society. Unfortunately, because Weah’s
wealth is based on athletics, he despises education-related
endeavors. And if he’s now contributing to educational
projects, I highly question his motive and suspect
he’s trying to play catch-up due to his presidential
aspiration.
George Weah Is A Uniter
It is an absolute fact Weah is fond of schisms. Remember
Lone Star’s shameful and dismal performance
in South Africa, 1996? Our national team was split
into two camps. The rest is history. Weah pitted players
against each other, thereby sabotaging the comraderie
amongst players. Liberia suffered in the end due to
Weah’s ego and intransigence. Contrary to what
Weah’s supporters claim of his unifying ability,
ironically his presidential ambition is creating a
division in our society. George Weah presses on to
become president because his selfish goal of attaining
the presidency takes precedence over the needs –
reconciliation, stability, peace, and security –
of Liberia.
George Weah’s Basic Education Is Enough
To think Weah has the intellectual capability to make
sound decisions on major issues is just plain deceptive
and a complete fallacy. Weah is intellectually incoherent
and eratic. Have you wondered how many times Weah,
due to psychological reasons, resigned from the national
team, then returned as if nothing happened? What leader
would abandon his troops midway through a mission?
How long is Weah going to shun or get away with academic
and intellectual challenges? Rewind to the 80’s,
junior high thru high school, George Weah changed
schools multiple times per year to avoid academic
challenges. Fast forward to 2005, Weah seeks the Liberian
presidency cognizant of his intellectual and political
leadership deficiencies.
It is not in anyone’s best interest to put a
politically unwise novice in the Executive Mansion
and expect this country to recover politically, amicably,
and economically from more than ten years of civil
strife. George Weah’s friends and minions should
dissuade him from making a fool of himself. Depending
on his wealth to bribe or buy votes will be exposed
because Liberians know better, and the international
community is watching. Lack of oversight, accountability,
and transparency that were commonplace on the national
team will not be permitted in our newfound democracy.
Making Weah a president of Liberia implies we are
susceptible to a false sense of our nation’s
stability, security, and prosperity. George Weah should
be held to similar leadership standards developing
and developed countries require of their leaders.
Anything less is tantamount to Liberia’s suicide.
A qualified president is the beginning of a profound
transformation that will trigger a chain reaction
throughout our society.
Dionysius Sebwe is Former Player of Liberia
Lone Star and President of Liberia Absentee Ballot Organization